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Fueling the Dream Without Quenching the Fire

The background noise fell mute, her smile and easy laugh turned up, she adjusted slightly in the chair.  Putting her head down for a minute, a deep inhale and exhale, and her eyes swung toward me, the audience, “Catching Walter Cuuningham in the schoolyard gave me some pleasure…”, I watched my daughter as she began a final run through of her monologue in the warm-up room.

For the past fifteen minutes I’d watched her do some jumping jacks to get her energy up and work through her piece a few times asking for my last minute feedback.  I remained keenly aware of my words, my stance, my nervous energy that I tried to subdue so that the only vibe she absorbed from me was relaxed confidence.

But I also watched with a little awe, mixed with surprise at the gift of the moment, and the flashing images of the fun we’d had together this week.  Like the tadpole turned frog who climbs onto the rock and finds himself finally home in the air and land, she’d moved easily into the world of theater.  I remember the feeling myself, but it was something else entirely to find it in my daughter. Memorizing, talking through character, trying and discarding ideas, all of the elements she’d absorbed readily like the frog breathing air.

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Now, the moment upon her, some children might show nervousness, signs of panic as other potential actresses crossed our path.  Something-whether the huge studio, the single nine year old alone in front of the two professional directors-something  should rock her.  She told me later as she focused in the last few moments before she began that she alternated between conjuring her character and repeating to herself, “Okay, I’ve got to do it, i’ve got to do it.” And she did.  Without dropping a line.  Followed by a charming and animated chat with the director.  ”It didn’t seem like a big deal, it wasn’t really hard.”

It wasn’t really hard because she was inside of her gift, her dream, her passion. It wasn’t too nerve-wracking because she’s energized by performance time. She wasn’t a flight risk because she’s worked her tail off all week to be ready.

A thought had nagged me throughout the week, Am I just tying to fulfill my unfulfilled dream through her?  Again and again the answer came back “no” because anyone could see she loved what she was doing and she was almost eerily, naturally, effortlessly, good at it.  The first words from the director to me after the audition, “It’s obvious she loves performing.”

In the warm up room that afternoon I marveled at the gift of sharing this passion.  I atleast have the skills to help her construct her wings to take flight, I thought.

But as we left the audition, another voiced joined in, I want this for her, she’s worked so hard, and I really want this for her. And I had a glimpse of how easily I might go over the edge to a place where my want for her to succeed could smother her young, joyful approach to the experience.

Then she got called back.  Called back by a professional theater on her first ever audition.  The decision to let her audition had been a whim, a “life’s never going to get less hectic and when will there be another part at a professional theater when she’s just the right age.” The whim had turned into possibility.

The second week of preparation was harder.  As we worked on her scenes, I wondered if I was working her too hard, asking her to reach a level that she wasn’t ready for, was I taking the fun away?  I couldn’t find a clear line to draw that marked Ready For Audition from Perfect Performance for Mama.

Knowing ahead of her lay a three hour call back, reading in front of other girls up for the same part, reading scenes with a professional actor, she didn’t even glance back at me as she headed in and she came out again smiling, “I loved it, that wasn’t hard. I’m hungry.”

Now we wait until monday, when casting is revealed.  But my thoughts remain turbulent.  Will I be the parent who hires an agent, signs up for every audition and workshop available, pushes my child past the point of fun as I see plenty of parents do with their own passion whether it’s a sport, academics, or an art. How will we encourage the dreams of our other 3 children while we spur on this one, and what about parts of the theater life that aren’t so innocent?

For now the question remains: How will I help fuel the dream without quenching the fire?

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It Was Closer Than We Thought

Well, after my post lamenting the loss of summer before it had even begun for our family, it found us.  In our own backyard.

We found the sun
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We found the land of Narnia in the leftover puddles from the sprinkler…

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We found a lot of smiles...
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Popsicles in the shade….

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Look alike sisters….
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And Mama found reading
(I always was better at reading school books when school was over!)

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And bare feet!

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When I find Summer, I’ll Let You Know

It seems I’m being pulled into summer still wondering how I missed Spring completely. I’m sitting outside at the moment, the wet heat a telling sign that a new season has settled into the air and under skin. I fussed all winter about the cold, sunless days, the thin hope that eventually a cool 60′s breeze with the new sun would lift my spirits back to their proper place. Some family health issues pulled that shade down and I sat inside many days finishing up school with the kids, taking care of chores, wondering when I would get into that spirit lifting breeze. I felt it on the way to the car to the hospital, and then it was summer.

The sound of the ice cream truck and the cars parked at the pool sing the song of summer, a time we like to remember from childhood as less-burdened and busy. But I’ve lost the rhythm of summer. Two years ago it was the early sick months of baby in utero, last summer it was the sweet baby arrived and the mama trying to expand, and this year a few things keep masking the season and holding back my heart.

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With my Dad in the hospital and our family firmly stretched, I haven’t been doing much cooking. After four years gathering the first fruits of our CSA, opening each box like it was literally Christmas in July, I haven’t brought one local, fresh green thing into my house. Past summers brought fresh raw tomato sauce over home made pasta, fruit crisp, and grilled veggie hoboes.Still eating from the freezer, my taste buds don’t know it’s summer.

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With the erratic school schedule of the past months, our work lingers into the days, my teacher brain doesn’t know it’s summer.

With my heart accepting, resisting, surrendering, asking, escaping, and again accepting the various circumstances of our life right now, my heavy heart doesn’t know it’s summer.

With my bare feet hot on the pavement and my kids at the pool with friends, I’m beginning to think I better adjust my ideas of summer, and make up a new version for our family, before we get pulled into fall, and look back for the signs that we missed.

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As I wrote this blog in my head, it ended with a search for summer, the summer I think sounds the best, the one it seems many of my friends get-their only goal the pool, their biggest trial a bad sunburn. But as I searched for photos I realized that my last two summers, albeit challenging and in my mind at the time both lonely and limiting, were also filled with joy much deeper than a summer of afternoons at the pool. Maybe, if I open my arms(and heart) to the possibilities, I’ll realize that what God has for my family is even better than the vision that taunts me just beyond my reach.

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Midnight Ramblings Injected with Real Thoughts

The subject of homeschooling can really stir the hornet’s nest when it pops up in conversation.  The homeschool moms, understandably, have chosen their path for very specfic reasons and are living them out daily with a heavy dose of blessing and trial and they are going to talk about it with passion.  The public and private schools moms, their own reasons and journey firmly planted, are immediately put on defense and feel called in to defend their own very personal choice for their children, and stand up for their mama-hood. All in all, despite my usual stance of “this is what’s good for us, but it’s a choice for each family” I’ve experienced a few stings and been tempted, out of exasperation, to give a few myself.

We can talk about the hot topics-socialization, education of the teachers versus parents, moral and spiritual foundations, but I only find myself getting really worked up when I feel that homeschooling is attacked because it’s a deviation from generation upon generation of “this is how we do it”.  New=makes people uncomfortable= bad.  Most of my friends have considered and researched(much more than more myself I might add) the choices available for their child’s education.  They’ve prayed and discussed, finalized their stand, and walked forward with it.  But there is the group that seems to go with public or private because it’s what’s done.

I watched a video today that I had to bring to my blog.  Set aside the opposing teams and listen. It’s a video to make you think.  And it’s for you, the homeschool mom, to consider carefully your purpose and methods for the precious time you have with your children.  And it’s for you, public and private school mom, so that you can consider what you hope your child will gain from the 13 or so years in the school system. How are you going to fight for that education model to help your children and their friends become more of who they are supposed to be, find their passions and talents, which will carry them through life not just through the successful admission into a college.  Whether you are at home or at school, do you feel like it’s a daily fight for your child to have the freedom to be him or herself, are they not fitting into your mold or the school system’s mold?  Maybe the mold needs to be broken and refitted for each individual child.  This is not a homeschool speaker encouraging people to homeschool.  It’s a well-educated, out of the box visionary, asking all of us not to accept the “always done it that way” just because it’s easier.  A change in our education goals is necessary across all gaps.

If you have 17 minutes, grab some coffee and a seat.

Click over to this blog to find the video.

You’re welcome to share your thoughts in the comments, but please keep respect and kindness in mind.  I’m not hoping to change minds, just to engage them.

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