Monday, September 24, 2007

Zane and Legos

"Hey Mom, what if they combined Lego Spongebob with Aqua Raiders?" Zane, 8, is holding Gary the snail and a tiny submarine with a deep sea diver inside. He walks into the other room and I hear, "Oh no! A giant snail! Captain, reverse thrusters, fire harpoon gun."

My son has been playing with Legos in the den all morning. This wouldn't be noteworthy except that he hasn't played with Legos for the last week. It all started a month ago when I suggested he enter the Lego display contest at the State Fair. He spends so much time building Legos, mostly Bionicles. He makes up stories and whole mythologies to go with his creations. He is continually taking them apart and building new ones. It is a large part of what he does and who he is. He was interested when I mentioned Lego display. He readily agreed. I submitted the entry form and the required $2.

The display needed to be on a piece of board. We talked about settings and designs. I continued to bring it up regularly so he could think about it and plan for it. I sawed the board we would use for the project. He told me he wanted it to look like lava. So we worked on it one day. I painted it how he wanted. Then his interest vanished. He stopped planning for it or even playing with Legos. I tried not to keep reminding him. I didn't want to pressure him. I asked him if he felt pressured by the project. He said yes. But he still wanted to do it.

The deadline drew closer and he still wouldn't touch his Legos. He suddenly couldn't think of anything to do for the project. He couldn't find the right pieces. I offered to help him. At one point he was digging through the bin of pieces. He sighed and said, "I need a break." I need a break? from playing Legos? I knew he was struggling and paralyzed. Whatever the reason, I wasn't able to help him work through it. I had to ask myself why I needed him to do it. I let it go. The day before the Legos were due, he told me he didn't want to do it after all. I hid my disappointment, because it was mine. I worked through it later. It had something to do with wanting to impress relatives. So I got my head back in line with my values.

We'll go to the State Fair in a few weeks. We may even look at the Lego displays. Zane will be able to see what one is. And maybe he'll ask to do it next year. But it will have to be his idea, his desire, his motivation and his own pressure. Until then, the sound of hands tinkling through the Lego bin looking for just the right piece (to please himself and nobody else) is music to my ears.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Seasoning




My daughters are 2 1/2 yo. They are delightful and happy and very busy. Lately I have been frustrated with Greta, though. She frequently pulls food and milk out of the refrigerator. She pours herself milk and spills quite a bit of it on the floor. She draws on her body (which I don't mind). But also on the furniture. She pulls things out and makes huge messes. These are things I expect from a 2yo. But it tries my patience when it happens all day long every day. I was watching her sleep the other night. She was so peaceful. It was one of those moments when I felt huge amounts of love gushing out of me. I realized part of the reason she has been pushing me away and screaming at me and fighting me lately is because I have been so frustrated with her. I tell her no and I get annoyed. She reflects that back to me. I resolved to do my best to respond to her with patience and love.

Today Greta had my lipstick. She was putting it on herself. Then she started rubbing it on the carpet. I wanted to get it from her. So I offered to get out the markers so she could draw on herself. I got the markers. I sat down with her and offered to help. I drew a flower around her belly button. I drew a stem out from the flower and down her leg. Carmen got into it too. She drew on herself and asked me to add some flowers. Then Greta pulled away into the other room. She didn't really want me to draw on her. She kept coming back and flirting a little. We turned it into a game.

Later Carmen had some spices. She was smelling them and putting some on the counter. She had a capful of coriander. She wanted to sprinkle it on my head. My automatic answer would normally be, "no, thankyou." But today I thought, why not? I let her sprinkle it on my head. Now I'm scented like coriander. I asked Ian to smell my head. He smelled it twice. I told him is was coriander. He said Tom's of Maine uses coriander in their deodorant. So there you have it. I enjoyed some time with my daughter and discovered a new exotic scent just by not saying no.

This seems to be a lesson I have to learn over and over again.