Anyway, yesterday I had the opportunity to make some decisions based on my values in mothering. Other mothers might have done things completely different than I did. In the morning, I swore I was going to finally deal with this:
But then, I had the chance to go to a pumpkin patch with Annie. Because I value fun and festiveness, we went (in full costume, I might add)!
This was Annie's reaction when she found out she could hold not one, but two bunnies! |
Again, I found a small sick pleasure in seeing these two little girls surprised by a curious goat. |
Pig in a blanket! Ha ha ha ha! |
Then we had a few minutes to kill so instead of getting a pedicure or running a productive errand, I went dumpster diving for cardboard boxes with Annie. See, it's all about values.
Next, we picked up the boys from school and drove to the Discovery Science Center in Santa Ana to meet our friends, Julie and Stephen. Because I do not value a clean car but I do value happy car rides, I threw snacks at the children in the back seat. Also, I don't value punctuality as much as I do costumed-children, so we donned costumes in the parking lot (sorry for making you wait, Julie and Stephen). And also, I value free parking, so we had a little hike to the museum. A side benefit is a little exercise, right?
On the way out of the museum, we paused to take photos...for fun and also for my ulterior motives of having another good long, skinny picture for my Facebook cover photo. Not such a good value, but it is handy having a crafty mind like mine.
(We could have been learning about planets or something educational but it's more fun to just take silly pictures.) |
I don't always think things through past the fun of the moment and only after we were settled in and meeting the other kids did I start to wonder if we were sort of crashing the party. The PR rep for the museum gave me a quizzical look when he shook my hand, asking me who I was. Awkward! In any case, the kids got to stay for the photo shoot and basically play wherever they wanted on the bottom floor of the closed museum. They had a blast, and even though I never figured out if we were tacky party-crashers or not, I enjoyed talking to the other two moms and watching the kids play.
The whole thing kind of reminded me of a book I loved in 5th grade, where some kids run away from home and hide out in a museum:
(Oh, and I guess there's that one popular movie about the same thing :)) |
There were venomous spiders on display and I got the creeps when the kids were messing around with their cages and I wondered if the tops were locked on. They were. Phew! |
The two other mothers, who are standing in front of the bright screen in the background of the picture above, turned out to be popular mommy-bloggers in Orange County. We had a fascinating conversation about the blogging world and what it takes to make a name for yourself or to make money from your posts. I admired them (their blogs are sandytoesandpopsicles.com and thismamamakesstuff.com), and at the same time, decided that I value the ability to write freely and from my heart and post way too many pictures of my kids, even though it would be amazing to be a "professional" blogger. I think I am too self-centered to be trusted with any amount of fame or fortune! By the way, I stole the picture of the world's tallest man from the second blog. Thanks, Carrie!
In the course of the spontaneity and photo-shoot-crashing, I hadn't really thought about dinner (there was some pizza, but I told the kids not to eat too much because they clearly hadn't expected us) and homework and the fact that the car was parked far away and it was now dark. I don't value safety as much as I do not-whining children, so I let 2 of the 3 kids walk all the way back without shoes on because that was what they wanted. I'm sure we were a sight to see...me dragging costumed-clad children with no shoes across two major intersections, anxious to see if my car had gotten a ticket or been towed. It hadn't, phew again!
And when most moms would have called it a night, I drove our snack-strewn, cardboard-box-laden, tired-children-carrying minivan to Chik Fil A to see if we could cash in on the last fun, free activity of the night: free kids' meals for superheroes! We made it, got our food, and subjected Annie to one more fit of (humorous) terror...this time over a human dressed in a cow costume.
So, in conclusion, some things I don't value as much as other moms: cleanliness, time-management, sleep (the kids still had homework to do when they got home!), safety, and possibly etiquette. But I do value: festiveness, imagination, spontaneity, confidence, and flexibility. The greatest of these is fun and togetherness, but this still remains:
Oh, stink.
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