the song of the family: winter

This was a fun one. Partly inspired by an Exhale Taylor Swift writing prompt and partly from Steinbeck’s The Pearl, I wrote it with my nine year old in mind. She has asked to read my poems but as she firmly believes a poem must rhyme, I didn’t feel like sharing any of my recent ones with her. So it was fun to read this one aloud to her! Got some laughs.

cheerios crunching underfoot
magnatile towers crashing down
vroom of the roomba making its rounds
look! look at this! can we read a book now?

wails, cries, as Daddy is leaving
someone is always earnestly singing
the same line over and over again –
the toddler’s still determinedly grieving

tinkering on the piano, the same tune
splashing in the sink – there’s no more spoons!
can I have more? can you get a bowl?
almost done with this, I’ll be there soon

falling hush of nap mid-day
burrowing under blankets to read
the tiny clicking of perler beads
savoring the silence each of us needs

then a barrage of noise and backpacks
can you sign this and give it back?
can I go ask them to play with me?
Dad’s home! dinner’s ready! – no more snacks!

evening sounds like teeth being brushed
I’m sorry, will you forgive me, family prayer
peace be with you, finding pj’s to wear
goodnight, I love you, slowing the rush
now one final song, and one final touch

a very january good list

This January has already felt a million years long. Mostly the unexpected school cancellations/delayed starts we keep getting hit with plus a mild stomach bug keeping us from really getting back into a good groove. And I want to be in a groove! Also, this is our coldest winter in Maryland and our house is freezing. (I have become such a wimp since my time in South Bend.) So, in the midst of the blahs and constant boogers of near mid-winter, I am trying to notice what I am pouring life into and what is bringing me life.

our sledding spot by the river
  • the mid-day nap. so crucial. the quiet, being horizontal, and finally warm! on a normal school day, this is me and the boys. Joe naps, John and I read a book and he either stays and naps with me or does a cozy time in his room before we walk to get the girls and neighbor kids from school.
  • Friday morning adoration swap (if there is school). even just being there for 20 minutes is like a soul-check time and helps me know what I need to get from the weekend ahead.
  • the (very) occasional freezing cold run. on January 14th I ran at 6:20am and saw Mars to the lower right of the full moon! it was so beautiful, and I wouldn’t have seen it if I had been able to run at 3:30pm in the cold sunshine like I wished I could have. I pointed it out to two different strangers. but also, it was so cold. and it completely wiped me out – but that may have been the start of the stomach bug too. oof. but so grateful to not be injured right now, to be physically able to run – when I’m not sick and want to brave the dark and the cold.
  • a long, gripping novel to read. for book club, The Father’s Tale by Michael O’Brien. I’d never heard of him before! (Though it is my FIL’s name, ha!) I’m really glad to be reading this one in winter, I can feel the icy wind around my ears of Canadian and Russian winters.
  • a beloved TV show starting a new season. All Creatures Great and Small! a postpartum show for me with Joe? John? I can’t remember. delightful.
  • morning prayer by candlelight in my chair again. reclaimed the corner from the enormously fat Christmas tree that I regretted buying.
  • reading Harry Potter to my second for the first time. and my oldest reading it to her. she’s been waiting and waiting to be able to share HP with her. the best.
  • a couple afternoons playing with my kids in a warm indoor pool. plus, hot tub for me! and I tried the waterslide, it was so fun. I’ve come home from these sessions so energized and relaxed. something about being in warm water is really bringing me life.
  • sledding time with just my three year old. that was a really fun afternoon on our first unexpected snow day.
  • encouragement to “keep the paint wet” with writing. just keep going. got this from Laura Kelly Fanucci, who I have loved following for years now.
  • a variety pack of dark beer that we shared with friends. delish. found Chris’s beer.
  • reading and discussing The Pearl by John Steinbeck with friends. again, I love this book club. I got my hands on this novella at the last minute but motivation was high that week of snow days to get it done so I could get out of the house to discuss literature with other adults. did not disappoint.
  • a Saturday morning women’s retreat at my parish. so edifying, so refreshing, so needed. grateful!
  • toddler music class with Joe. I really wanted this, asked around, a friend wanted to teach it, someone else in the neighborhood ended up hosting it, and it’s been exactly what I wanted, so fun to do with him and be with friends.
  • an incredible poem a friend shared with me. by Sally Read. now I want to slowly make my way through the 100 Great Catholic Poems collection that she edited. I haven’t been writing as much this month (even how this blog post is just a list, it’s all I got) but I have been reading and savoring good writing. maybe it’s more of a time to saturate myself in that and see what comes out eventually.
  • milky black tea. all day, every day.

There is life to be found in winter – it’s good for me to keep telling myself.

This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in the series “Alive.”

a year for hope

As we went off for our night away from the kids at a nearby abbey – a personal Advent retreat we got to take together (the best Christmas present ever from my in-laws) – a friend suggested something about finding my word for the new year. There are fun word generators you can find online, that’s what she meant, but I wasn’t really planning to do that. Then, on the retreat, I flipped through the monks’ newsletter and found an article on the Year of Jubilee 2025. I hadn’t known anything about this, could not have told you that the theme for the year is hope. The monk quoted Pope Francis’s introductory words about the Jubilee, and I felt sure I had found my word without even looking for it. He spoke about Mary as the model for hope and said, “In the Blessed Virgin, we see that hope is not naive optimism but a gift of grace amid the realities of life.”

Our family is facing a year of potential transition, big time. The reality of the situation is legit cause for anxiety. There’s unknowns, there’s loss of many good things, without knowing yet if or what good will come of the changes. But for now, we are still in a period of waiting. Waiting, and hoping, that God will make clear the path forward, and that it will be a good one for our family. Hoping for His guidance and providence. I feel most hopeful, and at peace, when I remember what He has already done for us. How we moved to South Bend and then again to the DC area not knowing anyone, and almost instantly made great friends and found community and eventually great schools for our kids. So, I’m starting off this year still in a posture of waiting, but asking for the gift of that grace of hope.

I neglected this amaryllis bulb in a plastic bag on the counter for a month but it started growing anyway, and when I finally potted it, gave us a double bloom!

A side note is that this is the first January in ten years that I haven’t had a nursing infant or been pregnant, though this long long period of waiting feels similar in some ways to the wait of a pregnancy, and the relief I will feel when the waiting is finally over will be somewhat analogous to birth. My hope is that God will be birthing something new and good in our family – something we can’t even fully conceive – and that we will be open to receiving it.

“just a mom”

“How can it be a large career to tell other people’s children about the Rule of Three, and a small career to tell one’s own children about the universe? How can it be broad to be the same thing to everyone, and narrow to be everything to someone?” – G.K. Chesterton

These are some thoughts I’ve had bouncing around for a while and an attempt to pull them together. As we’ve had our first snow storm and I’ve become obsessed with nap schedules, I’m feeling more homebody-ish. And as we’ve been more home-bound, I spend more time keeping spaces tidy for my own sanity’s sake. And laundry. Always, so much laundry. And as my days are filled with small tasks that are quickly undone, I’m finding myself, not frustrated, but grateful. (This is definitely grace, and also due to getting more sleep lately).

I think our world is in need of the small. And this G.K. Chesterton quote – not being the same thing to everyone, but everything to someone. This making of a home, these small daily tasks, this caring for children … it is hard work, definitely, but it is also good. And this is really me telling myself this, because younger, college-age Sarah living in the Bay Area, needed to hear this.

If I could say something to that Sarah, I would say, don’t make choices that are motivated by fear of what other people might think. If there’s something you want to do, even if no one else around you is interested in it, that doesn’t mean it’s not for you. In my case, it was marriage and motherhood.

But I was afraid. Afraid that I was too young, afraid to “waste my degree,” and afraid to be “just a mom.”

Just a mom. 

I think the root of that fear for me was the hiddenness, the unseen, nature of motherhood. That I would be lonely and bored if I stopped working and stayed at home with my kids. That I would no longer be making a difference in the world, having an impact. Identity, really. And community – would I have anything to talk about with my friends and family who spend most of their time in the work world, if I spent most of mine in my home with babies and toddlers?

I have found great community, now. And I don’t struggle with this anymore. I see how motherhood has peeled the onion of my selfishness and will continue forever to do so. I see how it has changed me for the better and how freaking hard it is, and how it is a path to holiness. I am not lonely and I am not bored. It could be argued that indeed, my Stanford education has been wasted because I am not earning a six-figure income, but another way to view it is from my kids’ perspective. My mom never used her BA in Anthropology from Stanford, but my sister and I benefitted immensely from the ways she was shaped by her time there. So, I am grateful to be the recipient of her “wasted degree,” at least. (I do realize that I’m speaking from a place of immense privilege – to have a BA and to not have to work to pay off tuition debt). 

I think about the good of the small and the deep. Of being everything to someone. I think about the work that can be done, the impact that can be made from the cloister of the somewhat home-bound. A friend who recently became a mother after finishing grad school told me that in this season, while she’s at home with a baby, she realized that she can be connected to the global church through prayer. I think about how St. Therese, who entered a convent at age 15 and died seven years later, is the co-patron of missions for the Church. The power of intercessory prayer.

I found this in my drafts from 2019. 5 years later, these thoughts still resonate, though I don’t feel the need to share them in a apologetic tone, and I still don’t know what this Chesterton quote is from, and maybe that’s why I never published it.  But I can see how that period of time 5 years ago was the beginning for me of experiencing motherhood as fertile ground for the contemplative life, and how this has only deepened for me since. The idea that hard physical labor and contemplative prayer go hand in hand, I am living this. The idea that in the spiritual life nothing is wasted – nothing is too small, too hidden, too unglamorous for God to use for His glory. The friend I reference who had just finished grad school and had her first child, we have both had two more babies since then, born around the same times. Our friendship is one of accompaniment in our vocations, from across the country. We have joked about being like two abbots, encouraging and praying for each other as we lead our own hidden little communities. Who knows what 5 years from now will look like, but I enjoyed finding this window into my thoughts from back then. Enough to share them now, I suppose.