Sunday, February 20, 2011

If the shoe fits

I currently own 16 pairs of shoes. I know this, because I just counted them. Among the more unique ones--tap shoes from my short-lived tap dancing experiement, snakeskin-trimmed sandals given to me in Nigeria 19 years ago, vegan Earth shoes, slippers given to me by my dear husband, one pair of waterproof wellingtons, and two pairs of shoes with cracked soles. And for the record, nothing even slightly resembling high heels.

I've been spending altogether too much time thinking about getting new shoes. On one hand, it's a perfectly reasonable desire. My main work shoes are wearing out and my feet are fatigued after a long day in the field. My sneakers are well past the 3-6 month lifespan recommended by fitness and podiatric professionals. My black shoes (the step up from sneakers, but appropriate with slacks) can only be worn in the absence of puddles, mud, or rain, since the cracked soles allow water to soak my socks from the bottom up.

From another perspective, 16 shoes is already a travesty. You can only wear one pair at a time, after all! Fashion rules notwithstanding, do I really need to own both black and brown casual shoes? Is comfort while working a nicety or a necessity?

And if I were going to purchase shoes, I'm faced with more quandries. My hard-to-fit feet make finding second hand shoes almost impossible, and even Gabes rarely has footwear in my size. If I buy new, should I go with USA made quality (at $179.99), durable but imported LL Bean ($49.99), local business clogs ($95.00), or cheap Chinese from Payless ($29.99)? Don't even get me started on children's shoes--Salvation Army is great if you can find the right pair, but if not, $16.99 for cheap Chinese is hard to pass up when you know the shoes will only last 6 months.

This desire to be a concientious consumer is a recurring theme in my life. I want to be mindful of how my choices affect the larger world, and I am inspired by those who are able to integrate their values more seamlessly and with less inconsistencies than I. I'm also aware that spending so much time thinking about the implications of living simply may be a form of idolatry, or at the least, a waste of mental energy. So for now, enough. But tomorrow I might go shopping.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

things that made me smile

Conversation with DJ:
DJ: Mom, I think I want to take piano lessons.
Me: um...well, that might be a possibility.
DJ: I'm going to ask Ms. Kerry if she can be my piano teacher. She has a piano in her house.
Me: I don't know if she gives piano lessons, but you can ask her.
DJ: But I'll do homework and violin before computer, and piano after, because it's too much to do three things before computer.
Me: Or maybe we could just save computer for the weekends. Maybe you could just play computer on Saturday. We only go to church one day a week; you could just play computer one day a week.
DJ: Yeah, that would save energy, too!

Marina's drawings of the family, complete with labels. I'm "Mam" and I have a ponytail.

Havah's babbling.

Saturday, 10:15 a.m. DJ returns from basketball. "Mom, we have to turn the radio on at 11:00 so we can listen to Wait Wait Don't Tell Me!"

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Resistance Training or Resisting Training?

I mentioned in a recent post that I have joined a gym, something I didn't see myself doing. Why should I pay money to sweat? It would be much better to exercise outside, even better to live a life so full of physical activity that I don't need to set aside additional time for exercise. I know you would think that farmers are plenty active, except that a) it's the middle of winter, b) I have a 7 month old, and c) because of said 7 month old, my role in the farm is often limited to what I can do while carrying Havah.

I wasn't planning to join a gym because people who go to gyms either hate their bodies or love them too much, and I don't think either extreme is healthy. I've long prided myself on having a good attitude about my body, which is more countercultural than I think it should be. Have you ever seen a women's magazine that doesn't have at least one article about losing weight or making your stomach flatter? We don't own a scale, and my main measure of health is whether my clothes fit and whether I can play tag with my kids. I acknowledge the fact that I've been blessed with good genes and grew up with moderately healthy eating habits has made it easier for me than for many.

Except that at a recent medical checkup, my doctor asked out of the blue, "How much more weight are you planning to lose?" I replied, jokingly, "Well, it would be nice to lose 15 pounds, but for now my appetite is my master." Later, the truth of this became more apparent. I eat, a lot. And I spend a lot of time thinking about food (but not enough about what to cook for dinner). I'll even go somewhere because they have free food, a practice that should have ended in college. Working from home means that I pass through the kitchen dozens of time each day, and often, some version of this internal conversation happens: kirsten, you don't need anything to eat right now. You just had breakfast. But I need to keep my blood sugar levels steady. How about some peanuts and chocolate chips? You don't need all those calories. Are you saying that I can't love myself if I gain weight? Don't be so legalistic. What about showing grace to myself? munch munch. Whoever said that there is a fine line between boredom and hunger was very wise. Food is a distraction, a comfort, a reward. So I shouldn't be surprised that I've put on 25 lbs since college. I waver in whether this is a problem or not. How much attention should I pay to the scale? What's the balance between "your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit" and "learn from the lilies of the field"?

I can have only one master, and I don't want it to be my appetite. The fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control. Against these things there is no law. (And I wish you could hear the soundtrack that plays in my head with those verses!)

So, I've joined a gym, with a goal of working out 4 days a week (for the next two months, at least--until things get busy at the farm) and trying to practice self control when it comes to food. I'm still uneasy with the whole thing, and the irony of paying $30 a month to lose weight while others in the world are starving is not lost on me. I haven't decided whether losing weight really is my goal. If I don't say that it is, then I can't fail, right? :) I know that health should be my goal, but what is that, for me?

The daily challenge at the gym is what to do while I'm exercising. Maybe it's the staying in one place thing, but I can't get away from the feeling that I'm wasting my time. I try to pray, but I can hardly sustain prayer alone in my room, much less in a public place with lots of distractions. The exercise bike is the only thing I can do while reading. I bought an mp3 player (such a slippery slope, this gym thing!) so I could listen to music or news or something informative, but I haven't figured out how to put anything on the mp3 player, and even if I did, I wouldn't know what to download. I keep thinking that all these treadmills and bikes and stairclimbers could actually generate electricity--don't you think there's a niche out there for a green gym like that?

Friday, February 4, 2011

The downward spiral

Tough morning. I believed DJ when he said he wouldn't be sad when I left if I came on only part of his field trip, so I stopped in at the Whitaker Center, anticipating that I could tag along with the group, sit with them while they ate lunch, etc. (We have a membership, so I get in free). Unfortunately, by the time I got there, they had already finished lunch, were moving on from the exhibits to the IMAX, which I wasn't prepared to stay for, having brought neither my free IMAX pass nor put enough money in the parking meter. (It was also immediately apparent when I arrived that additional, uninvited chaperones were not within the museum coordinator's plans). DJ got sad, I tried to leave, he followed me, I got angry and embarrassed, he begged to come home with me, I wavered briefly, then straightened and left. Completely disgruntled, I held it together until I passed the Commonwealth Connections cyberschool bus parked outside the Whitaker Center. The spiral quickened, going somethign like this. [Be warned, what follows is neither rational nor coherent, but that's the way the spiral works.]

He's clearly not having a good time at school. He feels like a social outcast, and told me just the other day that he only has one friend--all the other kids "hate" him and are mean to him. (He later amended that statement to say that 3 kids hate him and are mean to him, the others just don't want to be his friend.) He's not advancing as quickly/far as I think I could, not enthusiasitc about learning. And he wants to be at home (at least at this minute). What's so wrong with that? He often asks if I could sleep in his bed (or he in mine)--attachment parenting would say he needs more time with his mom, that if I don't provide that now, he'll look for love in the wrong ways/places in the future. He would love to be homeschooled or cyberschooled (I don't think he knows the latter exists--we've tried to keep him in the dark about it, because of course he would be thrilled to find out that he could do school on the computer--what could be better?!). But I can't homeschool--I'm not a teacher, I have two other kids, and I have a farm to run. And what's the point of living in the city if you pull back from all the places where you could interact with people different from you? Of course, I'm not doing very much of that now, anyway. We could do cyberschool him (I'm more comfortable with computer learning in grades 3-8 for some reason), but then Marina would lose her automatic placement to Sylvan Heights, and I certainly can't teach her how to read and she's too young for cyberschool. It could give me more flexibility--we could do violin lessons during the day, and not rush around in the evenings so much. The kids could be at home in the morning and go to afterschool programs while I work on the farm, and do summer camps. But how in the world would I juggle all that and the farm and still put dinner on the table every night?? But if I were a really good mother, I'd put my desires aside and focus on my kids. Someone else can do the farm; I'm the only mother for my kids. And this is the wall I keep running into, the pit I keep falling into, the place I get stuck: that I don't know what's best for my family or how to balance my ideals with the constraints of reality. I can't figure out why this triggers such intense feelings of sadness and hopelessness in me.

But I can't spend any more time thinking about it--Marina's been playing pokemon for more than an hour. On the bright side, Havah started saying "ma ma" yesterday, and though I know it's a sound not a title, I still smile to hear it.