Dear Isaiah: Letter 14

Dear Isaiah,

It’s been seven months that my brain surrendered itself to become a fierce animal of intuition, protection, and memory mush.  Long, long ago, before you were even a thought, my brain was something akin to a needle.  Sharp, incisive, not to be messed with.  And now, with your arrival, it has transformed itself.  I’m still adjusting to that.

The world’s mothers know what I mean when I talk about memory mush.  It’s, what I hope, a temporary condition of forgetfulness and inability to retain information.  It’s similar to a huge, gorgeous mahogany dinner table that has been loaded with every kind of plate, silverware, glass, candelabras, and cup imaginable.  The table is full of wonderful things but each time you try to push one more thing onto the table, somewhere, on the opposite end, a plate that was teetering on the edge, quietly drops to the carpet below.  Noiselessly, I don’t even notice the exchange that occurred.  Another plate of information has been added, but another has dropped off into an unknown abyss.

That’s kinda how my brain is processing information.  And all the new plates are yours.

The information and knowledge that you have shot into my brain has crashed all the other plates to the ground and I, so hopelessly in love with every inch of your existence, barely notice the disaster that is called my memory.  Keys are tossed in the pockets of bags I don’t use.  Voicemail messages are listened to and then forgotten.  Appointments are only remembered because I tell your dad to remind me later on because, surely, it will escape my memory.  Twice this month, I had to crawl under the parked car in the garage to retrieve the spare key to the car.  This latest episode – last Sunday – ended with my holding up the key victoriously in my hand, only to find my regular keys stuffed into your diaper bag.  I got down and dirty for no reason at all.

I’ve heard that parenting is something reactive, particularly in the first stages.  Each day is something new with you.  Your two bottom teeth have cut through.  The first has been showing its top for a few weeks, this second just burst through yesterday (oh, you were such a sad, quiet baby yesterday).  Your laugh is SO LOUD (so Factora of you) and your rolls, once disappearing, are now back to their original chunk size as your appetite has now accepted a few ounces of formula in the afternoon to accompany your usual breastmilk lunches.  Yesterday, you even polished off two, yes TWO boxes of stage 2 Gerber food.  YOU ARE SUCH A GERBER HEAD.  I couldn’t believe it with each passing spoonful.  At any moment, I expected you to turn your head away, signaling your busoog (remember, that’s “full” in Tagalog) belly, but no.  Your Filipino-German-Spanish-Irish-French mouth opened itself wide open for each bite.

In fact, your size is a daily topic.  With strangers and friends alike, everyone seems to comment on your length.  Or guess how old you are.  The other in a department store, a grandpa looking man, glanced over at you and asked if you were  A YEAR AND A HALF.  I smiled and said, “Oh no, just about 7 months.”  He looked at me for a long while, like I was about to add “just kidding” to that bit of information.  He just stared at me.  Then at you.  Then exhaled, “Well, he’s going to be a really big boy.”

Big boy.

As a feminist identified writer, my love, Big boy means you are going to have a big heart.  You are going to grow a heart ten times bigger than your gigantic frame.  Because, my little lovebug, you must understand that it will be the size of your heart, the weight of your compassion, the openness of your mind that will get your through in life.  In other words, you will be just like your father.

My memory muscle is embarrassing, and that is why I write these moments to you.  Not only for your eyes to read someday, but also for my memory.  Everything these days feels like fleeing pieces of paper blowing in the wind and writing it down turns it into a sticky note.  A little bit of glue so it stays in place for a while.  Writing helps me solidify what I want to remember.

This morning, I held you a little longer than normal.  You were getting sleepy and instead of setting you in your crib for your morning nap, I propped myself up on the couch and gently laid you, tummy down, on my chest.  You squirmed and wiggled, probably thinking I was playing a new game with you, but eventually I think you understand it was just me wanting to be close to you, wanting to smell your skin – your scent of dry milk and sweetness – and pressing you gently against me as you laid your head against my breast and stuck your thumb in your mouth, finding your comfort and peace.  We stayed that way for several minutes, before I laid you in your crib and you flashed me your two pearl smile.  It made my heart ache with longing to stop the months from passing so quickly.

And as your rolled to your side, resting your two little legs on top of the bumper and I watched you fade into sleep, I whispered how much I loved you and knew again, as I often find with you, that words will never convey how truly precious each minute of your life is to me.

My memory will always hold you as the greatest miracle of my life.

Happy 7 months, my beautiful son.

Love,

Mom

Ditching Mrs. Cleaver: Shaping my Own MomAwesomeHood

I was never really a baby person.  Growing up, I was never one of those kids in school who loved to embrace younger kids and play with them at recess.  There was no giggling with my friends in the 5th grade and pointing when we saw 1st graders with their lunch boxes.  I smiled but was never squealing, “Oh my gosh.  LOOK!  They are SO cute!”  I just thought I was cute.

As a teenager and at my mother’s urging, I babysat from time to time.  I was a good babysitter.  No TV.  No junk food.  Lots of playing and chatting.  However, my skills had more to do with the fact I was deathly afraid of the parents coming home and finding me oblivious – head in the refrigerator, fudgesicle in my mouth – and their kid braiding electrical wires together in the living room.

Now, I’m the parent coming home and I’m not the babysitter.  I’m the mother.  Nearly 7 months in training and, still, can’t believe some mornings that the AHHHWAHHHGOOOO sound coming 8 feet from my bedroom door is coming from a baby who actually belongs to me.  My mornings are still foggy like that.

That being said, I’m ALL about MY kid.  I worship the ground he rolls on.  I wish there was a candy flavored after him, or a donut, that I can eat because he looks so adorably scrumptious.  But just because I wish there was a donut called Isaiah, doesn’t necessarily mean I’m a child fanatic.

I’m learning that old misconceptions crumble in the wind.  I thought that since I was never a baby fanatic that I wouldn’t turn out to be a good mother.  WRONG.  Mothers come in all different kinds of styles, colors, sizes, schools of thought, and background.  There is no spectrum measuring parenting skills, except for the hierarchy I have created in my head that I measure myself against.  Such practices that compare yourself to other people, by the way, usually send your parenting-esteem straight to the toilet.  I don’t recommend comparisons at all.  In fact, I think that unless it is semantics and verbal debate, the practice of comparing anything or anyone should be outlawed.  We are all so full of imperfections and flaws that make us uniquely individualized.

I’m learning to use Isaiah’s development and overall smile frequency as my barometer. I’m learning to measure the health of my parenthood by assessing not only the welfare of my child, but also the joy factor in my own life, the carefree laughter resonating in my marriage, and the ability to find moments where I write a poem or two about getting caught in the summer rain.  Without tools that help me stay sane, parenthood becomes a voided practice of chores and tasks, not relationship building.  Isaiah needs a mother who is calm, inspired, and energized.  The frazzled and often morose mother who counts the sacrifices is a useless, outdated model.

That being said, I’m still not a baby person.  Because of my growing Gerber prince, my knowledge of babies and children has exponentially grown, skyrocketted even, to the moon.  And I’m finding that I don’t need to be a baby person to be a wonderful mom to my own son.  I’m learning that listening to the unmet expectations, the little whispers in my head that repeat devilish little quips about my self-doubts, do not provide anything beneficial to me or Isaiah.  As a new mother, I have to sharpen my ears and be a voice snob;  there’s only a handful I should listen to.

It’s time to ditch the unrealistic images of motherhood and welcome fresh versions of ourselves as we transition into new roles as mothers.  It’s time to learn how to say YES to the things that we truly need and love while saying NO to the excessive, the impulses, to the drive that pushes us to make more money, acquire more THINGS, and act more as corporate parents than loving, free thinking ones.

It’s time for outreaching to form communities and build trust in neighbors again.  The nuclear family unit is destined for isolation without the assistance and hands of the village.  No aprons, no heels.  Or maybe just an apron in heels.  No shoulds.  Close the gender gap in the distribution of domestic responsibilities.  Reorganize your schedule, not your priorities.  The grassroots of motherhood are often secrets that are exchanged at the ground level, not on TV or in big media, and it will not tell you the thing you need to hear most:  The most critical voice in the mix that takes the most time to find, use, and shape is your own.

Why Geography Doesn’t Make or Break a Writer: Lessons from LeBron James

I never wanted to be a sports fan.

It takes too much emotion.  Instead of watching pig skin balls cross lines while being carried by brute men in colorful tights, I opted for the arts.  Theater.  Painting.  Galleries of modern art and blissful afternoons of imagery and metaphor, told on the written page.  Now that’s my idea of exhilaration.

I never wanted to be a sports fan.

And then I had no choice.  I moved to Boston.

It was everywhere.  It was on the streets during parades, it was on billboard signs of the trains I took.  I swear, sometimes, it was even in the beer.  Everywhere.  Sports was everywhere.

And still I denied it.

Before any complex understanding of different sports, I was like many non-sport fans: somewhat disgusted with the attention athletes receive and the unparalleled focus society places on sporting events.  I was a snob, in other words.  That is, until I discovered what sports CAN be about.

In the company of my sporty spouse who has a considerable amount of sport knowledge, I began attending Reds games, Ohio State football games, and scoring great seats to watch the Cavs.  Nick began to share the ins and outs of plays, the thought process of calculating risk, the strategy of a team backed up against a wall.  He taught me about watching the clock, how timeouts should be used, when to spike a ball, what it means when a shortstop stands two steps forward, how rankings are done, what preseason is all about.

Before long, my interest grew.  I would never claim to be a diehard fan of anything, but I did take a particular interest in the largest sports story to break this year: LeBron James dissing Cleveland in a long drawn-out process of ego stroking.

But, a deeper analysis of James’ decision reveals much, much more than just a desire to choose which yellow brick road will lead him to the championship ring.  What rocks reluctant fans, like myself, is that James’ decision confirms the worst about sports and small-town folks who make it big: they sell out.

LeBron sold out.  Not with money or power, but he sold out the incredibly rare connection that many of us strive to have: a person-place relationship.  It’s not about the Cavs, it’s about place.  It’s about building a foundation in the place LEAST likely to succeed that truly spins the greatest stories.  More and more, that spirit vanishing.  We are born and raised in one place and then we set our sights on the Emerald City, convinced it has the key to complete our dream. We give shout-outs to our hometowns, but we’d never be caught dead with its zip code.

It rattles and irritates me when I’m told to settle down about LeBron’s decision to leave Ohio.  And not just because his immature and diva-studded process resulted in the largest orchestrated sympathy card for Cleveland imaginable.  I am agitated by the “poor, poor Cleveland” mantra that is decimating the media waves and marching into the open ears of young people.  As if a ring is more significant than growing up with ties and relationships.  As if “finding” success is more meaningful than building it.

However, I do resonate with the geography talk.  As a writer, I’m consistently forced to evaluate my geography. I moan and wail over the midwest louder than anyone.  I worry about the shortage of creative communities.  The likelihood of finding challenging mentors or writing confidants is slim in the midwest because, well, the midwest isn’t known for its creative harbors.  In my mind, New York, Oakland, and other big, glitzy cities offer more square foot refuge to radically minded moms who want to write memoirs about interpersonal transformation and social justice.  It isn’t a coincidence I moved once a year for ten years.  Searching for your mojo kinda makes you feel restless, to put it mildly.

But, I often find myself countering those thoughts with questions like, what exactly is it that will make me the best writer I can be, what will help me best cultivate my writing voice? The answer I found as a writer is the same answer that Lebron James should have come to, the same place every person who is in search of personal achievement eventually (and hopefully) arrives: it’s what you BUILD with what’s inside you that will deliver your glory.

You travel and move to learn from other places and people, but you don’t need to live next to the ocean to learn how to swim. The New Clevelander is someone with talent.  Someone successful.  Someone with every availability to leave, but chooses to stay. You choose to stay not out of loyalty or fear or safety.  You choose to stay because you recognize that what you are pursuing can and must be built by your own two hands.  Who knows if I will be a permanent midwesterner, but I am grateful to it for teaching me its most profound lesson:  what you carry inside you, not where you live, will determine your destiny.

“Should-ing” All Over Myself: Expectations, Parenting, and the Proverbial Noose

I’m pretty sure that when I decided to become a parent, I didn’t sign an invisible scroll that read: I AGREE TO LISTEN TO ANYONE AND EVERYONE ABOUT MY OFFSPRING.

No, I’d never sign such a contract.

But I think the rest of the world has a copy of that scroll somewhere.  And, any day now, I think someone is going to march right up, whip it out and show me on my front overgrown pachysandra-ed lawn and reprimand, “See here?  You signed away your open ears RIGHT HERE!”

Ah, parenting…the topic I vehemently try to steer clear from within my writing, but I’ve found that it’s like trying to concentrate on something important while a kangaroo recovers from a bad acid trip in your living room.  It’s just not going to happen.

It’s very difficult not to listen to people who give you advice.  Somewhere, in the cavernous darkness of early parenting, some advice IS like a beam of light and truly is helpful.  Most of it, though, is nodding and silently replying, “Mhm, I haven’t thought of that!  Going somewhere air-conditioned since we don’t have central air when it’s 95 degrees outside?  WHAT A NOVEL IDEA!”

I sometimes wonder if I should invent a parenting card, or even better, A PARENTING LICENSE, and then flash it like a cop with a badge every time someone approaches me with a parenting idea.  That might make me millions.  I could invent an online course, a brief quiz, and if you pass, I’ll send you a card – ALREADY LAMINATED! – that reads: I’m an inventive, thinking, emotionally stable parent who is imperfect but still pretty great.  Lisa Factora-Borchers says so.”

WHO WOULDN’T WANT THAT IN THEIR WALLET RIGHT NEXT TO A PICTURE OF TOMMY JR.?

The baby industry is ridden with books, articles, and every kind of folded brochure that could possibly be made with graphs and suggestions on how to measure your child’s development.  Most days, I’m thankful for it. Most of my research comes from an eclectic grouping of books, internet, close peers, confidants, and family.  And not that Nick and I know everything.  Far from it.  But, we tend to be more on the relaxed side of parenting.  Right now, I feel the most critical piece of Isaiah’s development is his emotional stability and physical flourishing.  He should know his parents are attentive, supportive, and although a bit nutty, completely reliable.  The fact that Isaiah cries once every 78 hours and is in the 94% for length leads me to think that we’re doing a pretty good job of raising him.

But that doesn’t stop the shoulds of the world.

“Shouldn’t he be sitting up on his own now?”  Probably, but he’s a bigger kid.  Maybe he can’t even out his balance yet.

“Shouldn’t he be holding his bottle by now?”  Probably, but he puts his hand on it when he’s really hungry and pushes away when he’s finished.

“Shouldn’t he be rolling over by now?”  Yes.  He did once last week, so I think he’ll be ok to take the SATs when he’s a teenager.

“Shouldn’t he be eating more solids now?”  I’m not sure.  I think babies have a really good survival sense about them and he stops eating when he’s full, so I don’t force more solids if he’s not hungry after nursing.

“Shouldn’t he wear shoes in the summer?”  Yes, but he keeps sticking his feet in his mouth.  His toes are cleaner than his sandals.

I’ve written it before and I’ll write it again: parenting has made me more humble and increased my compassion by ten fold.  There isn’t a day that goes by where I don’t see another parent and feel, however slight, a small connection to them.  Or at least, a smidgen of understanding.  When I see parents by themselves and trying to handle a stubborn car seat or piercing scream, I send a smile that I not only tolerate the line being held up by their kid or the disrupted quiet, I actually understand it.

The expectations we place on parents is, at times, impossible.  We want to see a child doing well.  Society wants to see children thriving at ever stage and age.  We want to secure their welfare.  Setting expectations and should-ing all over parents, though, is a far cry from ensuring the livelihood of their children.  If nothing else, it bring parents just a step closer to the proverbial noose hanging in the dark by their bed every night.  The noose is there, relentlessly, waiting waiting waiting for your neck.  It wickedly swings back and forth while you contemplate whether or not to step up and reel it around your throat.  The noose can be spelled in five letters: G-U-I-L-T.

“It takes a village to raise a child” is the most overused cliche in the parenting sphere, but I’d be hard-pressed to find a more profoundly true statement about child-rearing.  Indeed, a village of family, supporters, listeners, and positive cheerleaders are tokens of a happy family life.  Without these scaffolds, isolation and bitterness can begin to crust the edges of our smiling family picture and the “shoulds” begin to overpower a very simple but under-appreciated phrase: You’re a good mother.

Those four words, boring by the measure of my vocabulary until I became a parent, are some of the most touching words you can put together in the English language.  A small hug.  An arm slung over your shoulder.  A warm hand on your back.  A love pat on your hand.  That’s what these words feel like.

Because these four little words aren’t just about affirming the parenting style, it’s affirming your life choices made evident by a growing creature full of vulnerability, need, and dependency.  And when you’re trying your hardest to fill that child, when you’re trying to drop every ounce of love, life, freedom, and trust into that little being, those four words break down into one beautiful message that all new parents need to hear every now and again: You are enough.

Summer Hits

It takes me several days to realize that June has arrived.  Once that realization hits, summer hits, and then, seemingly, out of nowhere, I hear grocery store shoppers comment as they slowly push their carts in sadness, “Can you believe how fast the summer is going?  It’s almost the fourth of July.”

Those are moments I’d love to ask strangers, “Summer officially began June 21.  It’s June 28.  It’s only been a week.  What are we being so dramatic about?”

Summer hits and just as it does, people are already sad that it’s coming to a close.

I don’t get it.

These days of dawg heavy humidity have Nick, Isaiah, and I on the go.  We just returned from good ol’ Russia after a lovely wedding on Nick’s side of the family for which I photographed the reception.  It was Isaiah’s first wedding and he was a pretty good guest at the table.  He didn’t eat any food.  He didn’t hassle the bartender for stronger drinks.  He didn’t complain to the DJ, asking, “Why aren’t you playing my song?”  No inappropriate moves on the dance floor.  He was a perfect gentleman, except for the fact he didn’t wear shoes.  Most gentlemen wore shoes to formal events.  Isaiah needs to see his toes, feel the air on those little piggies.  So he dressed up for the occasion, sans footwear.

This week we are heading to New Jersey to spend time with some close friends of ours and relax on the Atlantic coast.  This will be Isaiah’s first real roadtrip.  (I consider anything over 4 hours a roadtrip.  Anything under is a just a mere car ride.)  We have no idea how he will be, but this will be the first time he will be upgraded to first class seating with his new convertible car seat.

I tell you.  Life is all about the little things.

Gerber Head is just too adorable these days.  Sometimes I just want to roll him in sugar and take a bite out of him, he looks so scrumptiously sweet.  This weekend he enjoyed Borchers family worship in Russia.  His grandparents, uncles, and aunt were there to provide an abundant supply of affection and stares into his big brown eye wells of love and innocence.

Latest developments in babyland: he is scooting!  Backward!  I think he learned that from Tita (“aunt”) Carmen, fitness extraordinaire, who taught him leg lifts.  She did reps with him in sets of four.  Aigh nako.  (Tagalog expression for, basically, Oh my LORD!/OMG/Good heavens)

Latest developments in adultland: packing, shopping, planning for our big trip to the Atlantic coast.  First family roadtrip.

Random piece of news update:  We’re having a landscaper come out and tame our jungle look at our property.  Have I mentioned how Shaker Heights is the queen of celebrating landscapes?  There would be no surprises in this family if our block threw us an appreciation party for even having someone take a look at our pachysandra disaster.  I’ll keep you posted.

Letter #13

Dear Isaiah,

Two days ago you turned six months old. SIX MONTHS!

In this time, your life has changed, you body has developed, your everything is maturing with each little inch of life you live.

People often ask me if I write all your milestones down. They encourage me to do so because it’s supposed to help “relive” the moments later on when you get older. Well, the calendar that is supposed to act as your first year recorder is somewhat dusty and neglected. I prefer writing, not simply “recording.”

This site and all my previous writings have centered you, your germination, your birthing, your life. I don’t think the little sticker that reads FIRST SMILE will be able to truly convey the heartmelting moment when you first showed me your pink gums. I don’t think scribbling 20 lbs. 4 oz into today’s record book of your doctor’s appointment is going to preserve the pleasing grins your father and I exchanged at the doctor’s office when we heard your measurements and weight.

Years from now, you’ll read these passages and wonder what all the big darn deal was. You’ll probably think that I, an overly sentimental mother and writer, recorded and shared TOO MUCH INFORMATION with everyone.

Years from THAT moment though, someday, you’ll have your own children and God-willing, I will be writing and recording their milestones, how your son or daughter sucks their toes just like you did at six months old. How they loved to squeal in front of parents but behaved quietly in front of strangers.

Isaiah, I write these things because writing both releases and preserves moments that cannot be replicated. They will act as memory stones when we cannot recall what this feeling was like as new parents. Writing these letters may even come as a tool for me later on, when you’re a wiry adolescent and break rules for fun. These letters may help me remember that all stages of your life are as precious as they are passing. And no matter how far your crawl or drive the car without permission, I will always be behind you. Loving you. Hoping only for the best and most meaningful things in life for you. Because that’s the kind of mom I hope to be: simply there. Protecting, guiding, asking, feeling.

And writing.

You are more than precious. More than anything I could ever imagine or attempt to describe.

You are more than all of the milestones you will achieve. You are greater than all of the gifts you have given us, your family. Your life is more sacred to me than my own heart.

All of these emotions cannot be surmised from stickers on a calendar, you see. Actually, these moments cannot really be preserved by anything, not writings, not notebooks. They are burned into the bricks of our home, into the blankets you love, onto the bottles you throw.

And I pray that your father and I are able to continue to enjoy every little inch of your blessed life.

Love,
Mama

The Loose Vegan: How Food Tells a Story of Our Lives

loose vegan2

I love food.

This is not a surprise.

My family, immediate and extended, are the same.  And now that I come to think of it, there really isn’t anyone close to me that doesn’t feel the same.  Food is wonderful.  It is beyond satisfying and celebratory.

Food isn’t just about eating.  What you select, how you prepare it, how you feast on it, and all the different people and cultures that influence you are smashed into every little bite of food that goes in your mouth.

I grew up with Filipino food.  Filipino food is a cross between Malaysian, Chinese, and Spanish cultures, I’ve been told.  How I think of Filipino food can be summed up even more quickly than that: it’s just awesome.  It’s rice based with lots of different kinds of ways to stew meat, potatoes, vegetables, fish, rice, noodles, and sauces.  There’s no real complexity to the flavoring of things.  It’s usually just hearty, stick to your ribs kind of foods.  We ate with both fork and spoon at every meal.  When Iwent to college, I was dumbfounded to find that most people reserved spoons for desserts and soups.

It also wasn’t until college that I tasted my first salad.  I always thought the idea of cold vegetables – with no rice anywhere on your plate – was a novelty.  I didn’t grow up with fancy spices or dashes of this or that in the pot.  There was no real complicated way to prepare food in our house.  The only thing lesson I knew growing up about food was that the best tasting things often take the most time.  Foods need time to marinate, soak up the ingredients, or let out its robust flavor.  Good eating means good cooking and good cooking means caring and giving your time.

Food tells a story.  Regardless of what your diet consists of, there’s ALWAYS a story as to what you eat.  Even if it’s drive thru menus or dollar deals at Popeye’s – what you put in your mouth reveals something about who you are.

I began understanding this in my early 20s, when I was introduced to Indian, Thai, and more American gourmet foods.  I grew interested in how whole foods were put together to have a completely different taste.  I started experimenting and buying spices.  Then I started researching recipes on the internet and adapting to my own taste buds.  Eventually, the experimenting including dipping my fingers into desserts and baking.  Getting over my fear of the oven, I baked my first batch of brownies circa 2005.  I wasn’t always this adventurous.  When I was 16, I tried to cook my first pot of Kraft Mac ‘n Cheese.  CULINARY DISASTER TRANSPORT.  I forgot to strain the noodles.

Yeah.  That’s where I was 15 years ago.  Forgetting to strain pasta.

Too shy to call myself anything but a cautious experimenter in the kitchen, I simply observed others in grocery stores during my shopping trips.  Particularly in the produce department, I meticulously read labels and perked up to listen when overhearing a conversation on how to cook arugula or the use of bibb lettuce.  As a writer, a sometimes painter, and a photographer, the creative life is always calling me in different directions to experience life – and flavor – more deeply.  Cooking is just another channel to better enjoy the rich variety of life.

When Isaiah was born, I quickly began selecting the best foods for my diet.  Several weeks later, this was complicated by his eczema and frequent trips to the allergist and pediatrician.  For now, Isaiah is allergic to milk, eggs, all dairy, and peanuts.  The doctor believes he will grow out of it, but for now, I have to be pretty observant about what I put in my mouth and eagle-eye strict with his solids.

So I, reluctantly, became a vegan+meat eater.  I started reading more and more about plant based recipes and how to enjoy a dairy free world, or at least, an extremely limited dairy life.

The basic social functions of my and Nick’s life should just be titled DAIRY FEST because, I swear, there is NO getting around dairy in the ingredients and core solvent in most recipes.  The first six weeks were full of bitching and moaning, complete with sulking in the parking lot at Whole Foods.

I missed cheese.  Sour cream!  Cream cheese!  Milk!  Cream!  Omelettes!

By the 8th week, my passion for food grew in an extremely unexpected way.  I learned that there is life without dairy.  Seriously!

And with that revelation came a burst of creative energy.  Books about the effects of dairy began filling my reading shelf with cook books on how to cook vegan on the cheap.  Nick even began tasting my creations and, no surprises there, exclaims, “This tastes great, babe!” (He says that about everything I prepare…)

But the conflict remained:  I didn’t want to opt out of all the dairy-ful culture that is the midwest, particularly holiday functions, weddings, and special occasions like Game 7 of the NBA where I will inevitably want pizza while I yell obscenities at Kobe Bryant.  That’s life.  Things come up that leave you with two choices: eat dairy lightly or starve.

Realistically, I can’t prepare every single meal vegan.  Veganism, I’ve found, means lots of prep work and committing yourself to the cooking process.  I have no problem with that 75% of the time.  But the other 25% –  life happens.  Hurry up moments drop themselves everywhere.  Stomachs growl.  Children need to be nursed and you can’t nurse (I’ve found) on an empty stomach.  Disentangling myself from dairy and eggs means disengaging with friends and potlucks.  I’m not ready for that.  Or, at least, I’m not ready to cook something in preparation for every. single. time. I. go. out. to. meet. friends.

I’m trying to be a loose vegan.  Meaning, when I have the power and means to do so, I eat vegan.  When I do not, I allow myself – lightly – to something else being served.  Let me be clear though: I prefer vegan meals.  Fully, whole-heartedly, I prefer vegan meals.  I think they taste better and make you feel much more healthy.  There is absolutely NO deprivation whatsoever, so long as you take the time to cook and enjoy yourself in the process.

For now, I embrace my coined identity as a loose vegan.  And to encourage anyone else out there who finds themselves wanting to try something new but is too afraid to do it full force, think of approaching it loosely.  Not everything needs to be full force.  There’s a reason Nick sometimes calls me “The 4th Quarter Girl.”  I tend to be, uh, kind of intense about things.  But, for this,  I’m going to be doing my best to not be so absorbed and consumed by the details.  Approach it with fun.  With lightness.  With a lot of sway.

This Loose Vegan believes that food tells a story and while I am learning more and more about this particularly lifestyle, and the political insinuation it comes with, I plan to share the ups and downs of this yummy endeavor by writing about different creations and recipes I use.  By no means am I am turning my site into a vegan website because there are a gazillion sites that are gorgeously laid out and go much more in-depth than I will ever go.  Nope.  My sharing is simply for fun and to inspire any hard core burger eater, like myself, to open yourself up and try something different.

Being a light vegan appeals to the side of me that truly does love inventing and finding ways to make something that was once ordinary taste heavenly.

Hop on the LFB delish train.

Loose Vegan Recipe:

Tofu Scramble with Golden Couscous and Blueberry Fudge Mint Smoothie

The scrambled tofu scramble is basically saving my life since I really miss eggs.  Here’s what I put in mine…(I don’t measure, I eyeball everything)
Extra firm tofu – cut up and dried (cut in half and press paper towels into them to soak up the water)
1/2 sweet red pepper, 1 med vidalia onion, 3 cups baby spinach, 3 cloves garlic, 1/2 c cubed vegan monterey cheese
1/2 tp or so of Tumeric, 1/4 ts Ground Coriander, 1/4 ts Curry Powder, dash of bread crumbs
Throw it all in there with some EVOO (add cheese and spinach last) and sautee on med-low until you hear the baby crying and you have to turn it off and run upstairs for 15 minutes while it cooks on the lingering heat.
I love golden couscous because of its yummy fluffy texture.  I throw in 2 tsp of vegan spread to replace butter.  Cooks in 5 minutes.

Blueberry Fudge Mint Smoothie

1 c frozen blueberries
1 banana
depending on how thick you like the consistency about 1 cup of soy milk or unsweetened brown ricemilk
1 scoop of non dairy marble mint fudge ice milk
a handful of ice
Blend until you have desired consistency.
The mint and slight hint of fudge goes FABULOUSLY with the blueberries.  Completely refreshing and rocking for summer mornings.

Before and After: How Motherhood Changes Concepts of Time and Communication

Much of motherhood is very much about intuition.  Intuition is about as subtle as a fading tan in September.  You look at your child and simply KNOW what their current expression is all about.  Same goes for their squirming and head turns and mini yelps when you leave the room.

Intuition is reading between the lines; understanding the unsaid and what most cannot see.

Prior to Isaiah’s birth, I lived my life very much in the intuitive world.  I “felt” more than planned.  If a free Saturday rolled around, I would mentally make a list of my “Hope To Do” list.  While others simply make a To Do list, my list was always open to variation.  For example, I would plan on 1. grocery store shopping  2.  laundry   3.  calling a family member

But, if life just happened to throw me a curve ball and, I unexpectedly find a gorgeous 60 degree day sunning into my room in February or a friend calls, squealing details of her latest beau into the receiver, I adjust my Hope To Do List to accommodate other activities.  I adapt.

Which is why it’s very difficult for me to stick to a plan.  What if something better comes along that needs attention?  What if my feelings change about what needs to get done?

None of this was a problem until I met Nick.

Nick L-O-V-E-S to know what I am planning on doing with my day,  “so I can make sure you accomplish the things you need done,” he figures.  Nick’s a planner.  He’s one of those people who was, like, BORN with a small clock radio in their heads.  Even without a watch, he knows whether he’s on time or running late.

Now that Isaiah is here, my intuition and “feeling my way” through a day is limited.  Nick and I need to be in sync.  Not just for Isaiah, but for our own personal sanity.  Who takes care of Isaiah and for how long determines who gets to go for a long run in the morning or who gets to lounge and read in the backyard.  Planning for Isaiah’s welfare isn’t just about Isaiah’s welfare.  How symbiotic our relationship is translates into a lifeline for our own individual equilibrium.

More and more, I am beginning to understand how absolutely critical it is to communicate clearly about what you want.  There are countless studies that report that new mothers postpartum are more susceptible to mental health struggles and illness because of stress and anxiety.  The culprit is multitasking under hard conditions.  New mothers feel all the domestic responsibilities fall on their shoulders.  New mothers put baby, spouse, community, and family before themselves.  Time, like a pie, is cut into pieces.  The largest pieces often go to caretaking and making sure OTHERS are ok.  New mothers rarely take time for themselves.

But, I noticed, much of those reports (sorry, I can’t find links directly to them) associate this overwhelming stress with women who are unable to delegate responsibilities, or, women who cannot simply ASK their partners to do more.  I can’t help but think that the traditional roles of women, motherhood, and caretaking impress upon us precisely when we are most vulnerable: sleep deprived, borderline neurotic with worry, and physically exhausted.

I don’t pretend that my life or marriage is perfect.  Far from it.  But Nick and I work tremendously hard at communicating with one another and keeping the other balanced and reasonably happy.  It can’t be a euphoric party every night, but I think we both realize that the happier we are as individuals, the better spouses we are and more loving parents we are to our son.  I encourage women I encounter to become, if nothing else, a better communicator with their families.  To effectively communicate what one needs isn’t about laziness or complaining – it’s about being a better parent and sharing the workload in a manner that demonstrates respect and self-dignity, love and compromise, and evenness.  This balance isn’t always struck, but the efforts to do so pays off in dividends.

Isaiah forces me to say what I need because if I fail to communicate effectively, I end up taking on more than what I can realistically do, and when I fail, slip into a dark corner of self-punishment.  Isaiah, and certainly Nick, can do without that.  I can do without that.

The intuitive parts of my day have quieted into a more determined planner.  This transformation was necessary, critical even, to my development as a parent.  I can’t “hope to do” anything, I must put Isaiah’s needs first and then assess how much time is left in the slithered pie crusts.  With those hours (minutes, really), I am able to breathe and hope that I get in a long hot shower or a ranting post like this.

Our children need to see us happy, attentive, and loving.  Working to make ourselves mentally and emotionally sound so we are 100% present to our children is the most radical act parents can do these days.