I am MOM

I am MOM
If I knew then what I know now . . .
"I take a very practical view of raising children. I put a sign in each of their rooms: 'Checkout Time is 18 years.'"
Erma Bombeck

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

In Pursuit of Magic


Laurèn made chocolate covered carrots with sprinkles for the Easter Bunny and placed them on a plate in the kitchen, the night before Easter.  Earlier that day she had told me that three of her favorite people were Santa, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy; she liked getting candy, presents and money.  All week long Faven had been challenging the younger kids; “Do you think there is an Easter Bunny - really?” or “Who do you think the Easter bunny is?” They simply stared at her, while I instant messaged her with my eyes!  She seemed to be enjoying the fact that she finally knew something that they didn’t.  Or did she?  In private she pleaded with me to tell her the truth – who was the Easter Bunny?

Late that night when Laurèn couldn’t wind down for sleep, as her mind reeled and her mouth spilled out the contents of her day, in a round about way she told me her thoughts about the Easter bunny.
            “Mom, you know what?” she said.
            “What?” I answered.
“According to Hatching Pete the magic is in the mystery, and I still want the magic of Easter, so I don’t want to find out the mystery.”
“That is interesting honey” I offered, relieved that I didn’t yet have to confess.

The magic is in the mystery.

Years ago, in the waiting stages of our first adoption, our minister was speaking one Sunday about callings. Some people truly feel moved by a calling but it isn’t necessarily clear why.  Embedded in the uncertainty, there is mystery.  Take Jonah, God called him to go to Ninevah to cry out against that city’s wickedness.  He was afraid.  Jonah, as a prophet was called to do the work of God, and yet he refused and fled.  We all live the mystery, but the question is, can we overcome the uncertainty or fear and answer the call in order to find the magic.

Our family is a mystery to many. I am regularly asked why we adopted children from Ethiopia. The question comes in one of two forms: with a quizzical expression, hands gesturing in the air and a skeptical tone, or with a soft voice, hand on my shoulder and a look of gentle curiosity and sincere attention. I willingly admit that it is not ‘textbook’ family-planning. Each time I am given an opportunity to answer this question, I pause, not sure what to say.  For me, living a life that is authentic means answering the call, to live, to give, and to be in a certain way – this is a difficult concept to share with another and it is a vulnerable piece of my journey.  Creating our family through adoption was and is a calling, pure and simple.  It was a plan outside of our making.  It was a journey of faith.  (Which in the aftermath has felt more like a leap of faith, across a vast valley somewhat miscalculated, crashing into the side of the gorge and slowly sliding down, then gathering speed, while debris and dust lodge into every orifice, rendering me unbalanced with clouded vision as I tumble into the pit – only to pick myself up, dust myself off and climb up and try again.)

On the days that I am exhausted and exasperated and I bellow out in anguish, from that pit, “Why me God?” there is only a dull echo in response, followed by complete nothingness.  In that gentle space is where the mystery lies – in the still and quietness between God and I, where there are no clear answers, just a map without a route, and a path without footprints, which I am urged forward onto.

How appropriate that in this season Laurèn reminds me of the magic hiding within the mystery.  Every parent knows that there is magic in our children. Heck, we have some pretty magical parenting moments too. I don’t mean the moments that take our breath away.  No, I am referring to the moments when all seems lost; the train of our living is skidding out of control towards an imminent and ugly crash and somehow, as if by magic, we right the train, calm the fire and a crash is averted (this time!).  We are left with the words hanging in the air, “What the….?”

Truth is, every day is a mystery; we only think we know what is going to happen.  Our calendars are filled with work, appointments and ‘to-do’ lists.  In the book “the Seven Whispers”, there is a section about Surrendering to Surprise.  Christina Baldwin writes, “Life’s surprises introduce unexpected elements and experiences we might not have the courage to choose”.  Remember Jonah, he ran away because he was afraid, he neither had the courage to ask questions nor step into the unknown.  Also, Baldwin says,  “surprise is […] the practice of leaving enough space in the day for something to happen that isn’t on the list.”  Whenever I am on holidays I leave space for sunsets, the call of the loon, sticky messes and breathing in nature; but at home, there simply is no space in my day-timer.  In my day-to-day life, I can’t hear the calling because there is so much noise and clutter.

Now we have a running joke in our house.  When the phone rings, my husband quips, Check who is calling…….. if is God, don’t answer!  Yes, there are many days when we feel that this particular calling has been too much to bear, and the sacrifices have been great.  But the magic of being audience to a child who cooks corn on the cob directly over the flame on the gas stove, or widens their eyes in wonder when their curly hair get pressed straight, or makes their first joke, in English, or blossoms before your eyes in ways you never imagined, for reasons you can’t articulate, is worthy.

So I wish for you some magic in this season of your life.  Just as my kids continue to suppress their suspicions about Easter for another year, so they can run with pure excitement from clue to clue on their egg hunt delighting in the palpable magic of possibility, may you explore the events of your life with cautious curiosity while marveling at the magical moments.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Beyond Breakfast





This morning the kids wanted to help me make breakfast.  Uh-huh, that would be great.  We got some tunes going, and broke into stations.  Yohannes was making the fruit salad, Faven was keen to run the espresso machine and Lauren and I were in charge of the pancakes.  Simple.

Yohannes cut up the pear into perfect bite-size pieces, complete with the seeds and stickers.  I stopped to admire his handi-work and thought it best to demonstrate what I wanted him to do with the orange.  Meanwhile Faven exuded the confidence of a Barista, so I let her at it – just until she called out “Oh no!”  I stepped in just as the froth was oozing over the side of the pitcher and down Faven’s fingers; the hot lava caused her to let go of the pitcher, which I caught just as it was about to hit the counter top.  As I eased the hot container onto the counter, I glanced over at Lauren, and she was alternately licking the spoon and then mixing the pancake batter.  “Lauren”, I called, she paused, oblivious and with the spoon in her mouth, “What?” she questioned.  My chin hit my chest as I let out an exasperated sigh.

I scurried back over to help Lauren, which Faven took as a green light to carry on. 
Lauren questioned, “ Is it okay to lick the spoon and then keep using it?”
“Well, not really”, I responded.
“But Mom, the heat will kill the germs, right?” she pressed.
“Hmm….. I don’t know.  But let’s just say, if you did that in a restaurant you would be fired.”
“Well, I’m not in a restaurant am I?” she finished.
I gave up, gently taking the spoon and replacing it with another to give the batter a fierce stirring.

My gaze took in Yohannes’ technique with the mango; there are no words to adequately describe it.  Imagine the skinning and gutting process after catching a prize fish, only the ‘meat’ was smooshed between keen and clumsy fingers and then scraped into the bowl.  Okay, moving on.

Lauren actually managed to get some batter onto the grill, and I felt like we were on our way!  Just at that moment, I heard the espresso machine sputtering and wheezing as if it was about to explode.  I am not sure what Faven had been doing, but there was a fine layer of coffee grounds covering the counter, floor and machine.  I looked at her, with the utter love of a mother who is amazed by their child’s deeds.  Then I calmly, but with an edge, informed her that it would be great if she stopped and waited for me to guide her through – she (haughtily) reported that she knows what to do!  Then I merely grunted and turned off the machine; I am not sure who was ‘steaming’ more, the machine or me.  Faven stood off in the background, quietly observing, just out of my reach (smart kid!).  I disassembled it to see what the problem was, cleaned out everything and started over. 

By now, there were some pancakes ready to come off the griddle, so Lauren held them out to me with the patience of an elite runner at the starting gate, ‘Mawm” she beseeched.  Kinda busy here, I thought, but scooped a plate from the drawer and got there just as she dropped them.  I didn’t quite make the catch.  I stared at the pancakes on the floor and with only a moment hesitation picked them up and put them on the plate with six eyes staring at me.  Into the warming drawer they went. 

Yohannes, inclined to interrupt at the least appropriate times – asked me, “How many strawberries should I cut up?”  I told him eight; he counted all eight, out loud.  I slid back over to Faven and asked her if she was ready to try again.  It took everything in me not to banish her to the back forty and just do it myself. “Okay mom” she quietly said, she took one reticent step towards me, waiting to see how I would handle her in my space.  I welcomed her in.  This time the espresso went into the shot glasses; she pulled the glass out (with the coffee/water still flowing) and quickly dumped it into the coffee mug before sliding it back underneath for more.  I asked her what she was doing?  She responded, “making coffee”.  After some dialogue I found out that she was going to continue running the water through the espresso until she got enough shots to fill the whole mug.  Hmmm…….I was completely surprised by this and stumped at how to re-direct her. 

Meanwhile, from the pancake maker, I heard another insistent cry for the pancake plate.  With a surge of speed, I retrieved the plate and she piled more onto it.  Then she queried, “When can I learn to make the coffee like Faven?”  I paused, “I don’t think we are quite ready for that, but I can show you how to make hot chocolate if you want.”  “You can make hot chocolate with that?” she asked with surprise.  “Uh-huh.  Finish up the pancakes and we’ll get to it.”

I got the milk and chocolate sauce ready, set the table and said a silent prayer.  I showed Lauren how to steam the milk and what temperature she was aiming for.  She finished that, and I directed her to pour the hot chocolate into her waiting mug.  I had made her wear oven mitts while preparing her drink, as I didn’t want her to get burned.  Now, as she poured the hot chocolate, it so happened that our foster cat Carlton was sauntering by.  Lauren completely missed the cup; the hot liquid hit the counter top and sprayed all over Lauren, the counter, the cabinets and the cat.  Thankfully I was there to grab it and save just enough for her to have a taste.  I looked at the mess and said, “Let’s eat!”  Just after that the dog walked through the chocolate milk and spread her milky paw prints throughout the kitchen.  Laugh or cry?  I decided to laugh.

It had been almost two hours since we had started.  On my own, I think I could have had breakfast on the table inside a half an hour.  The kids were a mess, the kitchen was a disaster (it took me another two hours to clean up), but we had made it together and we enjoyed it together.  Now, I think I’ll take a nap – so I have the energy to handle lunch.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Playing the Field


I played in a soccer tournament all weekend.  It was fun.  It was good soccer.  I played well and hard.  And now, I suffer.  But really, it is not like the suffering is that great, I only seemed to have strained one muscle group.  It is the muscle that allows me to stand erect, the muscle that allows me to bend and tie my shoes, the muscle that allows me to put one leg in front of the other (aka: walk) and the muscle that supports me as I reach my arms out to pick something up.  Other than that simple little muscle strain in my back, I feel great.  Well, besides the fatigue, dizziness and headaches from exertion, dehydration and electrolyte imbalance.  I don’t seem to have any trouble sitting or lying down, which is great news because my husband, who has a herniated disc right now can’t sit or lie down so together we make one functioning adult!

I am forty-five, but on the field, I play younger (we all do!).  Before each game, I coach myself (brain before brawn) “play smart, slow down, stay in control”; but truth is, I love the feel of side-by-side sprinting, and gaining just an edge over the other player and meeting the ball first.  It is truly exhilarating.  Furthermore, a game with no physical contact would be boring indeed.  I am not seeking it, but when it finds me, I am ready to engage, mass-to-mass, sweat upon sweat, legs entangled and then free.

Our final two games we played the same team.  They were lithe, fit and young; we are robust, able-bodied and mature.  If the audience were at a horse race, and placing their bets based solely on appearance, they would have picked the fountain of youth over the well of experience – hands down.  They all would have lost their money, and incidentally, so would have I! The winning was really a testament to our teams’ defensive tenacity.  We stuck to them, like a teenage boy dancing his first slow dance.  When we successfully defended, we were just that close – but the response was completely different, our opposition wasn’t interested in a slow dance; we got under their skin.  They fought to shed us like a cobweb on a nature walk. 

We were there to play soccer, have fun and to win, if it was in the cards.  They were not only there to win, I think they expected to win; and on the second game, possibly even to teach us a lesson.  It wasn’t to be.  They left both games congratulating us, and shaking their heads wondering what had just happened.  I know their dressing room chatter was not likely reflecting their complete awe at our prowess, but in complete dismay over how they could have let that happen.  Our dressing room was simply celebratory, complete with Jello shooters!  We knew they were a good team, and we had beat them (twice)– not because we are a better team, simply because we had played well in both ends of the field, for the majority of the game.  That’s all.  It was minute-by-minute, game-by-game. 

The differences between them and us may not be so obvious on the field, appearance aside; but after the game, as they were peeling off their sweaty sports bras and matching shorts and climbing into their lace undergarments and 'skinny' jeans, we were peeling off our ‘protective undergarments’ and cursing the intricacies of aging, while slipping into sandals and sweatpants.  We were already icing and lubricating our muscles and joints – and popping Advil, just to get ahead of the aches and pains. 

It is after my fourth game in 48 hours that the difference in our age becomes apparent.  All the players had to be over 35, but when it comes to sport, each year difference is not simply additive, it becomes more like ‘dog years’ (7 years for every year).  Regardless of how much physical fitness I do regularly: running, biking, weights, core and walking – I pretty much come out beaten and depleted.  It is in the recovery; my ability to rebound is sluggish to the point of not being able to ‘come off the wall’ at all.  Everyone around me has to adjust.  My full time job, taking care of home and family, is hampered; I let down those that I love and I feel so ‘out of body’ for the next day….or two.  Is it worth it?

I feel like I have played soccer my whole life, despite only recently returning to it after taking a ten to twelve year parenting break.  In the same moment I simultaneously think, ‘I can’t do it anymore’ and ‘I don’t want to quit’.  It is why I stayed away for so long when my kids were small, I knew it would take something from me that I wasn’t ready to give.  There is great benefit for me to play soccer, and there is also a cost.  After a tournament it sure feels like the cost is higher, even with the lingering high of winning the tournament.  But when I am on the field, it is the only place where I am truly in the moment; I neither think about nor care what is for dinner, who has homework, whose fault it was, or when I am going to find time to do all that I do; I am simply playing soccer with a team of ageless and beautifully spirited women with the aim of giving our best in that moment, that game.  Can I really give that up?

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Grass is Greener . . . On the Beach



Something inside gave out.  I think it was the carburetor.  I simply no longer had the capacity to get the mixture of fuel and air right, and was ‘running rich’ day after day; that is, flooding, letting off too much smoke, bogging down and wasting a lot of fuel.  Eventually, I ran out of fuel completely, depleted and without capacity for revival.

I called my Mom - yes, she would come.  I booked my retreat.  If you were to look up the word retreat in the dictionary, you would be both encouraged by your decision to vacate, and afraid by the connotation.  (Retreat: the act of withdrawing, as into safety or privacy; retirement; seclusion; OR an asylum, as for the insane)  Thankfully, with an empty tank, I didn’t look up the meaning, and simply withdrew. But it does beg the question why, as mothers, we often relinquish our due vacation time, and simply carry on – is it to ‘save face’ lest we be perceived as weak, or (gulp) insane?

For me, I felt a strong pull to get away.  Even my children had been trying to tell me something.  After losing my patience and yelling at Faven one day, I heard Laurèn go over to her and whisper, “Don’t worry Faven, Mom just needs a vacation.”  Not a week later, when I once again lost my temper with Faven, I came storming out of her bedroom and Yohannes gently took my hand and said, “Come on Mom, I think meditation will help calm you.” 

The emotional intensity of parenting a grief stricken, pre-pubescent, adopted, ‘transplanted’ child simply produced in me, an over-reactive, unkind, frustrated and emotional (peri-menopausal) being.  Day after day, I attempted to armor myself in kindness and love, and day after day, I crumbled into battle – feeling remorse, shame and sadness.  I needed to get back to the trenches, and so I left, providing only the promise that the Reserves were coming; Grama would turn up in a few days to help out.

I landed on the beach a few days later to the warm, shining sun – and miles of barren, soft, sand willing to be explored.  When I first set foot on the beach, it was dusk and there were numerous black blobs floating out in the water.  As I attempted to figure out what (sea creature) they were, one jumped up and surfed in with a cresting wave.  It was phenomenal, breath-taking.  I had never seen surfers live before.  They wait, they watch, they listen and then they gracefully erect themselves upon their boards and glide on a track felt only by them, and with a direction meant only for them.  They are magnificent to behold.  And then they pitch backwards over the crest of the wave and simply re-join the sea, or are swallowed up by the bubbling froth as it slithers towards the shore.

I was drawn back to the beach to watch the surfing every day.  It became a growing metaphor for my daily living.  Surfing appears to be the ultimate lesson in patience - waiting for the right moment to join the swell and glide effortlessly towards shore, in contrast to catching the wave at the wrong time, and getting tossed and tumbled like clothes in a washing machine.  My life, over several months had been exactly like that.  Many times I rode the wave effortlessly, and was a mother with patience, love and words to reassure.  But I was also regularly being caught and tumbled in some of the bigger and more repetitive waves.  I realized that I was simply being battered by the waves without realization that I could step out, watch, wait and listen – and rise above.  Moreover, as I watched the surfers, there were prolonged periods at points in the day, where the waves subsided and they simply rested.  For me, at home, I wasn’t pausing to rest and reflect – I was pausing, but it was to try and figure out what I had done wrong, and how I could do better.  It was my mind, my thoughts that were creating wave after wave:  frustration, disappointment, anger, self-reproach, sadness, and judgment.  No chance to ride the wave while spending so much time and energy swimming into the crashing waves. 

The beach break created so much space in my life; I was at first restless and unsure.  Nobody asked me to do anything; the silence was deafening.  But the coming and going of the tide was cathartic; its steady, rhythmic beat gave me a focal point.  It was relaxing and peaceful while being energizing and reassuring.  It created just the right environment to do some intentional internal work: to pause and reflect, to do yoga and meditate, to sit and write, to read, to challenge (my thoughts) and shift (my gaze), and to forgive myself the parenting infractions and misdemeanors. 

I came home feeling so much lighter.  All of my relationships were improved by my absence – and the relationships between those who depend on me were strengthened without me here.  Truth be told, my husband (though supportive and understanding) was not very pleased with my decision to leave so suddenly.  It was an extremely busy time at work, and I did not even stop to check in with him – I simply planned, and fled, to preserve myself.  But, in the end, with intention, it created a bridge for open and honest communication, something that we had abandoned for the higher good, of being attentive, caring and supportive parents. 

Moving forward, I will continue to honor my need to take time to myself (maybe before the carburetor conks out).  It is a rare opportunity to sit in quiet with my thoughts, dreams, and plans and to really celebrate all that I am, with the coming and going of the waves to remind me that nothing is permanent.



Saturday, February 12, 2011

A Pilgrim's Journey


To journey without being changed
is to be a nomad.
To change without journeying
is to be a chameleon.
To journey and to be transformed
by the journey
is to be a pilgrim.

Mark Nepo, “The Book of Awakening”, 2000

I am on a journey, in Southern California – without family or friend, responsibility, demand or task.  I came feeling depleted and drawn, hoping for renewal and perspective, and longing for peace and quiet.  There is a certain peace, a certain ‘way’ in this verse, by Mark Nepo, which draws me in. 

To be a pilgrim sounds so much better than to be a struggling soul fighting the current of ones’ life.  To be on a journey is to invite flow into your existence, no beginning and no end, a continuation of yesterday, a step into tomorrow.  That is how my life feels.  The journey has been within and without and I am changing because of it, so I must be a pilgrim.  I like that.  I really like it.  It’s as if it gives complete permission to simple let go, knowing that the journey – and those on it – are the teachers and every experience is okay, simply as it is.

To embrace my personal pilgrimage, I must change my relationship with mistakes. Mistakes are the inevitable path to learning, to changing, and to growing.  I am on a journey toward the sacred space within, to momentarily know grace, and then move on.

I am a pilgrim.



Friday, February 11, 2011

Organ Failure


May 5, 2010

Yesterday I was writing in my journal and I could not remember which direction the accent went on the ‘e’ in Laurèn’s name.  My pen stopped, hovered over the page, I questioned, was it accent grave or aigu? - my brain was a complete blank.  With a fifty percent chance of being right I willed my body to write; I wrote, I paused, I chose the wrong one!  The moment I wrote it on the page, my hand revealed to me what my brain could not.  I was stunned.  How could you give a name to your child, and then forget the intricacies of it?

There may be some argument about what the most important organ of the body is.  Some would say heart, some would say skin, and some would say brain.  Of course it is an integrated system, a team effort, certain aspects of living not possible without all parts. But, the brain is a fairly important organ for day-to-day functioning.  I don’t know about you, but I rely on mine more than ever before.  Scientists know that we will only use a small fraction of our brain in our lives.  If I am not even using it to full capacity, how can it start to fail me now? 

Last week, I had stopped for a coffee late in the morning.  I knew I had a certain amount of time before picking the girls up for lunch.  I sat down and relaxed, doing some reading and writing while watching the time. At 11:46 I started packing up; I had plenty of time, I thought.  However, when I got to the van, a full ten minutes had passed.  All I remember doing was putting my things into my bag – normally a thirty second job, and walking the eighty-five meters to the parking lot.  Even if I had crawled there, it would not have taken nine and a half minutes.  I was stumped, and more than a little worried.  That loss of time could not be classified as a micro-sleep – what had happened?

Our brains do take short breaks throughout the day, especially if we are tired, stressed, or over-committed – did you ever drive home and not remember the route you took?  Or walk to a room in the house, and forget why you went there in the first place? The other day I picked up the phone to call my mom, but I only stared at the numbers, as I could not even remember the starting point.  Another time I was calling a friend and realized when I ‘ran out of space’ that I was punching her phone number into the microwave!

Sleep deprivation can affect your brain in ways that are similar to being impaired[1].  According to researchers Fairclough and Graham, partial sleep deprivation (aka: motherhood, less than 4 hours of sleep/night) causes “noncritical alterations in primary task performance”, but alterations nonetheless.  Whereas full sleep deprivation (no sleep) results in behavior similar to that of an alcohol level of 0.07%; both the alcohol group and the sleep deprived group exhibited “a safety-critical decline in […] performance”.  I would be curious to know the effects of continual sleep-debt over time.  Another interesting fact of this particular study was that both sleep-deprived groups were aware of their performance impairment, while the alcohol group was not aware.  So maybe I should just start drinking, and then I won’t really even notice my momentary blips!

When I was younger and my brain was unencumbered by the mental, emotional and physical details of supreme motherhood, I accomplished things, I was on top of my game, and I was busy and successful.  I was (as it turns out) disillusioned! Even though I yearned for and imagined motherhood in those days – I was not a mother.  I simply had no idea of the many demands and challenges I would be facing on a regular basis. 

Today I stopped by the house of a stranger to pick up my cell phone, which I had lost a day or two previous.  I found the house, slowed down, pulled up to the curb, and then attempted to exit my vehicle while it was still in Drive!  Thankfully, I still had my seat belt on,  (I only got dragged a few feet before I realized there was a problem.)

Now there are so many ‘things’ in my house (think Thing One and Thing Two, and multiply) I can’t think.  I spend an inordinate amount of time looking for things.  I pick something up to put it away, then I get distracted and put it down; later I can’t find it.  There are occasions when I need to take a toy away from the kids; the problem comes when they want it back and I can’t remember where I put it.  They don’t believe me, who can blame them?

Before kids, I had systems: alphabetically organized spices, CD’s and Movies by genre, clothing by color, shoes IN the closet, and so on.  My systems were my strength.  Now my systems have all failed because kids are not systematic, they won’t be sorted and catalogued, alphabetized and stacked or sized and slotted.  They will simple not fall in line! They are not always capable of picking their things up, let alone placing them back in order, on the right hook, in the right slot in the fridge, on the right shoe shelf, or in the correct CD/DVD case. 

Am I going crazy? I admire women who can work AND raise their kids.  I feel completely under-qualified for the task.  However, lately I have been glancing at Help Wanted signs in windows – so far, I think I could make sandwiches for the Lunch Lady, pump gas at the local gas station, deliver for Meals on Wheels, and join one of the animal ‘visiting’ programs at the seniors homes (as the animal).

Well, onward ho! 


[1] Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society March 1999 vol. 41 no. 1 118-128

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Ethiopian Turned Canadian




Not long ago, in the midst of our day, right after asking the kids to shut off the TV, Faven wistfully said to me, “It would be great if we could stay home all day and watch TV!” 
Amazed (and somewhat annoyed), I said to her, “You would really want to do that!?”
“You bet!” was her exuberant reply.

I found myself deeply disturbed by this desire in my Ethiopian-born daughter.  What had I done to her, I painfully pondered?  How could she want to participate in this waste of time activity, when a world of opportunity was right before her, for the taking?

Later I realized that this same desire has been alive and well in all of our children.  Faven is not an exception, simply because she experienced a different way of life in her first ten years. And yet, it still bothered me.  I remember a story in Melissa Fay Greene’s book, There is No Me Without You, where Haregewoin Tefera (orphanage director and subject of the book) visits the United States, and comes to Melissa’s house.  Standing in her home, Haregewoin witnesses one of Melissa’s daughters, who had for a time been in her care at the orphanage in Addis Ababa, jumping from one chair to the next to the next.  Undoubtedly disenchanted by the behavior, she commented to Melissa that she had spoiled her.  I hear that same voice in my head.  Not necessarily the voice of Haregewoin, who also had a hand in caring for Faven, but the more lingering, indistinct voice of Ethiopia.  I take my responsibility for maintaining my kids Ethiopian-ness seriously by: celebrating Ethiopian holidays, presenting Ethiopian food, connecting my kids with Ethiopian born Canadians, pursuing opportunities for them to maintain and learn their first language, and allowing them to connect with their heritage in their own way.  Therefore the fact that both of my Ethiopian-born kids have become Canadian is heart breaking even amidst the reality that it is inevitable.  Ethiopia, simply, is far and away from where and how we are living – no matter how hard I try, I cannot change that simple fact.

In my struggle to harmonize aspects of life in Ethiopia with this contrary life in upper-middle-class Canada I simply have to accept the gifts and blessings of both places, and give and receive accordingly.  Ethiopia has shared so much more with me than its’ children.