How to train your dragon—er, dog—while keeping your cool.

Last Saturday I took my dog, Maude, to her first obedience class at Petco

Wait.  Did I really just say that out loud?  Because if so, I can now add it to the growing list of things I Swore I’d Never Say, such as:

  • I live in Kennewick.  Still.
  • I eat soy sausages for breakfast.
  • I want to get my hair cut like my mom’s.

But life plays funny tricks on us, and no trick is funnier than that of a canine-loathing young woman who, with the onset of age and children, morphs into a Devoted Dog Mom.

And so it was that last Saturday–a brilliant August morning ripe with sunshine and possibility–I did not enjoy a late summer jog followed by a late summer swim, nor did I water my flowers and pretty up my porch.  Rather, I used that bright morning to enter a dark world from which, I suspect, there may be no returning.  Because, see, you don’t step through those sliding doors at Petco with your dog on a leash and pretend to be a casual pet owner.  The minute you’ve buckled Lassie into the car and driven her to the store as if that’s a normal thing to do, your days as a casual pet owner are over—and with it, any semblance of coolness in which you’ve ever staked a claim.  (Although, let’s face it, I think that ship sailed with your first soy sausage.)

Casual pet owners pick up a bag of Kirtland dog food from Costco once a month; Devoted Dog Moms bring their darlings shopping with them–to a specialty pet store, natch–and would just as soon own a cat (!) than buy a supersized bag of no-name food from a warehouse club indifferent to the needs of their precious pup.  (I mean, like Costco knows anything about dogs.  Buying dog food there is like getting a manipedi from Walmart.)  (Which I have done.)  (But am not proud of.)

Casual pet owners do not sign up for twelve-week obedience training courses that require them to spend three months of Saturdays contending with Rocky the Evil Boxer and Opie the Whining Daschound, along with their respective owners.  It’s enlightening (read: disturbing) to find truth in the old saying about owners looking like their dogs, but true it seems to be.  Rocky and Opie are the canine clones of their masters (mistresses in this case): one dark and brooding, the other fair and flustered.  It’s uncanny, and I can’t pretend that I am the single exception to this rule. So the fact that Maude is a large furry dog with curly black hair confuses me somewhat.  We must look alike, but how?  Is our dog/owner similarity in the eyes, the nose?  The breath?  Wait…Maude has terrifically skinny legs and buttocks.  Could it be?  Oh please let our similarity lie in the skinny legs and buttocks!  Imagine what that would mean for me.

Back to last Saturday:  after Rocky, Opie, Maude, RockytheHuman, OpietheHuman, and I waited fifteen minutes for the dog trainer to show up (dog trainers have lives too, you know!) we were greeted by a boisterous woman who put us all in “the ring” with our pets.  The Ring was a corner of the store partitioned off with corrugated cardboard bearing the Petco logo and was, we soon learned, a place of privilege.  One did not reside in The Ring unless one was worthy—which is why Rocky and Opie had to be taken out of the ring, repeatedly, for their gross misbehavior.  Every twenty seconds or so, Rocky growled and lunged at Maude, with the apparent intent of tearing Maude’s head off.  Opie whinnied and cried every time Rocky tried to eat Maude, obviously scared even though she was not the one under attack.  (Opie must be very empathetic in nature.)  So out went Rocky for attacking and out went Opie for whining—along with their owners, who were also required to leave The Ring until order was established.  This scene played over and over, like an endless 8-track loop, for the duration of the class.  But despite the dire and repeated consequences, Evil and Whiny refused to behave.

But.  Guess whose dog never had to leave The Ring once?

Guess whose dog sat at her master’s (mistress’) side, looking cute and contented, throughout the entire class?

Guess whose dog received multiple bacon treats for being such a good, good girl and even earned the coveted title of sweetheart from the Boisterous Trainer?

My dog, that’s who.

And I don’t mean to brag and make you all jealous—really, people, that is not my intent here—but:

  • watching my dog just work The Ring at Petco was a fine way to spend a beautiful summer morning.

A sentiment which will now be added, in bulleted format, to the growing list of Things I Swore I’d Never Say.

 

 

First day of school blues. Not.

Exactly one year ago, I wrote about how difficult it was for me to watch my children start another year of school.  I bemoaned the bittersweet nostalgia of another year gone by, the harsh reality of babies-turning-toddlers-turning-children-turning-teenagers, all of which had happened, seemingly and suddenly, while I wasn’t looking.  Exactly one year ago, I waxed poetic about Father Time’s indifference to Mothers Everywhere; I cried over Days Gone By and ached to return my growing cherubs to their Splendor In The Grass.  Exactly one year ago, I took front-porch pictures of my three darlings with a lump in my throat and a knot in my heart.  It was a tender time for me.  Always has been.

Until now.

This year, something changed.  Whether this change was within or without, I cannot tell you.  Whether this change was good or bad, I cannot tell you.  All I can tell you is that this year, on August 26, it was not difficult for me to watch  my children start another year of school.

This year, my heart was not knotted and my throat was not lumped.

This year, when confronting the rapidly diminishing childhood of my offspring, I tasted none of the bitter, only the sweet.  (As in:  SA-WEET!  School’s back on!)

This year, I was relieved giddy ecstatic delirious pleased to send my wee ones off to another round of school.  I was happy and excited to see them go, and they were happy and excited to be going.  In short:  we were all happy and excited to get away from one other.

Don’t get me wrong, we had a great summer.  We traveled and swam and camped and got along with each other.  We were busy and tired, all in good measure.  But as the weeks wound down and the calendar cooled, none of us could finish summer fast enough.  We’d loved it, but we’d had enough of it.  And I, for one (don’t judge) had had enough of my children lying around the house all the hot and dry day long.

And so the first day of school was, for this mom, awesome.  No tears, no lumps, no knots.  No schmaltzy posts about a sepia-tinted yesteryear and how it all-went-by-so-fast.  No regret as I closed the front door, only a relish in the silence that soothed me like a cool washcloth after a long day:  soft and fresh and long overdue.  I took a deep breath, thought about what fine children I’d been blessed with, and then dove into the business of the day.  No looking back, only looking forward.  (Which, by the way, I’ve found is much easier on my neck.)

Take heart, young moms.  It won’t always be as hard to see your children go as it was for you today.  They get older, and smarter, and stronger, and easing them out into the world will eventually feel as natural as shielding them from it does now.  You will both grow into it, promise.  Watching them grow up gets, bit by bit, a little more gratifying and a little less heartbreaking.  It all works out.

If you’re like me, you’ll start to feel kinda like a (star) quarterback who’s thrown each of your kids a long, beautiful pass–and now it’s up to them to catch it and run.  Maybe feeling that way means I’m heartless, maybe it means I’m healthy.  Either way, it means I’m happy.

And these good people seem happy too:

Ethan:  Fourth grade, new Nikes (first name brand he’s ever requested–and so it begins), and actually a very happy boy but refuses to smile in pictures.

Megan:  Eighth grade, fabulous hair, and most excited about being an Office Aid this year because–wahoo!–it gets her out of P.E. (which tends to interfere with the fabulous hair.)

Rachael:  Tenth grade, fabulous smile, and most excited about getting her license in five short months.  Another milestone that should taste bittersweet, but instead has me salivating with the prospect of terminating my endless chauffeuring duties.  Bring it on, baby!  Mama’s gettin’ her groove back.

 

Three cheers for Starting Over.

My eyes flew open at 4:30 this morning with a single, panicked thought.  Cold water down my neck could not have woken me more rudely than this particular thought did on this particular morning.  What insight, you may ask, was vital enough to push my warm and comfy subconscious into a cold and prickly consciousness?  Some kind of epiphany, or even just a great idea?  No.  It was simply the sudden, jarring realization—the kind that comes only in the bald of dawn—that, as a grown person whose life is half over, I never finish anything.

I know.  It’s not like I woke up with the guilt of a murderer or the regret of an adulteress.  And it’s not like I’ve never bemoaned this fact before; what woman doesn’t feel like she can’t finish anything?  But for me, this morning and for some reason, the familiar resignation became a frightening revelation, and it was damning.  Not in the curse-word sense, but in the literal sense; I felt permanently condemned—to my own lack of discipline, my own mediocrity.  I felt guilty.  Look at all the good things life had given me.  Why couldn’t I make more of them?

I lay slumped in bed with these thoughts for far too long, then finally heaved myself up to pull on capris and a tee for the gym.  I stumbled to my desk to get my workout sheets (I’m such a nerd, I actually bring them to the gym) and found them missing.  (Where could they have gone?  Do you see what I’m talking about?)  Irritated, I pulled up the website where said workouts were stored so I could print a new sheet, only to find that the site had been changed, and my old workout program–the one I’d zealously committed to completing in twelve weeks—had been replaced with a new, unfamiliar one.  I’d spent hours poring over the old workout regime, learning the correct form for each exercise and carefully putting together a routine that would work for me, and now I’d have to start all over since apparently I’d lost the only hard copies I’d made.  I had no time to figure out any of this at 5 am, so I headed to the gym and did the best I could from memory, all the while thinking, Here I am–barely started a new exercise program and already quitting it.  I proceeded to lift my piddly little weights, grunting out of disgust as much as effort.  The morning’s first, brutal thought hung heavy in the rank gym air:  I never finish anything.

running-track-2-267439-m

Stretching afterward, I caught sight of myself (okay, stared at myself) in the mirrored gym walls.  All I could think was, I should really start dieting again.  This notion had barely formed in my head when it was toppled by another one:  Why start?  You’ll just quit in two weeks.  Such self-defeating talk was, in fact, based on a long history of starting and quitting diets within two weeks.  Why?  Because I never finish anything.

Driving home, the lovely summer morning was wasted on me.  I could only think darkly of the family meeting I’d called the night before to discuss the “Summer Schedule” I’d written up for the kids.  It included things like chores, scripture study, cooking dinner, and extensive reading.  (Of course I’d penciled in some Free Time each day, fun mom that I am.)  I’d typed the whole thing up in what I felt certain was an attractive and seductive format.  As I passed out our Summer Schedule to each family member, even my husband couldn’t repress a grin.

“This looks great, Jen.  But what will the schedule be for Week Two?”  Meaning, of course, that we’d only keep to this schedule for Week One of summer.  I put him in his place (and set a good example for my children) with a composed reply.

“Shut up.”

And though I drug my kids through a whole rigmarole of what our “Summer Expectations” would be (which were listed in fine print beneath the Summer Schedule), I knew, of course, that my husband was right.  Vacations and sports camps and grandma’s house would, within a week, sabotage my great expectations.  At one point during my lecture, I saw my twelve-year old daughter lean over and whisper something to my nine-year old son, upon which they both giggled.

“What did you say to him?” I asked her.

“Well,”  (smirk)  “He was bummed about all the chores he was gonna have to do, but I told him not to worry—he would only have to do them for the first week!” With this, the entire family burst into laughter—except me.  Because with this, I realized that I haven’t been fooling anybody, all these years.  Even my kids knew it:  I never finish anything.

Pulling into the driveway and walking through the front door, my mind then leapt to my ill-fated e-book, that glorious fantasy of yestermonth.  I had it eighty-percent completed as of March, and then we got busy with Spring Break and leaving town and having company in town and church stuff every weekend and leaving town again and more company in town and and more church stuff and Memorial Day and home renovations and opening the pool and cleaning, cleaning, cleaning the house before and after all those visitors and trips and piano recitals and violin recitals and friends for dinner and karate class and scouts and errands, errands, and more errands and in short:  I never finished it.  Because I never finish anything.

And that aborted effort led my mind to another one:  I’ve been trying, for years, to become a more consistent, capable blogger.  But as soon as I get on a roll, Life comes crashing down and I put off posting and I lose my audience and I have to start all over to get them back again.  Because I never finish anything.

But I do start over.  I start over a lot.

Start over.  It’s what I do best.  Finishing?  Not so much.

And here is something I just realized, just now, just today, when I began writing this post:  starting over is half of finally finishing.  The exciting half?  Sure.  The easy half?  You bet.  But it is half.  It’s the Starting Over that makes it possible, one day, to Finally Finish.  If I don’t start over, finishing becomes a statistical impossibility.  (I mean, it would if I kept statistics on my failed diets and unsuccessful chore charts.  But some things are just too painful to see in print.)

start track

So unlike the jolt of reproach that woke me this morning, here’s a new thought that’s getting me through my day:  Whenever I fail to finish something, I can always just start over.  ‘Cause see, if I keep starting over—again and again and again—I will, eventually, narrow the gap between Starting Over and Never Finishing.  And one day, I’ll have started over so many times that it will become the way of the Middle, not just the Beginning.  What used to be How-I-Start will evolve into What-I-Do.  And I’ll forget to not finish.  Because one day, the Start Overs will swallow up the Never Finishes.

The trick, I think, for today and every day, is to feed the fuel of Starting Over and starve the fumes of Never Finishing.  Both will exist, but we can choose which one we dump our energies into.  Because though never finishing is not good, I can think of something worse:  never starting.