Being Thankful

Thanksgiving has come and gone.  I love opportunities to have lots of good food.  I also love opportunities to reflect, and being thankful is something I have consciously been trying to remember.  It is so easy to get caught up in life and the busyness of each day and school, work, activities, obligations.  But to actually pause, be in the moment, and appreciate those we love is truly a gift.

We have two Thanksgivings- one at each of our parents’ houses.  It is the return of how each of us grew up.  Speaking for myself it is such a throwback.  Except Tracy doesn’t cry over having to eat turkey- she makes her own steak on the grill.  The kids love it too.

We are lucky and blessed with lots of good people in our lives, good jobs and our health.  I hope I remember this each day.  Every day is a day to be thankful.

Thankful for the best boys

The 7th Annual O’Brien Family Italian Dinner

This past weekend was the 7th Annual O’Brien Family Italian Dinner.  This is a favorite event and in a way our Thanksgiving with friends that falls on the second Saturday of November each year. (an exception was made the year of our unexpected kitchen remodel)

We make a lot of food and get a keg.  We ask only that everyone enjoy themselves and catch up.  Last year we were finally able properly thank those who came (and who come each year). Here is the letter we sent:

Each of the last five years we have intended to send a letter thanking each of you for coming to our dinner.  This year without the distraction of graduate school or very small children, we have the luxury of time to properly express our gratitude for your friendship.

We believe that there are moments and events in life when the universe shifts and there is life before and life after.  For us when Ed passed away it was one of those defining moments.  Perhaps it was the fact that we had just become parents or that Pumpkin Shoot was just the week before, or maybe it was that Jim lived so close at the time that we were together more or maybe it just was the realization that it could have been any number of people in our lives taken from us.  As we painfully went thought the next week we said to each other, more than once, that we needed to make seeing our friends, being there for our friends and appreciating our friends, a priority.

The first dinner was small.  It was a way to come together and be together during what we expected to be a tough time.  This dinner has grown tremendously and reunites lots of people each year.  And each year there are new faces!  And now more children! It has become our way of saying thanks to all the special people in our lives.  It is our once a year to gather everyone and appreciate the gift that each of you is in our lives.  We realize how blessed we are to have so many amazing friends.  Thank you.

While we can’t promise that Oktoberfest will be on tap every year, we do promise to continue with this tradition and watch it grow.

This year was smaller than other years, and that was fine.  We spent time thinking of those who have been there in the past and have moved to other parts of the country.  It was very nice.  It was a way of realizing all that has happened to all of us and how extraordinary the gift of friendship is in our lives.

Brendan’s Conference AKA The Realization Your Child is You

In Brendan’s Montessori school parent conferences happen in a multi-step unique way.  First a pre-conference questionnaire is sent home to parents.  This forces us to sit down and answer some questions that require thought: 3 words to describe Brendan, what are our goals for him this school year, what are our goals for him long term, what changes have we seen since the start of the school year (social-emotional, academic, etc).  It is tougher than you would think!  For the record “socially-gifted” is one word.

Next a school progress report comes home, about a day or two before our conference.  There is a list of skills and boxes for “Exhibits Strength”, “Age Appropriate” and “Needs Development.”  Everything for Bren was “Age Appropriate.”  With a few exceptions: Verbal Skills, Participates in Group Activities, Aware of Others, Is a Leader/Role Model, Participates in Singing/Music.  They were all “Exhibits Strength.”  This is where you get an idea of how the conference is going to go.  Let me break it down how I read it:

Verbal Skills- he likes to talk. A LOT. Shocked.

Participates in Group Activities- “I’ll get the kids in the group to do what I want.”

Aware of Others- who can I play and how can I get them to do what I want?

Is a Leader/Role Model- in a word- dictator

Participates in Singing/Music- My drama queen?

Then I read the summary page. “Brendan is creative in his approach to learning and life.”  In three paragraphs his teachers commented on his leadership skills, his willingness to help other children even without being asked, his organization skills (color coded a work for the class) and his way  of making things more efficient (the snack table).  And in his spare time he is doing language and math work too.  “Very social and enjoys conversations” came up too.

It is not surprising in a Montessori classroom where he has been for three years that the teachers would know him so well.  This is the gift of time in the same space with the same record keepers learning and observing each child.  But when you see it on paper, it is striking.

And there is the stepping back moment and realization that maybe he is more like me than I realized.  Systems? Organization? Leadership? Color-coding?

The day of the conference parents are invited into the classroom to observe the classroom for 30 minutes.  You get to see the full picture of what is going on and see you child at work. (and as with this age, sometimes they “perform” other times not so much)  Then you meet with the teacher and talk about the observation, report and any questions.

When we got to the classroom Brendan was reading his little books of words!  Something he rarely will do for us at home.  It lasted about 10 minutes.  Then he chose another work- polishing and eating an apple.  Seriously.  Then on to pruning a plant.  My God this kid can play us.

The conference with his teacher was full of laughter.  Her Brendan stories were as funny as ours.  For example, he has a favorite 3 year old he helps.  She loves puzzles (he is not such a fan).  She has one in particular she takes out a lot but can’t quite finish.  He manages to swoop in just as she gets frustrated to help her and will just say, “this one again?”  He starts a sing along or “reads’ when the littlest kids are getting ready to go home.  Nice to hear he gets to be the “big brother” someplace in his life.  And we can see the change in him and his level of being responsible and confident.

We left there shaking our heads at this extraordinary little leader who is becoming a big kid full of empathy.

When did that happen?