Wheat Belly Sisters

Siblings

In his current incarnation as a paleo adherent and owner of two CrossFit gyms, my brother has transformed himself into a rock solid mass of rippling lean muscle and sinew. Once the wearer of “husky” size clothing, he now refers to his more humanly-proportioned former self (the one we, his older sisters, always cherished and adored) as “that guy” and “morbidly obese.” He has found his passion and calling. His clients gush about him. He changes people’s lives. They say things like, “Thank you for creating an environment where people push each other to be the best that they can be.”

So last summer all my siblings and I got together at my parents’ house in Arlington. It had been awhile since we had seen each other. My brother sized up his three dear sisters and he came up with an action plan.

The following week three identical amazon.com packages were delivered to three different households. There was no note, just this:

Wheat Belly

Now of course on an intellectual level we understood that our brother was expressing his concern for his sisters. That this was, undoubtedly, a ham-fisted expression of love. But…Ouch. Just…ouch.

A three-way email flame-fest of epic proportions ensued. My oldest sister wrote the first message. She reported coming home exhausted from a long day at work, being happily surprised to see a package addressed to her, opening it…and bursting into tears. My second sister was incensed. Me? I opened my package and read lying on the couch, eating a bowl of Cheetos, the book propped up on my big fat wheat belly. Knowing that our little brother had sent all three of us the same, bluntly-named book (did a caveman come up with that title?!) was a sister-bonding experience like no other.

Fairly early on in our email flame-athon, my sisters and I began addressing each other as “Wheat Belly” or even just: “Fatty.” When my oldest sister said that all she wanted to do to was to console herself by eating a bagel with her fellow Wheat Belly Sisters, it occurred to me that we really should and could do it. The Wheat Belly Harpy Weekend was born. (Oh, did I mention that my brother likes to refer to his sisters collectively as “The Harpies”?

The planning went a little something like this:

On Friday “we would have a delicious carb-laden dinner and then go to the movies…On Saturday, we would roll around on our wheat bellies by the pool after a huge breakfast of bagels, pancakes and waffles. Then another really starchy, carby dinner…”

The weekend was awesome. We spent the weekend in a hotel. We went to a spa. We filled our wheat bellies.

…And we made a special toast to our little brother, who had made it all happen:

Bread toast

I’m hitting the road again today. I’m going to be hanging with the harpies at our Second Annual Wheat Belly Weekend in NYC! Can’t wait to chow down on those fresh, piping hot H&H everything bagels smothered with cream cheese!

Thanks, brother! Love, Fatty

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Runaways

My triplet nephews jointly wrote this masterpiece of a runaway letter full of reassurances to soften the blow of their departure:

 

Gotta love those boys!

Grand Old Time

It was a busy spring with kids’ soccer games, recitals, and many other weekend obligations. It was hard to find the time to make the trip to Arlington to visit my parents. We finally got the chance to go this weekend.

Time becomes mercurial when I’m at my parents’ house. I simultaneously regress and age. Time reverses as I reassume my place as my parents’ third child. I confide in them my troubles and joys. I ask for their advice. I eat my mother’s Korean food. She takes care of things like sewing Panda’s arm back on:

At the same time, I senesce as I fall into the gentle rhythm  of my parents’ household. I shuffle around in a borrowed cardigan and slippers. I fall asleep sitting in an armchair, my legs covered with a throw, my mouth undoubtedly hanging open. I putter around town, chauffeuring my mom and dad on leisurely errands and outings. We take walks around the garden and the neighborhood.

There was much to admire in my parents’ garden this weekend. The hydrangea my mother-in-law gave to my mother when she came from England for a visit is blooming in that typically extravagant way hydrangeas do:

A new hydrangea my mother’s sister brought her:

My dad’s beloved cacti:

You’d be mistaken if you thought he grew these for their spectacular flowers. Nope. This cactus is for eating!

There are food crops all around the house, and I really do mean all around the house. In the back there’s a small orchard of fruit trees. There are also rows of raspberry canes, corn, squash, and more exotic vegetables. There’s a lettuce bed on the side of the house:

And in the front of the house…YES, at the front of the house, nestled in amongst the more pedestrian rhododendron and euonymus are onions, pepper plants, and wild sesame:

My mother informed me in a bemused tone of voice that people seemed to want to use flowers as their foundation plants. As a nod to the prevailing neighborhood culture, she put some geraniums in pots…right next to the pepper plants.

After admiring their garden, I accompanied my parents on their daily crawl around the ‘hood. I adjusted my stride to match my mother’s snail pace. It’s good to be forced to walk slowly every now and then. It gives you a chance to observe and appreciate all the ordinary yet wondrous things that surround us every day, but that we don’t usually have the time or inclination to notice.

We saw chipmunks:

We stopped and communed with a bunny that stood her ground as we slowly filed past.

“She’s always there,” my mom commented, “She must have a nest nearby.”

To my, “How cute!” my mother countered in Korean, “‘Cute’ joah ha ne!” (Translation: “Psht!”)

We discovered this sweet memorial in one garden, and surmised that there must be a pet fish or perhaps a gerbil buried under the stone in the center…

This little mushroom prompted all sorts of recollections…

My dad recounted how in Korea, his family would gather poisonous mushrooms that would grow on the thatched roof of their house. They would crush and mix them into rice that would be placed around the house as a natural and very effective insecticide. He recalled how his mother would go into the pine forest on summer days after the rain to pick baskets of delicious, edible mushrooms. In turn, I told him about an astonishing confession I heard from a professor leading an expedition I was on in Russia. He told us that he had been showing off his knowledge of mushrooms to another group of  students. One of them picked a mushroom and asked him if it was safe to eat. Not wanting to lose face, the professor assured him that it was, though he was not in fact at all sure. The student popped it into his mouth and for the rest of the outing, the professor was gripped in a rictus of fear, wondering if the student would keel over dead! (Fortunately, the mushroom was not poisonous)!

We saw this overgrown patch of weeds:

“It’s an eyesore, but I don’t say anything,” my dad noted mildly.

“A tiger could have babies in there,” my mom muttered darkly.

We finished circling the block and walked back into the house. I spotted a photo I hadn’t seen before. It’s so new it doesn’t yet have a frame, and has been propped against a painting on the mantel. It’s a photo of my beautiful and talented niece performing at Carnegie Hall after winning a piano competition.

As I was admiring the photo, my mother said wistfully, “When I saw the picture, the first thing I thought of was my parents. I wish they were still living, so that I could brag about my granddaughter to them. I wish they could see how beautiful she is, and hear her play the piano. Isn’t that silly? I still miss them so much.”

Every day is a gift of staggering, incalculable value. There is truly nothing more precious than time.

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Graduation Day

My son graduated from elementary school today. The occasion was marked by tears…when he discovered that the pants he had been planning to wear were about two sizes too small. There were high emotions…when a chest of drawers fell on his brother who was rifling through his own clothes trying to find a pair of pants to lend to his little brother. And traditions were upheld…when I dropped my son off for his last day of elementary school ten minutes after the bell rang. (Kids thrive on consistency, right)?!

Despite all the drama, there were truly sweet moments that I’ll hold on to:

Hope your weekend is wonderful!

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Home on the Range

I’m a lousy traveler. Two Sundays ago, as I was about to head out the door to go to St. Louis for the conference I was attending, I collapsed in a pathetic heap on my foyer floor. “I don’t want to go,” I whimpered. As usual, I had made terrible packing decisions. Colin brought down a smaller bag for me, helped me repack my things more sensibly, and sent me on my way with a few reassuring words. Flying makes me nervous. I get lost all the time. Hotels give me the heebie jeebies. I’m always petrified that bedbugs are infesting my suitcase. I don’t like being away from my family for extended periods of time.

Once I was in St. Louis, everything was fine. I got to see a little bit of the city before the conference got under way. I heard inspiring plenary speeches by former Secretary General of the U.N. Kofi Annan and Dr. Alfredo Quinones-Hinojosa, or “Dr. Q,” a neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins, who began his life in this country as an illegal immigrant tomato picker from Mexico. I attended sessions which gave me a renewed sense of purpose and mission. Most importantly, I rediscovered the heady, intoxicating, and hypnotic power of HGTV in my hotel room in the evenings. Although I’ve never tried it, I’m fairly certain that crack cocaine couldn’t possibly have anything on House Hunters International. I’m still having withdrawal symptoms.

On Friday as I headed back to the airport with my colleagues, the weather was looking ominous and I wasn’t at all confident that we were going to make it out of St. Louis. We managed to safely fly out before tornadoes shut down the airport. It was past midnight when I finally got home. What pure and unmitigated joy to peek into my children’s bedrooms and to see them fast asleep, and then to fall into my own bed for the first time in almost a week. For the first time in three weeks we’re all together, under one roof, and will be for another month and a half except for a few days here and there. Bliss.

I picked right up where I left off. It was a typical weekend. We went to the last soccer games of the season for the two youngest kids, a pool party, a graduation party, church…I did loads and loads of laundry. I nagged my kids to clean their rooms. I helped my daughter with her homework. But all of these ordinary events were burnished with a glow of comfort and familiarity. As I was driving back home from the airport late on Friday the song Home on the Range came into my head. This was one of four songs I would sing over and over to my oldest son on infinite loop back in the days when he was a sadistic baby who would torture his mother by refusing to ever sleep. It was a song I had grown tired of, having sung the same old tune night after night after night. This evening I sat on my deck and sang it again along with the sweet trill of the birds:

I’m a jerk.

My husband is accompanying our son to his Destination Imagination Global Finals in Knoxville, Tennessee this week. I’ve written before about my compulsion to chronicle everything in photographs. My sorrow that I can’t be the one to go with my son is matched only by my anxiety that there won’t be enough documentation of the event I’m missing. I pestered my husband by text all day to send photos. He finally obliged by emailing me this one:

…whereupon I immediately fired off the following:

Perhaps unsurprisingly, I didn’t get any more photo updates for a few hours, but he finally relented and sent me these:

And this:

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Global Finals in Tennessee

Destination Imagination is a non-profit program that promotes creativity and problem-solving skills in students from kindergarten through college level. This morning we said goodbye and good luck to our son, who is heading to Knoxville, Tennessee to compete with his Destination Imagination team at  Global Finals. There will be over 15,000 people from  1,200 teams from 45 states, 7 Canadian provinces, and 13 countries competing against each other in various challenges.

Our daughter was sad that she couldn’t go too!

Good luck, DI’Ablos!

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Happy Birthday to my one and only little brother Teddy!

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My Brother Teddy

Lessons from My Mama, Pt. 2

People above rules.

When I was a child I would occasionally ride the bus in D.C. with my mother. She would always try to sit as close to the driver as possible. As I nervously eyed the big sign that clearly told passengers not to talk to the driver while the bus was moving, my mother would launch her irresistible charm offensive. In no time at all, stone-faced, surly drivers would fall under her sway. They would be laughing and sharing personal anecdotes like a couple of long lost BFFs. By the end of every ride, I swear the drivers would be ready to give up a kidney for her.

Her disregard, and indeed disdain for rules that hinder human interaction was never so clear as when she came to visit me when my son Nicholas was a baby. He was going through a phase when he would torture me by never ever sleeping more than an hour at a time. I was thoroughly exhausted and was trying to rectify the situation by “Ferberizing” him. The “Ferber Method” is a technique developed by Dr. Richard Ferber to train an infant to learn how to self-soothe and put himself back to sleep. Basically, it involves a training period during which you let your baby cry for longer and longer periods of time. Ultimately, the method is supposed to result in a baby, who doesn’t cry and who sleeps soundly through the night. When my mother came to visit me and realized that I wasn’t leaping to rush to my baby’s side when he cried, she was outraged. She snorted when I tried to explain the rationale. Whenever Nicholas so much as peeped, she would pick him up and hand him to me and demand that I whip it out to nurse him. As I did her bidding, she would stand there watching me with her arms crossed, shaking her head and muttering under her breath in a seamless blend of Korean and the Universal Language of Disgust the whole time, “Ay-goh!…’Ferber’ joah ha neh!…Tchuh!”

My mother has always been guided only by her own rule: to love and care for people with extravagant generosity. She is as warm and effervescent to gas station attendants as she is to her own children and grandchildren. At the same time, the truth of the matter is that she is a formidable, if benevolent force of nature, who always gets her way. The miracle of it all is that she manages to completely subjugate people with a weirdly hypnotic and bewitching despotism, which  inspires only devotion and gratitude for her attentions.

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