Favorites of 2020

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Things I wore:

Things I used:

  • This serum.

  • This makeup remover.

  • An unhealthy amount of social media. (Is that a favorite? Idk. It stays.)

  • This nail polish.

  • Late entry since it was a Christmas gift, but loving my Chemex.

Things I ate:

Things for the kids:

Things I read:

  • This novel about…everything.

  • This book of essays.

  • This novel about faith, marriage, friendship, and life.

  • This anthem for women everywhere.

  • Another anthem because we sure needed it this year.

  • This love letter of a memoir.

  • Could have underlined everything in this one.

Things I watched:

  • This series forever, please.

  • Also this one.

  • Could watch this with the sound off just for the sets and the clothes.

  • This documentary about my forever favorite.

Things I wrote:

(Note: all bookshop.org links are affiliate links. All others are just things I love and think you will, too.)

2020: A Summary

In January, I planned for February. Planned for three birthdays, two birthday parties, and one big trip, the biggest we’d ever taken as a family. In the middle of all that, I turned 33. I remember feeling exhausted then, ready for something—anything—to change.

At the tail end of January, or maybe it was very early February, I remember listening to The Daily and hearing for the first time about this disease over in China. It was my first introduction to COVID (and to Donald G. McNeil, Jr., who I had no idea would become one of my favorite people of the year). He talked about lockdowns and overloaded hospitals. It sounded awful. Thank goodness we don’t need to worry about that here, I remember thinking, as I pulled into the parking lot of Target, hopping out of my car without a thought to walking into a store with a bunch of people without masks.

In February we celebrated those birthdays. I held back-to-back birthday parties for the first time: family on Saturday, friends on Sunday. It felt both crazy and genius. One enormous clean up of the house, one enormous mess, and then one enormous effort to put it all back together. A couple weeks later, we officially celebrated those birthdays in Disneyworld, making our way through Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom and LEGOland. We arrived with two five-year-olds and a three-year-old and returned with six-year-olds and a four-year-old. One six-year-old became a princess while we were there. The oldest hasn’t stopped talking about LEGOland since.

On February 25th, I talked about “leaning into the ordinary” for Lent. Just. Bless all of my heart.

In March, I was preparing for a writing conference in April. I was also considering a part-time job. Something I could do from home, in the few hours a week the kids were at school.

Bless all of my whole entire heart again.

First, the writing conference was postponed until 2021. Which seemed a bit extreme, but okay. Then the week of March 9th got weird. Super weird. It felt like there was a storm brewing but we didn’t know if it would be a sunshower or a category 5 hurricane. 

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I happened to be at school on March 12th, the last day the kids were in school: Spring Break started the next day. It was a Thursday, because I was there every week on Thursdays. I’d become friendly with many of the teachers who came in and out of the workroom where I volunteered. A couple of teachers were traveling to Mexico and I remember thinking that leaving the country sounded like a terrible idea. Mostly I had a gut-level feeling in the pit of my stomach, a feeling that would be confirmed by our school districts in the coming weeks: this would be the last day any of us would be in this building for the rest of the school year.

A leprechaun was supposed to visit their classroom after Spring Break. Caden and Brooklyn’s Kindergarten teacher warned them the leprechaun caused mischief: chairs turned over, books pulled off the bookshelf. Caden decided, when they didn’t return to school, that the leprechaun chose to terrorize our house instead. “The leprechaun did it!” he would say whenever something was off: whether that was a misplaced LEGO creation or a sibling who’d left toothpaste smeared across the sink.

Maybe 2020 was the leprechaun’s fault.

In March, even though I’d been doing grocery pick-up for years, I found myself back inside the grocery store, because everyone else discovered grocery pick-up, too. We wiped those groceries down with a bleach solution. The week of spring break held new updates every day, from business closures to Spring Break being extended a week to stay at home orders. I began documenting our days because it all felt surreal. I woke up and then remembered all over again, in a wave of emotion, what this new life was.

Also, on that extended spring break, Brooklyn broke both of her wrists. Because of course.

In April, I became pretty good at schooling the kids. They did a few virtual activities with their teacher each day. I covered our entire dining room table with paper and set out a bin of crayons while they sat and listened to math and reading lessons. I printed out worksheets and they drew pictures and wrote sight words and math problems across the paper. Nolan rolled along with everything and became an honorary member of their Kindergarten class, completing the last three months of the virtual Kindergarten curriculum alongside his brother and sister.

I enforced a silent reading time. We had the afternoons to play. I ordered the entire Anne of Green Gables boxed set and hunkered down to read. I made dalgona coffee.

We entered the period of the stay-at-home order. We explained to the kids that despite playing with their neighborhood friends over Spring Break, we wouldn’t be doing that anymore. It was just the five of us. Here, at home. Even the parks were closed. We had to try the best we could to be with each other.

It was Easter and it snowed. Even though we’d been rid of snow for a solid six weeks by that point. I bought the kids Easter pajamas instead of fancy clothes. I picked up brunch from a local restaurant and ended up sitting in line for over an hour because no one had figured out how to do this efficiently yet.

In April, we watched Tiger King for some reason. And Carole Baskin became a household name.

In May I hit a second wave of grief. I grieved our lost school year. I grieved the loss of t-ball, what would have been Nolan’s very first year. I grieved the loss of their dance recital. I grieved the loss of what is usually one of the absolute craziest months of the year. I grieved that we weren’t getting McDonald’s between dress rehearsals and t-ball games. I grieved the loss of time without kids. I grieved that we were entering another season without an end in sight. 

It was Mother’s Day and despite having absolutely gorgeous weather for days it was frigid that day. I was in a terrible mood all day long. All I wanted to do was explore a nearby park outside and we couldn’t even do that. Everything was awful.

We started biking every single afternoon. The kids kind of hated it but I needed it. I prepared for summer despite feeling like we’d already lived through summer, what with the three months the kids had already spent at home.

At the end of May, a black man was lynched in our city and the world was turned upside down again. The whole world was literally and figuratively on fire. We visited the memorial and it felt like we walked on hallowed ground. George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor; these names became like liturgies.

In June we began “summer school”. Every morning we did an activity to learn about a woman in history (Amelia Earhardt. Bessie Coleman. Jane Goodall.) and had silent reading and iPad time. We went on nature walks and tested what items floated or sunk in water and every morning around 9:00, we began with a bike ride around the neighborhood.

They played at home. Together. Mostly outside. They splashed in the pool and ran around the backyard and every day bled into the next.

In July we watched Hamilton. Several times. And the soundtrack has yet to stop playing in our house. Only interrupted by Folklore, which we also listened to on repeat because Taylor Swift made it her mission to try to save 2020.

We went to Duluth for the day. We stayed in basically the same spot the whole day as the kids collected rocks and swam in the water (sans swimsuits because I’ve literally never been to Duluth before where it’s warm enough to actually swim) and threw rocks in the water for hours on end.

I painted Nolan’s room and turned it into the “rainbow room” he requested. It was good to have a project.

Also, they played at home. Together. Mostly outside. They splashed in the pool and ran around the backyard and every day bled into the next.

In August we waited to see what the school year would bring. In those days, if two or more parents gathered, they talked of nothing but school. There was a constant on-edge, anxious feeling in my stomach. Every school option felt terrible. I hit a wall because it was the 684th day of summer. 

Still, they played at home. Together. Mostly outside. They splashed in the pool and ran around the backyard and every day bled into the next.

In September, we prepared to go back to school. Three mornings a week for Nolan, hybrid for Caden and Brooklyn (three days at home, two in school). The start of school was delayed by one week because that’s how things rolled this year. I brought them each to the store individually to pick out school supplies: the first time they’d set foot in a store since before the pandemic. I tried to figure out what it would look like to do things like “be places at specific times” again. I remained in disbelief that they would actually go to school for real. 

But they did. I had 2.75 hours to myself every Friday morning and it was the longest stretch of time I had to myself since March 12th.

In October, we celebrated our 10-year anniversary. And if the traditional 10-year anniversary gift is to eat take-out at home wearing comfy pants, then we nailed it.

Otherwise, we fell into a routine of sorts. Every day was different. On Mondays, Nolan went to preschool and Caden and Brooklyn had a virtual morning meeting. On Tuesdays, Caden and Brooklyn were distance learning. On Wednesdays, Nolan went to preschool and Caden and Brooklyn were distance learning. On Thursdays, Caden and Brooklyn went to school. On Fridays, everyone went to school.

My head spun just to type that. Each day I woke up and my first thought was to remind myself what day it was. I would literally jolt awake and remind myself what awaited us that day.

In October, we bought pumpkins. We jumped in piles of leaves. And we trick-or-treated as Alexander Hamilton, Eliza Hamilton, and Aaron Burr because Hamilton mania had yet to subside around these parts.

In November we voted. We held our breath. We got almost nothing done of substance that first week of November, besides eating carbs and drinking coffee and refreshing social media more times than was healthy. We ended that week by letting Caden and Brooklyn stay up late so they could watch a black woman speak, elected to the second-highest office in the land.

We stumbled to find things we were thankful for. Especially as the kids entered the dreaded phase of distance learning. We (*ahem* I) drew up schedules. We re-arranged schedules for the 48th time this year. We sat in front of screens. Lots of sitting in front of lots of screens. We blessed the teachers from homeroom to music to dance as they did all they could to engage the smallest of students.

In December, we went through the motions. We woke up every day and checked that drawn-up schedule to make it to Google Meets on time. We checked over work. We had all the Christmas presents delivered and seemed to have grocery pick-ups every other day. 

But in December, we also put up Christmas decorations and it felt like hope. We may have gone overboard on the gifts this year but wrapping those up felt like hope, too. We began to administer vaccines and that felt so hopeful our collective hearts might burst. And we looked forward to 2021. Though we knew the calendar flipping over wouldn’t magically change everything, still, we pinned our hopes on that number, that year. Knowing, hoping, feeling in our bones that it would be sooner, rather than later, that we could emerge into a new and better normal.



We Have A Lot of Stuff Going On Here

“Mommy, I have a lot of stuff going on here,” my daughter complains, staring at the screen of her iPad during distance learning, a scene that’s become all too familiar in our house. Remnants from a full morning of schooling—papers, crayons, snack wrappers, a whiteboard—are scattered across her desk: a very literal visual of a lot of stuff going on over here. I wander over and watch as she stumbles over some of the longer words in an assignment’s written instructions.

I look at her screen, at the bevy of assignments related to sight words and skip counting and something called fact families. I swipe down on the screen to view the directions.

“You can listen to the instructions,” I tell her. The first-grade teachers have prepared for the exact situation, of their still-young readers being overwhelmed by large blocks of text, “Remember? Press play right here. It will tell you exactly what to do next.”

I tiptoe away so I don’t interrupt her brother’s voice recording. I sit down at my own computer screen in the kitchen, far enough away I can’t see them, but close enough to be interrupted if they need me, which is approximately every 2.65 minutes. I look at my own screen with six tabs too many open and find similar words bouncing around my own brain.

What was I doing?
Where was I?
I’ve got a lot of stuff going on here.

Unlike my daughter, I don’t have an older, wiser person nearby to help me figure it all out. There’s no one around to check that I’ve done my work, for me to interrupt every couple of minutes to ask what I need to do next. Also, I’m 33 years old. In the language of the millennial memes I see around me, it’s my job to get this adulting done on my own.

But adulting is frequently the actual last thing I want to do. At my worst, when I’m feeling anxious and lazy and anything but capable, this devolves into a social media doomscroll on my phone. Or I wander around, half-completing tasks, as I wait out the minute or two or five I have before the inevitable interruption that is distance learning with three kids.

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Read more about “all the stuff we have going on here” over on Twin Cities Mom Collective.

Goodbye Daniel Tiger

"No. I hate Daniel Tiger,” my six-year-old son mumbled in protest to his twin sister’s screen time selection.

“No you don’t!” I insisted to him in surprise.

“Yes I do,” he muttered back.

I have a soft spot for Daniel Tiger. It’s one of the kid’s shows I not only tolerate but enjoy. I’ve found myself significantly invested in the character’s storylines. I’ve come up with my own theories about the characters. (FYI Katerina Kittycat and Prince Wednesday are totally hooking up in the future.) And, when you can get beyond the unbelievable and compulsive patience of Mom Tiger, you discover there are lessons to be found as a parent, as well. 

There’s also the fact that Daniel Tiger was the first show the twins ever cared to watch consistently, when they were smaller, when I was desperate for just a few moments to myself. 

Caden and Brooklyn were 15 months old when I discovered I was pregnant again. Morning sickness never comes for me, but enormous and all-consuming amounts of fatigue do. Despite almost never using the TV before, I began to force it on them. I tried in vain to get them to watch something—anything—so I could lay on our microfiber couch and pretend to parent.

They weren’t interested. All my “no screentime before two” zeal seemed to have backfired.

Within a few months of expecting our third baby in two years, we were also moving. And my husband worked out-of-state. He didn’t live with us for any stretch longer than four days for four straight months, with our move planted firmly in the middle of that timeline. I needed backup any way I could get it.

I don’t remember how I came across Daniel Tiger, but I do remember realizing the twins were paying attention to it. Their usually active bodies stilled, their eyes glowed. My breath, though not all at one, began to release. First they were taken in by the songs, then drawn into the storyline for minutes at a time. Little by little, their interest grew. This is when they learned to embrace Daniel Tiger, half an episode at a time that fall, while my belly grew with their sibling and I learned to pack up our apartment in twelve-minute spurts.

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Read the rest of this piece over on Coffee+Crumbs.

Life Lately

Did you remember that we had an election earlier this month? Because we had an election earlier THIS actual calendar month. Even though it still feels as though we’re in year 4 of the 2016 election AND also in day 485 of March 2020 AND simultaneously like the 2020 election was several months ago. But, * checks calendar *, nope. We actually had an election a mere four weeks ago.

This month’s chaos was, in a way, reminiscent of March. The kids, as stipulated by the district, are moving to full-time distance learning. So are their dance classes. They had a week off for Thanksgiving to give the teachers time to prepare. I found myself taking deep breaths during the last Friday morning the kids were all in school, which I think was my body’s reaction to the last time my kids went on a week-long break (and didn’t return to their school buildings for six whole months).

Schedule number 43 of the year but also make it Christmas.

Schedule number 43 of the year but also make it Christmas.

Continuing with those deep breaths.

I won’t pretend that everything is fine because it’s not. As I look down the barrel of this week I see a schedule littered with Google Meets to manage. Tyson and I sat down this weekend to map out and overhaul our schedule which will probably happen at least once more before the year ends.

I don’t want to sugarcoat anything or tie this up with a bow. And yet. We decorated for Christmas this weekend and there’s something about those Christmas tree lights in the background. We might (read: will for sure, totally, definitely) have fights with three kids on three Google meets at the same time, or when two have Google Meets and the third doesn’t, or over using our tablets in the bathroom, or over staying on task during a 2:00 pm call when usually when they’re at home 2:00 = TV time. This is true. But the twinkle lights help. They’re the definition of hopeful. A tradition, a constant, in the midst of so much that’s not. And a reminder that 2021 is on the horizon which should be (read: better be, must be, has to be) so much better than the year we’ve all just lived through.

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Take Action

With Christmas coming, I’d love to urge you to shop local this year. Fellow Minnesotans, here is the ultimate guide to Twin Cities businesses. I’ll urge everyone to give up Amazon and replace it with Bookshop.org (heads up: affiliate link!). And wherever you are, I recommend gifting gift cards to local restaurants and buying beer and spirits made by local breweries and distilleries—these beloved businesses need all the help we can give them right now.

Also: Stay home. Please. As much as you possibly can. We’ve been urged by our Governor here in MN to stay home, to not have gatherings, to order take-out to support bars and restaurants who are banned from serving dine-in customers. It’s not quite as expansive as the shutdown we had in the spring, but it’s up there.

A vaccine (or several) seem to be so close; that light at the end of the tunnel feels like it’s just almost within our grasp. If we can buckle down these next few months, in the snow and the cold and the distance learning, there’s a chance life will return to ”normal” sooner rather than later. Stay safe.

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Around the Internet

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Eating

  • Tyson’s company is based in Champaign, IL, a town where there’s astonishingly little to do, besides eat at the equally astonishing amount of really good restaurants. I’ve had actual dreams about this roasted red pepper and gouda soup from a cafe not far from his office. I decided to re-create it by following this recipe and while it was different from the one I remember, it was still SO GOOD. Serve with fresh bread, obviously.

  • These fish fingers disappear in my house every time. Serve with a bag of frozen Alexia seasoned waffle fries because #balance.

  • Since I won’t be posting another of these round-ups until after the holidays, I feel like it’s my duty to point you to some holiday baking goodness. These cranberry bars, my favorite gingersnap recipe, more gingerbread if you prefer yours in cake form, chocolate sugar cookies to switch things up, and these which you hardly need a recipe for but the kids can practically make on their own and they’re wildly addictive.

  • Okay and let’s also include some party food, which you can bet I will make even if we’re only a party of five this year: the only (and easiest) meatball recipe you need, these stuffed mushrooms could basically be my last meal, bacon-wrapped dates and please include the goat cheese, and do yourself a favor and bake up some brie (top with jam, always).

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Fun Things

  • This tea is everything. I’m not usually a fan of adding cream to tea but I add a little sugar and the smallest splash of heavy cream and it feels absolutely decadent. Honestly, I like to just hold it in a heavy mug to warm my hands and breathe in the vanilla scent which is divine. At under $6 it’s the best little luxury right now.

  • This is a pretty big Fun Thing, but: our 10-year wedding anniversary was in early October. While we thought we’d be celebrating with a trip, that’s been put on hold for obvious reasons. Instead, I discovered that the traditional 10-year anniversary gift = diamonds. While I didn’t actually want new diamonds, I did get my wedding ring re-set. I’ve never had a wedding band, only an engagement ring (raise your hand if you were also a poor college student baby when you got engaged), so I had my original diamond re-set as a solitaire and the smaller diamonds that surrounded it in my original setting used in the wedding band, both in hammered yellow gold. I LOVE it so much. (MN friends: check out Sarah Commers Jewelry. She was so easy to work with and brought my vision to life!)

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Leaving you with those twinkle lights I mentioned earlier. I was skeptical, but they really do make all the difference right now.

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