Monday, October 31, 2011

Feed Me! Or, a Father Ponders His Fathering.

What raising small children feels like at the time.
(photo credit Maxwell Landbeck) .

What we remember raising small children being like.


My heart aches with longing and worry for the happiness and success of each of my children. The day before Stewart left for the Missionary Training Center, I tried explaining the mild trepidation I felt. He was about to pass completely out of my control, away from any continuing influence I might exert on him.

I know, intellectually, that he had really passed out from my control already. Years ago, if truth be told. He is a man grown, making his own decisions. Most of my children are really that old now, that grown. Legally, socially, and morally. The fact that I still pay some of their bills, and they do me the courtesy of including me in a dwindling number of their decisions prolongs the illusion that I have much to do with their actual living.

But in that moment with my son, I felt a great swell of melancholy, considering that my opportunity to instruct, inspire, lead, and direct was ending. I was full of the worry that perhaps I hadn't done enough. What if I taught the wrong thing? What if *by* helping him, I enabled his weakness? What if I hadn't tried hard enough to be encouraging? What if I have been *too* stern, crushing his creativity and agency?

The speculative what-ifs multiply, weighing heavily. I know, intellectually, that it's easy to psych myself out, and lose by simply giving up in despair.

I remember being the parent of small children and thinking it was hard, but looking back on it (and watching some friends who have young children), that's the wrong word. Parenting toddlers isn't hard, it's busy. Busy to the point of consuming. And feeling yourself consumed by something that you know isn't ever going to stop, that's stressful. But ultimately, all you lose is time. Those days, those years, they flow out of you, your kids survive and grow, and it's over. In almost every situation, small children and their pervasive needs are so easily met by the simple, brute force of spending time. The emotional pain then is worry at their fragility, at how easily the world could hurt them.

Parenting teenagers is hard. Statistically, older children make *far* fewer mistakes than younger children. But as they grow in age, the consequences of their mistakes multiply, increasing almost geometrically. When a two-year old spills milk, or has a tantrum, it is solved with a hug or a paper towel. They cry, you hold them, it stops.

But when a 16-year old steals a car, or an 18-year old tries drugs, or a 17-year old decides to have sex, or a 20-year old decides they’d rather go to school than serve a mission, or a 15-year old blows off a semester of school (ruining their chance to get a good scholarship) ... those things leave marks on a child’s life that never go away completely, no matter how good the child behaves subsequently. The emotional pain of the world hurting them is still there, but now, you also worry about the damage they do to themselves.

A parent’s heart aches, it just shivers from the sympathetic pain of such things, even when they are speculative. Some days, when I think about what is happening to my kids, what might happen next, I feel like I am juggling grenades. If anything slips, even a little, it’s going to all come crashing down and explode.

One day, we’ll look back on all of our choices, they’ll be clear in reflection. There will be a handful of moments that will stand out as the pivots for our eternity. Where we went to school. Who we married. When we said no. When we lied, or told the truth. When we stole something (or didn't).

The problem is that to me, ALL of the decisions I see in my kids’ lives look like pivotal moments. But kids resist adding the weight of destiny to choices, and reflexively insist that the decisions they make are no big deal. Getting all stressed out doesn't make it easier to make the right choice.

What parents think their input sounds like.


What teenagers think their parents' input sounds like.

What I really, really believe is that I am right; all the moments matter. Those huge pivotal moments, they come as the result of a million other choices that we made that were just exactly right. They add up to the momentum of that one shining moment that in memory becomes that pivotal moment.

So I get it, I understand. My kids, they have to come to the understanding of consequence and responsibility on their own. If I could always steer them in the right direction, then they'd never really come to their own adult grasp of right and wrong.

It's cold comfort. The understanding of that doesn't make it any less painful to watch my kids fritter away time, or blow a big chance. The weight doesn't lift from my shoulders when they stubbornly go the wrong way. I feel great sympathy for Alma the Older, for how painful it is to have nothing to contribute but silent prayers that things will get better.

But I guess it makes it easier for me to not react immaturely. There will be no ultimatums, no angry threats of disinheritance. I will strive for the tranquility to quietly express disappointment, to calmly urge for greater respect, and to reiterate the promise that no matter what, I will always love them.

I will always welcome them. I will pray for their survival, and look forward to the day I can hug them when they are dealing with their own teenagers.

... this post was featured as a guest posting at Modern Mormon Men. If you have a moment, click through and give them a page hit!

Sunday, October 30, 2011

I've Been Accepted Into Your Culture

“Say there, Lizard and Stretchy Dog. Let me show you something. It looks as though I've been accepted into your culture. Your Chief, Andy, inscribed his name on me.”


Exciting times at work. In about six weeks, my probationary period will end. I will start getting funds set aside in a 401K (being employed is such a big deal, actual retirement will just be a bonus).

I will be issued a delegation of authority that will allow me to execute contracts and change orders of up to $75,000.

It's starting to feel permanent.

But the way I *REALLY* know I belong there is that I am starting to get teased by co-workers.

It began a few weeks ago. Someone stepped away from their desk, and I left them a document to review. When he came back, and saw it there (where it hadn't been when he stood up), he exclaimed, "I've been Landbecked!"

Since then, by name has been verbed repeatedly. I often see some of the other folks in my office peeking around the corner, through my door to see if I am amused by their comments.

"Careful driving home, it's raining; you don't want to get Landbecked!"
"Hey Billy, did you Landbeck that file?"
"What, are you trying to Landbeck me?!"

My boss actually pulled me aside and asked me if I was OK with it. I told her it made me feel like I had been accepted by the tribe.

Then two weeks ago I was out an entire morning for a number of errands. Didn't arrive until after lunch. It was the same morning that Muammar Gaddafi was killed. The next day, this poster appeared next to my name plate by my door.



Apparently, when I'm not at work, I'm a secret agent (if you look in the lower right-hand corner, you see Gaddafi lying dead, his head sticking out of a culvert). With Arnold Schwarzenegger and He-Man as my sidekicks. The author of the picture said he took the ultra-busy designs of Bollywood film posters as his inspiration for the design, and tried to cram as much silliness as possible into the frame. And I wore crocks *once*, so he thought it appropriate to show off my footwear of choice.

Another one appeared the day after. It seems I was also behind the successful operation that nabbed Bin Laden.



"Osama been Landbecked!" They like puns at work.

Ever since, about every 2 or 3 days, a new poster has appeared on the wall by my door.

For the next one, if you don't know the full Arnold oeuvre, it's a movie about Arnold Schwarzenegger thinking he's a mild-mannered factory worker, but really, he's a superbad killer for some multi-planetary mining company that's had his memory wiped.





Everyone giggled at the image of me climbing a water tower...




Back to the image of me being a super assassin.
















And the final poster, my favorite (because it features all the other guys in my office).





The primary author of the posters is featured as the second face from the right (he's in place of Bill Murray).

It's fun to be a part of a community.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Most. Ridiculous. October. Weekend. Ever.




I have never, in my entire life, seen snow falling on green-leafed trees in Maryland.

Ridiculous!

Monday, October 10, 2011

Another Law to Take Seriously


I know, late to the party. I've spent the entire technical revolution making fun of people wearing bluetooth headsets ("What's up Captain Kirk?!"), so I've sort of committed myself to not ever wearing them.

But it's now even more illegal than ever to talk on a cell phone in the car. And it's extra super illegal to read texts while driving.

So I'll be changing my voicemail greeting to reflect my new policy of not answering the phone while I'm driving. I promise I will call you back when I stop, though.

Sunday, October 09, 2011

More Missing My Children

It's been a while since we've seen any new photos. So I went and found their BYU ID pictures.




Ha!

Sunday, October 02, 2011

Soylent Green Isn't Just People; It's *YOU*.


"Ask a kid what Facebook is for and they'll answer 'it's there to help me make friends'. Facebook's boardroom isn't talking about how to make Johnny more friends. It's talking about how to monetize Johnny's social graph."

I don't consider myself a paranoid person. I've always felt like anyone who really wanted to spy on me was welcome to do so, it's not like I have anything interesting hidden away. But I still think it's important to understand the mechanics of the marketplace, and to help our kids be wise consumers (of both material and information).

So forewarned is forearmed, kids.