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~ Adventures of a Mom, Teacher and Traveler

Stone's Throw Away

Category Archives: Family Ties

Things specifically about the Hamlins.

Under the Budweiser Sign

22 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Family Ties, Pride and Joy, Stuff I Want to Tell You About

≈ 2 Comments

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Itty bitty slice of heaven right there.

I’d never even noticed the tables before, in the hundreds of games I’ve watched on NESN.  But we got incredibly lucky with table seats for a Blue Jays/Red Sox game in late June.  Not only were they at a roomy table – with a great view – but included food and all the beer we could drink, which, forgive me brave Budweiser fans, was one.  One beer.  Which I didn’t even really want because it was 52 degrees.  And raining.

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Gray skies. Wet chairs.

It could have been hailing cat urine from the sky and I still might have been the happiest momma on earth, though, sitting there with the boys, enjoying bites of pretzels, popcorn, hot dogs, cotton candy, ice cream, and sausage hoozawatsis with peppers and onions.  I ordered nothing. And yet, was not hungry when we left the park.  Huh.

Yes, friends, the table had four chairs.  No, we did not stuff Natalie in a duffel bag and sneak her in, though the thought crossed my mind.  Yes, she was bummed to miss it.  We added to the list of things to tell her therapist in 2025.

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Great life message. Things move along quite nicely if you’re not a bag.

Listen.  I have not been to a live Red Sox game since I was 22 years old.  I didn’t have great memories.  It was horrendously hot that August afternoon.  I was with an ex-boyfriend.  Not a boy who became an ex.  One who already was one. (I know, WTH?) I think I even witnessed a fist fight – but that might be a mixing of memories from a trip when I was about 9.  Not the stuff of memoirs, really.

But I’m telling you, I love Fenway Park as I do my own living room, which, of course, is where I watch most of the games.  Now that the kids are older, and we watch a lot of baseball together, I have discovered I am more than a fair-weather fan.  Sometimes I even find myself screaming at the television, especially if we’ve left, say, 11 runners on base by the 3rd inning.

Or, to be more accurate; I don’t so much find myself doing that as listening to Guy tell me to STOP DOING THAT.  To which I later have to explain See? That is the reason we LOST. THE. GAME. 

Which did not happen here.  No losing on this lucky night in June.  Because guess who pitched?  My faaaaavorite, delicious, very talented player:  Jon Lester.  Mmmm hhmmm.

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Eyes off. He’s mine married.

Why I’m telling you about this trip – besides highlighting an awesome bit of our summer?  Is this: I discovered that Garrett still believes he’s going to make it to the Big Leagues.

During the game, he analyzed not strategy, not base running, not hitting stance, not coaching technique.  He said, “when I’m out there on the team, I’m going to be one of those guys who chats up the other team. I’m gonna be that guy.”

To which, we all nodded, like that made perfect sense.

If, on a one in a bakazillion chance that my son does become a Red Sock (a Red Sox?), a player, I can tell you exactly where the other four of us will be sitting.

Maybe they’ll let the mom of the center fielder bring in some decent beer!

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Raw and Exposed

15 Monday Jul 2013

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Family Ties, Pride and Joy

≈ 4 Comments

Our mantra, as we age, seems to have become we will not live our lives in fear!, but it will not surprise some of you for me to also declare that I am a fearful ninny when it comes to other things.

Things like the three human beings I created.

This week, I’ve been thinking of a time, years ago, when I was unable to sleep at night. I would lay down and close my eyes, but scenes of every single imaginable way for my children to die would play in my head, and I could neither stop the visions, nor  the situations that played out in them.  In fact; often, in the scenarios, I was the cause of their death, though always accidental.  I began to fear losing them with such angst and terror, that I found myself paralyzed, unable to enjoy them as I should have in those tender years.

Somehow, time passed.  I fed them vegetables and snuggled them often, and made them wear warm boots in winter and helmets when they biked or skied.  I held their hands tightly when we walked to the library.  I made sure to look behind me when backing out of the driveway and was most vigilant near pools and lakes.  My two main goals as their mother were to 1.) keep them alive and 2.) not let them die.  So, even while doing all the right things, my mind was constantly, and I mean constantly, buzzing with the what-ifs.  What if he chokes on this carefully cut carrot?  What if she rips her hand from mine and bolts into the road?  What if their school is attacked and rampaged?  And on.  And on.

The fact that this has gone on now for over 5,000 days is mind boggling.  What a terrible waste of good energy.  When my attention was on god please don’t let such and such happen, it should have been on, wow, look what’s happening! After all, that is definitely my focus and attitude in other areas of my life.  Just not with my children. I sincerely hope I haven’t missed as much as I’m afraid I might have.

Last Sunday, as I was watching Garrett do his thing on the baseball diamond, I thought —  he’s not only still alive, he’s thriving!  Luke is not only breathing, he’s singing his way through life!  And Natalie is not only living, she is living out loud.  They are getting on out there in the world whether I’m ready or whether I’m not.  And I am missing it.  I’m right here.  But I’ve been missing lots of it.

I wondered:  when and how did this happen?  This living?  As if I had no anxiety at all every time they left the house to play in the neighborhood, to walk to the store, to sleep over at a friend’s house.  And then it occurred to me. No matter how fearful I am, no matter how much anxiety I have, no matter how many warnings I summon about strangers or saturated fats or sunscreen,  nor how much I worry – I’m not controlling anything.  Anything.  At.  All.

Why on earth this revelation took this long is far, far beyond me.

Garrett’s going to be driving soon.  And dating. (Arguably, he is already dating – if by obsession texting with a girl, dating can be defined.)  And facing choices I would never want to have to make again.  How do I, his mother, keep my heart and mind in a state of non-worry? I feel I’ve spent 13 years considering worst-case scenarios.  Clearly, that’s gone on long enough.  But…how?

That vulnerable state is just about the most uncomfortable place I can imagine.  I suppose I’ve convinced myself it is just a mother’s job to worry.  But the thing is, I do not want to be remembered for being the worrier, the put on a sweater, don’t go too fast, for god’s sake be careful, people are NOT to be trusted! mother.  I want to be the one that pushes them to do the things they hadn’t dared dreamed of doing themselves.  I want to dare to let them go.

Because this:  if I don’t give them wings, who will?

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Natalie Turned 7 Recently

19 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Vicki Hamlin in Family Ties

≈ 4 Comments

Okay, it was back in JULY.  But today it is snowing, and it promises to snow between 14-18 inches.  And tomorrow is the first day of spring.  And I’m all say wha-? but it just keeps snowing.  As if I have no power at all.

Anyway.  I know most of you are over it, but in the hardening crumbs of the events at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, I’ve been reminiscing.  The general psyche of our culture has moved on from the deaths of all those little souls, but mine has not.  I am consciously more grateful and reflective, and also more reticent about all the ways we are so blessed.  While others have faced unthinkable tragedies.  To speak of it is to jinx it, I think.

I will write instead.

So, it was July.  Natalie’s birthday.  Joysus, but it was an awesome day.  And how lucky am I that I’m not having to think that while reeling from a funeral for my 7 year old daughter?

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See what I’m saying?  To be 7.  It is perfection.

She wanted a tea party, a sprinkler and red popsicles.  And that is what she got.  With giant bottles of bubbles thrown in for good measure.

And also to hold down the table cloth.

Tea Party for Princesses.

Tea Party for Princesses.

She also got so many people she adores, admires, and loves to come out to celebrate her.

Uncle Tim.

Uncle Tim.

Mimi and Uncle Ralph.

Mimi and Uncle Ralph.

Cousin Sammy.

Cousin Sammy studying the clouds.

Cousin Zoe

Cousin Zoe enjoying? a lemon.

Beloved Nauny and Auntie Jessy.

Beloved Nauny and Auntie Jessy.

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Cousin Millie.  Tea and popsicle both!

God I miss summer.

There’s Auntie Kay, Susan, Jessie, -and there’s Julianne and Zoe serving the girls their tea!

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Stella. Maya. Chelsea. Nat. Ella.

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Best money ever spent on a sprinkler. Who knew?

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Chelsea made a card with “googley eyes.” This was HILARIOUS for some reason. And may I point out the tongue where the teeth should be?

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Back to tea, cake, red popsicles.  And there’s Emily and Sarah!

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I remember.

I remember Sandy Hook and I remember the looks on the faces of the parents of those children in the days and weeks following the event that changed them forever.  Maybe the only blessing to come of it is that someone else somewhere has hugged their children tighter, held them closer and felt more thankful.

If so, I welcome the responsibility.

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