Brenden Sings “Hark the Herald Angels Sing”

Brenden has really gotten good at learning songs recently and loves to sing. I managed to capture him singing his current favorite Christmas song, “Hark the Herald Angels Sing”. Sorry about the poor lighting, but the audio is more important anyway. My parents once had a recording of me singing “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” at age 4 or 5. When I listened to it as a teenager, I was amazed at how different my voice sounded back then. I figure Brenden will have the same reaction when he watches this video a decade or so from now.

Christmastime is Here

On Wednesday night, after the boys went to bed, Jenny and I scrambled to put up the Christmas tree and decorations as a surprise for the first day of December. As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, Jenny worked out 25 days of activities for us to do leading up to Christmas Day. Day 1 was the tree. Last year Jonathan was 10 months old when we put up the tree, so we used our 4 1/2 foot tree and set it on a small table. This year Brenden requested the big tree, a 7 1/2 foot beast that we used for our first Christmas in the house. I’m impressed that he remembered it. We did most of the decorating but left a few non-breakables for the the boys to hang on the tree the next day.

Thursday morning we let them come downstairs to see their surprise. Jenny made a video of it. There’s nothing like the joy and enthusiasm of children. (Note: the first part is dark because we didn’t think about lighting. The rest is much easier to see, and the audio is pretty good throughout. Listen for both boys.)

This is the Christmas Countdown that Jenny mentions in the video.

This should be a great month. We’re almost done with our shopping thanks to Jenny’s hard work in November. We’re spreading out our family Christmas celebrations throughout the month instead of trying to see everyone on Christmas Eve or Day. Jenny is almost done with her anatomy class. And for the first time, Brenden seems genuinely excited about Christmas.

25 Days of Christmas 2011

Now that the boys are a little older (remember that Jonathan was only 11 months on Christmas Day last year?) and more capable of doing things, Jenny is putting together the 2011 Box Family Advent Calendar of Greatness. In layman’s terms, she’s planning a fun Christmas-related event each day in December through the 25th. In the Advent Conspiracy tradition, we’re trying to keep the Christmas season focused on Jesus, giving, and family rather than stuff for ourselves. Here are some of the highlights so far:

  • Nov 30 – Put up the tree as a surprise after the boys go to bed. Brenden has requested the big tree this year rather than the 4.5′ tree we used last year when Jonathan was a baby.
  • Early Dec – Take the boys shopping for our Salvation Army angels. We try to adopt angels that are near the boys’ age, and this year we’ll get their input regarding which clothes and toys to choose.
  • Dec 3 – Make Christmas cookies with my mom, sister, and her kids at my mom’s house like Lisa and I did as kids
  • Dec 10 – Instead of exchanging gifts among the adults, Jenny’s side of the family is visiting the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History together and having dinner afterward – experience over stuff.
  • Various – Drive around looking at Christmas lights, watch one or more Christmas movies, do other etc.
  • Mid Dec – Bake something tasty with Jenny’s parents and take it to her grandfather in his nursing home
  • Dec 21 – Dallas Jingle Bell Run as a family
  • Dec 24 – Christmas Eve service at Irving Bible Church

Plus we’ll get together for Christmas dinner with my immediate family and my dad’s family in Wichita Falls. It will be a busy month, but we’re excited about the festivities, and I think the boys will have a blast.

What are your plans for next month?

Thirteen Years

It’s so easy for me to get frustrated and stressed out by the little difficulties of parenting – tantrums, poop disasters, defiance, pottytraining accidents, having to interrupt my terribly important task of surfing the Internet to do something for them. Sometimes my goal is simply to survive…until Jenny gets home, until naptime, until I can carry my screaming toddler outside the busy restaurant, until their bedtime when I can rest and have an adult conversation with Jenny. The boys and I have lots of fun together, but sometimes parenting is just really, really hard.

Part of the reason it’s so difficult is the tension between wanting them to be happy and wanting to help them become good people. As a father, I love to see my boys happy. Their laughter is one of the most beautiful sounds in the world. Their smiles are sunshine with an on-off switch. But I also have a responsibility to mold them, train them, and inspire them to become the young men God wants them to be – men of honor who accept responsibility, know right from wrong, think for themselves, lead courageously when necessary, and live for things greater than themselves. Molding clay requires effort, pressure, and time, and my boys don’t always enjoy being molded. But I’m too duty-oriented to simply give up and let them do whatever they want. They deserve more from me, even if they can’t see it right now.

Arrows

The sermon tonight was about children. Our pastor has five of them, and his youngest just left for college in August. Despite all the freedom that empty-nesthood provides (money and time and vacations, oh my!), he and his wife cried like babies on the way home. They had prepared their children well and launched them all into the world, like arrows toward a target in his analogy, and their home would never be the same without each of those arrows. Jenny and I have two arrows to launch, Brenden Matthew and Jonathan Andrew. Right now they are merely sticks with the vague shape of an arrow. Each day we try to whittle them a bit. Someday we’ll help add feathers and tips, pull them back, and let them fly.

Tomorrow

Later tonight I read a fantastic article called Notes from a Dragon Mom. If you have some Kleenex handy, I highly recommend it. The author has an eighteen-month-old son who is dying of a rare genetic disorder and probably won’t live past three years old. While she understands “normal” parents’ desires to prepare their children for the future, for her son those aspirations are a waste of precious, precious time. Instead, she simply tries to make his life as comfortable as possible and to love him as well as possible while she still can. (May God give each of us such a person, no matter when our end might come)

Brenden is already over three years old, older than the boy in the article will probably ever be. Jonathan is roughly the boy’s age. Three years is not a long time.

Before I know it, they’ll both be in elementary school, wearing braces, shaving, leaving for college, getting married. Thirteen years from now, Brenden will likely have his driver’s license. Maybe he’ll be driving my old Fit. (Or the minivan, heh heh) Maybe he’ll have a girlfriend. Thirteen years isn’t that long a time, either. Thirteen years ago, I was a sophomore at Baylor living with a sports-nut roommate, working for Camp Fire’s after-school program, and trying to figure out what to do with my life.

It wasn’t that long ago.

A few more blinks, a few more sleeps, and we’ll be looking over college brochures with the boys, only by then maybe colleges won’t even publish brochures anymore because all marketing will be online.

Before I know it, I’ll be the one subtly begging for their attention instead of them begging for mine.

Today

I spend too much time screwing around on the computer and on my phone instead of being present with my children. I spend too much energy worrying about whether they’re going to turn out right. I work too hard trying to survive instead of simply enjoying every minute I have to spend with them, both the fun moments and the difficult ones. I’m too quick to get mad at them for behaving like toddlers instead of mature adults. I spend too much time working on my arrows and not enough time simply appreciating them. And I’m tired of it.

The New York Times author said it perfectly:

Parenting, I’ve come to understand, is about loving my child today. Now. In fact, for any parent, anywhere, that’s all there is.

I don’t know exactly what that looks like, but I want it. One day, one way or another, they’ll fly away. I want to enjoy them and make them happy and love them well while helping them grow into Godly young men, not instead of. I want to be all there instead of partially there. I want to embrace every snot-, poop-, and Ranch dressing-covered moment with them while they’re still here.

Figuratively, of course, because that’s just nasty.

Brenden’s Preschool Open House

On Thursday, Brenden’s preschool invited us over for open house. We parked our minivan next to all the other minivans and entered B’s world for a short while. The time gave us a clear picture of why he likes it so much:

  1. Every teacher obviously loves preschoolers.
  2. They work hard to implement a structured, varied curriculum that keeps them busy throughout the day. Brenden’s 3-year-old class includes a nature center, music center, home-ec center, number board, tons of books, arts and crafts, building blocks, and more. Just outside his room, they are growing marigolds in the class garden. They’re also learning bits of Spanish and French. But despite all the different activities, the teachers aren’t slavedrivers who demand the impossible. Somehow they seem to have the right balance between learning and fun.
  3. The playground is huge, with playsets for different ages, plenty of space to run, lots of Cozy Coupe-style cars with a two-lane “road” around some of the play areas, and sports equipment. Brenden and Jonathan both had a blast just playing out there.

The boys kept us busy, but I managed to snap a few pictures that you can see here.

Back to School Haiku

Brenden returns to preschool today! Here are two haiku in his honor:

Back to school for B
Numbers, words, and naptime mats
Mommy is so glad

1 2 3 4 5
A B C D E F G
H I J K L