Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Early Morning Rat Race

So much for working at home on Monday and Friday. Today is Tuesday, and that meant doing the early morning scramble that we've been doing for over eight years. It looks something like this:

5:10am: The alarm clock goes off for the first time, and I punch the snooze button after I figure out what that weird noise is.

5:15am: The alarm clock goes off for the second time, and I try to remember whether it's a day I have to get up early or just get to poke Mr. Engineer and tell him he has to get up while I roll over and get more sleep. 

5:20am: OK, that's the third time with the alarm, and the sleep I'm getting now is crappy anyway. I get up and stagger to the bathroom.

5:20-5:30am: Shower. Possibly fall asleep while rinsing my hair. 

5:30am: Wake up Mr. Engineer because it's true that misery loves company. 

5:35am: Let the dogs out and make my cup of decaf. No, it doesn't wake me up like regular coffee does for you folks whose bodies can tolerate it, but I yearn for it every morning anyway.

5:35-5:45am: Check email and FB on my phone while sipping coffee that is too hot. 

5:45am: Let the dogs back in, feed them, and give them water. Sip some more coffee while making myself a lunch. 

6:00am: Give Legoman and Noodle the bad news that morning came again. 

6:05am: Go back into the boys' room and make sure their eyes are actually open. Lay their clothes out and tell them they need to put them on. Give them their breakfast choices and hear two cranky versions of, "I don't know."

6:10am: Insist the boys make a breakfast selection. Make Mr. Engineer's high-test coffee. 

6:15am: Tell the boys it's time to use the bathroom and come to the kitchen table. 

6:20am: Serve the boys breakfast. 

6:20-6:25am: Load all our junk into the trunk of my car.

6:30am: Tell the boys to brush their teeth and put their shoes on. Mr. Engineer, who's been spending this whole time showering and getting dressed, finally appears downstairs to grab his coffee. 

6:35: Leave for day care (school year) or the babysitter's house (summer). 

6:45am: Drop off the boys. Feel like I've done enough work for one day. 

What's your morning routine like? 



Monday, July 1, 2013

Working From Home

I'm blessed with a family-friendly employer who allows staff to telecommute a day or two per week if they can work out a reasonable arrangement with their department manager. I've been working from home nearly every Monday and Friday since Legoman was born in early 2005. When he was an only child, I had him home with me on those days, and when Noodle came along in 2007, I had Legoman go to day care full-time while I kept Noodle home with me. I could (and will) write many blog posts about my experiences with this arrangement at different points in their young lives, but let's fast forward to today.

Both boys woke up by 6:30am when hubby was getting ready to leave for work. No rest for the weary. I let them watch cartoons while I tried to pry my eyes open and got a shower and that not-so-helpful but oh-so-necessary cup of decaf coffee. By 7:30 they were eating breakfast, and I was starting to answer emails.

By 8am I was breaking up the first fight.

By 8:30 I was dragging out the art kits I'd picked up over the weekend to keep them busy while I worked, instead of always relying on the TV and Wii.

By 9am they were finished with their art projects and back to fighting.

We hit a smoother groove for a couple hours in the late morning, but when I tried to get them ready to run some errands over my lunch break, we hit another snag. I had thrown away Noodle's old toothbrush on Friday right in front of him because its bristles were completely bent backwards and were useless to clean his teeth. Honestly, I should've noticed much sooner and gotten rid of the thing long before Friday. I checked in on him as he was using the bathroom to get ready to leave, and he was using the old toothbrush he had reclaimed from the bathroom trashcan. (Try not to throw up reading that. Just try. Deep breaths and swallow hard. You'll be OK.) A half-hour of crying ensued when I took the toothbrush back from him and told him that taking something out of the trash was never allowed and that he now had to brush his teeth with his new toothbrush to clean out his mouth. (He's lucky I know it's unsafe to brush with straight bleach!) I'm just counting on that strong immune system built up from five years in a day-care center and a year in kindergarten to get him through whatever he just exposed himself to from that trash can. Shudder.

Thankfully, our errands went just fine, and we regrouped yet again. Legoman even tried to console his sodden brother while he blew his nose and lamented the loss of that apparently special toothbrush.

Some days are easier than others, no doubt. They're still adjusting to spending so much time together after having a full school year of being in separate places most of the time--separate classrooms at both day care and school, separate Little League teams, etc. Now they are together seven days a week, either at our house while I work or with my friend who is watching them this summer when I'm at the office. Mondays are always the hardest because they've been together nonstop since Thursday evening.

Next week I'll be on a business trip, and I'll miss them fiercely, fights and all. Funny how that happens, the whole "grass is greener" phenomenon.

If you work full-time, does your employer have any flexibility with hours or offer telecommuting? Do you take advantage of it? I find that even though it is a struggle sometimes, it has really helped us keep our lives a bit more on track to have me home Mon/Fri than if I work five days a week in the office (an experiment I tried for part of this past school year and that I'll tell you about later). At my workplace, such perks are not limited to moms or even to parents. Any staffer who'd like to work from home occasionally and has a job that is portable can do so. I think it's no surprise that we celebrate lots of 10- and 20-year anniversaries every year. Employees tend to be happier when their employer recognizes them as human beings with a family and life outside the office. I feel blessed I'm in one of those workplaces, even with the bumpy ride that telecommuting  with two active boys around can be.

Why I Left My Boys at School After a Lockdown Lifted

The 2012-2013 school year has been a difficult one for so many parents, not the least of whom are the parents in Newtown, CT, who lost their children in a senseless act of violence. If that event didn't shake you to the core, I don't know what would. It was extremely difficult letting Legoman and Noodle go back to school that following Monday after I had dwelled all weekend on the fear and horror that event brought to the victims, the survivors, the first responders, and all who were involved in any way. But we struggled on, one day at a time, because my husband and I knew that in the rare event that a gunman targeted our sons' school, every adult working there would throw themselves in harm's way before allowing a child to be hurt, and if they couldn't prevent tragedy themselves, it was impossible to prevent. The rest was in God's hands. It was not an entirely comfortable mental place to be, but we soldiered on and gradually began to feel like the ground under our feet was stable again.

We were blessed that no actual violence occurred in our elementary school over six months, but we did have a scary incident on the very last day of the school year: a lockdown precipitated by a 911 call reporting a shooting at one of the other elementary schools in the district. Thankfully, I had no idea this event was occurring until I received the automated call from our superintendent, reporting that there had been such a 911 call but that the police had identified the incident as nothing more than a prank phone call.

Unfortunately the majority of the teachers, staff, and students at the six schools in our district, all of which had immediately gone on lockdown after the 911 call, didn't know there was no real danger. They spent varied amounts of time (2.5hrs at our elementary school, one of the last to be searched and have the all-clear declared) hiding in classrooms or bathrooms, wondering what was going on outside their doors and scared that something sinister would burst through those doors and harm them.

Legoman, his teacher, and his entire second-grade class stayed in their classroom's one-person bathroom for over an hour, and no one could actually use the bathroom while they were all in there, of course. Noodle's class sat huddled in front of their cubbies, being perfectly quiet, which seems impossible for two dozen kindergartners, but I trust his teacher made it happen and probably even kept a smile on her face to keep them from being worried.

After I received the report that a lockdown was in progress, I hurried home from work nearly an hour's drive away so I could be local in the event the schools closed and the boys needed to be picked up. The initial automated message had declared sternly that all parents would need to show proper ID to pick up their child(ren), and I didn't want to risk our boys being stuck at school because our more local friends would be turned away when trying to take them home for us.

As the lockdown was lifted at some of the schools that had been searched first by police, a new message reported that the schools were, in fact, not closing but were finishing the day. However, parents were certainly welcome to pick up their children and take them home. With that ID, of course.

At this point I was already at home, five minutes from our school, which was still on lockdown but had gotten the word that no one was in any actual danger. What a relief that news must've been to them all, even as they had to wait out the remaining time it took for heavily armed police officers to give the official word that the school was safe.

My motherly instinct was to scoop up my babies and take them home, but I paused. I tried to think it through logically:
(a) There was and never had been any actual danger to my children.
(b) If I rushed into the school to pick them up midday, with them knowing how far I work from home, how would that color their view of the event?
(c) If I took them home early on their last day of school, would they think they had something to fear there that would make going back in September traumatic?

This wasn't a decision I was going to make by myself. I called my husband and talked it through with him, and we decided I would not go immediately to the school. Instead, I emailed both boys' classroom teachers and asked how they were doing emotionally. Noodle's teacher wrote back within minutes, reporting that he was all smiles as usual. No ill effects from the lockdown. Legoman's teacher wrote back about a half-hour later, during which I stalked my email like crazy, that he was a bit worried that another lockdown would happen but that she had reassured him everything was fine. She felt he could make it through the remainder of the day.

And so, I didn't pick up our boys that chaotic day. I let them finish their last day of the school year with the reduced number of classmates remaining in their classrooms, and I let them take the bus home, a rare treat for kids who usually go to day care after school. They came off the bus with smiles on their faces, excited to start summer break.

Yes, we talked about the lockdown that evening and in the days that followed, but we didn't dwell on the fear. We focused on how everyone did just what they were taught to do to keep them safe and why they practice for these sorts of incidents. I figure the lockdown discussion may come up as the new school year approaches, but I feel like we made the right decision for our boys in letting them finish out the day in as normal a fashion as possible. Other kids needed to go home, or their parents needed the reassurance of having them home, and I understand that. Our family made a different choice, and I hope we never are in the position to make such a choice again.