Posted in Insight, Nuts & Bolts, Takes a Village, Teens, Tweens

The Stuff of Vacation

At the 5 Guys in Mystic, an elderly woman tugs on my sleeve while I refill our ketchup. “You have a lovely family… so nice,” she says, and her husband nods in agreement. “You deserve to take a bow, Mom. Right now.” and so I do, right there with my french fries.

It’s moments like these that highlight our family vacations.

~Like when my husband runs into the Subway shop on our way through the town of Salem, asking (on a whim) where we could find all the witch stuff–only to be reminded that we are in CONNECTICUT, not Massachusetts.

~Or the museum volunteer who dashes out of her meeting when she sees our family standing in front of the painting that she simply must tell us about;

~Or the young custodian in the casino who kindly goes out of his way to give my teenager directions to the ice skating rink, and hours later, my son repeats, “I really liked that guy.”

Duerer, visipix.com

Family vacations provide for these kind of touchstones which would easily be overlooked if not for the novelty of being out of place–together.  The trips don’t have to be fancy or expensive or even long.  We’ve taken 24 hour getaways that hit the spot.

Still, it’s tricky fashioning a trip that pleases a man and a woman, a ten year old and a teenager. Over the years, we’ve found that setting intentions–before making plans–helps create success–for all.

~This winter we knew what we needed most was simply a change of scenery. We also knew that we had neither the energy nor the finances to go very far–though we definitely wanted to head south. We began looking toward something coastal.

Gauguin, visipix.com

~Next we realized that we wanted this trip to provide some kind of “adventure”–some new discovery or experience that we could share together.

~Lastly, we wanted this vacation to offer what we want every vacation to offer–a chance to be incubated as family–away from home and routine and every day distractions.

This last one is a steep order when you’re traveling with teen given their great need for peers; so the deal has to be extra sweet.  We accomplished this by finding a location that not only had an aquarium for my 10 year old and an art museum for me and a coastal town for my husband–but also a shopping mall, right near our hotel.

While the last place on earth that I want to go on vacation (or any other day) is the mall, my son feels the same about art museums or days on end without friends. Thus, there is a give and take in our time together that brings balance to the whole.

Schiele, visipix.com

He tolerates a walk through a scenic waterfront town, and we tolerate a deadening maze of airless storefronts for him.  Actually, I skipped the mall, but we all went to the art museum because I was covert about it. Chocolate always helps. They were eating M & Ms when they noticed that we pulled up to an art gallery just before lunch.

It’s also important to find something that the entire family enjoys equally as much.  For some families, that’s amusement parks; for others, it’s the movies; while for others, it might be camping. For our family–it’s always been food.

The whole point of vacation for us is indulgence, and thus I always book a hotel that includes breakfast so that my kids can pig out on stuff I wouldn’t let them touch on a holiday–basically sugar masquerading as various forms of nourishment.

If we’re on a trip that lasts more than a couple days, I also make sure that we have a room (or an apartment) with at least a refrigerator so that we can eat in one meal a day. This makes it more affordable, especially if lunch is our “out” meal.  It also helps ground us into a bit of routine.

We take turns choosing–a seafood place on the water for me,  5 Guys for our teen, pizza at Chuck e Cheeses for my ten year old, Italian for my husband.

As a family, it’s this give and take that makes our vacations (and our lives) work, even if we do have to remind our teenager about this flow of energy from time to time.

I’m touched when he hugs me and tells me that he had a nice vacation. I almost want to take a bow.

“But now, I’m ready for friends,” he adds.

“Yes, I imagine you are,” I say, “And Dad and I desparately need some date time.”

“Okay,” he replies amenably, as our resident child care provider.

This first morning home our small house feels expansive with plenty of room for our separate agendas.  We intersect in the kitchen for to delve into the Cracker Barrel leftovers; and then we each head back to do our own thing.

My husband is in bed nursing a sore throat, while my ten year old is playing with his castle. I’m diving into writing and no doubt my teenager is texting friends.

A hum of ease and joy pervades the home and it feels good, even if no one has faced the laundry. I think back to the incubation of our hotel room, which was at times too crowded, but also sweet in the togetherness it provided. Our view was of a wooded lake without a home or human in sight, while the hotel itself was situated across from a strip mall.

Living rurally as we do, it was a treat to suggest to our boys, “Why don’t you head over to the stores and we’ll pick you up on the way to the aquarium.”

I would have preferred the hotel in Newport, right at the sea, but when my sons discovered this one beside a mall AND a Chuck E. Cheese’s, I couldn’t turn them down.

As a parent, watching them soften and delight in each other’s company–and into ours–is the best gift of all.

Kelly Salasin, February Vacation, 2011

Posted in Insight, Takes a Village, Teens

Sports Light

Open Clip Art

At first glance, I’m certain my son sent me to the wrong place–These are grown men! I study the grissly faces to see if there’s any chance my 15 year old is among them, only to discover that this is indeed the location for high school intramurals. (I had no idea that my “David” lived his days among such “Goliaths.”)

Once inside the gymnasium, I further realize that intramural basketball is a beast unto itself. Despite the qualified elders with whistles, a sense of chaos prevails. There are no coaches, less rules, and more unbridled expression of…whatever wants to be expressed–howling, hooting, and tickling for example.

Though I’ve witnessed it only on film, inner city street ball comes to mind. There are no uniforms here to order alliance.  There is no evidence of fans or any place for them to gather together if they were here. And yet, the room is littered with loiterers.  Girls on cell phones, girls with strollers, boys and girls together, girls and girls together.

I’m impressed (and surprised) to see that there is even a girl or two on each team.  I marvel at the tenacity of these young women–willing to mix it up on the court at a time when their friends are on the sidelines primping.

Open Clip Art

When Audrey gets in the game, the plot thickens. Street ball segues into West Side Story, transforms into Fame, and settles into Harlem Globetrotters. The chemistry between her and the lead player (on the opposing team) shifts the whole game.

I have to restrain myself from smiling.  This isn’t one of my romantic comedies.  In fact, I am under strict orders from my son–not to do anything that would bring attention to me—or more importantly, to him.

Unlike the JV or Varsity teams (or even the Freshman one) the code de rigeur here is—coolness—expressed, by not expressing, any bit of seriousness for the game.  It’s only intramurals, you know. Thus any skill a player possesses must be deftly applied with an air of ambivalence.

The girls shine at this, and it makes me sad. I have no doubt that were they on a court with other girls, there’d be none of this giggling, or half-ass shooting, or uncommitted defense. I know Audrey from her preschool days, and she’s as tough as any guy on either team.

http://www.epa.gov/sunwise/doc/guide.pdf

From time to time, they all let slip the veneer of their teen indifference, and the unconscious play of children returns. When Audrey guards my own son, she doesn’t hold back. They were preschoolers together and attended the same tiny elementary school up the hill so there’s no need to pretend that anything else is going on.

(This time I don’t hold back my smile.)

I decide that I like intramurals , that I even prefer it.  It’s light-hearted. Once the kids loosen up, they really seem to be having fun.  Sure, there are winners and losers, but it’s not the point of the “play” like it is in the game that’s going on in the gym next door where you have to pay to get in and you have practice over the holidays and you have to ride buses hours away.

There are no big stars here, and thus no falling stars; no heroes who feel lost when their short-lived glory lies behind them. Intramurals is for those with a life-time commitment to “play” and thus prepares these kids for the future—when one has to lower one’s standards of performance to have some fun, and to stay healthy.

My eyes are drawn to the referees that fill this room. I wonder what brings them onto the court.  Some are retired teachers, others are active in the school, yet others work outside it.  You can tell they really know the game.  You can tell they like it.  Even with knee braces, they take some shots at the basket when the night is over.

They blow their whistles a lot too, but no one ever seems to get mad at them.  There is an unspoken understanding—We’re here for you—We’re here for each other.

My own son loves the game. Any game really. Last year he made the freshman team, but this year he decided against going out for JV. It might have something to do with the reality that there are a thousand kids at this high-school—some with beards and barrel-chested bodies—while he hasn’t finished growing yet.

Open Clip Art

I’m happy that practices aren’t decimating family life, that we can actually share dinners together, and that there’s plenty of time for my son to keep up with his workload from school. Driving down to one game a week is manageable and actually enjoyable. It’s sports light–for the whole family.

Intramurals didn’t always exist at this school. Some warm-hearted soul wanted to create a place for kids who liked to play when they didn’t make the team.

But there are kids here who would surely qualify to play on any team.  They each have their own reasons for choosing intramurals instead.  I’d like to think it’s because they have an internal sense of balance—knowing that they want to have fun without giving up every minute of their life to a game that can be taken too seriously.

It’s not that I don’t appreciate excellence or admire it.  I just don’t like its cost, and I don’t think it’s for everyone.  Which is why this mom is especially thankful for all those who make intramurals happen—here at my son’s highschool–and everywhere else where it’s a choice for kids who want to play.

Kelly Salasin

Posted in Fragile Life, Insight, Takes a Village

Death as Entertainment

PeterM_Feather, Open Clip Art

This letter to the editor of my local paper was one of my earliest pieces of public writing, provoked by a series of school shootings which are now so common place as to be listed on Wikipedia.

Yesterday’s attack on Democratic Representative Giffords (at a grocery store!) resulted in the death of a 9 year old girl (among others), and is yet another wake up call–this time with regard to the inciting nature of our country’s political discourse.

Whose responsible for the attack? We all are. Just as I was responsible for my toddler’s exposure to killing as a form of entertainment.

See below.

To the Editor

I was glad to see the issue of violence in schools addressed in the health column last week. I appreciated the related commentary he shared from Vermont Public Radio. In reflecting on the number of shootings in schools across our country, I too felt the “wake up call.”

Now that murder has found its way into our classrooms, we can no longer “distance” ourselves from the effects of the violence that is so much a part of the outside world. The VPR commentator spoke of a new commitment to getting violence out of our children’s lives. As a parent and educator, I fully agree, but I think it is ironic that we work so hard to monitor our children’s world without changing our own.

Just this past week, my two-year old began talking about death and shooting. He picked that up from a clip of a movie my husband and I were watching over a month ago. It left a huge impression.

As a society, we are fooling ourselves if we think we can separate the world of adults from the world of children. The number of deaths in our country’s schools this past year is proof that this line no longer exists.

Kelly Salasin

Wilmington, Vermont, 1998