Getting through the Caterpillar Years: My Son and Eric Carle

6.16.2014

My son Atticus is three years old. I call him a "young three" sometimes when I attempt to explain him and his ways

I saw the wall clings while shopping for nursery decor once the ultrasound forecast a blue future. I saw the definition of boy: noise with dirt on it. I thought maybe, but maybe not. I'd had his sister Daina for a solid ten years already, and my home had been impervious to even her worst tantrums. 

Daina's messes were largely contained to my bedroom, consisting mostly of blankets, books, and Barbie shoes, lined up in perfect pairs and predictable gradations, moving from pinks to greens. Even her falls were predictable. She liked to run on the long couch and would fall in the same spot every week or so, knocking her head on the black lacquer coffee table edge. For a solid year, her pictures reveal bruises in still predictable gradations, moving from purples to yellows. 

My son, however, is, well, unpredictable

I have never apologized so much in my life as I do for Atticus's transgressions in public spaces. 

This shall be all that I say about it, as he may well be a writer someday, and these private and bizarre moments should be reserved for his own safekeeping and/or exploitation. 

I will say this: His ascent into Northern Aggression has become so steep a climb that before he exits the car, he lists his own promises, as though rehearsed: "I not hit. I not push people. I not spit." This list, sadly, goes on. 

As a measure of comfort, a dear friend sent me to this article, which made me realize Atticus and I were not alone. There were others living our days.

But all at once and without much warning, my son caught me by surprise in the most beautiful of ways on Sunday. I had set him on the bed and was putting on his shoes while he grabbed for The Very Hungry Caterpillar book we'd read dozens and dozens of times, nearly all of which he'd sat silent through from start to finish. 


The most peculiar thing happened. 

He read it to me.

Now, of course, I know he wasn't reading-reading. He knows a few letters, can spot an A and say it's for Atticus, and he understands we move from left to right on a page and front to back in a book. But he can't read. He can't. 

But he did. For him, I suspended all reality of his illiteracy and just fell in love with his voice all over again, his smallish teeth, his bold, wide eyes. I believed with him that he was reading-reading. Together, we pushed aside the impossibility of it all. 



I stopped everything. I even tried to silence the cheering inside my own head. I might have teared up a little. 

Page by page, his little voice said, "BUT, he was still hungry." Every day in the book was Monday. Every number was three. 

I didn't care. It was the finest version I'd ever heard. 

It's incredible with these little people how much drinking in they do, how much they watch and listen, how much they absorb from just sharing space with us. It's such an incredible responsibility I try to forget most days; it's overwhelming. But it's an honor I love to remember. 

When Daina was little, I read her Stinky Face every day. It became a ritual, and it became one of those memories that you pack just beneath your skin so that wherever you go and whatever you do, it's just there, hovering in the space just above your soul with you. 

By the end of the book, the small caterpillar becomes a big, fat caterpillar then a beautiful butterfly. My son says beautiful with the longest U sound I've ever heard. It's a little like a stretched out song, kind of full-bellied with hope and joy all mixed together. It sounds like the feeling I get when I watch him, dwelling and learning among us. 

Our home is a cocoon of gentleman standards and a very lax dress code. I think his wings are itching some days. When the space seems tighter, it's just because he's getting bigger. Because the world is full of chocolate cake, salami, pickles, and too many hungers to count, I pray that, like the caterpillar, he finds some leaves and rest. 

Because one soon day, I know he'll fly away. 




The BIGGER Little Literati Summer Challenge for Adults (and Other People Who Pass as Adults)

6.13.2014

I’m over the moon that so many of you are eager and excited to start the Little Literati challenge with your kids this summer. I’m excited about the memories you’ll make and stories you’ll share.
Me, actually being an adult with an infant at the doctor's office holding my business cards. This is so very adult that I should be able to vote twice during each election. 
It came to my quick and mostly focused attention that somewhat less-Little Literati might enjoy the challenge, too. So, I’ve written an adult version for the Bigger Literati among you.

Here is your mission.

Find and read ten books that fit the descriptions below, and keep track of your progress. When you complete the challenge, email your name, mailing address, and list of ten books to thelittleliterati@gmail.com.

All who meet the challenge will receive a snail-mailed Little Literati envelope from the Prices with Little Literati tokens of affection. The drawing for the grand prize will be held only for the kids.

Submissions must be received no later than Friday, August 1, 2014. Only one submission per person.

Happy reading!

1.     A book set in a place you’ve never been
2.     A book that teaches you how to do something
3.     A book that most people have read in school but that you somehow dodged—until now!
4.     A book meant for young adults
5.     A book that was made into a movie
6.     A book about another world
7.     A long book—one that is longer than you normally read
8.     A book of poems
9.     A book with a bird or fish on the cover
10.   A book you’ve loved your whole life

Instagram #littleliterati with photos of you and your book picks so that we can see your progress along the way!


Invite your friends! The more, the merrier.


Coffee that says, "You can stroke people with your words." I believe that.
And I believe in coffee.

The Little Literati Summer Reading Challenge

6.12.2014

Get your readers ready! The Little Literati in my house are challenging The Little Literati in your house to some summer reading with a scavenger-hunt twist!


Find and read ten books that fit the descriptions below, and keep track of your progress. When you complete the challenge, email your name, mailing address, and list of ten books to thelittleliterati@gmail.com.

All who meet the challenge will receive a snail-mailed Little Literati envelope from the Prices with readerly tokens and things that inspire little literary ones. All those who complete the challenge will also be entered into a drawing for a mystery book box full of reading and reading accessories (worth over $100). 

Submissions must be received no later than Friday, August 1, 2014, to be included in the drawing. Only one submission per child. Children through rising eighth grade may participate. The winner will be notified by email the first week of August.

Happy reading!

      1.     A book set in a place you’ve never been
2.     A book that teaches you how to do something
3.     A book that was your mom or dad’s favorite when they were a kid
4.     A book with a funny title
5.     A book with an animal as the main character
6.     A book about a make-believe world
7.     A long book—one that is longer than you normally read
8.     A book of poems
9.     A book about the sea or the sky.
    10.   A book about people who lived a long time ago

Instagram #littleliterati with photos of your literati pursuing the prize so that we can see your progress along the way! 


Secretly, we’ll all know that the reading is the real prize, but you don’t have to tell them that.



Plenty excited about this but don't have any littles to participate? Share this post on Facebook or Twitter and cheer us on in the comments below.  

Why Mom Blogs Matter: Me, the Moonshine of Virginia Woolfs

6.10.2014

Lining her pockets with river rocks, Virginia Woolf walked into the water in a woolen coat, wandering and waiting on death to come rushing over her, as if to her aid.

I replay deaths that preceded my life over and over again, like I’m watching for quarterback mistakes. I live in Monday mornings. I am louder than a referee.


Names and dates ebb, barely touching the shore where the reasons lie dry and futile in the sun. Plath in ‘63.  Sexton in ’74. Details cling to me and bloom like barnacles, waiting for Virginia Woolf, in some form or another, to pass by.

We’re all trying for her in our digital streams of consciousness, struggling to traverse the distance separating wine from moonshine.

We are a million Mrs. Dalloways, deciding to buy the flowers ourselves.

“So long as you write what you wish to write, that is all that matters; and whether it matters for ages or only for hours, nobody can say. ”

                                                                        --A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf


The Fault in Our Stars—A Double-Blind Review (in a Manner of Speaking)

6.09.2014

I’m setting out on a paper adventure.

I have not read The Fault in Our Stars. I have not seen the movie either.

I’m reviewing it anyway. Daina reads John Green books as if Guy Montag himself is about to storm our house to burn them.



Every once in a long season, a book gets you feeling evangelical again about the power of a good story. You marvel at the author at whose hands you find yourself feeling both helpless and superhuman at the same time.

By the end of that book, a strange thing happens: someone else’s words form within you something so perfectly inexplicable that you suddenly have none of your own. You’re left empty and full all at once.

In that long season, wherein you have this sudden gift, you understand how words can break a person. You want the entire world to read them anyway because you know that an important part of being human is being breakable. Without books like these, we risk being unbroken for too long. We risk our ethical periphery someday shrinking to the size of a balance beam. We risk finding ourselves seeing only ourselves and an occasional other exactly like us.

I know The Fault in Our Stars does this because I’ve seen it in my thirteen-year-old daughter. I am torn between reading it because there are lines separating the goodness of things you believe in so much you start selling them, the goodness of things you value so much you don’t trust that others could ever care for them or understand them the way you do, and finally the goodness of things you call sacred. 


Until I’m sure I’ll get that right, I’m leaving it to her.  
Proudly designed by Mlekoshi playground