Can it Wait?

A few days ago, in between music performances at Target, my goal was to find Annie a winter coat. I was bound and determined. Of course, she did not want to do this. She only wanted to play. So with her usual, brilliant two-year-old intellect, she said, "But Mommy, I already have a jacket at home and I'm not even cold right now and Mommy... I have three jackets at home!" she exclaimed. Well, of course, this stopped me in my tracks. She was just trying to play; she wasn't trying to teach me the philosophy and theology of living lightly, but she did.

She does have three jackets. Well- not jackets. But zip up hoodies. And let's be honest. We live in Texas. At the height of our winter, I could layer those three hoodies on top of each other and let her sleep in the back yard if she wanted and she would not be anywhere near frost-bitten!

(Don't worry, I won't try this. I don't have a back yard.)

In that moment- Annie taught me another lesson with her simple 2-yr-old, "But momma, I already have a jacket."

And so I let it go.

She's right. She doesn't need a coat right now. It can wait. Lots of things can wait. And, she already has three. Instead of getting another coat I went to the bank, pulled out the money I budgeted for the coat, and set it aside for a need that does exist right now.

***

Don't underestimate the power of your money. Big or small. Truth is, there are a lot of things that can wait. Don't believe me? Ask a two-year-old. Even they know excess.

And there are some things, like the current famine in Somalia that's leaving thousands of innocent children starving to death in its wake- that cannot wait.

My friend Derek just traveled back from the Horn of Africa. Please take four minutes to watch his documentary- it is inspiring.

Ask yourself- is there something that can wait so that we can all give hope to people who cannot wait any longer? Your money counts. What we do with our money collectively counts.

Join me and World Conern as we try help families who desperately need food in the Horn of Africa.

Pictures of Annie

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Annie is all girl. She takes care of her babies with more loving devotion than any woman I have ever seen. Yesterday, she asked if she could take family pictures. Not with Ryan and I. With her bears. Her newest saying, as she stands on the fireplace (her stage) is, "Hello. I am Anniston Cate Simmons and I am going to be a girl. And I am going to sing Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star." She is unconcerned with clothes. They drive her crazy. However, when she really wants to be a girl, she layers herself with tutus and bracelets and scarves and about twelve fake, plastic rings with emeralds the size of her nose.

Yesterday we played outside. She was dressed in two tutus. Our neighbors were playing baseball with their little boy and Annie, in all girl form, very kindly informed their five-year old son that it was, "MY TURN NOW!!!" So in between twirls, she hit the ball and ran the bases, and when it was all done, we collapsed in the grass and took pictures of ourselves.

 

 

Like this beautiful tutu? Buy one for yourself or your little girl and help my friend Karissa as she raises money for shelters protecting little girls from sex trafficking. Visit: www.tutusforthetrafficked.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

Road Trip

Oreos...

bad decision.

Watching Monsters Inc...

apparently my child is afraid of monsters.

 

Quick, staring contest. You win, Monkey.

You always do.

Are two-year-olds supposed to be this happy on a 12 hour road trip?

maybe it's the monkey whom she named "Daddy Monkey"...

As I document our trip from the front seat (No, I wasn't driving. Well, at least for most of the pictures.) Annie shuts her eyes and says, "No Mommy! No more pictures of me! I serious!"

Kitchen Floor Horror Stories

Thanks for all the amazing, in-depth questions about the music industry! I had no idea there would be so much interest in this subject and I can't wait to keep shedding light on the inner workings of my tiny sliver of the industry! The next installment will be Monday. Now....

May I please tell you a story about my child?

The Nickel

She was sucking on a nickel when I found her on the kitchen floor.

Rolling it around in her mouth, over her tongue, and then sucking on it.

I've asked her not to eat money before, but she insists.

She loves her 'monies'.

For her birthday, my mother in law's best friend, Sallie Baker, bought Annie a wallet. She printed a picture of Annie, cut it to size and it put in the I.D. slot. She then printed a picture of Ryan and I and put it in the picture section. She attached a pair of real house keys. I'm not sure whose house they open, but they are real, and that is all that matters to Annie. Finally, and most importantly, Mrs. Sallie filled the wallet with coins.

Do you need a present for a litlte girl under the age of 4?

Save your money and get the girl the gift she will adore the most:

Her very own big girl wallet with her very own 'monies.'

Trust me, she got a big girl bed, a tricycle, a toy piano, a wind up chicken, and enough art supplies to open her own gallery... but her favorite present two months later?

"Let's go ANNIE!" I yell from the front door.

"SORRY Mommy! Gotta get my WALLET! Gonna need my MONIES! I go-in shopping too!'

Who knew the ultimate present was under $5? (Mrs. Sallie Baker of course. Martha Stewart has nothing on this lady.)

 

Kitchen Floor Horror Stories

Back to the girl's monies.

She's eating her nickels, which I have repeatedly asked her not to do, when I find her in the kitchen, kicked back against the dishwasher staring at her own image in the oven.

Narcissism and curiousty hit early in life, don't they?

Frustrated that she is so money hungry, I attempt to do what every good fire and brimstone pastor does... put the fear of the Lord in her and all but force her to turn from her wicked ways.

"Annie!", I got on my knees next to her, "What have I told you about eating your monies?"

"I gotta nickel mommy," she snickers like this is a time for jokes.

"It's not funny Annie. I know you have a nickel and nickels are dangerous. Did you know that? DID you? "

Yeah. In that moment I was convinced that she ought to have thought through the whole 'nickels are dangerous' scenario. As every responsible two-year-old should.

"Well they are. They are dangerous. And if you swallowed a nickel it would hurt your throat and it would burn all the day down and when it got in your tummy it would get lost. And stuck. And your body would start getting sick. And then, we'd have to go to the hospital. Did you know that? Did you? That we'd have to go to the hospital?

"Yeah," she said sweetly and with a strange look of excitement in her eyes.

"Well, we would we'd have to go to the hospital. We'd have to see a doctor and do you know what that doctor would do to you? Do you? Listen to me, the doctor would..."

And just as I was- honest to God- about to explain to her that the doctor would give her a shot that would make her 'spizzy' and then he would take a knife and cut her stomach wide open and she would bleed and all her food would come out and she would have to have stitches and stay in her bed for at least a week... literally, just as the word knife is dangling off my tongue in the air, Annie said, with a face full of pensive, serious thought...

"Mommy I would need a band aide and a sucker."

She looked at me with those big, baby blue doe eyes,

"I would have an owie mommy."

I stopped dead in my tracks.

I want Annie to be safe, no doubt. I want her to have a healthy fear of things like strangers and snakes and not running out into the road. As her mom, I have to teach her boundaries and rules, I have to protect her. But that little girl taught me a huge lesson yesterday morning.

Fear Not?

Putting the 'fear of the Lord' in her, as in, "I will scare you so bad you will never want to do that again,"

isn't necessary.

A band aide would have sufficed.

 

Mongering Monster

In recent years, much has been made about "fear mongering." We see it in politics, religion, school systems, and environmental battles.

I often find myself wondering how you have a healthy respect for safety without using the fear of the Lord (or of anarchy, communism, hell, grannies being put to death by the government, or a universal chocolate shortage) to incite, manipulate, or persuade people.

And within our churches as we decide how to draw people to Jesus, if there is no better way to draw someone to Jesus, than by simply waving around the threatening fear of Hell?

Annie didn't need me to give her the worst, most horrific possible outcome. But there I was, prepared to tell my precious two-year-old that if she didn't "obey me" she would have a knife ripping into her stomach and her guts splayed on the table and she would be confined to bed for an entire week.

Really?

Instead, she stopped me with her simple words and simple heart.

If she had to see a doctor because she swallowed a nickle, well, he would have to give her a band-aide and she would have an owie. And that was enough for her.

She took the nickle out of her mouth and went on to the next toy.

My almost slip made me wonder, how often do I use fear tactics without even thinking? When are they appropriate? And how much fear is necessary? Or is fear necessary at all? I mean, this world is full of things that we become afraid of, is it really my job to go around instilling even more fear?

When she said she would need a band-aide, I felt silly.

Here I was about to scar the pour thing for life- and she graciously kept me from being a fear mongerer. She understood that doctors meant owies and bandaides. She didn't need me to terrify her with knife, blood, and guts.

I simply needed to make her aware, and even she, a two-year-old, was able to make her very own decision without the gory details of my knife to the gut story.

Fear.

or

Fear not?

 

 

 

 

Mom Week in Pictures

the art class

 

the zoo

Annie desperately wants the gorilla to kiss her. She gives the whole lot of them as many kisses as her lips allow. God only knows what kind of germs got into her mouth while she smooched the glass and hoped for contact.

the tent town

 

the- "my eyes burn" -sunglasses

She wore them every morning while watching Yo Gabba Gabba. She asked for them after she rubbed her eyes, slapped her eyes, pulled her eyelids, and- quite brilliantly- tried putting spit in her eyes. Maybe I should've given her eyedrops or closed the curtains, but it was way too entertaining to watch.  So, after all her other attempts failed- she asked for her sunglasses. Brilliant little bugger.

the mom moments

Well, ok. That moment was just for me. But at the end of a long summer week, every mom needs this kind of moment.

(And husbands, if you can't find one of those for her, I am sure a pedicure, night out, glass of wine, or a "Honey, why don't you go to Barnes and Noble and read for a few hours" would totally suffice.)

What are you doing with your kids this summer?