In discussing a writers’ conference, I had a few questions:
“How do mothers with little children juggle a weekend like this?” I asked. “Are
there nursery facilities?”
A fellow writer-mother had been
to this venue before and told me there are no nurseries. She included this line
in her response: “If your little ones do well at sitting through church for
long periods of time, they should be just fine. Ha.”
Immediately, my mind went to REACH 2015, a Mission’s Conference we took
our young children to. The following words were written to debrief myself
afterwards.
I knew it was going to be a long day of
sitting for a five- and two-year-old. It was a long day of sitting for an
adult, but adults can get caught up in the inspiration of the moment and forget
they are sitting.
A child does not. Inspiration is not on his menu for the day.
Survival is.
I thought I went prepared. In general, our children sit quietly
through church services without much extra-curricular entertainment, but
considering this was a full day of meetings in a less-formal setting than
church, I tucked snacks, books, tablets, and coloring things into my bulging
bag and thought we had the day aced. We did great through the first three
sessions without even touching the snacks. I was impressed.
And then came lunch.
When the moderator announced that there was only seating for 350 of the
900 people at a time, John leaned over and asked if McDonald's was in order.
"Nah," I said, imagining easy-to-eat sandwiches. Plus, fast
food restaurants seemed scarce in the area we were in, and the children were
still doing so well. I was confident and reassuring. "We’ll be fine.”
Wrong.
Things deteriorated the minute we reached the food tables. There were
little cups of stew, a salad, dinner rolls, and fruit in more little cups, all
to be balanced on a Styrofoam tray. We were each getting food for
ourselves and a child. It felt like we were balancing an entire army of
cups on trays not designed to carry them. Weaving through the crowded room with
our precarious burdens, the backpack slipped lower on John's arm, threatening
the stew with disaster before we ever got to our table. But we made it without
mishap to the seating area.
Our troubles might have been over had there been tables in the room we
were directed to. But there weren't. Only rows of chairs with thickly padded
cloth seats that rested upon beautiful, wall-to-wall carpeting.
We stood knock-kneed in front of four chairs, only slightly better off
than we had been during the balancing act it took to get there. I sat the Girlie’s
tray on a chair and had her stand in front of it. So far so good.
But it happened. You knew it would, right? Somewhere between the Girlie
dropping a forkful of salad onto the carpet and The Boy losing part of his
cookie down the inside of his shirt, the soup fell. It didn't
land gently on its side with a few stray beans spilling out, this was a
full-blown crash, landing entirely up-side-down on that beautiful carpet.
John was sweating profusely.
Our saving factors were three. The first was the tightly woven nap of
the carpet; the second was the thickness of the stew; and the third was a wet
washcloth I had in my bag. Between the three, the mess cleaned up beautifully.
The best part of the spill was that it broke the stress of potential
disaster. When the dreaded became reality, we started laughing at the absurdity
of the situation: two preschoolers, soup and fruit cups, and no table.
And lunch was over. I gladly pitched the offending Styrofoam cups into
the trash, mean ol' things.
But even then, things did not improve. Restless little legs were tired
of this, a tiredness so deep it was not cured by running around outside during
lunch break. Sessions ran back to back and were an hour long. We burned
through all of our snacks, stickers, and books in a single session.
Sitting all day was a lot to ask of a child who appreciates nothing the
speaker is saying. So we cut out early.
On the way home, John and I discussed the day and what the expectations
should be of a child. I regretted that I hadn’t taken the children out
for some exercise during one of the sessions. That would have offered some
diversion and worn off some of the energy that was building for the Grand
Finale in the last session. In that period, the words of the speaker were only
background music to my test in child management skills as I tried to save fellow
attendees from a side-ring circus. Ironically, this session was held in a real
dining room where the children and I sat at a table only long enough for them
to color two pages apiece on high speed and to consume all of the chocolates in
the little bowl on the table. Then we gathered our things and left.
It had been a long afternoon for fledgling parents. Long enough that he
looked at his tired wife on the way home and said, “Do you need some coffee?”
“Yes,” she answered. “I’ll take an espresso. Intravenously.”
At least they were laughing.
For a long time afterwards, the day was an
icon of stressful parenting. Other potentially challenging situations were
overshadowed by the memory. "Hey,” we would say encouragingly, “if we
survived REACH, this will be a no-brainer."
Experience has made us wiser. In
discussing the possibility of me attending a writers’ conference, John already
has made a generous offer: “I’ll be happy to take you to one when the baby is
older. The children and I will find something fun to do in the area during the
day. That way we can see each other in the evening, and you’ll be able to enjoy
the conference.”
And I say, what a good idea.
Photo sourced from pixabay.com
Photo sourced from pixabay.com
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