Monthly Archives: March 2013

Keep Dating!


Photo Credit: Rita Crane Photography

I work with a lot of young moms and wives as a Bible study leader and Mom To Mom mentor.

Since our son is 17 and our daughter is 15 1/2, I am not so far removed from those  early years that I can’t remember  the exhaustion, the stress, the potty-training drama…as well as all the unique fun and joy that little ones bring into a life.

Running like a strong thread throughout those years was the timeless and vitally important piece of advice that our pastor gave us during our premarital counseling sessions: “NEVER STOP DATING. Don’t stop being Doug and Susan, even when there are little ones who call you Mommy and Daddy.”

I share this advice with young moms every chance I get, because it is so essential to a marriage.

We will celebrate 21 years of marriage in May and we have heeded Pastor John’s advice all those years ago.

It was very easy to do during the nearly four years before we had kids. Doug worked in New York City, so that was our playground.

However, when we had two children who were only 19 months apart and lived far from family, dating became much more of a challenge.

Yet, we persevered.

We made sure to have a date once a month.

When my parents came to visit, it was easy. We took advantage of their free babysitting services and not only went out to dinner and a movie, but sometimes went away for the weekend. But since they only visited a couple times a year, we had to make other plans for the remaining months.

There were times when Doug would get  take out from one of our favorite restaurants after the kids were in bed and bring it home. We would light candles (to soften the effects of  the hideously painted yellow kitchen with blue countertops in our rented home), put a Frank Sinatra CD on, and enjoy dinner and dessert right there in our kitchen.

We also traded babysitting duties with other couples. One month, Doug and I would watch their kids; the next, they would watch ours.

This led to some interesting scenarios for me.

I still remember having to go to our friends David and Wendy’s home  one Saturday night by myself because Doug was sick. As soon as I put their kids to bed for the night, I began to be completely terrorized by a gigantic black spider that skittered across the floor out of nowhere and ran right by my feet under the sofa! Then it came right back out and ran back in! I screamed and ran to the kitchen to sit on one of the breakfast stools. That is where I remained for the next few hours, as the spider continued its reign of terror while I tried to read my book and prayed for our friends to come home early!

The second scenario that comes to mind is one night when our neighbors, who had NEVER had one night out in all their  years of marriage, finally agreed to allow me to watch their two young boys so they could attend a glitzy function at the husband’s work. They were so excited and I was praying that they had a wonderful time. Doug was across the street taking care of our two kids, who were still quite young at the time.

Fifteen minutes after their car pulled out of the driveway, their oldest son proceeded to lose his entire dinner all over her polished wooden floors.

Now, I could not even clean up after my own kids when this happened and now this. So, I held my nose, prayed for grace, and did what I had to do.

All this to say…it will not always be easy to continue to date your spouse when you have small children, but it is worth every effort.

Because those little kids who tear through the house like a tornado right now? They will be leaving for college tomorrow.

If you have not put in the work (and yes, a good marriage requires hard work), this day may fill you with appropriate sadness, but not despair. Why is that? You have done your parenting job to the best of your ability (not perfectly because there is no such thing). You have equipped your children with what they need to know to strike out on their own and begin to live their story.

And now, you and your husband can live out the rest of your love story because you will have worked at staying connected throughout your parenting years.

If you haven’t done this, it’s not too late to start. Consider your resources and make a plan. Be creative but by all means, reconnect with each other as a couple.

Begin to consciously remember the things that attracted you to your spouse in the first place.

Start small. A date doesn’t always have to be dinner and a movie. It can be a walk around the neighborhood or along the beach. A trip to the local ice cream stand. One couple I know enjoys riding a tandem bike together. Whatever works for you and your husband, just do it.

The moments add up and add a sweetness to your years.

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Friday Photos: New York City


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This past week, my family and I headed to New York City to tour two colleges: Columbia and NYU.

Our son wants to be a writer and both offer stellar programs. 

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We arrived on Sunday afternoon and our first stop was a visit to the Guggenheim museum. Or, as my husband refers to it: ” A Monument To Self Indulgence.” 🙂

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NYC college visit-0053-1Photos were only allowed on the ground floor…which is why I do not have a photo of one of the exhibits…the absurdly titled “The Bisexual Flower.” It is “a motorized plexiglass flower-shaped fountain bubbling with glowing bath salt nectar. The work…is not just loud but dangerous: as it screeches it glows and protective glasses are provided to shelter your eyes from the UV light.” (source: gallersityny.com). To protect people from those UV rays, the entire display was shielded by what resembled a giant igloo bubble.

I respect people’s right to create art. However, this just seemed so absurd that our entire family burst out laughing as we observed this spectacle. This definitely garnered us some disdainful looks from the obviously more sophisticated art lovers among us, but so be it.

Give me a lovely Monet to get lost in any day.

Each display seemed more ridiculous than the next, so our time at the Guggenheim was quite short. It was unfortunate that the day we visited, a modern art exhibit was being featured but it provided us with enough laughs for months to come.

The next two days were a whirlwind of college tours, restaurants, heart-pounding taxi rides, and fascinating people-watching.

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Those two days in the city seemed to fly by.

As our cab hurtled toward Grand Central Station, I quietly snapped this photo of Josh…

NYC college visit-0398-1He was quiet as he watched the Manhattan skyline rush by, seemingly lost in his thoughts and dreams.

There truly is no place like New York City.

“New York remains what it always has been: a city of ebb and flow, a city of constant shift in population and economics, a city of virtually no rest. It is harsh, dirty, and dangerous, it is whimsical and fanciful, it is beautiful and soaring—it is not one or another of these things but all of them, all at once, and to fail to accept  this paradox is to deny the reality of city existence.”—Paul Goldberger

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