What Sam says
Overheard in the Wolfe House #238
Sam (slapping the wall in the other room): Goodbye, mosquito!
Try the front row
The kids and I sat behind a family with three wiggly boys at Mass this morning. It didn’t take long for Michael, now a coach at Easter Seals, to notice that the youngest one was likely on the spectrum. I noticed, too, and remembered when my children could be that wiggly.
I thought for a moment about tapping the mom on the shoulder and offering her a tip, but then I remembered how I felt about advice from well-meaning strangers and kept my thoughts to myself.
Our church has Mass in the round. The altar is in the center of the room. It provides a good view for everyone, if you’re a grown-up. If you sit in the back, whether at St. Philip’s or at a church with a traditional layout, your kids seen only all the big people around you. But if you sit in the first row — and you have about six chances with a church in the round — all of the proceedings unfold right in front of you.
Mark had a bold idea when our church, St. Philip the Apostle in Lewisville, opened its new worship space in 1997. We wouldn’t sit in the back. We would sit right up front. If the kids wiggled, they would wiggle right onto the floor. And, they could see.
The first couple of times were a little scary. But it worked. The kids actually wiggled less because they could see what was going on. And, when they came back from children’s liturgy, they didn’t have to work too hard to remember where Mark and I were sitting because they only needed to scan the front rows.
I can’t remember when we realized the kids were calm enough that we could sit in other spots. But I do remember we started picking spots that would let Sam avoid the incense during the Gospel reading. He would slip out into the narthex and then slip back in at the end of the Homily, when it was done smoking so much. Eventually, we found a spot where the smell wasn’t as strong and we sat there so he could stay all the way through the service.
On the way home, as we shared our observations of the new Family Wiggly, I asked the kids if they could remember sitting in the front row and whether they liked it better. Could they see better? Did they know we did it so they wouldn’t wiggle so much? None of them could remember a bit of it.
Sam did remind us however, that while it may have been years since we’ve sat in a front row, we did for Mark’s funeral Mass.
Amen to that, Sam. Amen.
Overheard in the Wolfe House #237
Overheard in the Wolfe House #236
Peggy: What’s on your mind there, Sam?
Sam (gazing to the ceiling): I don’t know. Trying to refresh it.
Overheard in the Wolfe House #235
Paige (trying to see Sam’s Hollywood beard): Wait, Sam, did you shave?
Sam: I should. It feels like cactus.
Overheard in the Wolfe House #234
Peggy: … so that would be the plan for worst case scenario.
Sam: Ok. (pauses) And, what makes it worst case scenario is that it usually doesn’t happen.
Sam’s Peanut-butter lover ice cream
He came up with this combination himself. The recipe is loosely based on Ben and Jerry’s cookbook, published the year he was born and gifted to us by dear friends, Jan and Tracy Davis.
Peanut Butter Cookies n’ Cream
3 cups broken up peanut butter Oreos
2 eggs
3/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup crunchy peanut butter
2 cups cream
1 cup milk
1 tsp. vanilla
Set the cookie bits in the freezer to chill them while you prepare the mix. Beat eggs and add sugar slowly, combining well. Whisk in peanut butter and when well combined add cream, milk, vanilla. Freeze in ice cream freezer according to manufacturer’s direction, adding cookies at the end and blending 1-2 more minutes.
Overheard in the Wolfe House #233
Paige: So I got the Bach a little better today.
Peggy: Oh yeah?
Paige: Do you know Bach, Sam?
Sam: That’s the sound a chicken makes.
Overheard in the Wolfe House #232
Sam (yawning)
Peggy: Sounds like bedtime
Sam: Sounds like lack of oxygen
Overheard in the Wolfe House #231
Peggy (seeing Sam resting his head on the back of a chair after a long search for his dress shirt): There are a lot of people in the house. It’s a little chaotic.
Sam: Yes. It’s nice.