My daughter sat on the floor watching me get dressed. She was wearing her brother’s ripped t-shirt and her hair was bunched into a knotty knob on her head.
“That’s a pretty dress, Mama.”
Her eyes shone when she looked at me, tiny mirrors that reflected my face back to me in rainbow colors.
I shimmied out of the dress and tossed it on the growing heap of not-quite-right outfits.
“Thanks, honey. But pretty clothes aren’t what’s important, right?”
“Mmm hmmmm.”
“What is important, baby?”
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My
Israeli husband and I, along with our kids, made aliyah two months ago.
Our new neighborhood, a sleepy suburb of Tel Aviv, has been disrupted
several times a day by the sound of a long piercing siren. Our
3-year-old twins, born and raised in New York, refer to the sirens as “a
big fire truck,” but this time was different.

Now
that I’ve been a parent for a month, I’m hoping to see evidence of an
emerging parenting style. Am I an Attachment Parent? Or am I Detached?
What are my philosophies on where, when, and how the baby should sleep?
Or eat? To wear or not to wear the baby?
“Bloody Mary party at 11 o’ clock!” a voice chirruped from the float to our left.