A Mish-Mashy Hodge-Podge Sans Conclusion

My daughter insisted that she would sleep outside tonight, in the backyard, in her underpants, thank you very much. “Night-night, Mommy!” she waved as I opened the sliding glass door and stepped inside.

I called her bluff and when I heard the theme music for SpongeBob Squarepants, I opened the kitchen window and informed her, “Hey, SpongeBob is on!” and she scurried inside. Then, curled on the couch, she let me know that she planned to sleep downstairs, on the couch.

I do love her polite defiance. When I tell her, “Hey, go pick up those toys,” she’ll say, “No, thank you.” After her bath (right before she went to bed in her room, as usual), she said, “I spit water right there, on the floor.” I furrowed my brows in the classic Mom Disapproval Glare and she said, “I’m sorry, Mama.” But the spark in her eyes and the impish grin said otherwise.

* * *

Today was a most glorious day. I had an eye appointment at Costco at 10:40 a.m., which I managed to stretch into a solitary daylong excursion. More on that in a minute, but first I must tell you about the eye doctor, or as I like to think of him, The Pocket Doctor.

From his tiny white shirt to his little shiny shoes, he was just like a real doctor, only miniaturized. His nose was tiny and perfect sculpted, like Barbie’s. When he leaned in close to peer into my eyeballs, the scent of Ivory soap wafted from his tidy hair.  I had complete confidence in The Pocket Doctor and couldn’t stop thinking about how handy it would be to have a replica of a doctor to just tuck into your pocket or purse.

Oh, and weirdly, my eyes are better, not worse, and so I have a lesser prescription. When we finished, I ordered the contacts, then faced the wall of glasses to pick out a new pair. (My old pair is 9 years old.)

The Costco clerk came out from behind the counter to stand next to me as I contemplated the choices. Too many choices! They were sorted into three areas: Men, Women, Contemporary. I stood in front of the Contemporary section, trying to imagine myself in these little rectangular black frames or those small oval pink ones and the clerk said, “Well, these are cute,” just as I started saying, “I don’t think I’m cool enough to wear any of these.” She said, “Sure you are!” but that was just mercy speaking.

I scooted over and picked out a pair from the Women’s section, but not before picking up, putting on, taking off, putting down the same ten pairs of glasses over and over again. I just couldn’t decide. But finally, I just picked one. Good enough for the next ten years.

* * *

Last night, my husband and I went to a movie. (Can you guess what we saw?) For the first time, I bought tickets online, which was pretty terrific. No standing in line to purchase tickets . . . and a very small crowd in the concession area. We stood behind three people in a line and I immediately wanted to switch lines. I had a hunch, but my husband, Mr. I-Don’t-Like-Change, said, “No, this is fine.” So we waited another ten minutes, finally realizing we really should have moved to another line.

As we finally headed toward the theater, I said to my husband, “You know, this one time I saw a movie on the opening weekend and when I first got to the theater, I thought, hey, it’s not even full, and then I walked into the movie and it was packed . . . kind of like this!” And we saw that the seats were full. . . and then we found two spots right on the floor, front and center. Perfect.

If I were a different sort of person, a person with a big mouth, a person unafraid of being bashed in the mouth by a stranger, I might have uttered these words:

1) ARE YOU TALKING ON YOUR PHONE DURING THE MOVIE?! SHUT UP! and

2) GET YOUR TODDLER OUT OF THIS THEATER! THIS IS NOT A MOVIE FOR TODDLERS! HIRE A BABYSITTER, YOU MORON!!

But, I’m not that sort of person, so I just said to myself, Now I have something to blog about. Aren’t you lucky?

* * *

Oh, and finally. When I returned from my daylong adventure (Costco, Wendy’s for salad, Joann Fabrics, Value Village, Trader Joe’s), I returned to my driveway in time to see my neighbor holding something at arm’s length with her index finger and thumb, hurrying across her yard.

She was walking back when I disembarked and I said, “What happened? Did something die?”

Then I heard the squawking. Two frantic Steller’s Jays were swooping from tree to fence and back again. Apparently, the neighbor’s cat had killed their baby bird and both birds had turned into John Walsh, desperate to find their missing offspring. The neighbor kept saying, “I feel terrible! I feel terrible! I feel terrible!” and scolded the cat who did not feel terrible and who was still lurking under a bush, a serial killer longing to kill again.

Did you know that Steller’s Jays form monogamous long-term pairs? They were still screeching and hopping from roof to tree to fence and back again when I finished carrying in the groceries.

* * *

Tonight, while I clipped back a wicked bush (with spiky two-inch needle-like thorns) near our gate, the boys played a game in which they threw a ball over the house to one another. If they’d broken a window, I’d really have a tale to tell, but they didn’t, so I don’t.

The End.

8 thoughts on “A Mish-Mashy Hodge-Podge Sans Conclusion

  1. Hey, we used to play that throwing the ball over the house game – we called it “Annie, Annie over”! You threw the ball over the house – shed, garage or what ever, and if someone from the team on the other side caught it, they all had to run to your side and try to tag someone – if they succeeded, then that person became part of their team. Anyway, it was a fun kids game that entertained us for hours. Loved all the “Hodge Podge” stories – funny and cute!

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  2. Trader Joe’s when you’re feeding a family: useful or overpriced way of serving snacks in lieu of meals?

    I’ve recently started shopping at Trader Joe’s a lot because I hate our cattle call supermarket and am too lazy to go to the farmer’s market and I find what I end up with is a lot of things that are more like hors d’oeuvres than meals and/or a lot of sauces with not much else….which is all well and good with me, since it doesn’t require as much cooking whichever way you slice it, but does it work when you’re feeding more than adults?

    Do kids like this kinda’ food?

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  3. Hubba-hubba and I do the exact same thing with the line thing. He ALWAYs picks the wrong line.

    I am positive on this date night that you saw Ice Age II: The Meltdown. Why wouldn’t you want to be reminded of your children? Add to that the supposed Bush-bashing references the movie contains and it sounds perfect for the two of you! 😉

    As for conclusions, who needs em’?

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  4. We used to throw tennis and rubber balls up over the porch roof against the front wall of the house…there was an empty space between two bedroom windows. Miraculously, none of my brothers or I ever broke a window for all the thousands of times we did that, lol! I’d forgotten all about that! I must admit I was a much more stubborn little missy than your daughter…when I threatened to do things as a kid, I DID! I ran away from home, made it halfway to the lake outside of town before a barking dog scared me and my two little companions who I’d talked into going with me and caused us to turn back. My Dad found us sitting in a line on the curb crying…he took us for ice cream cones and I didn’t even get into trouble. He said we looked SO miserable he figured we’d had punishment enough, lol! Dear Hubby and I drove down to Roseburg on Friday…hit the Goodwill and Salvation Army there that we spotted as we went about our other business that took us there…found some great stuff for my garden. Find anything interesting at Value Village???

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  5. Wow! You have an intesting life!

    My peanut is 6 and still acts like your daughter, how old is she? Probably younger if I had to guess.

    I don’t have a Costco, but they sound like fun if you can spend ALL day in there AND get new glasses!

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  6. Oh, your little girl sounds SO adorable! How precious are these stories about her!

    Getting glasses is very hard. You always have hope they’ll look great, but then they don’t even look good when you get them because… after all, they are glasses. Seems we always look better without them.

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  7. Love Trader Joes! We have to travel to another town to shop there though. I get my glasses at Costco, but the guy here doesn’t make any helpful suggestions. I can’t see without my glasses so trying on frames is a roll of the dice at best. My husband always just says “They all look nice on you dear!” Yeah right!

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