Random

The sliding door opens.  My 4-year old daughter plops down and begins taking off her shoes. 

“What are you doing?  Are you staying in?” I ask.

“I’m a dog.”

“Oh.  Why are you taking off your clothes?”

“Dogs don’t wear clothes.”

She stripped off her jeans and her shirt, adjusted her pink underpants and went back outside wearing only socks on her feet.

*  *  *

Guess what showed up on my living room floor two nights ago?  The remote control.  And it didn’t even bring me back a t-shirt as a souvenir!

Sad

Last night, I watched the Barbara Walters interview with Terri Irwin, the widow of Steve Irwin, the “Crocodile Hunter.”  I cried.  Then I cried again.  Then I cried some more.  I went to bed at 11 p.m. with red-rimmed eyes and a stuffy nose.

When I watched 8-year old Bindi speak at her 44-year old father’s memorial service, I wept.  At least I had my father for 24 years.  To have your father–especially that particular larger-than-life father–for only 8 years is so wrong.

My husband is 45-years old.  I cannot imagine losing him.  I cannot imagine my children losing him.  I know that happens–my own father left me fatherless–but it’s still unimaginable to me.

All of this–the interview, the anniversary of my own father’s death, the child’s voice speaking about her father–perhaps even the sliver of moon in the sky and the impending change of seasons–has left me undone with a tight place in my throat that will not unclench.

This world is so breathtaking, so heart-wrenching, so beautiful and with such potential for loss and pain.  When I glimpse the sunset pink on Mt. Rainier, I wonder if I might ever see that sight again.  Will I see the moon grow full and round?  Someday, will I watch my daughter become a mother herself?

This feeling will wash away in the tide of mundane life.  I know it will, but for the moment, I’m sad. 

Slow Down

Life is not a race.  So, why are so many mothers I know in such a hurry to enroll their three and four-year old children in school?  Why does a four-year old need to write his name?  What is the big rush?

For the typical pregnant woman, the starting flag begins waving the second the doctor insists on an ultrasound to “date” the pregnancy because God forbid a baby should just arrive on its own terms.  It’s all about shaving off the final weeks of pregnancy and inducing the baby to be born for the convenience of the doctor so he can be home before the sun sets on the splendor that is his home.  Who cares that a normal pregnancy can last up to forty-two weeks and that some babies take even longer to gestate . . . let’s hurry and get that baby born!  Stat!

Don’t even get me started on how few mothers bother to breastfeed their babies for the optimum length of time, because surely, someone will be offended and that is not my intent.  But honestly, how many babies are shortchanged because of mom’s rush to just move on to another stage? 

Babies are little for about twenty minutes, it seems, and then they are stinky teenagers, but we are in a headlong rush to get them through each stage as quickly as possible.  Finish up breastfeeding so we can potty-train so we can enroll them in full-time preschool so they are ready to read and write before they get to kindergarten so they can what?  Apply to an Ivy League college before they get out of second grade?

Speaking of second grade, I must again describe my dismay at observing second-grade girls at a Veteran’s Day assembly a few years back.  Those seven year olds had highlights in their hair and pantyhose on their legs and high-heels on their feet.  And to think that I wasn’t even allowed to wear earrings before I was ten back in the old days.  These girls looked ready for an office romance.

This all ties in with my pet peeve:  parents who take children to inappropriate movies or allow them to watch inappriate DVDs at home.  (The latter happens more often than the former because parents apparently don’t realize that the images are the same–only smaller–on both screens.  Duh.) 

Why are we in a foolhardy hurry to expose our children to adult themes and images?  What three-year old needs to view a rated PG-13 Superman giving his main squeeze an upside down kiss?  What child needs to see violence on screen or hear wildly inappropriate language in surround sound?  If a preschooler watches PG-13 movies, what will he be accustomed to watching by the time he’s fourteen?  What is the rush?

My job as a mother is to protect my children’s innocence for as long as possible.  My job as a mother is to protect my children’s childhoods for as long as possible. 

When moms and dads worry more about whether their kid can write a word at age four than they worry about images that child sees, people that child meets and influences that child experiences, something is wrong.  Not that any of you are like that, of course.  But some theoretical parents are, you know.  Rush, rush, rush, hurry, hurry, hurry, without regard for a child’s internal timetable or needs.

My four year can write a “M” and can recognize her name in print.  It hasn’t even occurred to me to teach her to write her alphabet, nor do I ship her off to preschool.  I haven’t tried to teach her to read nor have I shown her how to wear eye shadow.  She doesn’t have a lunchbox or take any classes or own a Dayplanner.

She’ll know how to write in cursive and recite her multiplication tables soon enough.  In the  meantime, you can find her in the sandbox, digging.

We’re in no hurry around here.   

Season’s Pass

We have a season’s pass to the Point Defiance Zoo in Tacoma because a day’s visit for a family of six costs almost as much as a family membership.  The 13-year old boys find the whole ordeal of visiting the zoo taxing and they always complain before going.  The 8-year old rejoices because he adores animals.  The 4-year old dances around with glee because she remembers feeding the goats and riding the merry-go-round.

The zoo is small, but perched on a hill overlooking the Puget Sound.  The paths between exhibits curve over gentle hills.  You never really have to push through crowds.  The peacocks roam freely, occasionally puffing up their tail-feathers in a beautiful show of intimidation which always reminds me of the peacock feather I once picked up from a zoo when I was a kid.

At the zoo, you can always see the elephants up close.  Once, we watched a polar bear swim in circles only inches from our faces–on the other side of the glass.  The walruses swim in lazy circles, brushing up against the window. 

But you can never really see the tigers.  The tigers doze in the shade, camouflaged by tall grass.  A gully and a pond and a wall and some stairs separate us from the tigers.  So, the tigers are sort of boring.  You can’t really see them and they don’t really do much.

I feel like a yawning tiger in the zoo.  I wonder why anyone comes here to peer at me since my life is a big snooze-fest.  I ought to give refunds to anyone who stumbles by because there is nothing to see here. 

At least not today.  Check back, though, and maybe I’ll be chasing small prey and slashing the couch with my razor-sharp claws.  Or not.

I am Sneezy, Mother to Crybaby

I can’t stop sneezing.  My daughter won’t stop crying.  But, hey, the weather is beautiful out today, predicted to reach 80 degrees, some optimistic meteorologists proclaim.  (Whatever happened to just calling them “forecasters” anyway?)

My husband would like you to know that he is one terrific guy.  Saturday, he set me loose from 10:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.  I saw a movie (“The Illusionist” which I can wholeheartedly recommend) and shopped at my favorite thrift store and at Marshall’s.  As usual, being alone out in the world refreshed me and almost made me ready to face the sink full of dishes at home.  In fact, when I got home, I cleaned out my closet. 

My daughter is still crying.  She’s crying for two reasons.  1)  She went to bed last night an hour late because I had to take her to my son’s Judo class last night because my husband went to a meeting; 2)  I just snapped at her when she kept repeating the same sentence over and over and over.  Why people in this family don’t realize I CAN HEAR THEM the first time, even if I don’t immediately respond is beyond my comprehension.  Just because I am not speaking, people I live with appear to believe that I am also NOT THINKING and not IN THE MIDDLE OF SOMETHING. 

Now, she’s gone into the other room to play the other computer.  Finally, she stopped crying.  I have also temporarily stopped sneezing.  I have fall allergies sometimes and this year, I sneeze all morning long.  My nose itches.  Really, it’s quite a delight to be me.

Have you ever heard of Pickleball?  It’s like playing tennis with wiffle balls and giant ping-pong paddles.  I’d never seen it played before this weekend when we visited friends who have a court in their driveway.  I tried to not be jealous of those people . . . and not just because they have at least $100,000 worth of vehicles parked in their garage, but because their pantry is bigger than my whole kitchen. 

My besetting sin:  jealousy.

And so my day begins with my sober assessment of my shortcomings (snappish, jealous, prone to sneezing, unable to keep kitchen floor clean, impatient) and a pile of used tissues.

My husband, though . . . he rocks.  And I’m not just saying that because he told me to.

Hold Your Nose

Why do teenage boys smell like feet?

And why don’t they want to brush their teeth?

Why are they opposed to deodorant and combing their hair?

Just wondering.  I came home tonight at 11:30 p.m. (from cleaning up and decorating my Sunday School classroom) and when I walked into the Boy Cave, the smell of feet assailed my delicate nasal passages.  Are the boys hard of smelling? 

Anyway, they have a friend spending the night and I predict that they will not sleep most of the night and that furthermore, they may be dead from inhaling foot odor in the morning, which is known to be a deadly killer.

Back In Time

I whispered to my great-aunt, “How’d he do last night?”

And she whispered back, “He was a little restless, but he settled down.”

We both gazed at my father, his six-foot-two-inch frame stretched out in the hospital bed.  The bed looked out of place in the lavender room where I’d spent my adolescence–we’d moved it in the day before, right before he was discharged from the hospital.

He hadn’t wanted to die in the hospital.  So, eleven days after I left him in the emergency room for pain management, an ambulance brought him home.  In prior days, my aunt had cautioned me, “What will you do?  You’ll have to go back to work sometime.”  But that night, I had wept in the dark and when my husband had reached for me, asking what was wrong, I sobbed out the words, “I want to bring him home!  He doesn’t want to die in the hospital.”

And my husband had said, “Then bring him home.  We’ll figure it out from there.”  So we did.

We drove in a makeshift caravan home from the hospital.  My stepmother brought a thick foam pad for the bed in her truck.  My husband and I followed the ambulance.  A friend of my dad’s brought the aunts with her.

The stretcher couldn’t reach the last bedroom on the right, so the ambulance driver yelled, “MR. MARTIN!  MR. MARTIN!  YOU HAVE TO WALK!” right in his face.  My dad, ravaged by cancer, finally said with annoyance, “I KNOW!” 

And he teetered one baby-step after another into the lavender room while I stood in his old room, the master bedroom, watching with tears in my eyes and a pillow clutched in my twenty-four year old hands.

We settled him into his bed.  The catheter bag hung on the side, dark urine collecting in a small puddle.  I could see his pulse beating fast near his collarbone.  His mouth parted, just a little, as he slept.  His face looked unfamiliar without his wire-rimmed glasses. 

His three aunts had flown out from Wisconsin to be with us.  We took turns sitting in the green recliner we’d moved next to his bed.  His friend stopped by to simply sit with him.  

In the evening, around dinner-time, I went in to the room with the list of medications he needed to take.  I pushed the buttons to move the head of the bed so he was sort of sitting.  I tried to wake him, but he responded with nonsense. 

“Dad!  You need to take these pills.”  And I placed a pill in his mouth.  “No, no!  Don’t chew . . . swallow.”  I stuck the tip of the straw into his mouth, but he chewed it, reminding me of a goat.  I laughed.  He chewed up his pills and I reclined the bed flat again.

When the night came, I went to bed, leaving my aunt, a nurse, to sit with him.  The next morning, when she reported that he’d had a good night, I said, “Do you think I should go to work?”  She nodded, so I showered and off to work I went.

I called around noon to see how he was.  He’s had a quiet day, she assured me, so I told her I’d stay until 4 p.m. 

I drove into my driveway at 4:30 p.m. and my aunt met me on the sidewalk.  “Go get your sister.  He doesn’t have much time.”  He’d taken a sudden turn for the worse.

My 17-year old sister worked at KFC a mile away.  She had worried aloud about who would get her or tell her or pick her up.  I told her I would.  I turned and drove straight to the fast-food restaurant.  I parked.  I walked in, asked for her.  When she pushed through the swinging doors, I couldn’t speak.  I just stared at her and she knew.  I choked out, “It’s time.”

And I held her in my arms and we cried a little by the case of fast-food delicacies.

We drove home.  Before we could enter the house, my aunt said, “He’s having seizures.  Don’t go back there.”  I pushed past and went straight to my old bedroom.  His body was rigid and shaking and his blue bloodshot eyes were opened. 

I turned and rushed my sister away, back down the hallway to the living room.  A few moments later, an aunt walked in and quietly said, “He’s gone.”

From the doorway, I saw my mother on the other side of him, crying and saying, “In Your hands, we commit his spirit.”  My aunts were hugging, crying.  I touched his bearded cheek and said, “Poor daddy.”  And then I went back through the house to tell my husband and my stepmother and his best friend that he was gone. 

I hadn’t even met the hospice nurse, but she soon arrived and began to make arrangements.  We called the funeral director.  My other sister arrived and began to wail when she heard he was dead already.

People filled our house.  Aunts, friends, family . . . we sat by the dining room table, uneasily making quiet conversation while the funeral director and his assistant tried to maneuver my dad’s hulking frame back out of the room, down the hallway and away from us. 

I imagined him zipped into a black bag, like a suit in a garment bag, but I never saw his body again, so I don’t know if this is imagined or true.  My husband helped them carried the body out while our conversation around the table grew more desperate and surreal with grim laughter.

And that’s what I was doing seventeen years ago today, when my 47-year old dad’s body fell victim to malignant melanoma and his spirit flew away, free.

A Kind of Whiny Post

The start of school has turned my life into a treadmill of laundry, dishes, schoolwork, dinner, grocery shopping and sleep-deprivation.  Various projects long for my attention, but I can’t manage to focus. 

If you add the babysitting I’ve done throughout the years to the mix, I’ve been taking care of either a baby, toddler or preschooler for thirteen years.  (My twins are 13.  When they were three, I started a home daycare.  Then I had my youngest son.  When he was three, I got pregnant again and when that baby girl was a year old, I started babysitting again.)

I suppose little ones keep you young, but they also keep you from concentrating for more than a few minutes at a time.  I mean, honestly, how much can you accomplish during nap-time?  Or in the space between the kids’ bedtime and your own collapse into bed? 

Life is chopped into little morsels, at least it is around here.  The things I want to accomplish demand large chunks of time . . . whatever shall I do?

I will think about it tomorrow, that’s what.  And I will thank myself for cleaning up the family room floor and the kitchen tonight so a scary mess doesn’t greet me in the morning.

The Fair

All through the night and pre-dawn darkness Monday, I heard steady rain.  How much do I love to sleep to the sound of rain?  And yet, I fretted in that fuzzy space between consciousness and unconsciousness because we planned to go to the fair first thing Monday morning.

We loaded up our four kids, plus an extra two year old and a spare four year old.  We were on the road by 9:45 a.m. and arrived at the fair shortly after it opened.

By then, only drizzle fell from the cloudy skies.  All the rides were wet, of course, but the ride operators wiped them off and so little bottoms only got a bit wet.  The best part about our early arrival on this damp day was that the kids didn’t have to wait in any lines.  In fact, the ride operators waited for us to approach. 

My husband and I split up–he took the big kids and I took the small kids.  My daughter turns out to be just like me–she loved every single ride, only refusing those which spun high into the air (comparatively speaking–they were all little-kid rides).  She rode with her buddy while the two-year old was content to watch from his stroller. 

The only happening of note was when a particular ride operator and I both buckled in my daughter–our hands touched.  No big deal except then while my daughter spun in circles, the ride operating woman began to share too much information:  “My better half went and got me a coffee.” 

Me:  (Nod, smile tightly)  That’s nice.

Her:  Yeah, I have a really sore throat but hot liquids help.

Me:  (ACK!  WE TOUCHED HANDS!)  Oh. 

Her:  Yeah, I made an appointment for Friday at 10:40, but I’ll have to take off some time.

Me:  (NEED TO WASH HANDS!  MUST FIND SINK!)  I hope you feel better soon.

Then, I promptly forgot all about it and didn’t wash  my hands.  I’m a sorry excuse for a germaphobe.  We did later use the bathroom and wash afterwards, so I can only hope I didn’t transfer any of sick-ride-lady’s germs to myself.   

After meeting up with my husband again and eating lunch (again, no lines), we headed toward the animal barns and saw horses, llamas, chicks, ducks, turkeys, goats, sheep and pigs.  (We did wash our hands after touching animals.)

And the sun came out!  The crowds began to build, too, and I congratulated myself on our early arrival.

We would have greeted Dora the Explorer (live, in a gigantic fuzzy costume), but I refused to stand in such a long line with my daughter who would probably not have let Dora touch her long enough for a picture to be snapped.  Plus, they were trying to get us to pay big money for a photograph and I wasn’t about to play along.

I did not see anything that I would have seen if I didn’t have children.  No retail booths.  No quilt displays.  No 4-H demonstrations.  No produce.  I didn’t even eat any fair food, nor did I ride a roller coaster.  I had no time to sit and study people.

But boy, the new Sillyville area of the fair, created just for children was quite delightful.

And we were home by 2:00 p.m.  (My husband took my 8-year old son back for the afternoon and evening.  Now, that is a boy after my own heart, a kid who wants to ride all the rides, see all the stuff and stay at the fair until the last light flickers off.)

This is the real, true official end of summer for me.  Blink.  All gone.