Randomosity

I find panty-lines reassuring. Don’t you? I prefer not to think of people being naked under their clothes. And don’t get me started on thongs. Thongs sticking up from waistbands are not reassuring, either. How can you not visualize what’s happening below the belt-line? And, really, do I want to visualize that? No. I do not.

Do you know why God gave you lips? To keep your fork from clacking on your teeth. To keep the smacking sounds from escaping from your mouth while you chew. To keep the food from falling out. Please, use the lips God gave you. No more clicking and clacking silverware on teeth. I’m begging you.

Why do children come in and go out and come in and go out and come in and go out more often when the temperature is only 45 degrees?

Do my teenagers think the Sock Fairy will retrieve all those balled up socks from the corners of their room?

Why does pumpkin pie have to be laden with so many calories?

I admit to feeling judgmental when I hear about babies who need helmets to reshape their heads. Did their mothers ever pick them up? (Oh, I know . . . this is uncouth of me to say, but don’t you all wonder the same thing?) *See below*

Whenever I see a teenage boy clutching his oversized pants to keep them from falling down as he waddles down the street, I always remark to the children in my car, “Doesn’t that boy look ridiculous? He can’t even walk straight!” I want to say to the sagging-pants boy: “Hey, your pants are falling down!”

Marc Anthony, the husband of Jennifer Lopez, is so unattractive. Maybe it’s just me, but I do not see his redeeming qualities.

If I had to do it all again, I wouldn’t worry so much. So many things just work out if given enough time.

I have a cordless phone on my desk. So, why do I shout, “BOY, I WISH I HAD A PHONE!” almost every day when it rings? That’s right . . . my boys use my phone and fail to return it. My subtle remark fails to spur them to action. Yet, I continue to yell because it amuses me on some sick level.

One year, the night before Thanksgiving, I peeled all the potatoes to save myself time the next day. At 11:30 p.m., I finished up my pie-baking, washed dishes, shoved potato peels into the garbage disposal and clogged my kitchen sink. The next day, I couldn’t use my sink at all and had to wash all dishes in the utility room. I felt like such a pioneer woman. Ever since, I keep Thanksgiving-themed paper products on hand. (The day after Thanksgiving, I dumped chemicals down the sink and dissolved the clog.)

My 5-year old daughter hates to wear shoes, even though she loves to buy shoes. All week long she’s been playing in the 45-degree back yard wearing her pajamas only. Except for the afternoon when she wore a purple fleece jacket and her underpants. Underpants are good, although I wish she’d wear something over her underpants.

So, to sum up:

1) Please wear underpants.

2) Please wear something over your underpants.

These are my rules for sane living.

* * *

What Is Positional Plagiocephaly? Brain Damage dvd

Positional plagiocephaly is a disorder in which the back or one side of an infant’s head is flattened, often with little hair growing in that area. It’s usually caused when a baby spends a lot of time lying on the back or is frequently left in a position where the head is resting against a flat surface (such as in cribs, strollers, swings, and playpens). Because infants’ heads are soft to allow for the incredible brain growth that occurs in the first year of life, they’re susceptible to being “molded” into a flat shape.

Do not vomit now! Jack Bauer is back!

I have watched every single episode of “24.” I heard Kiefer Sutherland explain the premise of the show on a radio talk show and I thought it sounded interesting. Now, I am addicted. I admit it.

So, I’ve been waiting eagerly for the season premiere at 8 p.m. tonight.

Which is pretty much the time my 4-year old daughter chose to start vomiting.

Keep in mind that we are a household which rarely vomits. Last winter, we had an unusual round of stomach viruses–we had the Norovirus at one point–and we all threw up. But that is not the norm. (I hadn’t thrown up since seventh grade, if you don’t count one time during each pregnancy.) Since then, we’ve been vomit-free.

Until tonight.

I still saw most of the show, but I have been interrupted by two episodes of my 4-year old vomiting into the toilet, one extended stretch of time gathering all the soiled blankets and putting them on the “sanitary” cycle of the washing machine (I just moved them to the dryer and I think I may have ruined three of them, the water is so hot on that cycle!) and some moments putting on a Winnie-the-Pooh video. She is upstairs now, snuggled against a huge stuffed animal on her floor, at 10:30 p.m., watching Winnie-the-Pooh. A metal “vomit bowl” sits near her. Every time she takes a drink of water, she throws up.

Oh yeah, we’re having fun now.

One of my 13-year old sons let me know last night that his stomach hurt. He casually mentioned that he’s had diarrhea for a few days. He even took a big white bowl into his bedroom in case he vomited. (He didn’t.) I sort of didn’t believe him since he hadn’t mentioned anything earlier, but this morning, I made the executive decision (while still in bed) to leave the 13-year olds at home for an hour while I went to Sunday School with my 4-year old and 8-year old. When we returned home, both teens were watching television and seemed fine and dandy and I thought I had been deceived.

But, this interfering round of vomit tonight by the 4-year old vouches for the teenager. He really must have been sick. I only wish I’d had the foresight to douse him with bleach and isolate him from the rest of us.

This is typical. I was really looking forward to getting out of the house tomorrow–I haven’t had a “Saturday”–a real day off in a couple of weeks and tomorrow was going to be my make-up day since the kids have no school and I’m not babysitting. Now? Now I wait to see if we sleep tonight and if anyone else starts puking.

Sigh.

(But Jack Bauer rocks!)

A letter to a most despicable dunderhead.

Dear Damnable Defacer,

How dare you? In the darkling dusk, you dragged a dart-like device across my Disco van.

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Did you dash away after your dastardly deed? Are you dense? Daft? Devious? I dabbed at the disfigurement, disturbing the dust, but the destruction didn’t disappear. A deadbeat like you deserves a dropkick into the depths of hell, detouring around the Day of Judgment.

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You, dear decerebrate, define degeneration. I decry your decided decrepitude and decree that you shall receive a decupling of defecation upon your dirty, dirty, downtrodden, deformed dodo-head. I despise you. I deplore you. I hope a dump-truck lands on you and that your dirty sins haunt you forever.

Drop dead, you dull-witted dunce. May you suffer from dyspareunia daily.

With Deep Loathing,

Disco-Van Driver (who wasn’t even parked over the line, you idiot)

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I Found Your Missing Sock

Last night, while folding laundry, I came across a sock which does not belong to anyone in my family. How can this happen? I pondered these things in my heart. I thought perhaps I had solved the age-old riddle: where do single socks go when they disappear? Perhaps they are teleported from your dryer to mine. This is not the first time a random sock has appeared in my house. [Cue ominous music.]

Teleportation. That must be it. Mystery solved.

Until this morning, when I found this. The matching sock. Which I never purchased. This pair of socks is a obviously a set of intruders, interlopers, maybe even spies. But from whence did they come?

I cannot comment further due to the ongoing investigation.

Reporting live from Washington State, this is Mel, Queen of Socks, signing out.

A Long Rambling Post Going Nowhere, Really

If you had told me thirteen years ago that the day would come when I wouldn’t long for a newborn baby, I would have slapped you and then collapsed in my bathroom in a heap of self-pitying tears. For those were my infertile days, the days when everyone had what I wanted (babies) and I had what I didn’t know was valuable, namely sleep and free time.

This was my second week of babysitting an almost-3 month old baby girl. She has chubby thighs and a baldish head and the loudest scream I’ve ever heard come from an infant. She has no “fussy” stage. She is either deliriously happy or screamingly furious. I only have her half-days and every day has been different. She appears to have no rhythm whatsoever, so I can only hope that she’ll ease into some kind of schedule. And I hope she stops spitting up down my back.

I’ve been in the same mode–childproofed house, toys in the family room, sippy cups in the cupboard–for twelve years. And I’m tired of circling. I’d like to land and do something else, ride a shuttle to an airport, for instance, or go sightseeing (figuratively speaking, of course). My friend yesterday reminded me that the children will fly out of the nest before I know it. (And yet, I’d like to have a schedule which doesn’t revolve around naptimes–I’m intolerably demanding.)

My own almost-3 year old daughter has been hitting her playmate and “best friend” who is also almost three. Yesterday, she had four or five time-outs. When I scold her, she crosses her arms, purses her lips and shouts “NO!” at me. Which is cute and all, but must be nipped in the bud. He throws a cup at her. She smacks him. She tosses sand his way. He pushes her.

Today, I had nine children at my house at one time. Nine.

I thought I’d be a whole lot more like the mother in “Little Women,” which is nonsense, of course, because I don’t even wear dresses on weekdays or do needlework. And I don’t have four girls. I really did picture myself with a set of docile children, doing craft projects, sewing, reading, pleasantly remarking to one another about ideas contained in those books. Ha! This afternoon, the boys were all in the back yard brandishing fake swords at each other.

In my kitchen this morning, I found an overflowing sink full of dishes–which accumulated since dinner last night. I did every single dish last night before I left. I am so sick of washing dishes I did not dirty. I know, I know. I should make the boys do their own dishes. I should.

At least they fix their own lunches. That’s something. TwinBoyB spent thirty minutes yesterday lovingly making himself scrambled eggs. Then I saw him take a bite, then another. Then he stood, put the plate on the kitchen counter and walked away. I said, “HEY! You made them, you eat them!” He smiled sheepishly and said, “They have eggshells in them.”

My husband has been working diligently on our overgrown yard. For some reason, the previous owners planted every manner of invasive plant you can imagine. We have English Ivy everywhere, laurel hedges that never stop growing, holly bushes that keep sprouting up, bamboo which is determined to take over the neighborhood, and just for fun, blackberry vines which will not die. Ever. The world will end and the blackberries will sustain the lone survivor who was down in the subway bathroom during the Last Catastrophe on Earth.

Yesterday, he took one thousand pounds of stuff to the dump–the old yellow couch I painted the living room walls yellow to match and a cat-scratched hand-me-down ugly brown recliner. Our living room’s kind of empty now, but we are getting another hand-me-down couch which we think will be better. Since he was going to the dump anyway, we gathered all the broken things scattered in the backyard and tossed them, too. The yard seems so much more sanctimonious and self-righteous, which is only fitting, really.

Anyway. The other night, we were all outside. The kids were playing basketball with my husband and I was yanking waist-high weeds. Then he came over to clip more ivy. I gave him some helpful pointers, and he said, “Dear, when I want your help, it will sound like this–‘Mel, will you tell me how to do this?'” And I retorted (in love, of course), “Well, when you do it right, I’ll say something like this, ‘Hey, you did it right!'” (I’ve never said, “Hey! You did it right!”) We’ve been married eighteen years. We joke like this all the time.

Then he pointed out how I put the “mean” in meaningful and we brainstormed about possible uses of that slogan. I think it would be a great blog tagline. “I Put The Mean into Meaningful.” I like it.

Now, a true confession. (I read this on a blog and I can’t remember which one. . . sorry!) Someone was complaining about people who don’t return shopping carts. Well. Sometimes I don’t. But only if I have a cranky baby in the rain far from the shopping cart return thing. I never park in handicapped spots, though, and that’s got to count for something. Doesn’t it? And I never scratch my key along the shiny side of cars that park badly and annoy me. That counts for something, too, right? And I’ve never smashed a windshield or even written my name in the grime of someone’s back window.

And now, my judgment for the day: This woman is stupid. What an idiotic series of things to do–marrying that man, helping him escape and then committing murder.

The Moon and Reality Television

The moon followed me home tonight, one of those full moons like a flashlight full of new batteries shining in your face. I came home with tears brimming in my eyes and a need to blow my nose because I saw one of those amazing, inspirational movies. Tonight it was “Cinderella Man.” I laughed, I cried, and I thought how great Renee Zellweger looks on film compared to how squinty-eyed she looks on late night talk shows. When I ducked out of the theater, I said to myself, “Great movie.”

And, as so often happens, after seeing a movie or reading a book, I am inspired to write, but alas, it’s past 11:00 p.m. already and tomorrow morning is our fourth day of Vacation Bible School. The “Watering Hole” Station Leader asked me if I would be directing the VBS next year and I paused, but she didn’t really wait for an answer. She just told me that she’d be willing to work with me–no one else–and that if I’d do it, she’d do it and meanwhile, she’d be keeping an eye out for quarter-cup measuring cups because they’d come in handy for almost every day of snack-making.

The weird thing is that this year of running VBS seemed so easy that I will probably do it again next year. I have the most amazing volunteers who agree to work with me year after year, and kids who return each year and I am so good with running a program behind the scenes–why pretend otherwise–that I may as well do it. (I know, Cuppa thinks I need to take a “dirt” year (one in which I say “no” to everything). Maybe she’s right, but running VBS is almost as simple as breathing for me.

Or maybe I have actually gone insane.

As I was saying, tomorrow I have another day of Vacation Bible School. My husband has been staying home with Babygirl and DaycareKid. They aren’t quite old enough to participate. Each day, he loads the dishwasher while I’m gone. He’s going away on church business (despite his sabbatical, he still needs to attend this annual meeting) on Friday night. He’ll be gone for about a week. That’s one reason I went to the movie tonight–when he’s gone, I’ll be shackled to my home, just like Martha Stewart is shackled to hers, only my estate is somewhat less luxurious than hers, plus her ankle monitor can be removed and my four children cannot.

By the way, does anyone else get emails purporting to be from television networks who are recruiting families to appear on reality shows? I would never appear on a reality show. Unless a lot of money were paid to me. Or a new wardrobe given to me. Or the possibility of a tummy tuck were offered.

I’m just saying.

(I’m kidding, people! Me? Reality t.v.? Uh, no. Though I did once appear on a television show produced by Jim and Tammy Faye “You’re on the Brink of a Miracle” Bakker when I was an intern. I was just in the audience, though, sitting directly behind the man who would become my husband and his then-girlfriend, a blond Texan who’d been a cheerleader and who is now a flight attendant.)

Daisy-Petal Plucking

My daughter should be upstairs, watching a short video before she goes to bed at her scheduled bedtime in twenty minutes.

Instead, she’s in the backyard, wrestling five-feet tall daisies to the ground so she can pluck their petals. She’s wearing fuzzy footy pajamas and her yellow rainboots. When I went out to take her picture, she pointed to the sky and said, “Look! A tiny moon!”

She is addicted to flower-petal plucking. I need to make her stop and go to bed. But I can’t. God made two-year olds this cute so you don’t keep them in a closet, gagged, until they turn four.

Eight! Six! Four! Two! Zero!

I am sick. Nothing life-threatening, of course, nothing warranting a full day in bed, just a sore throat–a really sore throat–a nagging cough, a stuffy nose and a headache.

And in the next week, I have to:

1) Finish up school with school-at-home boys;
2) Meet with decorating team for Vacation Bible School;
3) Run two separate meetings for Vacation Bible School volunteers (Saturday);
4) Type 40-60 pages of transcription;
5) Keep house tidy enough;
6) Stay on top of laundry;
7) Send two packages in the mail;
8) Prepare to leave town on June 23.

I have realized there is no way I will ever:

1) Get all the closets in the house cleaned out;
2) Sort, purge and organize storage room;
3) Pull all the weeds;
4) Lose sufficient amount of weight to look cute in my new swimsuit;
5) Leave house in pristine condition;
6) Win the Pulitzer Prize.

What I wish for:

1) Perfect health;
2) A clever birthday gift for my husband (44 years old today!), along with a delicious meal and perfect dessert;
3) The immediate end to school;
4) One entire day alone in my house;

What I have to do now:
1) Clean kitchen;
2) Wake up pre-teenagers still snoozing in their beds.

My motivation:
Zero.

More Good News, Bad News

Good News: Baby slept all night. She seems healthy.
Bad News: I woke up coughing in the night.

Good News: The boys cleaned up the kitchen last night.
Bad News: The boys cleaned up the kitchen last night and put regular dishwashing soap in the dishwasher.

Good News: My kitchen floor is remarkably clean near the dishwasher.
Bad News: I had to wash an extra load of wet towels after cleaning up the puddle.

Good News: It’s Friday!
Bad News: Husband will be gone all day tomorrow.

Good News: The kitchen is clean.
Bad News: I have no plans for dinner and it’s already 3 p.m.