Today = Bad

Today turned out to be a four-cans of Diet Coke with Lime kind of day.  It was a find-and-eat all the dark chocolate in the house sort of day.   This was a day in which I hollered so loudly that my throat hurt, a day in which I crumpled a pile of papers into a ball and threw them with some venom onto the kitchen floor while shouting at my son, “I HATE THIS!”  I marched out of the room, straight through the laundry room and into the boys’ bathroom where I realized I was trapped and thus, I had to emerge sooner rather than later.

This was a bad day.  I blame pre-algebra.  Also, my hormones.  And attention deficit disorder and whatever processing disorder my son has which makes it easier for him to forget than to remember.  I blame the number 17 and the number 51 and the sneaky relationship they have with one another.  I blame the weather and the trajectory of the moon and February.  I blame the dentist and the virus in our house that makes me youngest son cough day and night.  I blame bad luck and the grimy carpet and Hillary Clinton.

At least it’s over. 

My husband didn’t return until nearly 7:30 tonight from his workday–some days are long like that–and I’m not sure which of us were more wiped out. 

Tomorrow is a new day.  Tomorrow, I will not yell.  I will smile and cheer and do six cartwheels across the kitchen floor.  I will not eat chocolate (I ate it all today).

Cold Swimming

Before lunchtime, my daughter and her friend were outside playing in the backyard.  She came rushing in, breathless, demanding her swimsuit.  I refused her at first, then finally gave in, figuring the natural consequences would convince her that it was too cold for swimsuits outside. 

She changed into her swimsuit and went back outside where she filled up the sandbox lid with water and attempted to swim.  A bit later, I went outside to check on them and found her friend complaining of cold hands while my daughter stood shivering with visible goosebumps covering her pale body. 

She said, “I’m trying to swim, but it’s too cold!”  Yeah, that’s what happens when it’s forty degrees outside.  Next time, listen to your mother! 

*  *  *

Tuesday night turns out to be the perfect time to shop at Costco.  One day I will be a regular housewife who can run errands during the day.  In the meantime, I’m some sort of errand-vampire, able to leave the house only under cover of darkness lest I shrivel and die in the light of the sun. 

Tomorrow is a half-day of school, which means I just might be able to answer the one hundred and eighty-three emails in my box before my afternoon baby arrives to monopolize my arms.  (I remember now that it’s virtually impossible to type while holding a wobbly 4-month old.)  If you are waiting to hear from me, do not despair.  One day, I’ll catch up.

An open letter to the lady using my right armrest

Dear Lady On My Right,

When you came into the movie theater and chose that seat right next to me, I thought, “Good for her.  She’s seeing a movie by herself,” because usually I’m the only single female in a movie theater.  I think women should claim their freedom and see movies by themselves and stop worrying what other people will think, so I applauded you, silently, in my head.  Silently, because we were in a movie theater, a rather crowded theater.

The movie was “The Queen,” and while the film has been nominated for a slew of Academy Awards, I hardly think it was the best movie of the year.  (My pick this year?  Babel.  Last year, I was right about “Crash,” you know or maybe you don’t know since we’ve never met.)  Helen Mirren may well win the Oscar, but the film was a bit of a snooze, if you ask me. 

Perhaps this is because I was distracted by your constant popcorn shuffling, Lady on My Right.  Did you not realize how much noise you were making by scooping and caressing your popcorn and then rattling the paper bag?  At times, I could hardly hear the dialogue and since the film was almost entirely comprised of talk-talk-talking, the noise you made was distressing.  And that snort of yours?  Do you have allergies?  And, honestly, the film was less than two hours long and you had to get up, scoot past everyone in our row and go to the bathroom.  Do you have a bladder infection?

I wish you well.  But next time, I hope you sit on the front row. 

Love,

Mel

*  *  *

Yesterday, a young man came by to install a new light fixture in place of the 1973 chandelier hanging in our dining room (in which we never, ever dine). 

My daughter chatted with him, or rather at him, non-stop.  I heard her say, “How many are you?” and he said, “How many what?”  She said, “How many?” and he said, “Oh, you mean how old?  I’m 23.”  She asked, “How old will you be at your next birthday?” and he said, “Twenty-four.”  Then she informed him that she will be five at her next birthday and I did some math in my head and realized that when she is twenty-four, he will be forty-three.  Life sprints on.  (I’ll be dead of old age.  Okay, not quite.)

Then she said to him, “Do you wear pajamas when you go to bed?” and he said, without hesitation, I might add, “I sure do,” and she said, “I wear pajamas, too.  But sometimes I wear a nightgown.”

To think that I used to believe she’d never speak to a stranger.  Those were the days.  Now, I hold my breath whenever I hear her chatting with anyone, in terror of what she might say. 

Back to the Present

I’ve been living in the future, hopelessly entangled in a story set in 2021 by author P.D. James.  I finished the novel last night and when I closed the book, I felt regret.  While I love finishing a book, often, I hate to reach the end of a well-written novel like Children of Men.

Although my friend, Diane, has recommended the author P.D. James to me for years, this was the first novel by her that I’ve read.  (And it’s not even in the typical murder-mystery genre that James normally employs.  Now I look forward to reading one of the P.D. James books on my shelves.)  But I read this book because I saw the movie.  I saw the movie because I suspected it would be nominated for some awards.  (I was right.)

I was unsatisfied with the movie, however, and so I turned to the book.  As it turns out, the plot and happenings in the book have very little in common with the movie.  I wondered if P.D. James is disheartened when she sees her novel transformed into a story on the screen which is entirely unlike her book.  The book was so much better than the movie.  (They always are, aren’t they?)

(I found an interesting article in the New York Times which compares the two.)

Anyway, the book is over for me, but I offer it to you.  Leave a comment and I’ll choose a winner by random drawing on Monday.  If you win, you can Paypal me a couple of bucks for shipping or not.  It’s up to you.  (Sending books by media mail is cheap.)

[Oh, and let me just remind you to visit my other blog, The Amazing Shrinking Mom every day.  Even if you don’t read it all (not everyone cares about weight issues, I know), my bosses over there take note of ever click, if you know what I mean, and so I’d be very grateful for your support.]

Graffiti

From the time I was ten years old, I was the one and only, officially designated and paid nursery “helper” at church.  I received a dollar for my work during each church service.  Mrs. Wilson, an older woman, was the official nursery attendant and I was her only employee.  She never missed a Sunday or Wednesday night for years and years.  The two of us handled ten or twenty babies under the age of two each Sunday morning, faithfully passing out Ritz crackers and changing diapers and distracting babies from their distress at being abandoned by their grateful mothers in the church nursery for two hours.

The nursery was located in the back of the church in those days.  A window separated us from the sanctuary.  I imagine that window was just regular glass, but in my memory, it has turned into one of those mirrored windows where you see only your reflection on one side while the people on the other side have a clear view inside.  As we tended babies, I felt like we could see out, but people could not see in, despite that window.  Perhaps we had a curtain obscuring our view.  But the feeling of being on display, in a fishbowl of sorts lingers somewhere deep inside my psyche.

From time to time, I feel like I’m inside this blog, toiling behind a glass, seeing only my reflection when I peer through the window . . . yet suspecting that I’m being studied by a critical group of people on the other side who have a crystal clear view.  Now that people I see face-to-face read my words here, I feel like they’re looking at me, even though I can’t see them.

Obviously, I have delusions of grandeur and think that I am the center of the universe.  I am sane enough to realize that this is simply not so. 

My 4-year old daughter developed a dread of people when she was three months old.  I took her to my mother’s house for Thanksgiving dinner when she was a three-month old baby.  I expected to nurse her and put her down for her regular nap on my mother’s bed.  My baby shrieked and cried inconsolable tears until I gave up and returned home.  She immediately quieted once in the safety of familiar surroundings and went to sleep.  She’s hated friendly people ever since.  I try to explain that she is slow to warm up and by “slow,” I mean at the speed of a glacier and not one of those melty ones that worry Al Gore so much.

Although she is coming out of her shell and occasionally smiles and chats with random adults and visiting kids, mostly, she is reluctant to interact with people she doesn’t know well.  When I dress her on Sunday mornings (or, more accurately, watch her get dressed herself because she is a big girl who not only can do buttons, but who can also whistle), she says, “Mom, will they look at me?  Don’t let anyone look at me.”  She would like to stroll through life without attracting any attention whatsoever, an invisible girl who appears only to safe people who don’t scare her. 

I understand.  On one hand, I want my voice to be heard.  I want my viewpoint to be valued and my perspective to be validated.  I want to feel as if I belong, as if I count, as if I am as valid as the next woman, mother, human being.

Inside, though, I am the girl who knows that people are watching me through the window and I pretend not to notice that I’m being noticed . . . and then, I wonder if anyone’s looking at all, but I don’t want them to catch me peering out.  Smile, you’re on Candid Camera! 

The trick is to carry on, to speak without considering popular opinion, to think without censoring myself, to frame my world in a way that pleases me, t focus on what seems vital to me and, perhaps, only me.  Audience or no audience, the show goes on . . . this is no dress rehearsal, either, but the real thing, the only performance I’m ever going to give.  

No one lives this particular life but me.  No one can describe this exact moment but me.  No one inhabits this sphere and orbits this trajectory but me.  This life is unique.  That alone makes my story worth recording.  When I am gone, no one will slide into this place.  I alone occupy this body, this moment, this place in time and space, regardless of whether or not I’m noticed or ignored.  

So I write, even when nothing happens of note.  I’m leaving footprints, broken twigs along the path, wisps of torn spiderwebs to mark my path.  

I wish I’d taken photographs of my father during his last hospital stay.  Those last eleven days haunt my thoughts, fragments of images in my memory, but not a single photograph of him in a hospital gown, propped up on pillows, an IV tube snaking into his hand.  The trauma burned moments of those final days into my brain; the way his bloated hand clung to the armrest like a pale starfish, his slow-blinking eyes blind to the room full of those who loved him–I have no photographs of anything.  No pictures of the funeral, of the people who attended, of the flowers on his grave. 

As much as I long for pictures of that long ago week and a half, I wish more that he’d left a trail of words I could follow.  I wish I could see the world through his eyes, even the mundane parts, the insignificant details, his private thoughts about matters big and small.  He’s a stranger to me, a man who scarcely mentioned his childhood, who never explained his behavior, who hid behind silences and moods for reasons I never knew.

I wish he’d left a trail.

I wish he’d scrawled thoughts into journals.  I wish he left a record of his day-to-day existence.  I wish I had from him what I leave here . . . footprints left by an ordinary person, living an ordinary life.  Whether or not people are watching, life slips and slides away, one moment at a time, until it finally runs out like it did for my dad, only twenty-one days after he turned forty-seven.

And so I leave words to mark my path, a paltry trail of breadcrumbs to show that once I rambled along this path, I went this way, I was here.  I was here. 

I was here.

Looks Like We Made It

Whew.  We made it through another week.  This was quite eventful in a completely boring yet strangely stressful way.  Let’s review, shall we?

Last week, Tuesday-Friday:  Snow messes with us.

Saturday:  Husband has meeting.  I spend day at home with kids, just like the previous six days. 

Saturday night:  I grocery shop.  Woo-hoo.

Sunday:  Teach Sunday School.  Return immediately home to sick 13-year old.  Husband works all day.  

Sunday night:  Vomit-fest interferes with “24” viewing.

Monday:  Holiday!  I anticipate a possible outing, the salvation of my sanity!  Husband is sick.  I go nowhere.  Again.

Tuesday:  SNOW DAY!  Again!  Enough already!  I spend afternoon sorting scrapbook paper and stickers.  Various neighborhood kids let out all the heat from my house.  “CLOSE THE DOOR!”

Wednesday:  SNOW DAY AGAIN!  STOP WITH THE SNOW!  In addition to my usual babysittees, a 2-year old and a 4-year old, I add an almost-4 month old baby boy to my responsibilities, noon to 5 p.m., weekdays, until further notice.

Thursday:  Back to school and school-at-home and babysitting and cooking dinner and laundry and . . . oh, I take the kids to see “Night at the Museum.”  Woo.  Hoo.  I think I’m doing a good job, holding things together pretty well until my husband remarks that maybe soon I can hire someone to help me with the housework.  Oh.  Ouch.

Friday:  Tonight, when the day ends, I go to Trader Joe’s because I have been out of chocolate all week.  I’ve spent the day tidying the house, cleaning the kitchen, doing load after load of laundry and cleaning off the tops of the dressers which are magnets for all manner of household items, including scissors, newspapers, books, hangers, coins, little-girl fancy high heels, Mr. Potato-Head parts, and a stack of books I mean to give away.  

Tomorrow I am going to the church to work on my photo scrapbooks all day.  I’ve been meaning to do this since last February.  

I am desperate to get out of this house without children.  I will not wash any laundry tomorrow and if I’m really lucky, I will prepare no meals.  And I’ll wear make-up and shoes all day.  

Maybe I’ll even come home when I’m done.  

Move along. Nothing to see here.

Today was another Snow Day.

I’m nearing the end of The Prince of Tides.

I had to watch “American Idol.”

And make dinner.

And do laundry.

All of this non-drama gives me very little material for mulling over here.

But tomorrow?  The snow is melting, school will resume and there’s nothing I want to watch on television.  So, stay tuned.

Snow Day Ad Nauseam

Seriously.  Global warming?  I only wish.  We’ve had snow on the ground for a solid week now.  Last night it snowed again.  The kids had yet another snow day.  Even they have grown weary of the cold.  We live in the land of “mild” winters . . . rainy winters . . . green winters full of umbrellas.

But!  This afternoon, I spent three solid hours organizing my scrapbooking supplies in anticipation of Saturday when I will spend a whole day sorting through pictures and putting them in scrapbooks.  That was kind of fun, even though I have this super sore spot right between my shoulder blades.  I haven’t touched my scrapbooks since last February when I went on that scrapbooking weekend with four other women, despite my best intentions to scrapbook regularly upon my return.

Tomorrow, school will start on a two-hour delay.  You’d think that three or four inches of snow wouldn’t incapacitate a place like it does here, but the problem is that our cities and counties are not equipped to handle snow removal.  Some winters we don’t get any snow at all.  So, when the snow falls, and the temperatures drop, if any of the snow has melted, it turns to ice.  And if the snow hasn’t melted, it gets compacted into ice.  We have no snow plows or de-icing trucks for the side streets.  Some places, they only put sand on the roads which does not melt ice.

Add that to our hilly geography and we are stranded in our houses, imprisoned by the slopes that surround us. 

I need to leave my house.  Need.  I need to leave. 

I hope the snow melts soon.  Supposedly, tomorrow it will get up to forty degrees.  I hope it does.

Meanwhile, the stomach virus wends its way through the family.  My husband is better now . . . one of my 13-year olds just informed me that, “Mom, my stomach hurts and I just used the bathroom and it still hurts!”  My 4-year old seems well and is sassy as ever.  I am the only one who hasn’t been sick and I keep declaring that I simply won’t get it.  Can you will yourself not to get a stomach virus?  I’ll let you know.

Meanwhile, bring on global warming!  I’m ready!  My icy sidewalk beckons you!

A Post-Vomit Report

At 11:20 p.m. last night I dragged a spare comforter and three pillows to my daughter’s room.  She thought she had already slept (she had been in bed, until she threw up over her blankets a little after 8 p.m. and since then, she’d been watching videos in her room, laying on the floor, in the dark) and balked at going back to bed, so we both slept on the floor.  She woke up periodically throughout that long night to lean over the vomit-bowl.  I think I was awake more than I was asleep because I am an old woman who doesn’t sleep well on the hard floor.  Whenever I heard she stir, I’d grab the flashlight so we could see (she doesn’t have a nightlight) and then I’d wait as she gaggd over the bowl.   

At some point in the pre-dawn darkness, she wanted to go downstairs and for whatever delirious reason, I agreed.  So, I took my blankets and pillows and relocated to the recliner.  She laid down on the couch and, after a lot of talk, slept.  The recliner was an improvement over the hard floor, so I was grateful.  When dawn came, she asked for a “kid show,” so I turned on the television and slept, sort of, some more.

By 8 a.m., I realized she hadn’t been sick a long time.  So I abandoned her, went upstairs and crawled into bed.  I slept through the noise of my husband getting up, the boys showering, my daughter talking and only when the phone rang at 10:20 a.m. did I really wake up for good.  (My son was invited to go sledding–and I thought I sounded perfectly wide awake, completely lucid, but my friend said, “Are you getting sick?” and I launched into my description of the Night of Vomit.  I hate it when I offer too much information.) 

Anyway, by the time my husband returned home with the teenagers (from P.E. class), I had growing hope that I’d be able to get out today after all.  My daughter seemed well and the sun shone and . . . my husband mentioned that his stomach hurt. 

I confess that I really, really, really wanted to roll my eyes because HOW DARE HE GET SICK ON MY DAY OFF?  I’m not sick and I’ve been touching vomit!  But I decided to be a grown-up and spent the day puttering here and there, reading the newspaper, catching up on the laundry, answering email and providing activities for my daughter (painting, Play-doh, scissors and paper . . . the fun never ends!)  I put dinner in the crock-pot this morning and made myself notice the lovely sound of a dishwasher at work. 

Why fret when there’s nothing you can do to change things? 

Besides, tonight, “24” continues and I think that just possibly, I won’t miss a minute.

(Also, my daughter naps at this very moment and how much do I love the quiet moments when she isn’t asking me questions?  And the boys are all outside playing in the frigid, icy yard . . . I’m practically alone!)