Lost

This story (over at “Notes from the Trenches”) reminds me of the Christmas that my husband gave me a gift certificate for a massage.  I placed that white envelope in the windowsill until after the festivities.

After the festivities, my husband hurried all the wrappings and ribbons into the dumpster. 

I never saw that envelope again.  He claims I lost it.  I know he threw it away.  The massage therapist refused to honor the gift–even though it was a small office and the person who sold the gift certificate clearly remembered my husband purchasing said certificate–and thus, I never got that massage.

And my husband still thinks I lost it and I still know he threw it away,

At least my teeth are clean.

I went for my twice-a-decade dentist appointment this afternoon.  The dentist cheered after he looked in my mouth because he realized that now he’ll be able to take that cruise through the South Pacific islands next February.  In fact, he’ll be able to take a dozen friends.

I hate the dentist, not personally, of course, but the sound of metal scraping my teeth, the grit of that polishing stuff, the bright lights shining in my eyes, the sound of money slipping into my molars.  I hate that.

My daughter was heard chanting in the other room today.  “I’m doing the underpants dance.  First you wiggle your bottom!  Then you wiggle your pants!” 

I will not be doing the underpants dance.  Especially considering that I can’t afford to shake any of my old fillings loose.

Adopt-a-book coming soon!  This is how it will work:

1)  I’ll list a book I’m going to relinquish.

2)  You’ll leave a comment and Paypal me a quarter (Melodee-at-gmail-dot-com–replace dashes/words with symbols).  [UPDATE:  Paypal takes the quarter as a “fee” if you fund your Paypal account with a debit/credit card.  I will pay the postage and if you win, you may choose to send me a buck or two to offset the costs.  Fair enough?]

3)  I will randomly choose a winner after, say, twenty-four hours.

4)  Book will be packed and shipped off to its new home.

We’ll see how this works and tweak the procedure if need be.

In other news, we’re having cold, blustery rain.  How is it where you live?  Really.  I want to know.

 

Friday Summed Up

I decided to clean up the kitchen.  It was almost 9 p.m.  I had already exercised and changed into pajamas.  After cleaning the kitchen, I planned to read the newspaper.

And then, suddenly, my slippers slid in a cascade of water that gushed from under the sink.  In a flash, I turned off the dishwasher and snapped the faucet off and grabbed for towels as water covered half the kitchen floor. 

I lived through this calamity once before, the night before Thanksgiving a few years back.  I knew what I must do.  I spread a carpet of towels on the floor, pulled out the miscellany of cleaning supplies and the crock-pots out from the cabinet and then put my clothes back on.  I drove straight to Albertson’s, bought Liquid Plumr and nothing else, and drove straight home.  I poured those chemicals down my sink and now, at 10:55 p.m., the dishwasher is strumming along, singing a little tune and draining its hot water down the unclogged drain.

I rock.

This morning’s adventure was a rousing success, though the 13-year old twins reported, “I’m bored,” within ten minutes of our arrival at the appropriate Community Center.  However, they soon discovered the joy of stringing popcorn and then started a game of Monopoly with a boy in an orange shirt.  I helped the little ones make reindeer puppets with brown construction paper cut-outs of their hands.  Then, they decorated snowflakes with tubes of glitter glue.  My four-year old, Grace, has an obsession with glue, particularly if glitter is involved, so she spent quite a stretch of time dotting her snowflake with little globs of sparkly goo. 

Eventually, I ended up on the chilly, goose-poop covered path which half-circled the pond.  I, ever the Pied Piper, led a procession of five boys and one girl.  I chanted, “Watch out for poop!  Don’t step in poop!” over and over again. 

When we arrived at the event, I took out my camera, only to discover it dead, so dead.  Bummer.  (Battery problem, not coronary disease.)  So, I whipped out my brand new, cute little pink cell phone and snapped cell phone pictures which are now trapped in my phone because I don’t have the foggiest idea how to transfer those photos.  Guess I’ll have to read the manual.  I’d take a picture with my newly batteried-up camera, but the house is still in a box in the back of the Disco Van and thus, no picture.  Maybe later.

My gingerbread house did not win a prize, but then, after seeing the other remarkable creations, I’m not surprised.  Clearly, some other overachievers spent more than two hours decorating their houses.  I was just happy to be back home by 1:30 p.m. . . and then, six neighborhood boys appeared to frolic and roughhouse in my yard. 

Happily, tomorrow is Saturday which can only mean one thing.  I’m jetting out of this house quicker than you can say “clogged sink” or “Mom, I’m hungry!”.   

 

Where I’ve Been All Day

It’s 11:48 p.m.  I hear Jay Leno’s studio audience laughing.  The center of my back, right between my shoulder blades aches.  I need to pee. 

In approximately nine and a half hours, I will gather up five children (three of mine and an extra four year old and a two year old) and the following items:

1)  One fully decorated (by me, from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m., minus a half-hour break to watch “The Duel” on MTV) gingerbread house.  I not only decorated it, I also baked the gingerbread from scratch.  This will likely be the last time I ever participate in such folly.  (And by “folly” I mean baking the thing from scratch.  The house smelled delightful, but I am no Martha Stewart.)  You can’t even see the gingerbread because I loaded the thing with so much candy. 

2)  Lunch for everyone.  Diaper bag for the 2-year old.

3)  Sample math and composition work for the kids’ portfolios to deliver to the teacher.

4)  Camera.

5)  Directions.

We are going to a Virtual Academy Winter Wonderland party.  My whole day has centered around the ridiculous gingerbread house, which I imagine I should have let the children decorate, but 1) they are not crafty and 2) I didn’t have time.  How did this date sneak up on me?  And how silly is it that I decorated the gingerbread house when the whole point, I imagine, was to have some fun family activity? 

I have vowed that I’ll let the kids decorate personal gingerbread houses in a couple of weeks during Christmas break. 

And now, five minutes until the clock strikes twelve and I turn back into a servant-girl.  Or something like that.  *POOF*

A Note from the House of Boys

A woman showed up at my front door today with her pre-teen son at her side.  I thought maybe she came to share with me the way of salvation, but instead, it turned out that she knew someone who knows me.  The boy at her side was her son and she wondered if he could stay at our house all afternoon and then go with my boys to youth group tonight.  My boys don’t attend youth group, but I said, “Sure,” and that’s how I ended up with yet another boy in my house.

Isn’t it odd, though, that someone I’d never laid eyes on before dropped her son off at my house before jetting off to work?  And isn’t it stranger still that I agreed to this sudden arrangement?

The boys all played some crazy physical game outside where they attempted to beat each others’ brains out.  Or something like that.  I opened the front door at one point and hollered out, “You!  Big kids!  Take it easy on the little kids!” and then closed the door again. 

They soon galloped into the back yard and played a noisy game of hide-and-seek.  Then they all trampled inside.  My 8-year old had muddy pant-legs and flushed cheeks and dirty hands.  Two boys have gone home, but there are still seven boys in the Boy Cave.  The three littler kids are running back and forth in the house.

*  *  *

Do I look different tonight?  I’m typing from the keyboard of my brand new bottom-of-the-line Dell laptop computer.  Yes, I know, several of you recommended (practically demanded, really) that I purchase an Apple computer, but I’m a simple girl with simple needs and a very small budget. 

Tell me this.  If I offered free books, would you be willing to contribute a quarter (per chance) if you wanted the book?  That way, someone gets the book for twenty-five cents and I don’t have to pay shipping.  I will probably give away two books a week if enough people will donate a quarter in exchange for a chance to win.  (Kind of like a raffle, but very unofficial . . . we’d use Paypal.)  Let me know if you would participate in such a giveaway.  I’d love to send books without asking for anything in return, but I’m not made of money.  Alas. 

So, would you send a quarter for a chance to adopt a book?  Yes or no?  Anyone have a better idea?

You can’t pick your family.

Yesterday, I forced the children to all shower before church and then I forced them to wear festive color-coordinated clothing. I ordered them to report to my Sunday School class before church began so I could photograph them for our annual Christmas letter. (I love the annual Christmas letter, both writing and receiving it. Don’t you? You don’t? Why not?)

Since I had limited time and unwilling subjects, I resorted to saying the thing that makes my sweet 4-year old daughter roar with laughter: “I’m going to kick my own butt!”

She finds this statement the very pinnacle of hilarity and so I resorted to its vulgarity time after time. First, she threw her head back and snorted with laughter.

Christmasjoy.jpg

Then, I tried the magic phrase again (“I’m going to kick my own butt!”) and this was all I got.

Nosepicker.jpg

That’s my girl.

See? I am fine.

I woke up with a stiff, sore jaw because I’d slept immobile half the night after my four-year old daughter insisted (with tears) that she needed to sleep with me.  I scooted over to the middle of the king-sized bed and she curled up against my back and everyone slept soundly.  Except me.  I inhabited that space between deep sleep and consciousness and didn’t jostle anyone until morning. 

We didn’t get out of bed until after 8:30 a.m. which was such a luxury.  The days of a baby shrieking at dawn are behind me and I say that with a complete absence of longing or nostalgia.  I am so happy to sleep past dawn on a regular basis.

I would have stayed in bed longer, but my free time lasted only until 2:30 p.m.  Saturday is my day off, on normal weeks, and I relish walking out the front door and climbing into my disco van (really, all this “golf conversion” van lacks is a disco ball–it has mini blinds and a seat that converts into a bed in the back) and driving away from my home.  Today I forgot my cell phone, so I was truly disconnected from my family.  It was refreshing.

I went to the following places, in this order:

1)  Gas station.

2)  Bank.

3)  Camera shop to drop off random roll of black and white film.

4)  Game store to ask about Nintendo Wii.  (No promise of anything before Christmas.)

5)  GI Joe’s Sporting Goods to gaze at slippers on sale for $17.  Left with nothing.  Slipper sole seemed too stiff.

6)  Target.  Picked up rain ticket items:  a vacuum for $10 and a digital camera card for $7.97.  And a few more things.

7)  Marshall’s to shop the clearance racks.  Will now be capable of dressing for various holiday events.

8)  Taco Time.  Soft taco. 

9)  Value Village.  Bought two big stacks of books: 

The Moral Intelligence of Children by Robert Coles;

The Ultimate Weight Loss Solution by Dr. Phil McGraw (for giveaway on other blog);

French Women Don’t Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano;

What Should I Do With My Life?  by Po Bronson (I read an article about him or saw him on a talk show once);

When You Look Like Your Passport Photo, It’s Time To Go Home by Erma Bombeck;

The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory;

And Then I Had Teenagers by Susan Alexander Yates;

Personal History by Katharine Graham;

Parenting Teens with Love and Logic by Foster Cline, M.D. and Jim Fay;

And One More Thing Before You Go by Maria Shriver;

Before the Change:  Taking Charge of Your Perimenopause by Ann Louise Gittleman, Ph.D.;

Our Greatest Gift (A Meditation on Dying and Caring) by Henri J.M. Nouwen;

A Million Little Pieces by (the Liar) James Frey;

All this, plus a bag of bouncy balls and a stuffed snowman (which I paid the exorbitant price of $4.99!) for $36 total, including tax.  I also hatched a plan to send you, my readers, my cast-off books as I finish each one.  It’ll be fun.

Then I went home.  Half an hour passed, then I left again, this time taking the boys with me.  We went to see The Nativity Story.  (The boys said they liked it.  I thought it was beautifully done, though not entirely realistic nor with a fabulous screenplay.  It was family-friendly (for instance, Baby Jesus was born without an umbilical cord attached, oddly enough), though, and an adequate portrayal of the Christmas story.

Anyway, then we went through the Wendy’s drive-thru and took dinner home.  My husband went to work for a couple of hours, I exercised, read another chapter of Pat Conroy’s The Losing Season and put my daughter to bed. 

Then I read most of an Oprah magazine while waiting (impatiently) for the boys to go to bed, too.

Now, blessed silence fills the house.  I’m only sorry that all too soon I’ll have to sleep, too, and waste this quietness.

Seriously, I’m fine. No, really.

My dad bought me a bus ticket from Everett, Washington, to Springfield, Missouri. While other high school graduates enjoyed a personal, loving, familial send-off, complete with an on-site trip to Wal-Mart to furnish their college digs, my parents put me on a bus, alone, to journey three days and three nights. And so I went to college.

I learned early on to expect to nothing from life, so this seemed simply the step I had to take to get away from home and to college. It never occurred to me that other parents in other families might escort their children across the country to college. But as I think of it today, more than twenty years later, I do find myself a little bitter. I wonder what my dad was thinking as he watched me climb up the stairs of the bus. I know he cried as I disappeared from sight, but why the bus? Why not a plane? Why did he send me off alone?

Did you know that Greyhound buses stop frequently in the darkest hours of the night in the most obscure towns along the way and demand their passengers disembark for mysterious reasons? (Purportedly to clean the bus, but I have my lingering doubts.) I spent three days and three nights worrying about strange people who might talk to me and who might cause me serious physical harm and who might scare the living daylights out of me. Or kill me.

When I arrived, I had what amounted to a bedsore from sitting so long in one position.

I thought of that sojourn today while fishing around inside the pond that is my brain for an adequate description for how I feel at the moment. My life at the moment feels like a cross-country bus trip with an unknown destination and nothing to do but listen to the noisy hum of my fellow passengers and wonder at people who actually use toilets on buses and stare out the windows at porchlights outside homes I’ll never step inside. I wonder if I’ll arrive at my destination. I wonder what my destination is. I wonder if I got on the wrong bus.

I have absolutely no cause for dismay or alarm or ungratefulness. I wonder if I’m having your traditional mid-life crisis where you look around and say, “Hey, where am I? I think I’m going the wrong way!” and “STOP THE BUS! I MISSED MY STOP!” I have a fearsome and irrational terror that I am a horrible mother, that I am ruining the children God gave me. I especially fret over the adopted children I have because it seems the stakes are higher. After all, their birthmother chose us because she thought we’d do a better job than she could do in her circumstances. Am I? Am I doing all right? (Did my dad worry about my future the way I worry about my children’s futures? And yes, I know . . . worry is not from God . . . God will provide . . . trust Him . . . I know.)

I think I need a progress report or some customer feedback. If all you are is a mother and your children don’t turn out, does that make you a miserable failure? Am I more than a mother? If so, where is the proof? What do I have to show for my life, other than a basketful of clean socks with no mates?

Why can’t I stop crying?

I ought not encourage myself when I’m in this dark mood, but I’m the kind of person who can’t stop pressing on a bruise. I think it’s interesting to examine all my thoughts, even the crazed ones, the ones that I would deny if you asked me about them later. As I mentioned on my other blog, emotions come and go, floating in and out like the tide. And while I am up to my neck in the cold waters of despair and wasteful sadness, I know the waters will recede and I’ll find myself fine and dandy, thought damp and covered with seaweed.

And this concludes today’s pointless pity party. Honestly, I’m fine and I have no idea why I’m swallowed whole by gloom this week. Don’t worry about me. I’m fine. (Well, did I mention my computer’s motherboard is dead and that I really do have to spend money on a new computer? That’s not fine, but that’s not life-threatening, right?)

I am fine. Do not be alarmed. Fine, I tell you!

A picture because the other post I’m working on made me cry.

I’ve always liked kids. Before I was even twelve years old, I was a well-regarded babysitter. I worked as a nanny during college. I volunteered with various organizations that helped children. I cried many bitter tears when it appeared that I would never have my own children. I am a Sunday School teacher, a Vacation Bible School director, the mom who serves homemade Chex to eleven boys on a Snow Day.

Now, thirteen years after adopting twins, I’ve overdosed. I am living “too much of a good thing.” My waking hours are overlowing with children. I’m never around my peers. I rarely have adult conversations with anyone but my husband and then I have nothing to say because I’ve just spent twelve hours with children.

I might be losing my mind.

But meanwhile, I take pictures of creative souls who believe that if one straw is good, twenty straws are better.

strawgirl.jpg

(This post made possible by one hundred consecutive hours spent at home with the children.)