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.

Digressing and blabbing and then, a great link!

I met a friend for dinner tonight. I’ve known her informally from message boards for quite a few years. We discovered we lived in the same area and tonight, we met for the first time.

She is much, much smarter than me and also doesn’t ramble on and on as I do. I told a story about a decapitated hamster and also one about my parents taking away my Christmas puppy without warning me. My mother no longer remembers me even having that particular puppy named Midnight, but I was devastated. Did my parents not realize I might notice a missing puppy when I returned from school that day?

But I digress.

Which is what I did a lot over dinner. Sometimes I’d be in the middle of a freakishly long tale and realize I had forgotten the point. Or I’d stop for breath and wonder how I got started and if I have an off-button. I digress a lot when I’m chatting. And I have the weirdest stories that bubble up, unbidden.

Anyway.

Without further ado–and changing subjects abruptly–I offer up this blog for your reading pleasure. This man is a writer who is riding along with troops in Mosul, Iraq. (The father of the baby I watch each day is stationed in Mosul and has been since last October.) Fascinating first-person accounts, unlike anything you will read in the newspaper.

That’s all.

“Eleanor” Replies

I know. I know. I promised some judgments today.

But to amuse you, I thought I’d point out “Eleanor’s” reply (I’d hate for you to miss the fun–I can’t miss the fun because it arrives in my email box)–which lucky for us, includes her email address–not that I personally would email her. An email address doesn’t really prove much. What I’d really like to read is her blog–or perhaps she doesn’t have a blog, which would be sort of ironic, wouldn’t it, that she would be stomping around here in my blog, hiding behind her anonymity, attempting to shame me when really, we have no idea if she’s been out bombing abortion clinics, do we? Or if she’s dressed in a Tigger costume at Disney World or if she’s panhandling by freeway exits. “Eleanor” is suffering from a lack of biography and a lack of history.

Poor “Eleanor” has nothing to back her up. All we have to judge her by are her words, which (aside from being poorly punctuated and occasionally misspelled) do not show her in a very positive light. This is so sad it almost makes me feel sorry for her.

Perhaps “Eleanor” needs the Church of Scientology to whip her into shape. That and some vitamins. With iron. Maybe “Eleanor” is anemic.

At 10:19 PM, Eleanor said…
My, my…it would appear someone can dish it out, but cannot take it! Not surprising. Happily the “subtle” message of my post was not lost on you. My comments were intentionally rude, arrogant, inflammatory, and harsh to illustrate a point. Just like everyone, you really don’t like being judged, stereotyped, or ridiculed. And yet, having spent considerable time reading through all your posts, you do this quite a lot. As do all your friends it would appear. Don’t assume this is the way I ordinarily dialogue with people of contradictory beliefs. Quite frankly, you just pissed me off!

[Mel says: Why would I assume anything else? All you have to show for yourself are your self-admitted harsh comments! I am sure you’ll be disappointed to hear how amused I was by your comments. And my “friends” will be disappointed to hear that you’ve lumped them all together, for they are a fairly diverse crowd. I did not judge, stereotype or ridicule Lance Armstrong in the first place, so at this point, I think you must have me confused with someone else. And yet, you spent over four hours reading my blog. Don’t you have access to a library? Maybe you should check out some books since my writing so infuriates you.]

To be fair, my comments on The Commander & Chief were indeed based in my personal reality and thus, I have fallen victim to the evil judgement monster in all of us…touche! I still, however, think he is an ass!!!

[Mel says: I accept your apology.]

Hey, one last question. Did I miss some internantional rule of blogging that requires that persons who leave comments of opposing beliefs must leave their email address? No one who agrees with you leaves their emails that I can see. For your records I can be reached at…
xonacracker19@yahoo.com

[Mel says: If one wants to be taken seriously, one should leave an email address AND a link to one’s blog. Almost everyone who comments on my blog leaves both. In fact, everyone who commented on this post is accessible by their blog URL or their email address. Common courtesy. Elizabeth disagrees with me on most everything, yet I know her email address and her blog URL. And I like Elizabeth a lot. I think she adds a lot of spice to my blog, and I appreciate diversity.]

Toodles, Eleanor
p.s. You should have been a school teacher. You seem obsessed with punctuation.

Well, what do you know? “Eleanor” ends her comments with a compliment–isn’t obsession with punctuation a good thing? In my world, it is. Unless, of course, you overdo it with the exclamation mark! Which I have done a time or two! I just can’t help myself when I get all narcissistic and judgmental and–lest I forget, sanctimonious!!!

So, “Eleanor,” I accept your apology!!! Thanks for stopping by!!!! Have a fantastic day!!!

(And today’s judgment: I tend to think people who don’t capitalize are lazy. I KNOW! I know! Not true at all, but there you go. A random, unfair judgment. More tomorrow . . . anybody else care to share a judgment of their own?)

Me, Me, Me

Let’s talk about me.

I am a middle child.

I earned straight A’s in school, but a choir teacher gave me a B+ for a semester grade my sophomore year of high school and thus ruined my life. I am still bitter. I never took another fine arts class in school, though I love art and music.

I have brown eyes and what used to be naturally blond, curly hair.

I read Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders when I was younger than ten years old. What were my parents thinking?

My first job (involving a W-2 form) was as a clerk at a natural foods store. I think I was fired (or did I just quit?) when my boss got word that I said to a customer, “I don’t know. They don’t tell me anything around here.” I was fifteen.

I once shook hands with Jim Bakker on a dare. I was working at Heritage USA on the grounds crew at the time.

I was voted “Outstanding Junior Girl” in my high school class of four hundred. If not for that stupid B+ in choir, I might have been one of the three (or four) valedictorians. I graduated fourth out of four hundred students. My parents did not have a graduation party for me.

I traveled to Jamaica when I was seventeen with a church group. I hated Jamaica. That could be because when I was sixteen, I traveled to Tahiti with a church group and Tahiti rocks. Just look here.

I don’t drink alcohol and the one time I sipped champagne, it reminded me of Nyquil. I always thought I’d probably like drinking so much I’d probably end up sleeping under a bridge and living in a cardboard box.

I’ve been in the following states (which I can type in alphabetical order by singing a song I learned in Miss Brittingham’s third grade class): Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming.

I play the piano, but I never practiced enough to become excellent. I can’t play by ear very well at all, much to my chagrin.

I am an introvert.

I like to watch “The Real World” and have watched almost every season.

My favorite television show of all time was “thirtysomething.” Oh. And “Seinfeld.”

I hate raw tomatoes and Kraft macaroni and cheese.

I’ve been deep-sea fishing off the coast of Florida. You haven’t really ever seen navy blue until you’ve looked down at the ocean and seen navy blue.

I swam in the Pacific Ocean when I was younger and didn’t mind my whole body going numb from cold and didn’t realize I was risking my life.

I swam in mountain streams in my youth, also not realizing the danger. I white-water rafted once and loved it. Today I might be too afraid of dying.

I hate to camp. (This might be because I don’t drink alcohol.)

I have red stripes on my family room wall.

I bought a Lifecycle exercise bike at a garage sale over the weekend for $50.00.

The last movie I saw was “Must Like Dogs.” I really wanted to like it because it features a Newfoundland, but it was a rotten movie. Stupid, stupid dialogue and ridiculous ending. The dog was cute, though.

I owned a Newfoundland for two years. She nipped two of my kids and was returned to the breeder, despite many tears and begging by the children (even the bitten ones).

I bought a hamster cage at a garage sale this weekend, too, for $10, including all the supplies you could dream of. It has a hamster bed and a hamster potty. I don’t want to own any rodents, but my youngest son is a fan of animals and has been begging for another pet. If I soften my stance, I am prepared. (The cage still had its original sticker–$49.99.)

I am sarcastic, smart, an excellent typist. I hate coffee and adore books. I am a pessimist. I never read historical romances. I like depressing stories. I am critical and defensive and never forget a slight.

Well, I could go on and on about me, you know, since I am completely narcissistic and all, but I am boring even myself. Tomorrow? Judgments. Let’s see how many I can make in one post.

Fan Mail

Oh, I just love signing on to the computer and finding lovely fan mail waiting for me. You can click on that link, review my post about Lance Armstrong’s failed marriage, then scroll down to the comments and read the last one from “Eleanor.” Or you can just keep reading.

Here’s what the gracious “Eleanor” had to say:

Wow, Mel! It was suggested that I visit your blog as it was shockingly judgmental and narcissistic! I am happy to see that this is indeed so!

Do you really think you are in any position to judge a man you do not even know? That would be like me saying, “well of course she is opposed to divorce, she is after all a pastor’s wife”. I am curious, does your personal experience cloud your perspective on the subject? Do you really feel that you are qualified to make such statements about a man you’ve never met? One would think losing a father to melanoma would enhance your “sensitivity chip”.

Forgive me if I sound harsh. But who died and made you God? If you were as Christian as you purport yourself to be you would seemingly stand a little less in judgement! I don’t see that. In the immortal words of Atticus Finch, “You just don’t know until you have walked around in someone elses shoes.” Why not spend a little more time figuring out why your kids get harassed on a regular basis and back off Lance!

Eleanor

P.S. George Bush is despicable, but of course you support him. You are after all, a pastor’s wife!!!

Well. Let’s give “Eleanor” a round of applause for speaking her mind. I hope she feels better. (I would direct my comments directly to “Eleanor” in email, but she failed to leave her email address. I know. How shocking.) So, follow along as I address “Eleanor” (who reminds me so much of someone else, hmmm, who could it be?):

“Eleanor” . . . you have so many questions, and yet, already answers. You know my husband is a pastor–a fact I haven’t mentioned recently (not since July 8) and in fact, something that has no bearing on my posts. You know my father died from melanoma–even though I haven’t mentioned that since September 22, 2004. Strange that you find me so repulsive, yet you’ve spent so much time reading my “narcissist” and “judgmental” blog. How that must pain you!

And yet, dear “Eleanor,” your comment reeks of judgment and self-righteousness. Have you never heard the words of an old Indian prayer that say, “Oh, Great Spirit, grant that I may not criticize my neighbor until I have walked a mile in his moccasins.”?

I find great hilarity in someone doing the very thing they accuse me of doing. I was merely wondering in my original post–“And sure. I know. It takes two people to make a marriage work and there is no possible way we can assign fault. Marriages, even celebrity marriages, are private. Who knows what happened behind closed doors? But I can’t help myself. When the world showers confetti on someone for grit and sheer determination, I can’t get past wondering what the ex-wife thinks about all this. And how the children feel seeing daddy holding hands with someone who is clearly not their mother.”

How does Lance Armstrong’s ex-wife feel after standing by his side for the more than five grueling years? How do his children feel? Does his seventh Tour de France victory have all the sheen of the previous victories in the eyes of his ex-wife and his little children? I don’t know. But I wonder.

Apparently, wondering is just too much for sweet “Eleanor.” She gets all sputtery and starts to confuse wondering for judging.

And then she expresses such great concern about my children! How sweet! (I can guess that “Eleanor” was the type of girl who in her younger years used to taunt other kids who were different than her. After all, here she is, judging me, a “pastor’s wife.” What impeccable behavior, a credit to society, really.)

But I digress. Let me answer “Eleanor’s” questions:

1) Do you really think you are in any position to judge a man you do not even know?

Yes. I do believe I am in a position to comment about the marriage of a public figure. Do you really think you are in a position to judge a woman you don’t even know? (That would be me.)

2) I am curious, does your personal experience cloud your perspective on the subject?

What do you think? I stated that it did. Do you have a problem with reading comprehension? Because I can go back over that part if you need. Now. Do you think your personal experiences shape your perspective? Clearly, they do. Everyone’s personal experiences shape their viewpoints. Duh.

3) Do you really feel that you are qualified to make such statements about a man you’ve never met?

Wait. Didn’t you already ask this? Well, here’s the thing, “Eleanor.” This here is a blog, where I speak about my life as it relates to the world around me. I am extremely qualified to express my own viewpoint on current events. In fact, I’m an expert on what I think about things. I’m an expert on what it feels like to be a child of a divorced parent–my parents racked up six divorces between the two of them (and their assorted spouses).

4) But who died and made you God?

Oh, such originality. I’ll have to say “none of the above.”

Now, for your last comment about President Bush . . . I’d like to know, “Do you really feel that you are qualified to make such statements about a man you’ve never met?”

“Eleanor” . . . thanks for stopping by. Next time, feel free to leave an email address or a link to a real blog or a self-addressed stamped envelope. Otherwise, your words are like passing gas in the wind. Stinky for a moment, but worth less than nothing.

Love and kisses,
Mel

p.s. I stand by my original statement. I can’t help but wonder about how Lance Armstrong’s children and ex-wife feel when they see him on television with his new girlfriend. I know I hated it when my parents broke up, but perhaps some people really enjoy going through life with divorced parents. I know it always gives holidays that extra-special complicated something you just can’t get from a mix!

p.p.s. “Eleanor,” can I recommend you read Elements of Style as soon as possible to help with your little punctuation problem? Take care!

One Less Sunset

I went to pick up my 7-year-old son this evening, on the way to the pool. He’d spent the afternoon at his friend’s house, so while he was busy gathering his stuff, Friend’s Dad and I chatted in the driveway.

His yard is impeccable. He just built a deck in his backyard. I’ve seen inside their home and it’s lovely and meticulous, despite their two children. Everytime I stop by, he’s power-washing or mowing or trimming or building or painting. He began to lament the end of summer. “We haven’t even been anywhere,” he said. “We have a place up at Hood *Canal and we haven’t even spent a night.”

It seems like you have a choice. Would you like what’s behind Door Number One (House Beautiful, regularly dusted and maintained) or Door Number Two (Free Time, including sand between your toes and a sunburn on your nose). (Or, if you can find a paperclip in your purse, you can have what’s behind Door Number Three: Mystery prize!) Let’s Make a Deal!

I leave my house almost every day in some degree of disarray so my kids can cavort at the pool. Food drying on dishes or laundry waiting to be folded, dust on the coffee tables and a few toys scattered around for good measure . . . I can’t be bothered, really, for summer is fleeting. I want to live in a perfectly tidy house, I really do, but I just don’t want to be the one doing all the tidying. Especially with four kids wreaking havoc wherever they go.

My daughter spun around and around at the pool tonight, falling down in a dramatic heap. “I’m so busy!” she said, confusing “dizzy” with “busy,” but then again, maybe there’s not such a big difference.

Time’s flying! Get on board, quick! There is one less sunset at the beach as of tonight. Catch one while you can.

Experience No Longer Needed

Just when you get really good at something, you don’t have to do it anymore. For instance, I am an efficient diaper-changer. When the current daycare babies are no longer in my care, my diaper changing days will be pretty much over. All that practice and boom! No more need for my skills.

Years ago, I was very good at wallowing in my grief over infertility. I filled pages of journals with morose “why me?” sorts of writings. I could turn any situation into a cryfest–a dinner with friends and a pregnant teen turns up? My face would fall and I’d cry all the way home. I’m good at grief and feeling sorry for myself. Practiced and nurtured, one might say.

In high school, I excelled in all my studies, but math came especially easy to me. I never took another math course again after I graduated. My math skills are not just rusty–they’re like a stripped and stolen car, abandoned and now overgrown with blackberry brambles in a ditch somewhere. I remember algebra faintly, like a dream you can’t quite invoke when you wake up.

So, what are you good at that you never do anymore?

(Though, life is cyclical and I am not stymied by the math my boys are learning. And being a Grief Expert helps me empathize with people as they cope with loss–and I’m sure I’ll grieve more as my time on earth grows shorter. As for diaper changing? Someday there will be grandchildren. At least one can hope that I’m changing grandbabies and not my mother.)