Stay Tuned

Yesterday, on the way to the bank, Costco, Red Robin, Toys R Us, Costco (again), and GameCrazy with my twins, the 12-year-old Birthday Boys, and my daughter, I saw three ducks in a puddle by the side of the road.

Today, I saw them again.

In between the duck sightings, my brain has become cluttered with bloggable stuff. I’ll be back when I have more time, later tonight, God-willing, if the creek don’t rise.

One Crime Scene: Zero Body

This afternoon, I realized I hadn’t seen YoungestBoy after his arrival home from school. I called his name and when he didn’t answer, I began to search. I found him in the bathroom, standing over the toilet. Blood covered his face and dripped into a scarlet red toilet bowl. He was sniffing and snorting the dripping blood into the toilet.

Blood drops led from the laundry room into the bathroom. Blood spattered the walls, the toilet rim, the floor and my boy. Sticky blood coated both hands. I’m surprised he didn’t need a transfusion. He looked like a murderer or a victim of violent crime.

He said, “I have a bloody nose.” And I said, “You sure do. Here, press this on it.” I handed him a washcloth and noted the newly stained yellow shirt he wore. The last time he wore this shirt, which was the first time he wore this shirt, he also managed to bloody it. Hydrogen peroxide removed the stains then. The shirt may be beyond salvage now. Blood splatters cover it now..

I directed him to sit down with a cloth on his nose and he said, “Don’t worry. I’ll clean it up.” As if!

While he sat and bled some more, I cleaned up the scene of the nosebleed. I hope that’s the closest I ever come to a crime scene. Mopping up his blood was a gruesome task. I am just thankful there was no corpse.

And he’s fine. Occasionally, he just gets a little rough with his nasal passages and has a nosebleed. That was the first time he’s ever bent over the toilet and let his blood dye the toilet-water crimson, though. I hope it was the last.

(Oh, and speaking of shirts–at noon, I received a phone call from school. He’d spilled chocolate milk on the same shirt, and because it was Picture Day, they asked if I could bring a new shirt to school. I couldn’t, but my neighbor came to my rescue and delivered a shirt. Apparently, after the photograph was taken, he put his stained shirt back on, which became completely blood-splattered upon his return home. That shirt is just destined for destruction.)

Fits

Babygirl has launched a new career. Well, maybe it’s just a hobby, but she could make it into a career. She is perfecting the art of throwing a tantrum.

This morning, she was happy to see DaycareKid arrive. She invited him upstairs to play in her room. Soon after, they came traipsing downstairs. She put on her yellow rainboots and DaycareKid put on his sneakers and I helped them with jackets and they went into our fenced-in backyard to play.

The mornings have been chilly, though, so they were quickly ready to come back inside. Babygirl came through the patio door and decreed that DaycareKid must stay outside.

I overruled her decision and she revved up her engines. By the time I had her jacket off, she was screaming and stomping. I gave her a choice (stop or go upstairs to bed) and she screamed more. So I carried her, still wearing the rubber boots, up to her crib where I deposited her without ceremony.

I closed the door.

Eventually, she quit screaming and I retrieved her.

Fit number two came when we layed down for a nap. I was so tired–5:20 a.m. comes so early for this nightowl. She began to cry and worked herself into a frenzy, complete with kicking her feet and banging her head into the pillow. I ignored her first, then mimicked her, but that had no effect, so I went back to ignoring her. She must have carried on for a good thirty minutes before she settled down. It took her another thirty minutes to actually fall asleep.

She woke up and launched right into fit number three. When I heard her wake up, I hurried to the room, but she was already in the throes of irrational crying. I gave her a few choices, which she completely rejected. Then I carried her to her own room and plopped her into her crib. This time I turned on a Winnie-the-Pooh video, so when she stopped, she could watch.

The fit lasted long enough for me to wash all the lunch dishes.

When my older children were her age, I used to reason, threaten, even spank them for tantrums like this. Now, I just ignore fits.

The moral of the story: As they say, if you can’t change the behavior, change the location of the behavior.

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do

We’ve been friends such a long time. I remember rifling through my mother’s hidden stash of marshmallows. You were there. When I sneaked cookies from the jar and restacked them so no one would notice, you were there. You even came along to my grandmother’s house that summer when I was just nine. How embarrassing to find that Grandma had taped closed the jar where she kept M&Ms after she noticed I’d pilfered some. You understood, though.

You were my friend, even when my parents became enemies. You stood by me when I found myself lost in middle school. Even though we parted ways for a year or so in junior high, you were waiting for me when I needed you again. You have been a steady friend, available at any moment of any day. Boring weekend? Nothing to do? You were there offering a bowl of ice cream slathered by peanut butter and chocolate syrup, and on a lucky day, miniature marshmallows.

My friends liked you, too. We’d all go out and eat french fries at that dumpy little drive-in which was demolished years ago. And a salty main course always called for something sweet, so we’d head over to the new Dairy Queen for a Peanut Buster Parfait. We were all pals. We stuck together.

Who needs boys when you have popcorn drizzled with butter?

My high school job made it convenient to spend time with you, which was great, wasn’t it? All those tacos and freshly deep-fried chips? I loved those “Crustos,” even though the name is disgusting–what’s not to like about deep-fried flour tortillas dusted with cinnamon sugar?

I know we weren’t on the best of terms in college, but I was so busy! I did appreciate how you’d lurk in the basement on the off chance I might come downstairs with fifty cents for a Twix bar, but I know we didn’t see each other too much. As it turns out, boys are more interesting than you, at least they were at the time. You have to admit, though, that occasionally, when we did get together, a whole pizza would disappear and sometimes a pound-size bag of M&Ms, too. And I never did practice moderation on those rare occasion we’d go a buffet. Hello!? Starving college student! I had to get my money’s worth.

Even though I didn’t see you all that much while I was preparing for my wedding (all that sewing, what was I thinking?), I did perfect my one-pan brownies, didn’t I? And let’s not forget those jumbo muffins at the bakery next to work! See? Always, forever friends, even though my wedding was coming. I still thought of you often.

I didn’t really expect to see you once I got married. And I probably wouldn’t have if my husband hadn’t started working the night-shift. I will never forget the first time we were together again. They’re not kidding, are they? Once you pop, you just can’t stop. I had to hide that Pringles can when it was all over so my husband wouldn’t realize how much I ate when we reunited. We picked up right where we left off, didn’t we?

Married life stressed me out, but not because of the marriage itself. The other stuff that happens to grown-ups challenged, teased and tested me–my dad’s death, the infertility, adoption, moving, job changes, financial woes, my husband’s cancer, parenting twins, pregnancy, moving again–oh, and let’s not forget the breast lump and biopsy. I am so glad you were there for all of that. I am, really. You were the one I could count on. Making friends is tough when you’re a grown-up!

But here’s the thing. I outgrew you, just as surely as I outgrew those size 10 blue jeans. Sure, you still feel comfortable to me, you calm me down, you welcome me with open arms. But I’m tired of sneaking around with you. I realize that you act like my Best Friend, but you are sabotaging me. You stab me in the back. You do not have my best interests at heart. It’s really all about you and never about what is really best for me.

So why is breaking up so hard to do? You have become my worst bad habit, the dark sin I repent of every Monday morning. I am embarrassed by my association with you and I pretend that we aren’t really that close. But it’s clear enough to anyone who looks at me and my extra chin. We are on intimate terms.

You have got to go. Food, you are the sorriest excuse for a friend ever. All that time when I thought you were helping me, bringing me peace, entertaining me, you were wrapping your chubby little fingers around my heart, ready to cut off the circulation.

You are demoted. Go back to your proper place, that of serving me, nourishing me, keeping me healthy. Our sick relationship is clearly out of hand.

I’ll be lonely for you and I’ll be tempted to call you. You are so familiar to me! The easiest possible solution to every problem I have! Bored? Sad? Happy? Tired? Cause for celebration? I want to call you. But I can’t. I’ve got to stop. You are no friend, despite your chumminess.

We’ve got to break-up.

And I mean it this time.

Keeping Promises and Making Kids Cry

While Babygirl napped this afternoon, I decided to take my couch-potato, GameBoy-playing sons for a hike. I took them back to the trails at Point Defiance, which were so lovely that even the memory of Babygirl weeping and wailing as she hiked did not deter me.

The air was still, cool. The boys chattered incessantly as we briskly walked down the trail to the beach. I’d point out the trilliums and they wouldn’t quite yawn, but really, all they wanted to do was find a good stick. I described the process of decaying tree trunks and new growth and they scarcely blinked. I used the word “ecosystem,” but it didn’t spark any flicker of recognition.

The tide was low today and so the beach stretched out before us. TwinBoyB nearly fell on his head as he carelessly scrambled down the last ten feet of the trail. Then he slid on his bottom as he tiptoed across a fallen log. He finally screamed, “I HATE WALKS!” I ignored his outburst and carefully picked my way down the stairstepping roots of the giant beach-side tree.

We meandered down the beach. TwinBoyA was intent upon finding “aquatic life,” as he called it. We immediately came upon a pink and blue sea star. YoungestBoy held it and I photographed it. Then we discovered symmetrical holes in the rock, which turned out to be mudstone which contained oblong-shaped clams called piddocks. The piddocks opened like gaping bird mouths. If touched, they’d squirt and then sink back down into their holes.

We found rocks which crumbled in our hands and then it dawned on us that the rocks had broken off of the soaring walls of the bluff which bordered the beach. I think the rock was probably gypsum–it was soft as a bar of soap. We each carved our names into the rock wall. We could break the rocks with one hand, as if they were chalk.

TwinBoyB began to complain and suggest that we turn back. He is a whiner extraordinaire and always has been. His complaints are so tiresome and have ruined many an adventure. Today was no different.

We eventually turned back and found the roots of the tree which marked our trail. As we began our ascent up the trail, I said, “Children who do not complain will get a treat! Children who complain will get no treat!” I did not want to hear any bellyaching as we climbed back up the steep trail. I prompted YoungestBoy to tell the twins where we’d have our treat (Dairy Queen).

And then we trudged uphill. Although the trail was quite steep in places, it was not impossible. TwinBoyB immediately began a tirade of complaints: “I’m tired!” “I hate walking!” “Why did we have to do this?” “My legs are going to fall off.” “I’m going to explode!” “I think I am going to die. Seriously. I mean it.”

I realized that this boy would get no treat or my words would have no value. I even commented out loud and so in a great dramatic performance, he collapsed in tears and slid on his bottom on the path. His brothers were shouting encouragement and giving him their walking sticks. He cried, his face red, his attitude stinky. I dreaded what was about to happen. His brothers were frantic, cheering him on.

Just as we reached the parking lot, I mentioned that he would not get a treat. He wailed and gnashed his teeth, begging for another chance, for mercy. “Mom, what do I have to DO?” I said, “You needed to walk without complaining the whole way.”

His tantrum reminded me of Babygirl’s fit the other day. By now, his brothers were desperate. “Mom, PLEASE, you have to give him another chance!” YoungestBoy went so far as to suggest that if I’d been in his class the other day, then maybe I would have learned to think how I might feel if I were in another person’s shoes. TwinBoyA cautioned me, “Mom, God is frowning on you! Whatever happened to mercy and compassion? Huh? Huh?”

I said, “Look. I told you the rules. I made a promise. I have to keep it. He made a choice, a bad choice, and I’m sad for him, but I can’t break my promise.” At that point, TwinBoyB broke into a mournful yell, “JUST KILL ME! KILL ME NOW! I WANT TO BE DEAD!”

I stopped the car. I said, “Get out. When you’re finished, you can get back in.” He stopped screaming and looked at me through narrowed eyes. I started the car again, he started crying again and the TwinBoyA, in a great show of moral support, burst into loud weeping. He hid his face behind the sleeve of his fleece jacket. I think he was faking.

Behind me, YoungestBoy joined the chorus, sobbing so hard he could barely speak his accusations aloud. “You are so mean!” I turned to see tears running down his pink cheeks. All three boys were now crying in unison.

I wanted to roll my eyes. I wanted to laugh. But I calmly pulled the car over–again–and warned everyone to stop. I explained again why TwinBoyB would get no treat.

I think they expected me to crumble–and how I wanted to collapse under the weight of their collective disapproval–but I held steady. I pulled into the drive-through lane of the Dairy Queen and said, “What do you want?” to YoungestBoy. Then I asked TwinBoy A. I ordered a hot fudge sundae and two Georgia Fudge Mud Blizzards (one for me, one for TwinBoyA) and told TwinBoyB that I was sorry he didn’t get a treat.

He accepted his fate without a sound. TwinBoyA rose to the occasion and shared his whole treat with his brother. Before we’d gone a block, the sound of pleasant laughter filled my car.

I can only hope TwinBoyB learned something. I know I did. I need new hiking companions.

Two Year Olds Must Be Quarantined

For the most part, we are homebodies. Partly by choice, a lot by circumstance. The school-at-home thing ensures that we are at home on school days, doing school work. The daycare babies means I have to be on duty, taking care of little ones from 7:15 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. I’m not one of those grab-the-kids-and-go-go-go kind of moms.

But yesterday, Friday, DaycareKid was at home with his mom. CuteBaby left at 3:30 p.m. The twins were with my husband, visiting the Washington State History Museum and its traveling exhibit of 9/11 artifacts. I’d been wanting to take the kids to Point Defiance Park. We go to the zoo occasionally, but have never hiked the trails in the 700 acre park.

So, off we went. We tramped on the muddy trails and I exclaimed over all the huge trees and took pictures.


[Zach and Grace (caught mid-cough) in front of an enormous old-growth tree.]  Posted by Hello

We wound our way down a meandering trail until we found ourselves at the beach–well, six feet up from the beach. The final feet were impossible for Grace to traverse and so we sat on the exposed roots of a giant tree and watched Zach scamper down to the water’s edge. A blue tugboat chugged past us, pulling a huge barge as if it were made of styro-foam. The wind tousled our hair.

At last, I convinced her we needed to go–she’d be happy to sit near the beach forever, I think. Back up we went. My morning walks have done me good. The steep climb did not leave me gasping for breath. About halfway back to the top trail, Grace abruptly turned and headed back down. “I go this way!” she said.

I cajoled, I bribed and finally, I waved bye-bye and continued walking up the trail. She began to cry, but followed me. Then she wailed and walked until we reached the car, scaring wildlife and annoying the rare fellow-hiker, no doubt. I’d reach my arms out to her and ask, “Do you want me to hold you? Do you want a ride?” and she’d stomp and yell, “No!”

When she realized we had reached the parking lot, she was furious. I had to chase her and plop her into her carseat. She screamed even louder. She carried on until we pulled into the Dairy Queen drive-through. Then she said, “I want ice cream.”

And that is why we have a policy of never taking two-year-olds in public. (A policy which is broken all the time, but still.)

(I use a film camera, so the pictures of the fit–of course I took pictures of that tantrum–aren’t available yet, but you can be sure I’ll add them!)

Bad Hair

I’m having a bad hair year day. Alert Oprah. I need a makeover.

I’m not saying God made a mistake, but somewhere in the DNA hair warehouse, someone made a boo-boo and went hog-wild, inserting way too much genetic code giving me this ridiculous, curly hair. And no, I’m not thankful for it, so all you naturally straight-haired girls can just slap me.

Stylists always gather it into a thick rope and comment. “Wow! Look at all this hair!” The last stylist admired the curls and said, “This is exactly what a perm is supposed to look like!” But, a-hem, this is not a perm. And perms aren’t even in style anymore. And why are my bangs suddenly curving in a backwards “C” on my forehead instead of curving straight down? They’ve suddenly decided to swarm to the beat of their own drummer and I am not amused.

I need bangs, obedient bangs which will frame my haggard face. I’d do away with them entirely (OFF WITH YOUR HEAD HAIR!) except that my forehead needs a disguise and because my head is too big for a ten-gallon hat, I need bangs. Regular, normal, obedient bangs. Is this too much to ask?

I can’t think straight when my hair is a-tangle. I’d had it short. I’ve grown it long. I highlighted it for years and then three years ago, I decided to embrace my natural dirty-dishwater, how-now-brown-cow color. Then I found a gray hair.

So, at the moment, I’m distracted by my below-shoulders mane which is mainly a pain in the rain. Hide the scissors.

Speaking Too Soon

Yesterday, Babygirl boycotted naptime. Oh, she rolled around on the bed next to me and claimed the best pillow for herself, but she did not sleep. I teetered on the edge of consciousness, rousing periodically to find her still chanting or wiggling or singing. And then after an hour and twenty minutes of this, the clock said 2:18 and I leapt from the bed and told her I needed to check on the boys. As I exited the room, I heard CuteBaby’s cries from the crib. He was awake. So much for my lunch.

Babygirl did not stay in bed, but called down from the top of the stairs a few moments later, “I had a good sleep!” She emphasized this lie by rubbing her eyes.

Hours later, I thought to myself, she’s doing really well. . . no fits at all this time. The last time she missed a nap, she disintegrated into a physically fit bundle of fury, stomping her feet, refusing to answer any questions, screaming while drool trickled down her belly.

I should know better than to even think such thoughts, because moments later, she threw a doozy of a tantrum. Right before bedtime, she followed up her earlier effort with a prize-winning shriek of irrationality, complete with tears, snot and saliva.

You’d think I’d learn.

This morning, I luxuriated in a day filled with fewer responsibilities. It’s Spring Break, so we aren’t doing schoolwork. CuteBaby won’t arrive until after lunch, so I cleaned off my desk and enjoyed catching up on some reading. If my body can’t be on vacation, at least my mind can.

And then–HOW CAN THIS KEEP HAPPENING?–TwinBoyA opened the door and said, “Hey, why is there water all over the floor?” So much for peace and tranquility. The washing machine strikes again, wriggling the hose loose from its mooring.

On the bright side, the boys rushed to find all the towels in the house. What teamwork! What an exciting adventure! An indoor pond! I worked up a good sweat dragging soppy towels over the floor with my foot and into the stupid washing machine. Only three unexpected loads of towels for today.

I wedged the washing machine firmly against the utility sink. I can only hope that this water-filled disaster does not happen again. But as surely as a two-year old throws fits, my washing machine hose will come loose again. And it will happen when I am least expecting it, basking in the uncharacteristic glow of optimism. I should know better.

Life Is Not in the Details

I’m all about the details. My husband might tell me what, but I want to know when, and who and how and what were they wearing? Conversely, when I launch into a story with a simple point, I can see my husband’s eyes glaze over when I embellish the tale with the adjectives and adverbs, the less-pertinent-to-the-story subpoints.

He’s a pastor and so he tries to protect me from the harsh realities he deals with on a regular basis. If you tell him something in confidence–or even something in passing conversation–he will not divulge the details to me. And not just because of his professional duty. Or because he can’t really remember the details. No. He purposely shields me from stuff like that. The detail stuff.

But I am all about the details, as I might have mentioned earlier. So, when someone telephones him and shares their good news (a grandbaby born today) and bad news (some weird finger-webbing, most likely correctable), I pry. I want to know. Did she have an epidural? How big was the baby? Webbing? He doesn’t know and even if he does know, he’s not telling. He’ll sometimes think of me and remember to ask about the sex and weight of the baby, but not always.

He’s not keeping me in the dark for some sinister purpose. As spouses often do, he’s treating me as he’d want to be treated–and he just doesn’t want or need the details. So he figures I’m better off not knowing the details.

Yesterday was his day off. He visited a child in the hospital, a five-year-old with a mysterious blood disease. Later in the day, he visited a man dying of lung cancer. The doctors opened up his chest, realized his disease had progressed too far, and sewed him back up.

I spent yesterday ignoring the rumbling pain in my stomach while tending to the needs of six children. And everytime I wanted to gripe, I stopped cold.

My husband is healthy. My kids are fine. Rambunctious, but fine. Strip away all the details and that’s what really matters.

All I Need is a Moat

Some days, I look at my boys sitting on the couch, caressing their Gameboys, and I wish we didn’t live in a fortress. I wish I could shoo them out the door so they could ride their bikes until dusk. I wish they could stroll down the street to the marsh preserve and wind their way through the swampy ground, searching for pollywogs in the ditches.

But I know for a fact that a sex offender lives on our street. And I’ve seen news footage of children snatched from their front yards. I know all about Amber alerts and bad guys who prey upon children.

We don’t even let our children play in our own front yard. I know we’re not alone, either. I think as times have changed (or as our perception of the world has changed), Americans have begun to hunker down inside the safety of their homes. Instead of children playing a pickup game of basketball in the park, every house has its own basketball hoop. If I look out my back window, I see trampolines in two different yards and a big wooden play structure in another. Each home has created its own little playground for its smaller inhabitants.

We no longer play communally in our neighborhoods. Oh, sure, the children will play at each other’s homes, but they do not run and holler in the streets like we used to when we play kick the can with all the neighborhood children.

At the risk of sounding like an old fogey, I recall back in the day (in the 70s, when we called low-rise pants “hip-huggers” and thongs were what we wore on our feet) that the setting of my childhood was not just my house and my back yard, but my entire neighborhood. We lived in a planned development full of cul-de-sacs and looping roads. If you drove past the “Whispering Firs” sign, you’d cross a small creek before going up a hill and meander through a street full of split-levels and ramblers. Our house was a small rambler on the corner of a cul-de-sac.

We moved into our house when I was five and I stayed there until I was twelve. In those seven years, I had the freedom to go as far as my feet would take me within the boundary of our neighborhood. I’d wander past the houses to the undeveloped fields and forests beyond. We’d play in the waist-high grasses, trampling down areas we’d pretend were houses. Other times, we’d go down to the creek where the mud would suck at our sneakers and oftentimes, we’d go home soggy. I greeted each dog in the neighborhood as I circled my block alone. I rode my bike in endless loops around and around the block.

That would never happen these days. It’s really no wonder American kids don’t get the recommended exercise. We don’t allow them to walk far enough to raise their pulses. I used to ride my bike with its banana seat a few miles down the road to buy candy at the gas station. I never wore a helmet.

The American preoccupation with keeping our kids safe seems to contribute to the plethora of organized sports and the craziness of rushing here and there with a vanful of kids. In my day, our mothers didn’t take us anywhere. We didn’t even have a second car. We stayed home and ran the neighborhood and raced our bikes around the block and tried to keep from falling into the creek. On rainy days, we played Barbies and Monopoly and yelled until our mothers held their aching foreheads.

I wonder if homes aren’t getting bigger and bigger because our world has become smaller and smaller. Families used to live in smaller spaces, but inhabit larger outdoor spaces. New houses now have bonus rooms and great rooms and a bathroom for every person. Instead of sending kids outside to play, they’re inside all the time–unless they’re in the family van, heading for activities. Or they play in their private custom-built backyard play structures and jump on their trampolines. (Except for my poor kids who have only a ramshackle backyard full of overgrown laurel hedges and ivy-covered fences. Fortunately, my boys need only sticks and stones and dirt to be happy and they find the laurel hedges to be a perfect climbing place.)

I don’t know. Maybe it’s just me, but I feel like I’ve barricaded my family behind some kind of invisible barbed wire fence. I wish our kids could climb trees and meander to the school playground alone and explore the woods. But we just can’t take the chance.

All we need is a moat and our fortress will be complete. I just hope it comes with pollywogs.