Uncooked Turkey

The turkey didn’t get cooked. I wonder if I can cook it tomorrow? It’s been thawing since Tuesday morning. What do you think?

I finished addressing and stamping all the Christmas-letter envelopes. The letter is written, too, and pictures ready to insert. My husband is going to copy the letter for me at his office tomorrow–it’s his day off, but he has a funeral to conduct, so he’ll be working most of the day.

I am delighted that there is no school tomorrow, even though the kids will probably drive me crazy with their excess energy. At least I don’t have to force them to do multiplication or writing!

Is it a bad sign that I am already looking forward to spring when we haven’t even officially started winter yet?

Saturday

This morning, we met my ex-stepmother for breakfast. My mother was also there. Divorce creates such odd situations, sometimes. My parents became friends after they were divorced. And then my stepmom and my mother became friends while my dad was married to my stepmom . . . and then they had something in common after he divorced my stepmom, too.

We used to have the weirdest Christmases. One Christmas, right after my parents’ divorce, my dad brought his new wife to our house and my mother’s boyfriend was there, too. At least that’s how I remember it. We poor children practically huddled in the corners of the rooms, trying to make sense of the broken pieces of our lives. The next year was the Christmas when my dad thought it was a good idea to drive to Ohio. From Washington State. In a compact car with a faulty heating system. During the Christmas season . . . do you know how cold it is in Montana during December? Cold enough to freeze off your bippy, that’s how cold!

Anyway. So, my ex-stepmom lives a few hours away. Last night, she made the drive and spent the night at my mom’s house. As I started to say, we met them for breakfast. Even though my stepmother is extremely frugal, she likes to splurge on the rare occasion. Several years ago, she decided to take our little (big?) family out to breakfast for Christmas. So, we carry on this tradition.

Unfortunately, we were unable to linger over breakfast because the kids had to practice for the Christmas pageant. None of my kids has ever been in a Christmas production of any sort. This is the first year this particular church has had this type of event for many years. So, we walked over to the church and then stood around while children made a lot of noise and expended a lot of energy by fake karate chopping each other. (That would have been my son doing the chopping.)

Babygirl was especially pleased because the baby playing Jesus in the pageant was present. We held the baby several times–she’s not quite three months old. Babygirl adores babies. It’s a shame that she is my youngest child. Motherhood might have been so much easier if I’d had a girl first to help me mother!

At long last, the adults managed to organize and line up the children. I ended up being in charge of two “angels” and had to follow a script so I could send them onto the platform at the appropriate time. The pageant director had hoped Babygirl would be an angel, but Babygirl wanted only to sit on my lap.

When we returned home, I escaped as quickly as possible to go do some Christmas shopping. My quests were successful and I even managed a quick stop at the grocery store before returning home. The boys were eager to spend their allowance on an absolutely “necessary” GameCube cord, so I loaded up all the kids in The Deathtrap and we headed off to the video game store. We stopped first at Walgreens’, where they purchased Christmas gifts for their dad. (Chocolate bars and a giant, really gigantic, Hershey’s kiss.) We came home to find my husband making dinner–hot dogs and fries, my original plan. While we waited, I sat with Babygirl in the rocker and suddenly, I heard police sirens.

Way, way, way in the back of my mind, it registered. That is the sound of Santa Claus! Santa always comes through our neighborhoods in the days prior to Christmas. I startled Babygirl when I practically yelled to tell my husband, “Santa is coming! Get the boys!” Babygirl was shirtless, so I grabbed a jacket for her and carried her out to the driveway just as a police car with flashing lights passed in front of our house.

Slowly driving up our street was Santa’s sleigh, decked out in Christmas lights. Santa and Mrs. Claus sat up high. On his right stood a snowman (someone in costume) and on the left was a reindeer (again, someone in costume). A bunch of teenage elves jumped from the sleigh, ran to their children and gave them gifts–matchbox cars, candy canes and for Babygirl, a stuffed bear.

After Santa came two fire engines, sirens blaring, lights flashing. Babygirl stared at this nighttime flashing parade with wide eyes. When we went back inside, she said, “Santa Claus! Scary!” The rest of the evening, she said with wonder, “Santa Claus is scary.”

After I put her to bed and finished writing my Christmas letter, I went to a movie. Some years I attempt to see all the films nominated for Academy Awards (and/or the Golden Globes). This year, I think I might actually be able to achieve that goal. I saw “Closer” tonight in a theater that was fairly full. The couple right in front of me–a baldish man and a blond woman–were nuzzling each other, giggling and rubbing noses. I thought to myself, “Definitely not married.” To my right, the girl kept laughing inappropriately during somber, wrenching scenes. It reminded me of junior high kids who laugh during certain parts of biology class because they are so uncomfortable. An older couple came in at the last minute and next to the Nuzzlers. They smelled like an old couch, like one you might find in Goodwill.

At a particularly intense part of the movie, Gramps got up and I thought, “I can’t believe he’s leaving during this part of the movie, this most important part!” And then he walked two steps down and said in a loud voice right into the faces of two young women, “You are very rude to talk during a movie!”

Wow. Good for him.

It’s part midnight now and my stagecoach has turned back into a pumpkin. Tomorrow I am making a full turkey dinner with my unexpectedly thawed turkey. It’s always an interesting proposition to cook while at church, but hopefully I will get up early in the morning and become Martha Stewart.

Or not.

The Christmas Letter

I’ve been composing my annual Christmas letter. I present, the rough draft of my first paragraph:

“I don’t know about you, but I’m in some kind of time warp. Wasn’t it just Christmas ten minutes ago? Didn’t we just pack away the lights, shove the ornaments into a box and celebrate the New Year? I’m mixed up, a hybrid of Rumplestiltskin and Rapunzel (growing my hair rope-long again so I can dangle it out the castle window as a means of escape). My scheme is not working, though. I just wake up every morning, twenty years old with an unruly tangle of hair on my head and kids underfoot, no Fairy Godmother in sight.”

It’s not beginning to look a lot like Christmas here. Today, while I shopped, the parking lots were jammed with cars, but the skies were blue, the sun shone in my eyes and no one wore a jacket. Mt. Rainier was “out,” looking postcard perfect. When I returned home, I noticed bulbs beginning to grow in a pot on my front porch.

It’s the most wonderful time of the year, though, the time when the school schedule relaxes and I don’t have to harass anyone about homework or pack any lunches.

I do, however, have to finish that Christmas letter tonight or the line about “wasn’t Christmas just ten minutes ago” won’t make any sense . . . when the letters arrive after Christmas! I’m blaming the time warp.

The End

So, I’m sitting here at the computer at 11:00 p.m., checking email one last obsessive time before bed. Ah, peace and quiet, just the television news to keep me company.

And one of my boys comes out of his room (adjacent to the family room where I sit). I say, “CLOSE THE DOOR! THE CATS WILL GET OUT!” And he quietly informs me that the toilet has overflowed.

I rush in to find a gigantic puddle of water in the bathroom, laundry room and main room. I grab towels from the ever-present laundry pile and begin to soak up the water. I flush the toilet and work the plunger and think horrible Non-Mother of the Year thoughts like, “My children are so stupid!” But what I say is, “Please! Please! I am begging you: FLUSH THE TOILET WHEN YOU FINISH!”

Here’s the recurring problem. My boys do not flush. Their (a-hem) waste products congeal in the toilet, forming a water-tight seal. The next person who unsuspectingly pees in that toilet (in this case, me) and then properly flushes it ends up causing a flood because the dam in the toilet is now impassable.

So, technically, I made the toilet overflow when I flushed after using the toilet and left without watching the disgusting contents of the toilet disappear. I never would have guessed how much poop is involved in motherhood.

I thought about forbidding them from using the toilet. Yeah, like that would work.

The worst part? We are low on toilet paper and earlier (one of about five times one of the boys came out of his room) one of them went upstairs to retrieve a roll. That roll–largely unused–was sitting on the flooded bathroom floor, completely ruined.

It’s the little things that annoy me.

TwinBoyA’s history journal was sitting on the floor, under the computer desk. It’s now contaminated with poopy water. Very lovely. I just shake my head.

The boys tried to talk to me during my sopping frenzy and I said in a firm voice, “DO. NOT. TALK. TO. ME.” So they talked to each other, each blaming the other for not flushing, each denying that he did not flush.

They are still awake. It’s 11:30 p.m. In the morning, when they wake up, they will be tired and grumpy and then we’ll have to work on composition–their worst subject, God’s mean joke on me. Today, they were so difficult to work with that finally, I just said, “Fine,” and walked out of the house. I went and sat in the van for about five minutes. (Babygirl and DaycareKid didn’t even realize I was missing.) When I returned, I calmly replaced all the school books in the school cabinet and didn’t mention another word about school. They said, “Why are you mad?” I said, “I’m not mad. I’m just finished working with people who don’t want to work with me. But don’t worry. I’ll be here all week next week and you can do your work then.” (Next week is supposed to be the first week of Christmas break.)

Amazingly enough, they finished their work.

What is getting me through this week are the Crosswicks Journals by Madeline L’Engle. I am on the second volume called “The Summer of the Great-Grandmother”. As I read them, I think about all the people I know who must read these books.

And now, I have to go to bed so I can do this all again tomorrow. I just hope that tomorrow the toilet doesn’t overflow and that no one sneezes on me. And I hope that I win the lottery, even though I don’t play, and that Oprah calls and offers me a makeover.

A girl has to have a dream.

Okay, then

When I came downstairs this morning, crabby and bleary-eyed, I found the living room lights on. On the kitchen table sat two syrupy plates and on the counter was a thawing box of waffles, and open peanut butter jar and the almost-empty syrup bottle. Clues.

I am always the first person up in our house–except on Saturdays when cartoons beckon and the kids don’t want to waste a second of their day-off sleeping. So, what did this mean: the lights, the limp waffles, the sticky plates?

One of the twins woke up at 5:00 a.m. (or 6:00 a.m., it depends who you ask) and couldn’t sleep, so he woke up his brother and they had breakfast. Then they played their Gameboys. Normally, I have to coax them out of bed at 8:30 a.m., sometimes 9:00 a.m.

When I walked into the laundry room to start my first load of the day, I found my gigantic freezer standing with its door open, counteracting the furnace. The boys sneaked freezer-pops last night and didn’t push the door closed behind them. A puddle had already formed on the floor and the turkey I had stashed for Christmas dinner was already mushy.

That’s why there is a chicken in the crockpot. That’s why we’re having turkey on Sunday night. That’s why I have a plastic container full of freshly cooked chicken tenders. That’s why I’m defrosting my freezer–with its lentils and oats now utterly unfrozen and destined for the trash. Is it serendipity that my boys left the freezer open on the night before the night before trash-day? Indubitably.

I will start the new year with a cleaned out freezer, like it or not. Sometimes a girl just has to be forced into facing the drudgery.

Last night, I spent hours, literally hours, reading my blog. How self-centered, right? Well, my search was threefold:

1) Find blog entry which might be editable into something for the newspaper column try-out;
2) Get inspiration for annual Christmas newsletter;
3) Discover if I have, indeed, portrayed my husband as a “boob.”

After reading from January to September, I must report that my search was two-thirds successful. I found several entries to edit, rearrange, fix and send off to the newspaper, there to be soundly ridiculed and rejected, just in time for my fortieth birthday. I also found very few references to my husband, and none that seemed to me to color him with a boobish brush. I do take my readers’ comments seriously and was distressed to think that I had somehow inadvertently made my husband seem like a dorky character on a sitcom. But I don’t see it, so I shall shake off the dismay and carry on.

Unfortunately, I did not find inspiration to write my annual Christmas letter, so this year–as I do every year–I will just write and hope for the best. People tell me throughout the year how much they look forward to reading my Christmas letter and for that reason, I worry that this year’s letter will be a failure, a flop, a boring ramble through a dull year. I fear that people will roll their eyes and tear up my missive.

Besides that, procrastination cripples me.

Want to know what’s funny? I was just interrupted and when I went through the laundry room, I noted that the top shelf of the freezer is still coated with a thick layer of ice, though the rest is puddlish and damp. I puzzled over it for a few seconds and then went DOH! I never unplugged the freezer when I began defrosting it this morning under duress.

I am so sequential that if I jump into the middle of a task, sometimes I forget the first step. For instance, if I were going to defrost the freezer without being prompted, I would first unplug it. Then I would open and unload it, then put towels to catch the drainage, etc.

Today, it was open, so I just put down towels to sop up the water. It never even occurred to me to unplug it. Who’s the boob now?

Not the Meaning of Life

Sometimes I think I might be too sensitive to criticism. Okay, well maybe that was a teensy-tiny understatement. I’m hoping that when I turn forty (soon, very soon), I will care less what people think about me. I think it will be true because I care so much less now than I did when I was thirty. And when I was twenty and in college, I cared so much about what people thought that I never left my dorm without my hair flowing freely and make-up on my face.

The problem with being sensitive to what people think of you and keeping a journal on-line is that people read it. And then when they read it, they form opinions about you. And yours. Which is all good. Except for my teensy-tiny pathologically crippling problem about being oversensitive to criticism. Or even perceived criticism. As a part of this disorder, I remember the snotty comments more clearly than the kind ones.

For instance, remember that anonymous commenter took me to task for my tongue-in-cheek (mostly) movie review of Fahrenheit 9/11, here,, the one who then criticized my mothering skills because I mentioning that two of my children were adopted?

Or how about not long ago when another anonymous commenter who told me to “shut up for awhile!”?

Within the last few weeks, a fellow blogger actually pointedly removed me from her blogroll because of a link I have on my blogroll. Ouch. The reasoning behind her move doesn’t make it hurt any less.

Well. It’s certainly one thing to write about your life, but it’s another to find yourself open to judgment and comments from people who have you all figured out, based on what you choose to write. This isn’t fiction, people. I am writing directly from my guts. And when my guts get snickered at or critiqued–or even if I mistakenly, crazily assume that’s what’s happening–I tend to get a little defensive, I guess. So, you’ll have to forgive me if I snap off your head or give you a dirty look or even just get a little wordy in my defenses. Clearly, it’s a personal problem for which I should seek psychiatric care, but I just don’t have time between all the demands of ironing pants and wiping the 2 year-old’s runny nose.

Defensiveness is another of my issues. Yes, I’m just a barrel of laughs to actually live with. Ask my poor, male chauvinist husband. It’s a good thing I’m so witty and cute or he’d toss me to the curb, probably. At least he should. If he could lift me.

Well. Anyway. I was going to write about The Meaning of Life, and I even got started and quoted a newspaper and opened up my Bible to Ecclesiastes, but then my head started to throb and I thought more about my overreaction to comments and criticisms and then I thought, WHO DO I THINK I AM, TACKLING THE SUBJECT OF THE MEANING OF LIFE? And so I went to watch Road Rules, Real World challenge for a few minutes until the panic passed.

But still. The Meaning of Life post will have to wait until I regain some equilibrium. Or until I figure out a way to calm my inner-crybaby.

The Naked Truth

My husband has no pants to wear. Well, he has pants, but they are all members of various suits he owns. His khakis and his jeans have all disappeared into the black hole of laundry and this week, he’s had to rely on suits and odd nylon exercise pants to get by. Fortunately, he spent a day at home while I was on death’s door, and then a day in bed, so he suffered minimally.

But he said when he goes to work naked next week and people ask, what should he say? And I said, “Tell them your wife has been sick. No, tell them you are helpless and can’t iron your own pants.”

We are so traditional. He’d happily take them to the dry cleaners to be pressed but do you realize that would cost $4.00 per pair? I can iron six pairs–maybe more–in an hour, which gives us a rate of $24.00 per hour to have those pants pressed. I can’t bear to pay for what I do so quickly. And no. He doesn’t iron. He also doesn’t cook, do laundry or breastfeed babies.

The sad and obvious fact is that I am ill-suited to house-wifery. Perhaps it’s because a truly traditional housewife, in the 1950s sense of the word, would not be schooling her children at home. She would not be fooling around on the internet or watching cable television. She’d be wearing pearls and pumps and ironing her grateful husband’s pants. And she’d do it while wearing perfectly applied lipstick.

I am a sorry excuse for a housewife. I admit it. Not only do I not keep up with the ironing, I also don’t do a very good job keeping things spic and span. The other day I read an obituary (I always read them) in which a deceased woman was described: “she loved keeping an immaculate house for her husband.” Oh dear. That will so NOT be in my obituary. Mine will read more like, “She read a lot and liked People magazine and wrote her own blog. She dusted as little as possible and often forgot to plan dinner.”

It’s not that I don’t enjoy an immaculately kept home. Oh no, far from it. It’s just that I live with these other people who are constantly undoing what I’ve done. They have no regard for tidy rooms and neat cupboards. They feel no compunction to pick up trash they might have dropped. They leave their shoes exactly wherever they take them off. Laundry never finds its way to the laundry room. They leave crumbs on the counters, grease on the stove, and a sticky trail wherever they go.

And I’ve tried to train them, teach them, encourage them. I have. And as a recovering perfectionist, I’ve decided to just surrender to the chaos rather than drive them all into therapy.

If I could stand it, I’d be like one of those people you see in shopping mall food courts–you know the ones with the rolling trashcan and the little spray bottle who wipe up after slobs who leave messes? But I don’t want to spend my time following people around, straightening up and putting stuff away and wiping down the tables. It’s hopeless and boring and repetitive. And did I mention repetitive?

A couple of days ago, I saw Dr. Phil’s wife on his show. She’s fifty, you know, and terminally cute and perky and well-groomed. And the whole show was about how she does it, how You, Too, Should Take Care of Yourself. Apparently, she is wholly devoted to remaining attractive for Dr. Phil–she uses a team of professionals, a skin-care regimen, an exercise regimen, all kinds of regimens, laser treatments, plus a nightly bath filled with expensive potions. Staying cute sounded like a full-time job to me, the kind of job a former cheerleader would sign up for. I was not a cheerleader.

I’m not that kind of a wife, either, one devoted to my looks and my body. My physical self hardly rates a thought, not to mention expensive cosmetic counter products. I haven’t even had a haircut in fifteen months. I don’t buy outfits and I never shop for shoes. My workout equipment is holding all the wrinkled pants my husband can’t wear.

As I said, I am ill-suited to be a wife. And that’s the naked truth. Just don’t tell my husband.

Desperate Housewife

Teri Hatcher has no idea, really, what it means to be desperate.

Desperation is sleeping as late as possible, getting up to put on clothes, wrapping your hair into a ball on the top of your head, slapping on your glasses and crawling back into bed until the baby calls your name. Desperation is bacon and eggs for dinner. Desperation is a rainy, dark trip to Target to buy decongestant for the unable-to-breathe among us. Desperation is wearily staying up until the late, local news ends because sanity demands two hours alone, per day, without kids.

But the day is over. The plague has passed. Saturday! A Saturday which will not be followed by a Sunday involving company awaits me. Glory be.

The Mean Substitute Teacher

YoungestBoy returned to school today after two days of being home (questionably) sick. He coughed all night, but played all day and on those kind of days, Mommie Dearest inside wants to shoo him out the door with wire coat hangers, but Glenda the Good Witch waves her magic wand instead and lets him stay home.

Anyway, after school, I said, “Hey, how was your day?”

And he said, “Oh! We had a substitute, the meanest substitute ever!”

“She was mean?” I said, “What did she do?”

He said, “Yes, she gave us second-grade work.”

I said, “Like what?”

And he said, “She made us spell the word electrifying on our spelling test!”

I stopped. “She did?” I said, “Your words should have been fun, sun, run, at, be!”

He said, “Mom! I’m just kidding!” And then he grinned.

Drat. I fall for it every single time.

Kitchen Knives and Cheese Graters

I was a new bride, living in Connecticut. One day, a package arrived from my dad. In it, I found a spiffy set of kitchen knives and a cutlery block in which to store them. Those knives still live in my kitchen, silently begging for professional sharpening, yet still doing an admirable job of chopping and slicing. They do such a good job that I never give their adequacy a second thought.

That is, until the other day when I wrestled with my broken cheese-grater.

For some reason, I just can’t justify a purchase for anything decent in my kitchen. My husband does not suffer from this problem and that explains our Juiceman Juicemaker and the George Foreman Grill. He’s a sucker for infomercials and longs for one of those chicken rotisseries. We just don’t have space for any more faddish appliances. Plus, I say, why spend money on something if what you already have is adequate?

Not that my cheese-grater is adequate. When I purchased it (to replace one that inexplicably disappeared about the same time a GameBoy and a cellphone vaporized from the premises), I thought it was Perfect. It unfolded into an upside down V–you could grate finely on one side and not-finely on the other.

Perfect. Until it broke. Now, the legs on the not-finely side are gone and the cheese-grater is crippled. You can’t open it all the way and place it flat on your bowl. Nor can you prop it on a cutting board. To grate cheese requires a delicate, yet firm, grip, which often involves shredded skin and pinched fingers.

I need a new cheese-grater.

That’s what I thought the other night while grating cheese. Then I remembered my dad and the knives. He gave me those knives because he really needed a decent set of knives in the kitchen. When he died, he was 47 and he’d never owned a really great set of kitchen knives. He did not want me to suffer the way he did.

Yet I do suffer. Exactly in the same way he did. What do you bet I find a really fabulous, expensive, glorious cheese-grater–to give to my daughter as a wedding gift, to prevent her from shredding her fingers and otherwise enduring the agony of a lifetime of living with a worthless, broken cheese-grater?

Better yet, maybe for my 40th birthday–coming soon–I’ll splurge and buy myself the best cheese-grater money can buy. Life is too short to bleed on dairy products.