Good News and Bad News

Good News: Babygirl is on her second nap today.
Bad News: She’s sleeping because she’s feverish.

Good News: My mood has improved.
Bad News: My period has started, thus my hormones have settled down.

Good News: My husband went to the grocery store for me today.
Bad News: He forgot the butter.

Good News: Tonight is Survivor.
Bad News: Survivor is just a recap show tonight.

Good News: I had enough time to wash my hair this morning in the shower.
Bad News: My legs are still stubbly.

Good News: My head doesn’t hurt today.
Bad News: My throat still does.

Good News: Frozen pizza for dinner.
Bad News: Frozen pizza for dinner.

Good News: Spring is in full swing here: trees blossom, tulips bloom, perennials grow.
Bad News: Weeds are thriving and rain is falling.

Good News: I have free time while the baby naps.
Bad News: Laundry.

Perhaps I should hire myself out: for every good, I can find a bad. It’s a gift, really. My husband didn’t nickname me “Dreambasher” for nothing.

Yellow Roses

My husband brought me two dozen yellow roses yesterday.

At 5:30 p.m., he took our three sons to a movie. My baby went to sleep at 7 p.m., so I’ve been alone in my quiet house so long that I have started to worry that my menfolk have been in a devastating car accident somewhere and that the seatbelts failed and somehow, my boys were ejected from the car and are now in a ditch somewhere.

Okay, not really. But it has been weirdly quiet here. I have two television set on “American Idol” and I kept switching rooms as I wander about cleaning and putting stuff away.

My throat hurts still from this cold. Now I feel a little bit bad that I wasn’t more sympathetic to TwinBoyB last week when he had this cold. I am a terrible nurturer sometimes.

Anyway. My husband either senses when I’m close to the edge or he reads my journal. I’m not sure which. At any rate, he’s a good husband and a good person and he makes me laugh out loud almost every day.

Last night, when I got home from a movie (“Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”), he was sprawled on the bed upstairs with the thick book about dogs that we bought when we first married. We used to go through all the breeds, imagining which dog would be perfect for our family. Three and a half years ago, we bought Greta, a Newfoundland. After two years, we had to return her to the breeder when she nipped two of the children. They still have scars. I wrote about this a long time ago, so I won’t go on and on about it.

The fact is, last September, just after Babygirl turned one, I drove Greta two hours north to the breeder’s home under cover of darkness and returned home to my broken-hearted boys and Greta’s empty crate. My husband said, “That’s it. No more dogs.” He told me he never wanted her to start with, that it was my idea, that it was a bad idea. Well, it was a good idea, but the timing was off because two months after Greta arrived, I became pregnant.

YoungestBoy still misses Greta. When I’d mention that YoungestBoy had cried about Greta, my husband would say, “No more pets.” But last night, he happened to be the one to hear YoungestBoy’s cries. When he put YoungestBoy to bed, he put Big Dog on the bed (a huge stuffed animal) and Little Dog (a small stuffed animal). YoungestBoy burst into tears and cried for five solid minutes. Those five minutes prompted my husband to begin researching dog breeds so his boy can have another dog.

That sums up my husband. He is soft-hearted and generous and kind. He is the calmest, gentlest person alive.

But YoungestBoy hasn’t mentioned Greta today, so we will move forward without a dog. For now.

Here is the last picture I took of Greta, as she was celebrating Babygirl’s birthday with us:

Childhood and Happy

I’ve always said I had a happy childhood. I’m not sure why I think that. My parents moved twenty-five times by the time I was five years old. And not just down the street. We moved from Wisconsin to Kansas to Montana and points in between until finally, we landed down in Washington state like the house that settled on the Wicked Witch of the East. I remember very little of the tornado that was my early childhood.

When I was five years old and halfway through kindergarten, we moved to a house in a housing development called “Whispering Firs.” My dad teased and said the house was haunted. It was the first house we owned–three tiny bedrooms, a living room with a fireplace that had two sides, so you could enjoy the fire from the family room, too. Not that I ever remember a fire burning. Small kitchen and sliding glass door leading to the back yard. When I was very small, at night I was scared of the side of the yard that sat on the other side of the garage. No light shone there at night.

I loved animals and one year, my dad asked me in the hallway what I wanted for Christmas. With uncharacteristic boldness, I said, “A puppy” and he said, “Don’t count on it!” But he presented me with a small black poodle anyway, a black poodle that my mother doesn’t remember at all. She was named “Midnight” and one day when I came home from school, she was gone. My mom had a new baby and the dog was just too much and so they just made her disappear without warning.

Then somehow, years later, my dad presented me with another dog, a Miniature Schnauzer he named Mitzi. He’d made some arrangement with the breeder and contrary to that arrangement, the breeder bred her while the dog was boarded and one day, shortly after I remarked that Mitzi’s tummy sure was getting fat, Mitzi gave birth to four tiny puppies on my twin-sized bed while I slept. But the time I fully woke and ran through the house to my mother’s bed, Mitzi had licked off the last pup and placed it in my slipper for safe-keeping.

But Mitzi eventually became too much, too, and she was sold.

My dad had cancer when I was in the second grade. He had Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and he was extremely ill. He endured chemotherapy and wasted down to a skeleton of himself. He shaved his head one night while we were at church and then he wore a hand-towel over his bald head and scared me by yanking it off his head and making a face.

I hardly knew my dad because he worked graveyard shift from midnight to 8 a.m. Then he worked in his own shop, tinkering with ham radios and electronic equipment and eventually, computers. He never ate dinner with the family. He was sleeping then. I was kind of scared when I had to sit next to him at the dinner table because he was so unfamiliar to me.

Once, I jumped out my bedroom window to join my siblings in the back yard. I bit my tongue hard when I landed and blood spurted everywhere. I ran inside where my dad gathered me in his arms and sat me on his lap, though I was much too big to sit on his lap. He rocked me in a chair while I cried and he kind of laughed at me and asked me if I was going to live. I can’t remember him ever holding me or rocking me at any other time.

My mother stayed at home and took care of us. She was stern, yet she gave us a lot of freedom. We rode our bikes until the streetlights came on. We walked down to the creek and got muddy. We played all afternoon in the “honda fields”, pressing down the waist-high grass to make little rooms to play in. Her friends came over while we were at school and drank coffee and ate cookies and made crafts.

Every week, my mother would bring home friends from church, or my dad would invite some of his ham-radio buddies over and the grown-ups would play cards and eat snacks. I’d try to linger outside their attention, but I’d always give myself away by crunching giant pretzels in my mother’s ear and then she’d shoo me away to play with the kids.

We played a lot. Outside, inside, in the backyard, in the streets. I read a lot. I had friends in the neighborhood and I remember them trying to get me to dance, but even then I was too self-conscious and had no rhythm, so I would just watch while they danced to the Jackson 5.

When I was in fifth grade, my parents divorced. We lived with my mother for maybe a year, but by then, my dad had remarried (six months after my parents divorce) and my mother soon remarried, too. My childhood essentially ended when we moved out of that house and into a rental house a few miles away. My room had hot pink carpet, but the rental house did not have my mother, but a stepmother who hated children and who had no idea what to do with an 11 year old girl.

By then, I lived almost entirely inside myself. I remained self-sufficient for the rest of my school years. I even bought my own shampoo and my own clothes from then on.

But the thing is, I remember my childhood as being happy. I thought I was happy. I was happy. Did my parents even think of my happiness? Did they obsess, like I obsess about whether or not my children are having a happy childhood? It seems like parents used to just live their lives, dragging their kids along for the ride. And we survived. We scared ourselves sometimes when we went too fast down the Big Hill and crashed our bikes with banana seats, but that was just part of being a kid. If bigger kids threatened us, we just adjusted our paths and put on a tough face and averted our eyes and dealt with it.

Sometimes, I think I am still eleven years old, wondering what I will do, now that I am so alone. Is it possible to avoid any more pain? Is it possible to do everything just right so I will never stub my toe again? I guess not.

I wish my kids had a guaranteed Happy Childhood. I wish I could be sure I was doing everything right. I wish I could let them eat chocolate and potato chips all day and never tell them to turn off the t.v. for their own good. I hate being the Mean One who makes the rules and then reinforces them. I hate it when they yell that they hate me.

We don’t have quite enough money and they don’t get to have enough fun, nor do we travel as we should. I yell too much, I am not consistent enough, I am tired too often.

But here is what I know I’m giving them that I did not have:

1) Parents who stay married forever.
2) A mother who does not leave.

I don’t know if they are having a Happy Childhood. God, please let them remember it that way, though.

Can I Have a Do-Over, Please?

I need a do-over. Yeah. Really. I think I should never have married or had children. I would like to have a second chance and if I were that same 20 year old girl, I would go to medical school and then disappear into some needy country to devote my life to serving others.

That would be easier than where I ended up. Okay, right, so that would be my hormones talking. Or maybe my sore throat and aching head. So what?

My husband was gone most of yesterday and the day before and the week before that and the weekend before that and the week before that. Turns out that I am a horrible single parent. The kids drive me crazy with their incessant arguing. TwinBoyB, in particular, seemed to be on a mission to make my head pop off my neck. I’d tell him to do something (like “stop hitting you brother and come here”) and he would slide his body half-way off the couch at glacier-speed. I gave him a thwap with my foot under his thigh and he shrieked as if he was burned with a hot poker in the eye.

Of course, his dad came downstairs just then and got his wailing report of how I kicked him. Which, technically speaking, it was a kick. It wasn’t intended to be a kick, but a . . . well, a reminder-thwack. My husband scolded me and said I should use time-outs. Yes, I heard that loud and clear: You are the worst mother in the world and a rotten human being as well.

That was Saturday. Sunday, I decided I would use time-outs. So the first time TwinBoyB disobeyed me, I told him to go sit on his bed for ten minutes. He said, “No.” I said, “Okay. You just earned yourself an early bedtime.” He launched himself into a wildly dramatic performance, flopping around on the ground. Then he went and sat on his bed and screamed, “Mommmmmmmm! Mommmmmmmmm! Mommmmmmmmmmm!” He wanted to argue with me about his punishment. I told him to stop immediately or he’d get an additional ten minutes.

He got the additional ten minutes.

This kind of thing wears me out.

Last night, he expected not to go to bed early. He thought he “earned it back.” I said, “No, there is no earning back your punishment. Otherwise, it won’t count.” He sobbed and cried and carried on so much that I said, “Just go now.” It was 7:40 p.m. He laid on his bed and shouted and cried. When I’d go in and check on him, he’d argue with me more and complain more. This child is not a quick learner.

My husband came home, of course, after TwinBoyB had been sent to bed, but before he had finished throwing his fit. TwinBoyB tattled on me, trying to make his behavior my fault.

Husband tells me I should go in and comfort him. I do so, but of course, get even more aggravated with him. Now it’s not about his behavior but about his brothers and school and why he’s going to fail math. I told him it’s all about choices. You choose how to behave, you choose how to do in school.

Then TwinBoyB comes out to report to his dad that he does not have a particular item he needs. I already know this, but TwinBoyB is telling his dad anyway. I say, “Hey, if people would tell me when they use the last one, I would buy more!” (Early in the day, I find out that we have no more trash compactor bags. I did not use the last one and I did not know we were out.)

My husband rebukes me and says that it’s my job to know these things and not the job of a 10 year old boy.

With that, I went upstairs and ironed Husband’s clothes and fumed and stewed and then crawled into bed at 9 p.m., watched a show until 10 p.m. and turned off the lights. I never, ever go to bed at that hour, but I was tired, sick and emotionally drained.

I decided just as I fell to sleep that I am a complete failure as a wife, mother and homemaker. The worst part is that being a wife, mother and homemaker is all I do. So, at least I would win “Best All Around,” if Anti-Mother of the Year Awards were given out.

Of course, that’s completely irrational, but it still sounds true to me today.

The House with a View

I was right.

The home we visited tonight was all about marble and stainless steel. The kitchen counters were black marble and the stove was gas and featured a griddle and a grill, in addition to the burners and two separate ovens. The floor was bamboo, smooth, shiny and blond. Windows everywhere, twinkling lights on islands across the water. If you woke up in the master bedroom, you’d be looking at the Puget Sound. The master bathroom has heated floors, a shower with three nozzles that is bigger than my closet and a giant tub. Downstairs is his office and her “play room” which features large, expensive weight-training systems and a sauna.

We ate pork tenderloin and baked squash with dried cranberries and challah bread and fancy salad that seemed to have dandelion leaves in it.

The company was not so interesting. The dinner was hosted in honor of the youth pastor candidate and his wife, and frankly, they were kind of dull. At one point, the young man (who is balding, but that is neither here nor there) started rattling off a bunch of books he’s read: Howard’s End, A Room with a View–I can’t remember the others–and so I said, “Do you read for pleasure?” and he paused for just a second and said, “No.” Those were all books required for a college class. We did talk a bit about books, then–the host mentioned his wife’s book club and I was intensely jealous that she belongs to this long-standing book club. She talked about how these women have been with each other through crises and life situations for years and years . . . and I thought, “Where is MY book club? Where are my friends? I want a support system!” She described a couple books and I asked what they were–one, in particular, she mentioned that she hated, but she claimed not to remember what it was.

I felt a little bad when I’d realize that I was completely ignoring the youth pastor candidate couple, but they were so boring. She, apparently, loves sports and NASCAR racing. Oh dear. She didn’t wear any make-up and had a huge pimple on one cheek. He kept hijacking the conversation to ramble on and on in his North Carolina accent. Oh dear. They did not make a good first impression on me.

But I would have happily sat and discussed books with the hostess while sitting on her lush leather couch and feeling warmth from the gas-burning fireplace (which was surrounded with marble that matched the kitchen). The fireplace is two-sided, so if you step out onto the patio, you can also sit by the fire and be warmed.

The youth pastor couple mentioned that she just found out she is pregnant, which is joyous news, but on the other hand, there is no way they can live in this area on the salary that we can offer. The salary sort of necessitates a working wife. So, I have no idea what will happen. I guess there is another couple to interview next week. The dinner ended before 9 p.m., because they were exhausted from their long trip from Pennsylvania. Apparently, they left at 1 a.m., Pennsylvania time.

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This morning, the entire family was presentably dressed by 10 a.m. We went to the church to have our portrait taken for the church directory. They give you a free 8×10 and then sell you additional pictures at exorbitant prices. Although Babygirl hates people and new situations, she did not cry, so we managed to get an acceptable picture. Babygirl and I came home while my husband took the kids to the local Mexican restaurant for lunch. I didn’t think Babygirl would cooperate, so we had a can of soup.

My husband dropped the kids off and went to the church to participate in the interviewing process. I didn’t see him again until after 5 p.m. I spent my day cleaning out Babygirl’s closet and taking the boys and Babygirl for a walk to 7-11 to get Slurpees. I even got Babygirl a small one, half-full. That 79 cent Slurpee bought her complete happiness and contentment for quite a long time. When we got home, the boys watched the t.v. shows I had taped for them from the morning and I went in the front yard with Babygirl. We eventually walked around our circle, which is about a tenth of a mile, but which took a long, long time. I had my cell-phone on and called the boys half-way through to make sure they hadn’t burned the house down or anything.

Babygirl has developed an obsession with rocks that some people use in their yards, the small, smooth, round rocks. She spends a great deal of time crouched down, studying the rocks before she picks out just the perfect rock to hold for five minutes. I remember YoungestBoy being the same way. Even if he was in the stroller, he’d beckon to the rocks and I’d have to pick one out for him.

When we finally came inside again, I returned to the bedroom closet and sorted through more clothing and shoes. I have two tubs of baby clothes that I will probably eBay, but not now. I just don’t have time now. I have clothes to give my neighbor, clothes to give my nephew, and a giant black garbage bag to just give to Value Village. It’s always a good feeling to purge the house of stuff.

Because garage-sale season is coming. *wink*

Gloom, Despair and Agony on Me

I have another cold.

Tonight I have an obligation, a meeting to attend. Of course, I’ll be late because first I have to put Babygirl to bed.

Tomorrow morning at 10:15 a.m., we are having our family portrait taken. I have all the clothes picked out, ready to go, but I can’t decide whether to battle my hair and straighten it or whether I should just let nature win and have raucous curls. I’m also hoping to have some cosmetic surgery, pronto. Or at least find some good concealer.

All day tomorrow, my husband will be busy interviewing a candidate for youth pastor at church. Yeah, we know what that means. I will be home with the kids all day. I am so sick of being home alone with the kids. I want to drive my car somewhere. I want to walk down the city streets and look into store windows. I want to eat a meal in a restaurant with silverware. I want to leave whenever and come home whenever. I want to buy myself flowers and smell perfume at department store counters and read books in bookstores with no thought for the time.

Then tomorrow night, after spending a pleasant day with the brood, I will be having dinner at a church member’s home with a bunch of other people, including the youth pastor candidate and his wife. They’ve flown in from Pennsylvania. (I want to fly in from Pennsylvania.)

The home is beautiful–I walked through it while it was under construction. I can barely contain my jealousy, though. These people had a gorgeous home before with marble countertops and a view of the Puget Sound and stained glass windows the wife created herself. And now, they built an even bigger, grander, more lovely home with a better view. (I want a home with a view.)

I’m usually quite happy with my house and my little odd-shaped yard ringed with wild hedges and determined ivy. Then I drive two miles down the hill to a home ten times nicer than mine and suddenly, I’ve gone from 1972 and shabby carpets to 2004 and I’m standing on carpet padded so luxuriously that my feet actually sink into it. I wash my hands in bathrooms with no water stains, no toothpaste smeared on the counter. I look out the windows and instead of seeing my moss-covered shed with its falling-apart door that needs replacement–I see lights twinkling on the rippling water of the Puget Sound. I hear the blaring horn of the ferry as it crosses the water. The kitchen is all about marble and stainless steel and spacious cupboard and suddenly, my own little kitchen with its dated cabinets and dull yellow-gold countertops looks even smaller and darker.

Jealousy has always been my issue.

Contentment is my goal.

Sunday always means church here and even if I don’t go (because of sick kids), my husband is busy all day. This week, especially, he’ll be busy all day.

I really hate weekends.

Then Monday all over again.

I realized all this yesterday–that I would have no time to myself–and I was really having a pity party, complete with balloons and noise-makers–and today God smiled at me and caused my baby to fall into a deep sleep. Actually, I think she napped because every day this week, I have followed the same routine. Upstairs at 1 p.m., nurse her until 1:30 p.m., put her in her bed. Today was the first day she actually curled up and slept. The other days, I let her cry for half an hour and when I retrieved her, she looked at me with big, teary eyes and said, “Night-Night” very regretfully. Like “how dare you make me go night-night!”

I’d also like to point out that God must love me because tomorrow, the weather is supposed to be spectacular. The temperatures will reach sixty-degrees and it’s supposed to be mostly sunny. After the pictures, maybe we’ll do something fun outdoors.

A girl can always dream. Even a jealous girl.

Unfortunate Fashion Trend

I saw my high school neighbor girl leave the house today. I noticed her wearing saggy sweatpants with a word written across her rear-end.

Why do girls wear words written across their butts? I never wanted people to look at my posterior. Perhaps I’m just an anomaly, but you can be sure you will never have to read my backside.

Texas Brownies

My husband came home from work last night at about 9 p.m. He’d been visiting a church member who is dying from liver cancer. She is the mother to a couple of high school kids. Her cancer is quite advanced and she is now sleeping 16-18 hours a day. When my dad died (age 47), liver cancer gradually took his waking hours until finally, he breathed his last.

Anyway, what struck me is that my husband brought home a plate of perfectly square, frosted, Texas brownies (you know, the kind that are more like cake than a brownie). How remarkable that this dying woman spent some of her precious time awake preparing a small gift for the pastor and his family.

A man at church was diagnosed very recently with lymphoma. His cancer is quite advanced, as well, and although he is going through chemotherapy, the prognosis is not good. Yet, two weeks ago, there he was at church, smiling, asking me how I was. He is maybe 61 years old, which used to seem “elderly” to me. Not anymore.

My grandmother turned 98 last week. She has lost her vision, her entire leg from hip to knee aches all day long with arthritis and bone loss, and she barely hobbles around her perfectly-kept, tidy home. Yet, when I was there, she insisted that I take home some of her birthday flowers. She prays for me every day. She sends me twenty-five dollars for each birthday.

My neighbor picks up my kindergartener for school every day. She brings him home every day. She does this with a smile and perky enthusiasm.

I am so thankful for the small kindness of these people. I am awed by the generosity and selflessness of people who have every right to complain and to be bitter and to rage against the injustice of their circumstances.

I hope I will make visitors brownies when I am facing my death. I want to be that kind of person.

Last Year at This Time

Last year at this time, Babygirl had just learned to sit up.
Now, she crawls onto a kitchen chair, then onto the table and sits there.

Last year at this time, Babygirl was bald.
Now, she has a wispy, gold baby-mullet that shimmers with red highlights.

Last year at this time, Babygirl woke up every two hours throughout the night.
Now, she sleeps from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Last year at this time, I was the only adult that mattered to Babygirl.
Now, she adores her daddy and hollers “da-da! da-da! da-da!!”

Last year at this time, Babygirl’s babyhood seemed like it would stretch on forever.
Now, she’s a tiny girl, not a baby.

Last year at this time, Babygirl had two teeth.
Now, Babygirl has a mouthful of teeth and she does not want them brushed.

Last year at this time, I wished time would hurry. I wanted to sleep again, I wanted to go places alone again, I wanted her to be able to talk to me, to tell me what was wrong.

Now, I miss her being six months old.

And next year, I will miss her being eighteen months old.

(Reminder to self: Please, do not wish your life away.)