Ack!

When I lifted Babygirl from her crib this morning, she seemed warm. Her hands seemed strangely warm to me. I haven’t used a baby thermometer for years and years, but I can tell from my baby’s hands if she is feverish. I toted her to my husband and asked him if he thought she was warm. “No,” he said, and finished putting on his shiny shoes.

So we went to church, where I ended up manning the nursery since I coordinate the volunteers and the scheduled volunteer was a no-show. Half-way through, Babygirl began to fuss. The fuss accelerated into a full-blown cry. I realized that she, indeed, was feverish.

When we returned home, I gave Babygirl some ibuprofen. She promptly gagged it onto my skirt in a mucusy wad of vomit. Then she napped a bit. She woke when my mother brought YoungestBoy home. She’d taken him after church to McDonald’s. (My twins went from church to a friend’s home to play.) I visited with my mother for a while. Babygirl played happily, fueled by her twenty minute nap.

My husband was home from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., then returned to church for more meetings. Babygirl grew crabbier as the day went on. She did keep some ibuprofen down when I tried again at 2:30 p.m. She took another nap. She nursed on and off all afternoon, and ate snacks here and there.

At 7 p.m., after an hour-long attempt to nurse her to sleep, she slumped over on my shoulder and fell into an immediate sleep without nursing at all. That was the first time that she ever went to sleep at night without nursing. I am hopeful that she’ll wake up cheerful in the morning with no sign of the fever. This is the illness that DaycareKid brought to us last Thursday.

I’ve watched the Golden Globes while reading a few chapters of “I Sleep at Red Lights” and now I will drop into bed so I can begin another exciting week of getting by. Oh joy.

So, Are You Ready for Dessert?

I trudged my way through this day. Babygirl wanted to go outside first thing this morning, so I sat in my slippers and bathrobe and fleece jacket with an afghan wrapped around my legs and shivered. When I finally convinced her to come inside, my husband was awake and ready to take her for a ride in the car–this would give me time to shower and get dressed in peace.

He eventually brought home a sleepy looking baby. She’d taken a nap in the car. He then announced that tonight he was taking me to the fancy-schmancy local restaurant that overlooks the Puget Sound to celebrate my birthday. (Which is not until next Wednesday.) He telephoned the babysitter and made reservations. He said that Beth would call back and let us know if she could babysit. Then he left to run some errands.

While he was gone, I went outside with the baby (again). When she consented to coming back inside, I went from task to task–laundry, dishes, sweeping, picking up toys, putting away clothes, washing the bedding–until finally I decided to clean YoungestBoy’s room thoroughly. Grace “helped” me.

Two hours after he left, my husband returned and shocked my socks off by telling me he was taking all four kids to the park. Wow! Fifteen minutes after he left, he called to say that it was colder than he thought, probably too cold for Babygirl. He’d have to bring her back. They were gone almost an hour, though, start to finish. In that stretch of time, I’d cleaned up the twins’ room.

I feel like a cleaning woman today. A cleaning woman with a birthday.

During the course of the day, the phone rang and it was the babysitter telling me she had to check with her mother, but she was pretty sure she could babysit. I said, fine, let me know when you are one hundred percent. A while later, Beth’s mother called to confirm and offered to drive her over. Not long after that, the babysitter called again and said she definitely could babysit. “Great,” I said. “Ten minutes to eight?” she said. “Yes!” Then later on, another call from the babysitter asking if her 7th grade niece could come, too. “Sure,” I said.

At 7:00 p.m., Babygirl went to sleep for the night.

At 7:50, the doorbell rings. Standing at the door is Stephanie. But we had called Beth. I said, “Hello!” and she came inside and took off her shoes. I went directly into the kitchen and whispered to my husband, “Um, I think you hired two babysitters! Stephanie is here!”

He looked stunned. He said to Stephanie, “Did I call you?”

With a puzzled look, she said, “Well, your number was on my caller I.D., so I called Mel and she said you needed me tonight.”

They both turned to look at me. I said, “Oh! When you called, I thought you said–Hi, this is Bethany–not Stephanie!”

Both Beth and Stephanie were at the school science fair. Stephanie mentioned being at the Science Fair, which is where my husband told me Beth was . . . well, it all just led to a big comedy of errors. Okay, well, in other words, I screwed up. My husband took Stephanie home–I tried to pay her $5 for her trouble, but she refused–and Beth arrived. I told her what happened and she laughed and I said, “Is your name actually Bethany, by the way?” She said, “No, it’s Elizabeth.”

We drove to the little restaurant. We eat there infrequently because, although the food is good, it’s scarily expensive. We ordered and then chatted and watched the ferry boat approach the landing. We ate our salad (me) and chowder (him) and ate all the bread and chatted some more. And then more. I yawned and said how hungry I was. I said, “Hey, what time is it?” And he pulled out his cell phone and said it was 8:55 p.m. I watched a middle-aged couple across the room literally staring into each other’s eyes until drawn together by magnetic force into a kiss. I said, “That couple is definitely not married.”

Then we waited longer. Finally, the waitress approached with a big friendly smile and said, “So, are you ready for dessert?”

I said, “We haven’t had dinner yet. So, no. But we are ready for some dinner!” All with a smile and a laugh.

She was mortified but we thought it was hilarious. At long last, dinner arrived. Halibut with crab and hollandaise sauce for me, prime rib for him. The food was good, but not as good as I remembered.

Then the bill came: $82.02 with tip and tax! ACK! I just had no idea it would be quite that expensive. I examined the receipt to see what each item had cost until my husband said, “You are embarrassing me.” He said, “You only turn 39 once,” and I think that’s probably because it’s too expensive to turn 39 twice!

At any rate, now I’ll have to sell my kidney for grocery money. Happy Birthday to Me!

I’ve Fallen Off the Wagon Already

Yeah. So much for grand proclamations about riding the exercise bike everyday. I am not exercising today. But the time I remembered, it was 9 p.m. and I whined to my husband, “I am just too tired!”

I started my day off at 3:12 a.m. when Babygirl woke up crying. I have no idea why she woke up, but I spent 10 minutes in her room before trudging back to bed. Then, DaycareKid showed up early at 7:10 a.m. and I was barely dressed. My hair was still wet.

At only 7:15 a.m. with Babygirl still sleeping, I checked my email while DaycareKid played here in the family room. At 7:55 a.m., while watching television with YoungestBoy and nursing Babygirl, I looked at the clock and thought “Uh-oh! I didn’t wake up the twins!” I normally wake them up at 7:30 a.m. so they can be ready to leave by 8 a.m. School starts at 8:25 a.m., but they like to be early.

They were so mad that I woke them up late. Oh dear. I just completely forgot to wake them up!

Then they were gone.

We went outside right away. Before 9 a.m. Babygirl, DaycareKid and I were outside freezing our bippies off. YoungestBoy came out in his pajamas and rubber boots and discovered that the water he’d put in the old dog bowl had a coat of ice on it. Did I mention that it was freezing? DaycareKid seems very unhappy and I figure he’s cold, so after twenty minutes or so I lure them inside with a promise of watching “The Wiggles.”

DaycareKid spent the entire morning being unusually unhappy. He stood and cried. He sat and cried. He stumbled around and cried. Poor kid. I couldn’t figure out what was wrong with him. He whined for a drink and then wouldn’t drink it. He carried around his snack, but wouldn’t eat it. Finally, at 10:45 a.m., I thought, maybe he is just really hungry. I fed him lunch. He ate, then cried. I began to wonder if he was coming down with something. I felt a swollen gland in his neck and I thought he seemed warm. At 11:30 a.m. (an hour earlier than usual), I put him to bed. He fell right asleep.

His mother picked him up early at 3 p.m. He had a pre-existing doctor’s appointment for a well-baby check-up. I told his mother that he seemed very unhappy and I wondered if he was overly tired? Or sick? She called me later in the day and told me that the doctor found DaycareKid had a throat infection and a fever, but that it wasn’t strep and that he wasn’t contagious. I can only hope!

A sick daycare baby is the major drawback to having a daycare baby. I hate it when he brings germs to my baby! Sigh.

At noon, I suddenly realize that YoungestBoy didn’t do his homework yet and by then it was too late. What is wrong with my brain? I just can’t remember anything today!

Must be old age approaching. Next Wednesday I turn 39.

No More Doom and Gloom For Now

Okay. Well, after yesterday’s extremely grim entry, I figure I won’t recite the sad tale of how my dad told me he was divorcing my mother when I was 11.

Instead, a few random tidbits from life here in the Pacific Northwest.

Yesterday, Zach arrives home from school and blurts out, “Mom, I got my symbol moved!”

At kindergarten, their behavior is recorded as a happy face, a sad face or a not-so-happy face. If they do something they shouldn’t, they get their symbol moved from happy to sad or not-so-happy. He’s been so proud that he’s never had to move his symbol. Until yesterday. The “not-so-happy” face was circled.

“Oh no! What happened?”

And he told me excitedly that Dominick accidentally knocked over his dominoes and so Zach yelled, “DOMINICK!” Dominick got in trouble, too. So did David.

Now, a quick word about David. David is Zach’s new best friend. My neighbor who volunteers in the classroom says David is “exuberant.” David’s mother described him to me as “active.” I asked Zach once, “What kind of boy is David?” And Zach said, “He loves action!

The sheet in Zach’s folder said, “He was loud and talkative all day!” So, I had a little talk with him and he promised to be on his best behavior again.

On an unrelated note, today I overhead Zach mention to himself something about a picture of him “when I used to be cute.” I said, “Hey, what are you talking about? When you used to be cute?”

And he said, “Mom, that picture was when I was three and I used to be cute. Now, I’m not cute. I’m cool!”

Meanwhile, Grace has decided that she’d like to be outside in the backyard most of the day. We went out two separate times today and brrrrr, it was chilly! When she asked to go outside and I said no, she cried and screamed and flung herself toward me. And no nap today at all. Not even ten minutes during our noon nursing. This is her new pattern. No nap at all, but then she’ll sleep for 12-14 hours at night.

I started exercising yesterday on my new Schwinn exercise bike. Today is my second day. I’m going to ride it every day, unless I’m sick. Once I managed to do that for a solid year. I rode an exercise bike every single day, no matter what. I only quit when I got pneumonia.

So, no more doom and gloom for today. But there’s always tomorrow!

Big Sigh

I thought I might attempt to explain my pastor’s wife funk. But even without details, the story was too complicated and boring.

So, instead, let’s review the Life of the Pastor’s Wife, shall we?

Your local Pastor’s Wife is in an odd position. Some church women tend to view her as some superwoman who reads her Bible half the day and prays the other half. They would be flabbergasted to think that the pastor’s wife might be a human being who has a sarcastic wit and a dry sense of humor.

Then, there are those who don’t want to “bother” the Pastor’s Wife. After all, she must be very busy.

Some think that the Pastor’s Wife knows the same information as the pastor, simply by virtue of being married to him. This includes theological matters, business matters, and events.

And let’s not leave out those who dislike the Pastor’s Wife because she hasn’t learned their first names and she doesn’t smile and shake their hands every Sunday morning. They say, “The Pastor’s Wife is so stand-offish.”

Finally, how about those who study the Pastor’s Wife’s clothing and hair style and make sure to comment if they’ve noticed that she’s lost weight or stopped coloring her hair. Which leads the Pastor’s Wife to wonder, “Did they think I was fat before? Has everyone been staring at my hair?”

Oh wait. One more thing. Everyone knows exactly how much the pastor earns in our church. The Pastor’s Wife shops at garage sales, accepts hand-me-downs and doesn’t know how much the other husbands earn, although she does occasionally sit in a church family’s home and jealously look out their windows at the waterfront view and she can imagine that they are earning at least twice, more likely quadruple the salary her husband (who has a Master’s degree) earns.

And then, there is the whole issue of the Pastor’s Children. They mustn’t come to church messy and they must not put each other in headlocks during the service. (Yeah, right.) One of my sons once remarked that he hated Sunday School. I said, “Why?” And said, “All they talk about is Jesus . . . and Jesus is no fun!”

Sigh. Well, as your on-line Pastor’s Wife, let me just say a few things I would never dare say out loud in my real life.

I am not privy to things you tell my husband. He doesn’t tell me much about the day-to-day operations of the church. He never repeats confidential conversations to me. He often forgets to inform me about matters of some importance, as a matter of fact! So, don’t call me to ask how long a meeting will last. I might say, “What meeting?”

I hate that we have to struggle financially while so many in our congregation live so well. If this is God’s grand plan to teach me humility and contentment, Okay! I learned it! Can we move on? I’d like to actually go on a vacation with my family for once. But we can’t afford it, like we can’t afford a car newer than the 1993 Mercury Sable we drive.

I wish that there was someone who would befriend me. Who would stand beside me (and my husband) and be loyal and steadfast and true and encouraging. I wish someone would be “grandparents” to my boys. I wish I had someone local to call at 4 p.m. while I’m peeling potatoes. I wish I didn’t have to watch myself, to catch myself, to censor myself, to edit myself. I wish someone would “click” with me. I wish someone would take the time to try to know me.

If only I didn’t find out sooner or later that the women I love the most in the congregation will turn their backs on me because of theological issues or church government issues or some weird situation that I had no part in. I’ve grown suspicious of people in my church community, which breaks my heart and makes me cry in the dark. I feel alone.

Normally, your church is meant to be a supportive place, a community of caring and spiritual encouragement. And it is. Unless you’re the Pastor’s Wife.

The Human Condition

It seems that the human condition is essentially to be alone. You think you have friends and companions, but when it comes down to it, you are alone in the world. Well, maybe you are not alone, but I am. You see, I am a pastor’s wife.

This dismal thought brought to you courtesy of church politics.

More dismal thoughts from the pastor’s wife to come later.

And one more thing

Tonight, my husband mentions that next year, if Adam goes to sixth grade in public school (rather than homeschooling) that he will not be able to play the flute. Apparently, that would be just asking for him to be taunted because middle-school boys don’t play the flute without other middle-school boys taunting them and calling them “gay.”

I remember one of my husband’s friends joking years ago, way before we even had kids, about “flute-playing boys.” My husband and all his college friends are jocks. My husband played every sport in high school and then intramural college sports. He loves to watch football and baseball. He’s just a jock with two sons who are completely the opposite. Our twin boys have little coordination, no drive and complete disinterest in sports. They played baseball for a while, but it was boring and torturous. They took judo at the YMCA, but that eventually became drudgery. So, my husband, The Jock, counts on Zach and Grace to inherit some of his athletic skills and interests.

When I was in school, I was the girl in the library who thought jocks were stupid. I hated them for their bullying, for their cockiness, for their attitudes, for their stupidity. I did not have time for idiots like that. I went to one football game in all four years of high school. I thought that partying and drinking and being wild and crazy was just pointless. I thought the adulation of boys who were coordinated was sickening, especially when their IQs were lower than their jersey numbers.

And yet, here I am, married to a former jock who is warning me that my flute-playing son will be a target of other boys–the very kind of jocks I hated when I was in school–next year. Apparently, he was already called “gay” this year because of his flute.

So, I said, “Well, that is just stupid!” And then while my husband answered the phone, I moped on the couch and started to cry.

I either need therapy or a vacation! Or I need to slap the stupid boys in sixth grade who would make a flute-playing boy feel like a freak.

My husband says with incredulity, “Are you crying? Why are you crying?”

And I wipe my eyes and say, “Because I am a woman and I have hormones!” Sniffle, sniffle.

We discussed it more and I agreed that Adam should have other musical lessons and continue playing the flute at home. He’d like to play guitar and I’d like him to play the piano. He shows musical aptitude and I’d like to help him develop it.

As for me? I should be locked in a closet until this mood passes.

Sunday Laughs

Sunday means church in our family. By a miracle, I had my family seated in the front row at 9:30 a.m. Even my husband (the pastor) came up and said, “Why are you here so early?” I said, “Hey, if they are all ready, I leave!” So, there we were, fifteen minutes early.

My plan backfired, though. Babygirl had enough of it all before they even got to the congregational prayer. I took her and YoungestBoy downstairs to the nursery. YoungestBoy wanted to go back upstairs, so I allowed him, knowing the the adult I left in charge of my twins would also watch out for him.

That is how it happened that I missed one of our church’s funniest moments!

Every Sunday, there is time allotted for individuals in the congregation to stand and give thanks. YoungestBoy noticed something happening, people raising their hands, so he, my new Kindergarten Boy, raised his hand. The woman at the pulpit saw his hand and acknowledged him.

He stood up and then said, “I’m not sure what the question is. What’s the question?”

The woman told him, “This is the time we tell about what we’re thankful for. Do you have something you are thankful for?”

I’m told that he said, “Oh. I’m thankful for electricity!” The congregation burst into laughter. This kid is probably going to be a stand-up comedian. He loved it!

Girls Just Wanna Have Fun

I wonder if Cyndi Lauper is having fun? I’m not having any fun. I just realized that about two days ago. Since this baby was born over 16 months ago, I’ve been in Survival Mode. I’m the last one in line, the last person to eat dinner, the last person to go to bed, the last person to have any fun. And I’m sick of it.

Well, I also have PMS. Even my husband noticed it.

But.

Still.

My kids have fun, but their fun drives me crazy. They had fun last week scattering all the branches I had pruned from the trees and left in a tidy pile. They kicked them, they used them for swords, they just threw them around the yard. Then they left empty Capri Sun pouches on the ground and tracked mud into the house.

Today’s the children’s main fun consisted of running, chasing, screaming, wrestling and throwing each other to the ground. Did I mention “screaming”? I finally quit saying, “STOP SCREAMING! I CAN’T STAND ANYMORE!!” because they just couldn’t remember. They were having fun. Laughing hysterically. Until, of course, someone started to cry.

The baby even joined in, using her new-found screaming ability.

My husband took her for a ride, so I could accomplish something. I spent an hour sorting and organizing and throwing stuff away in the storage room. Stuff multiplies like some deadly virus in that room. The stuff mutates and oozes and then one day I can’t find the packing tape. So, I have bags for charity and a bag for garbage and I can walk to the workbench. But still no packing tape.

Then, the baby was home. What to do? I know! The backyard.

The baby had fun in the backyard. She toddled from the Little Tikes car to the sodden lawn (can you call it a lawn if it’s mostly muddy spots?) and back. She carried around a ball. She babbled to me. She climbed the deck, she climbed off the deck. (While I was outside, my husband was inside winning Dad of the Year by playing the board game Clue with the kids.)

I gathered all the loose twigs from the yard and pruned more and raked all the leaves that stuck to the wet grass. We have this one tree that loses its leaves after the weather has turned rainy. They blow around the yard for weeks and months until I find a day to rake. Today was that day. I even pulled weeds and discovered the bulbs beginning to break through the ground. This is our first spring since Greta, our Newfoundland dog, has been gone and I am looking forward to reclaiming the yard and getting the flowerbeds into shape. Seeing the bulbs poking up through the mud was such a happy surprise. I felt a little pebble of hope.

Then my husband went off to work again. Meetings, meetings, more meetings from 3 p.m. to . . . .well, he’s not home yet and it’s nearly 8:30 p.m. He called to say it’d probably be after nine. The baby went to sleep at 7:30 p.m., and the boys will go down soon and then I’ll have blessed solitude. Sort of.

But fun! I want to have some fun! Fun alone, fun with my husband, fun with the kids! Mostly fun alone, though. The kids are having fun–even though I tend to ruin it for them when I am tortured by their noise. The baby is having fun–everything is new and I’m the kind of mom who lets her sprinkle water from her cup onto the floor under the theory that “it’s only water, it will dry”. I let her get dirty because babies are washable. I buy myself time by letting her pull all the tissues from the box. What’s not fun about that?

My time will come. I won’t always be sitting at the kids table with sauce on my pants. The day will come that I will have something witty to say to grown-ups. I’ll have insightful comments about the Presidential caucuses. I’ll be able to read a whole novel in one sitting and then discuss it with another adult. I might even have a tan from a tropical vacation. I will soon, I hope, laugh again until my face hurts.

But for now, I just want to whine. I’m not having fun today.

My Restful World

7 a.m.: Shower and prepare for day. Throw laundry from washer to dryer. Start another load. Wash up a few dishes.

7:30 a.m.: Daycare baby arrives.

8 a.m.: Babygirl wakes up. Nurse her, change her, feed her whole-wheat waffles. Twins leave for fifth grade.

9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: Play with babies. Fold one load of laundry. Feed babies snacks. Play with 5 year old. Dance to Wiggles on t.v. Pick up toys. Read baby books.

11 a.m.: Feed babies lunch. Feed YoungestBoy lunch.

12:30 p.m.: Put daycare baby to bed. Send YoungestBoy off to kindergarten. Nurse Babygirl and hope she sleeps. She does not.

1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.: Play with Babygirl and try to read email.

2:30 p.m.: Daycare baby wakes up. Play with him, too.

3 p.m.: Twins arrive home from fifth grade.

3:30 p.m. : YoungestBoy arrives home from kindergarten.

4 p.m.: Feed daycare baby snack in high chair. While he eats and Babygirl pulls at my knees, peel potatoes, mix up cake batter.

4:30 p.m.: Mark arrives to finish fixing hole in drywall. Mash potatoes, put cake in oven. Mix up frosting. Clean up babies. Change diapers again.

4:45 p.m.: Daycare baby leaves. Finish making dinner.

5 p.m.: Call husband to see when/if he’s coming home.

5:15 p.m.: Husband arrives home. Mark sprays texture stuff on wall with air compressor. Children eat dinner. Babygirl throws dinner. Frost cake. Clean up baby. Thank Mark for fixing wall.

5:45 p.m.: Take baby upstairs. Put her in pajamas. Nurse her.

6:30 p.m.: Baby asleep. Clean up kitchen. Sweep floor. Wash dishes. Load dishwasher.

7 p.m.: Help 10 year old son design brochure cover for school project.

7:30 p.m. Free time!

* * * * * * * *

Last night, I heard my husband talk to a friend on the phone. He was telling her that he wouldn’t mind being a stay-at-home dad. He said, “And then after about six months when I am rested . . . ”

That’s all I heard. I said, “REST?!”

Poor husband with complete inability to understand how not restful it is to stay at home with children. I only wish I could earn enough to trade places with him. He keeps hoping I will write a best-selling novel, but guess what? I DON’T HAVE TIME! Rest! Ha!