The Great Pinata Party

As part of our Gin’s birthday ritual (the dispelling of winter), we always did a pinata.  We did it with the Wills down the street every year from almost the beginning of the children because 1) our two families always made a whole party and 2) the Wills knew how to laugh.

 Sometimes we used a store bought pinata.  Sometimes we made our own. (Yes, I was one of those mothers.)

Sometimes we whacked it in the studio (yucky weather).

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You will note the (over-exposed) grim determination on Gin’s face—and the calm of a home-made pinata that knows not even a wrecking ball could dent it. Uncle Q lurks in the shadows.  The studio looks nearly new. (1985)

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This is a store-bought pinata, which may be why it was not really included in the group portrait. If you look carefully, you will see purple hooves just at the top.  I cannot understand how we could be so heartless as to beat anything with purple hooves. (1986)

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And sometimes we did it outside.  Perhaps this was the first year of the decade of drought.  I didn’t mind drought that much, actually, for this very reason. I suspect that this pinata also was store-bought.  But maybe not.  Big round ones were our speciality.  If so, we did a bang-up job on the crepe paper. (1987)

So, in honor of her being home,  not only did we trot out Gin’s old garland and tropical zoo, we also invited the Wills back for the traditional pinata whacking party – only the old whackers are the new parents, and the new whackers are people who have only been on the planet a number of minutes.  (Or okay Abraham L – for several dignified years)

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Not Gin’s favorite shot, but C and L were headed home with the time bomb and we had to shoot fast.  If you look closely here, you will see That Look on the bomb’s widdle face. He’s too young to be a respectable whacker, anyway.  We did reunite all the kids (and their kids)  for a brief moment at the front door as some arrived and some left.

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J.L.’s lovely wife, B, and daughter C.  (the names have been changed to protect the innocent, but if you want to catch her blog – you know where to look, or at least, who to ask)

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And the lovely Ash and Abraham L. (ditto)  All of whom look like the boy (yes, I can still call a 30 year old man “boy,” considering the way he mis-led my children into thinking, long long ago, that they could speak Spanish.  “Me no know,” does not constitute Spanish.  Just so you’re aware.

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Here J.L. is, holding his youngest – possibly THE most beautiful baby in the world: Mairee (I made that name up).  And Mer in the background, holding Megs’ young whirlwind, Mags.  (I am not, however, making that up.)

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Launching herself at Grandma.

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Gin, doing her thang. M’s outfit, courtesy of The Children’s Place, store most likely to be voted my checkbook’s Deepest Black Hole.

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Gin, thanging once more.  It’s how we live.  When I was in high school, I went nowhere without my Honeywell Pentax.  That’s why my eyes aren’t well matched.  One got over-developed.

Deconstruction of a Pinata:

This one was bought at a real Mexican market, which may impress you until I say that it is exactly the same kind we used to buy at Smith’s grocery store FOR-EVER.  As you will see, it is a rainbow – an advanced anti-whacking design that offers TWO candy delivery systems, but an awful lot of negative space between.

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Frazz, taking his first hit.  He was brave enough to break the trail.  You will tell how serious the blows get by the reactions in the shadowy Peanut Gallery back there. Each kid got three whacks.

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Whack Two.  There are more pictures of Frazz than of anybody else because I am his grandmother and I was taking the pictures.  The really good pictures will end up on Gin’s blog, so go there, but not tonight, because I don’t think they’re up yet.  I shoot the facts, ma’am – but she shoots the beauty and magic.

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The Ash-man cometh. A good, solid whack.

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Ms. Bell, staying a safe distance, pats the rainbow with the stick. (Howdy Doody allusion)

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This child could give the Chaz a run for her money.  I actually have MANY pictures of her whacking away.  But I’m already subjecting you to a week’s worth of Frazz, so you only get one of Mags.

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And look what happens when the flash stops working.  Holy Cats, what a whack!  Go Honest Abe!!  (Nickname: the Clean-up Guy)

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Back in the light.  You can see, looking at Gin, that though the flash froze the violence into one little frame, Abe whacked the rainbow mightily.  And if you have very good eyes, you may see a few candy hearts and pink M&Ms flying loose.

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The Frazz takes his last hit. I love the earnestness in the form.  Frazz looks downright patriotic.  Or something.  GO FRAZZ!!  Oh, he will do well, that boy.  He’ll be governor, if they don’t hang him first. (Allusion alert: anybody recognize it?)

What you are not seeing is that Mr. Ash had a last turn also, and that Mr. Abe had thrashed this thing to within an inch of its life – doing the last bit with NO BLINDFOLD.

And what was the result, I ask you?  

BEHOLD—>

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Those dots you see in the middle?  Like that yellow dot on Mr. Ash’s face?  A raining down of candy hearts and Ms and little cars and heart shaped slinkys and pencils and tiny Hershey bars and Kit Kats and I don’t know what else.  Forget jewels on the ground – how about a flurry of all THAT?

They crammed it all into personal zip lock bags—except for Ms. Orange pants who is like one of those little floor vacuuming robots, except programmed exclusively for M&Ms.  And after this, there was cake (the “birthday” cake we’d bought Saturday from Costco because I’d lost my mind after our traditional Burger Supreme family feast and decided I wanted something to make my pants even tighter – and the only chocolate cake left there had Happy Birthday on it – so YAY!!  It worked!!!).  And talk.  And then going home.

And here I am, doing it to myself again – books about my parents, scanning the family photo albums, taking sentimental journeys hung with garlands and pummeled by pinata prizes.  I guess it’s this: if it was great the first time around, it’s only got to get better on the second lap.

 

 

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Friday, the 13th –

A couple of weeks ago, the daughter (step, but honestly, nobody’s counting) of a dear friend of mine had a baby.  A brave little girl baby who came three months premature.  The daughter had this baby alone, in a bathroom—a total surprise since she’d managed to convince herself that no such thing would ever happen to her.  This is an intelligent, funny girl who is always taking life by the throat.  I guess it can be a curse to be bright and young at the same time.  We love her.  We love the entire blended family.  Her step mother, my friend,  is not a saint, thank heaven, but a woman of strength and great love.  She would deny the charge of patience, but since all nine of the children are still walking the earth, I think she’d be wrong.

The baby ended up plugged into the machines of life.  And the new mother (suddenly a little girl in the big, harsh desert of reality) and her long-time boyfriend decided that they would marry—as prosaic as that had seemed to them before—be a family, and raise this child with the love our girl had missed out with her own bio- mother.  It would work.  It would be okay.

But we buried that baby today.  It was a cold day out, but not too bad.  Not too much wind, and the sun shone, as it is wont to do in winter, maybe a little weakly out of a strained bluish sky.  May I tell you that the girl’s father, a man of great heart, a man I admire, had made a lovely little box.  Oak, I think.  Beautiful.

Some religious people (I have fought the urge there to use quotation marks, but how could I do that without damning myself?) believe in a vengeful God who designs trials and visits punishments on sinners.  It is a simple, if myopic, view of things.  I, myself, think he must spend a lot of time alone, staring into his fireplace, his heart wrung by the stubborn short-sightedness of his children.  Why, I wonder, would he go to all the trouble to punish us, when we do such a good job of it ourselves?

Everyone will get through this.  Hopefully, everyone will have learned something.  One of the girls in the family (not step, but again, no counting here) quietly explained to her mother, there under that pale sun, that she had broken up with her boyfriend that morning.  Not absolutely, but a stepping back.  A more casual relationship, pitched to the actual time of their lives.  “There is no reason,” she said, “to try to rush into growing up too fast . . . “

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Two-fer

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In honor of the fact that Gin is HERE, or has been (who has time to post things when they could be hanging with the angels?), and that it was kind of her birthday, we hauled out the ancient garland that was our Gin’s birthday tradition for many years and hung it from the beam.  The tissue paper was still lively, but the lacy-paper connectors were so sad and so old that the garland’s very own weight tore it apart.  Aloha, old garland.  It was always our spark of color and festivity after a dreary, sagging January.  Now we will have to find something else.  Heat lamps, maybe.

And with Gin came The Frazz!!  Pinball in a bottle!  Lightening striking twice!  Who needs tissue paper and string when you’ve got a star child banging around the house?  So of course, we all got together and ate stuff, and here is how the story goes:

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One grandchild at our table.  The OLD one.

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The OLD grandchild and him mommy.

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AND the YOUNG grandchild AT THE SAME TABLE, AT THE SAME TIME.  Also with parents who are stuffing faces.

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The grandfather.  Talk about an OLD one.

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The blissfully single aunt.

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Wild and celebratory music and rhythm coming from at least two bass strings.

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The OLD grandchild gettin’ fancy with the dancing Aunt.

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The YOUNG grandchild doing buck-wings without tap-shoes.

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And last, a quiet moment with the YOUNG one and his aunt Gin.  It is the last one because there are no pictures of quiet moment with the Frazz.  They don’t make ’em.

Two in one place. At one time.

A-mazing.

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Why we sent our kid on a mission

I know that some of you folks dear to me are LDS and some are not.  And since the mission thing, which is a normal part of the LDS expectation, is NOT normal to most people, I thought maybe I’d explain why I would do such a weird and difficult thing as sending my kid off into the blue for two years.  This is not, by the way, an explanation of LDS beliefs.  It’s just me thinking this through.

As part of this, though, I do have to explain some of my personal beliefs in my personal way so we have a basis of understanding Me. 

WARNING: the following opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those held officially by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. 

Two general points:

First, I believe that God designed the system we know presently as reality and thus, that he knows how it works.  He knows all the function keys and shortcuts, and he knows the processes.  So if you want to get from point A to point B, he’s the guy to go to.

[Of course, in doing that you end up having to refer to the words that prophets from the beginning of time have put down on paper – flawed words (but then, that’s redundant – words are at once a rich and problematic communicative strategy), but semi-permanent if you use a good vector and nobody throws your vector away. But at least you have resource material.  Along with the mystical component of prayer, and the more scientific one of observation and conclusion.]

And because this is actually a functional system, there are laws.  Not human stabs at law-making, but the immutable kind—like gravity, or like “If you take enough Ipecac, eventually you are going to blow all your chunks,” or like “You can’t run iPhoto, Photoshop and iTunes at the same time on an iMac, even with a gig of ram, without really slowing down performance.”  You can argue all you want with these laws—weep, whine, persuade—and you won’t get anywhere.

  ——–=0=——-

Second:  When He established his children as individuals—important individuals in his eyes—he also allowed them the right and freedom to figure things out on their own.  To be creative.  To choose.  In fact, he encourages this.  They can’t change the system though, and so they either learn (through exploration and experiment—blundering—and listening to others’ conclusions) to follow the system manual or they end up blundering forever, always trying to work out their own path, and quite often up-yoursing anything that smacks of being in the manual.  Either way, we’re going to find pain, because that’s simply part of the mortal environment.  In a lot of ways, it’s up to us to decide how much pain is going to characterize our time here.  If I can reduce mine, I’m going to do that.  If I can reduce yours, I’ll try to do that, too—as far as I have resources to do that.

Which is why I work so hard with my kids.  Every choice I have ever made has had an impact on the lives of my kids.  At one point, it was for kids I hadn’t even imagined yet.  Then it was for kids I had.  Now it’s still for them, but also for the kids my own kids will have.

Though I never really realized it till this morning in the shower—just about the only place you can ever actually hear yourself think—every effort I have made to be a good person from the very beginning of my life—an honest person, a dependable, responsible person—all of this has been for the sake of saving my kids pain and pointing them in the direction of health, happiness and safety.

And this is exactly what missionaries are there for.  For the people who weren’t lucky enough to have parents who knew how to live for their kids’ sakes.  Or for people who couldn’t hear their parents’ voices.  To save them pain.  To teach them how to grab joy.

 ——–=0=——-

 It was hard to send my kids away.  Two years without visits is a long, long time, though those of you who have followed M’s adventures know there’s plenty of communication going on.   Some of you have said to me wonderingly, “LDS women just seem so peaceful with this. They just take it in stride.”  Well, yeah, I guess some LDS women are like that.  And there are some who are so glad to get the dang kid out of the house (doing something constructive), that they do the dance of joy and shout, “Don’t let the door hit you in the back-side, now!” as the kid leaves.

  For us, it was having your best friend move across country.  Or across the planet.  It was like a big hole torn in the fabric of our lives.  We were down one laugh, one singer, one problem solver, one hand of King and Scum.  It makes us limp.  All of us.  The fact that Gin lives as far across the continent as you can get does almost the same thing, but I know I can see her and interrupt her life anytime I want to fork out the bucks.  And she can come see me.

 But once you leave on a mission, you are committed to a two year project – no vacations, no visits – just service, focus – your head entirely in the game. 

This may sound scary to you, considering the weird groups of people who show up in the news sometimes, cults that separate people from normal life and guardians and then from their money.  And sometimes, eventually, from their lives. 

While this mission may end up costing all my money (if this stupid financial crisis doesn’t heal itself pretty quick – and not ALL, just $350 a month – and besides, M saved up enough money to pay for it himself), you’ve seen enough of Murphy’s dumb pictures to suspect that if he’s being brainwashed, it’s basically by clowns. (actually, mission Presidents are a very serious, dedicated lot.  If there’s a clown, it’s going to be the senior companion)

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            We do this for two reasons: for other people, and for the kid.

            How many kids do you know would earn enough money to buy a car and then spend it on a two year trip where all they get to do is work their butts off helping people, and trying to share their beliefs?  Cammon, on his mission, helped in all kinds of service, cleaning up yards and parks, assisting handicapped horseback riders, whatever needed to be done.  Missionaries help with flood and disaster clean-up, that kind of thing.  But most of the help is more personal than that.

 We don’t send the kids out to save people from hell.  Not the fire and brimstone hell.  The only hell LDS people believe in, anyway, is the one cobbled together by people themselves: a prison of regret and unrealized potential.  But that’s a discussion for another day. 

 Life is a puzzle. Is it worth two years of my time with my kid, if that kid helps even one person to figure out how to be happier?  Healthier?  Stronger?  You betcha.  If M can help just one family learn to be more functional, more committed, more pulled-together and patient with each other, then he has made the world better.  So, in that way, what we do is invest two years of our own happiness in a stronger, more loving world.  Which translates to me thus: he is there to teach people as much as he knows about the real system that has real laws, and to explain the processes that we have found to work so well in our own lives. 

  ——–=0=——-

            The benefits for the kids?  You get this kid back who’s lived on his or her own, who’s seen real poverty, real riches – who has gotten his hands dirty.  He’s had the chance to become acquainted with the real awful and wonderful things of life – not through TV scripts, but through learning to love people who have been through pretty much every misery, trial, joy, pain, triumph there is.  He gets to learn to love people who aren’t like him—culturally, economically, traditionally.  Many of these missionaries learn to see the world through a language that jerks them out of their own context.  They become acquainted with different cultures, different governments, different architecture.  They get a clear chance to put other people first.  They of offered the chance to learn discipline and endurance.  They may weep the tears of Godly, loving sorrow, and they can feel the incredible feeling of true relief. 

A mission is a great place to grow up.

            Not all the missionaries take what’s offered.  Some fail to grow.  And that’s sad.  I do not pretend that the members of this church are anywhere near perfect.   But so many of these kids come back to their families incredibly prepared to face their adult lives – focused, ready to make a choice and make it work.  And better, much better prepared to love.

            University tuition costs me a heck of a lot more, for classes that too often aren’t worth anywhere near what this is worth. (Lucky me—I got to shell out for both.)

            Understand that I feel every day that my kid is gone.  Don’t doubt it.  I cried my way through the  year before each kid left, and I get sentimental even now, counting days till I see my M again.  But if he comes back like Cam, then this hard, hard thing is so worth it.  So worth it.

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            I just wanted to explain.  So when you see the mothers of this church doing this thing – know that it isn’t easy.  It isn’t automatic.  It isn’t simple.  It’s definitely a choice, a tough one.  But it’s also an investment.

            And who doesn’t want to live in a better world? 

            So there you go.  That’s why.

Posted in Epiphanies and Meditations, Explanations | Tagged | 14 Comments

Enough to make your eyes ache –

Okay – you’ve gotta go look at the pictures Ginger just posted of her last ten days in Belize.  Remember what I just wrote about the pasture?  Well, this is the antidote.  The shots are great, but you almost have to believe that you couldn’t take a bad one in that place.  So just go look, eh?

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Here you go, sir—um, I mean ma’am.

There are no beautiful/significant/artsy-pants pictures to be taken down at the pasture these days.  No, it’s all gone to slush and mud and depressed and shedding horses.  This is the ugly time of year.  If I had time, I’d challenge myself and get out there and find beauty even in the slosh.  But I don’t.  Have time.  Cause Ginna’s coming and I am trying to red up the house (old English expression).  Not because she’d care if there was dust, but because I don’t want her to lose that romantic glow of memory to grim reality.

I say this, and I was just doing some dishes – when suddenly, across the ancient snow there was a flash of sunset light, not blue, cold, gray light—something much golden and warm.  I looked up and it was caught in the naked trees too, the branches and trunks gone gold and glowing – as if they were warming up, and leaves were stirring in there.  It only lasted a minute, but it brought my heart up.

Okay – on to business. I’ve been thinking about the comedy of errors thing I wrote about before – with my dad and me.  Being mistaken.  Mistaking.  Like I said in those comments (if you haven’t been reading the comments, you’ve been missing some fun – like that post that turned out to be a discussion of humor, some interesting discussion there), stuff like this happens all the time.  Like when I was in grad school, and I met my younger sister (four years younger, but married – and me hanging out there in the breeze, teaching Freshman English) for lunch.  We were in the bookstore and ran into a friend of hers.  Kev introduced me and the friend beamed down on me very kindly—“So, you’re a freshman here at the “Y?” she said.  I didn’t mind that one.

Or the time in Texas when I was home for Christmas (again in grad school) and picking up some framing my mom had had done.  Standing in line there in the land of UTA, I found myself next to a middle eastern male who was flexing his eyebrows at me.  “Well,” he said, undulating slightly, “so what high school do you go to?”  

“I’m in graduate school at BYU,” I said scathingly, if not crushingly—or imaginatively, then picked up Mom’s order and stalked off.  But maybe I didn’t mind that one either, because – hey – how often do you get to scathe?

This kind of thing really messes up being nice. I honestly make a big effort to accommodate people when I can.  Like, in Paris, I spoke French—trying really, really hard not to be the Ugly American, and ending up to be the idiot American because I could never understand the answers after I asked a question.  And with the influx of (okay – how do you say this?  Hispanic?  Latino? Spanish speaking people) I try very hard to be gracious and respectful, even though I’ve got about five words of Spanish to work with.  So one day, I said “Gracias” to my bagger at Smith’s.  She said,  “Excuse me?”

I sheepishly whispered, “Ummm – gracias?”

And she said, “Actually, I’m from Bangladesh.” Or somewhere like that.  It’s kind of had a quelling effect on my confidence.

So when we were in Texas, and dad was paying the toll lady who had what sounded to me like a Spanish accent, I screwed up my confidence and, from WAY over in the passenger seat where I couldn’t really see clearly, okay – I said another “Gracious.”  But this one turned out to Sudanese.

So there I am, hoping to be nice, and ending up sounding like an idiot.  Worse, a patronizing idiot.

What’s really bad is when this happens with gender. When all the kids were all little, Cam was so darned pretty, what with his almost white blond hair that was so long (well – how could I cut it, for heaven’s sake?), everybody who saw him gushed over him.  And every darned one of them thought he was a girl.  We were at Marie Callendar’s one night with all three blond kidlets, and this woman stopped at our table, leaned over Cam slightly and said, “You have the three cute, cute daughters!”

Four year old Cam, as he always did, looked up with his mouth all prim and puckered and said, “Actually, I’m a boy.”  It always embarrassed people and he always got a lot of satisfaction out of that.

It’s really bad when you make that mistake with grown-ups.  Not that I have.  But there’ve been times when I COULD have, if I hadn’t kept my mouth shut.

And then there are the state of being mistakes.  Like saying “What’s wrong?” to somebody who thinks they’re having a good time.

One day long ago, a family member of mine showed up at my front door dressed in a loose yoked shirt and a really, really bad mood.  “Do NOT ask me if I’m pregnant,” she warned as she stalked past me into the house.  Umm.  She really did look pregnant.  I didn’t say, “Well, you know – if you’re going to dress maternity –“

And then there was this lady in my ward who was really bent because when she’d taken the daughter she’d waited thirty years to conceive shopping for clothes, the salesperson had very kindly said to the little girl, “Let’s see if your grandma likes this one!”

So it’s not like I’m alone in this.

Still.  Okay, I really don’t think I look eighty.

 

Posted in Epiphanies and Meditations | Tagged , | 15 Comments

Texas Smackdown

            I had a great time in Texas.  My dad has made himself a very pleasant nest, baching it like a pro.  And while he says that the one thing that disturbs him is opening a closet and finding empty shelves, he’s pretty darn eager to jettison all the non-relevant stuff in the kitchen cupboards.  How is it that I was great at uncluttering him.  Actually, there wasn’t much to do; my efficient and energetic sister has already done all the hard stuff, and now the house is set up like a marvelous machine.

            It’s a beautiful thing.  And it will never happen in my house. (Sigh)

            So—turns out, my dad is pretty dang good and peaceful company.  Up to a point.

            The last morning I was there, we ran around doing errands.  The bank.  The grocery store.

            Dad was happily giving the grocery cashier a hard time, and I was defending her, and it was very funny for all involved.  The cashier, who seemed to like us pretty much after that, smiled and held out the receipt to me, saying, “Here you are, Mr. and Mrs. Downey.  Have a good day!!”

            That gave me pause.

            My dad is 86 flipping years old.  And now, here is Mr. Grandfather turning back to grin at the cashier, saying, “She’s not my wife.  I’m just keeping her.”

            Now, that was helpful.

            So on the way out I glare at him and say, “She either meant that I look a heck of a lot older than I think I do, or you look a heck of a lot younger than I think you do.”  Honestly – DO I LOOK THAT OLD?  He did point out that old guys sometimes marry much younger women.  And hey – I AM just about thirty years younger.  Not that, at this point, thirty years counts as “much younger.” 

            But what the heck?

            Next stop: Alterations by Rose.  She does pant hems for FOUR BUCKS.  I could double my wardrobe if I lived within driving distance.  Rose is an elegant Vietnamese lady who is about fifty and looks about thirty two.  She spent years and years doing factory sewing till she got good and bored with it.  At which point, her husband looked around to find her a good business opportunity of her own.  And he found it:  a laundromat, which they purchased and ran for a couple of years.

          Rose made it fun for herself by setting up an alteration service in one corner of the space.  But the area around the building went downhill, and Rose realized that they were going to have to replace all the machines before too long—a further investment of about $180K.   Besides, it was kind of damp in there, and not at all the kind of place that suited her.  So when the lease was up, she jumped on the opportunities that come with global financial crisis, found herself a neat little empty space in a nice part of town at a vastly reduced rate, and with the help of a very talented architect son, established the most elegant, classy, delightful shop ever: the afore named Alterations by Rose.

          She has a lovely ecru lobby with ecru couch and chairs, very Swedish in its clean simplicity, lovely ecru on ecru floral screens in the front window, very asian ditto, and two generous and secure dressing rooms.  It’s like a Beverly Hills boutique, right there in the middle of a nice little Texas strip mall.  And behind the counter, which floats in the middle of the long space, she allows you to see her neat and powerful machines, all lined up down the wall – but more wonderfully, we see all of her thread, big cones of it in all colors hung on hundreds of pegs, all organized by graduating hue—a rainbow wall of thread.

         Rose, herself, is dressed in a white and silver brocade vest and neat black slacks, and greets my father fondly and by name.  She is cheerful, lovely, hospitable and voluble.

          My father turns her attention to me.  “And this is my daughter,” he says.  Rose sucks in her breath. “I don’t believe that!” she says in her clipped Vietnamese accent.  “I don’t believe you can have a daughter like—“ and she indicates me with one elegant hand.

            Uh-huh.

            My father gleefully fills in the blanks: “You didn’t think I was ancient enough to have a daughter this old?”

            She looks horrified.  “No.  NO,” she says.  Then puts her hand on my arm and says to me: “What he said I said – I didn’t say that.”

            I am still not sure what she did say. 

            Now you know the power that has formed my character pretty much from birth.  For me, it was either dissolve into a mass of flustered-to-dissolved self-confidence at a very young age, barely surviving life—or develop an immunity to chutzpah and brazen my way through the slings and arrows.

           Or combine the two and become slightly schizoid.

           Guess which way I went?

           Once thing I’ve decided for certain: I am not going to be looking into any more mirrors any time soon.

            

Posted in Family, Memories and Ruminations, Texas | Tagged , , | 11 Comments

Ambushed

            So I was looking up the song “At this Moment” by Billy Vera and the Beaters, because I watched a Biography Channel thing about Mike. J Fox the other morning on the treadmill.  Does anybody remember Family Ties? You remember that girl that Alex loved?  The one he chased all the way to – what was it, New Jersey to the bus station, to tell her she couldn’t marry the other guy?

             Did anybody ever tell me that Michael J Fox actually ended up marrying that same actress years later?  And why DIDN’T somebody tell me, because I’ve worried about that since flipping 1986.  Not only did he marry her, but he’s STILL married to her, and she’s still beautiful, and they have four children, and he says that she makes him feel like she likes him even better now than when he was young and healthy.  So I was thinking about that whole story line, and I remember that song.  THAT SONG.

           And the more I thought about it.  I was sure it was in my iTunes (yeah, I listen to music a lot.  How can I?  I only sit still when I have both iPhoto and Photoshop open.  It’s not like I can add iTunes and not overdrive my RAM), so I went hunting for it.  And yeah, it was there, and I sat there at my desk, waiting for my solitary breakfast to cook, and listened to it.  I had some vague notion of maybe singing it at the Ward Valentine’s Karaoke Fest (which we will miss, I find that I am actually a little sad to say, in favor of a huge family get-together when Gin and Kris are here in February).  So I sang along, testing the range.  Which happens to be perfect for me.

            Only I couldn’t sing the song.  It kept making me cry.

            You know, there’s the episode of Raymond where Debra sends Raymond out so she can have a day to herself, and he sneaks back to see what the heck she’s gonna do with it, and peering through the living room window, finds her sobbing her face off all alone on the couch.  Later, she calls it, “A good cry,” apropos of nothing really.  Just a sort of spiritual clean out.  So yeah.  I guess I needed one.

            Before I could send iTunes back to the dock, the next song started, a very, very simple thing: guitar, and then my grown up, beautiful, dear Cam singing a verse of “Give Said the Little Stream.” 

            I find that the present is a fragile crust with me, of inconsistent construct – part great joy, part absolute bewilderment.  It is a crispy, thin thing and just below it, what-will-be and what-has-been rage and seethe and press hotly upward.  Most of the time, I’m good.  I do what I do, and I’m pretty happy and busy.

            But I sat there too long over Cam’s little song, and before I could stop it,  Celine’s “A New Day Has Come” started up.

            It was all over for me.  The crust broke up into a million pieces and everything below surged up and started  flowing to the sea.  It was like some movie montage—all these pictures flashing through my heart, and all these tears making little wet, warped spots on my heaps of bills and receipts and notes.

            It didn’t last long.  Thank Heaven (literally) that life is nearly all work—annoying enough work that it can keep you balanced when you’re in danger of wallowing.

            But I came away from all of this wanting to say something.  Celine’s song is all my children.

GinSlide

            So wherever you kids are at this moment, and Lord knows you are everywhere

            Thank you.  Thank you for giving me a chance to be part of your lives.  It’s been an honor and an amazing pleasure. 

            I’m not dying.  I’m just thinking it has to be said, because time is always short in mortality.

            Thank you.  Thank you.  You have been my joy.

            (Really – I’m not dying.  Knocking on wood, maybe.)

2008FamFunny

Posted in Epiphanies and Meditations, Family | Tagged , | 6 Comments

And Mommy starts to fade


MomYoungCute

           Among the myriad things my mother taught me—the fastest way to make somebody laugh is to tell them not to, sewing can be fun as long as you don’t get your thumbnail involved in the seams, order really does matter when you’re adding ingredients together, which is why we have recipes—was this: she taught me to sing.  More specifically, she taught me to harmonize.

            It was down in Mother Jeanne’s dark and magical basement, sitting at the looming upright piano that hadn’t been tuned for sixty years.  But that’s not right—it’d been tuned, but the pins were literally floating in the block, so the piano just sort of re-tuned itself every time, and nobody living there played the thing, so nobody really noticed.

            Anyway, she taught me the descending alto line of “I Know That my Redeemer Lives,” which was a funny choice, considering. I mean, it’s not like Mother Jeanne kept our hymnal around. 

            So she taught me, the two of us side by side on the piano bench, and I learned, and a whole new set of senses opened up to me – the combining of frequencies, the color of sound, the joy of matched soaring.

MomSuit

            My mother was, of course, part of the reason I went to Texas last week.  Last time I saw her, I was really just—freaked, I guess.  (Flabbergasted is too silly a word.  Blown away doesn’t begin to touch it.  Maybe amazed, in the sense of having entered an exitless maze.)  I hadn’t been there to watch the change happen in her.  I knew about it, yes.  I’d seen her loss of memory.  Her dislocation in the world.  But the last time I saw her was the first time I had seen her since Dad had been forced to enroll her in the nursing home. 

          And that visit was rough for me.  She’d lost a ton of weight. They had to medicate her, since she had finally descended to that place where the personality changes, and wonderful people are suddenly mean, loud, shouting people.  Now, with the meds in her system, she was passive, limp.  She only opened her eyes once while I was there.  My mother.  But not at all my mother.

            This time, it was different.  I knew where we were going; I could visualize it. And I thought I was prepared to see her without shock.  Anyway, her present “living room” is actually way nicer than mine.  More like Kathy Hendricks’ place – elegant, beautifully appointed.  And the place smells good, almost too much of Really Nice Candle.  They have a big screen TV there, lots of space.  Nice furniture.  And in the dining room, red table cloths.  It isn’t a hard place to visit.  The only thing missing is—everything.  Bustle, conversation, purpose.  And the front door is always locked.

 
MomBlur

           My dad headed right for the living room, knowing Mom would be there.  “I’m looking for my girl,” he said.  And then, with delight, “There she is!”  It took me a minute to recognize her.  The meds are gone.  But all they’d left of my mom was this clean, neatly dressed, thin whisp of woman, collapsed into the corner of the couch, eyes closed, mouth slack. She didn’t look bad, really, just—as though the wind could carry her off.  As though that’s what she might actually be waiting for.

            Kev had cut her hair boy short, but it’s a beautiful, healthy granite gray.  She was wearing a sweater.

            I sat down on the couch next to her and put my arm through hers.  “This is your oldest daughter,” Dad announced from the other side.  And Mom perked up, not altogether connected, but willing.  I asked her how she was, and she said, “Oh, fine!”  It was a strong answer, and about as clear as I sound right after dental work.  So we started to chat.  It’s a little down-the-rabbit-hole to talk to somebody you’ve known all your life, somebody you’ve depended on, laughed with, deconstructed the world with on a regular basis – but who may or may not have finally checked out of all that, now on her way somewhere else.

MomDadDate

            Her answers came back.  The short ones were easy to understand on some levels.  The long ones, “Oh, yes.  We’re going to have to take care of that – “ got passionate and devolved into a flow of unintelligible—if still emphatic—garbles.  We murmured responses, signaling willingness to support and understand, and I wondered for the hundredth time if she was really trying to say something, if somewhere inside of there, she knew who we were and had things to say to us.  And if she wanted to slap us for our vapid answers.

           At least I wasn’t scared this time.  I noticed how thick her hair still was, and I could still touch her.  So Mom and I leaned together side by side, shoulder to shoulder, head to head, the way we used to do.

            I had come with kind of a mission.  I’d thought maybe she might like to hear me sing some songs to her.  “Oh, they play music there all the time,” Dad told me.  But what kind of music?  Do they play the songs that belong to these people?  The war songs?  The love songs made famous by Fred Astaire, Bing Crosby, Rosemary Cluny?  Those songs that dad and mom used to sing when we took road trips—Down by the Old Mill Stream?  On Moonlight Bay?  Smoke Gets in Your Eyes?

            I wanted to sing those to her, the ones I remember from the backseat—on our way to Arrowhead or across country to our new house.  I meant to find all the lyrics, remember them all.  But when we got there, all I could remember was The Old Mill Stream.  So I told Mom I was going to sing it, and I did. 

            I sang softly, and Dad picked it up on the other side of her, harmonizing.  I sang the gentle part, then followed it with the jazz variation.  And as I did, a tall black man, a person in mother’s situation, shuffled over and walked slowly past—about three times—stealing looks at us out of the corners of his eyes.  So then I was singing to him, too.

            When that song was finished, I started some other one, but abruptly, Mother said, “Yes.” 

          She leaned forward then and started—singing. 


MomLeanCandle

             I didn’t get it at first, but I caught the pitch, and then the melody – scratchy but true – and then recognized the words.  The Old Mill Stream.  So I leaned over, too, and sang with her – and she sang the whole song, all the way through—and the whole song was there, timing, pitch—just buried a bit, and very weak.  It was because I knew what I was hearing that I understood, but they were all there, all the lyrics.  And we sang it through twice.

            Caught in what seemed to me to be a miracle of epic proportions, I glanced at my father.  He was smiling at me.  I don’t know if he was amazed.  I’d expected him to be astonished, because I was amazed.  She may not have remembered me, exactly, but she’d remembered a song that linked us.  Just a little song we used to sing in the car on any given plain old thought-it-would-last-forever day.  And as we sang it, I think my soul finally found a little comfort.  And maybe she did, too.

            We walked her into the dining room, and had to leave her there – in good hands, but in odd circumstances.  And now I wonder – all those garbled sounds in her answers to us, if I had only known what to listen for, would I have found perfect sense in the words?  I don’t know.   And the truth is that I will not know unless she visits me after she dies—as I made her promise to do—and tells me so.  Or until I die, too, and can ask.  At which point we will be pretty much the same age, I imagine.  I intend to take her dancing then, and introduce her to the joys of heavenly horse-back spirit riding, which I am sure you can do up there for free, if the horse spirits like you enough.

            Meanwhile, we’ll always have The Old Mill stream . . .

MomWindCute

Posted in Family, Just life, Memories and Ruminations, Texas, Visits | Tagged , , , | 12 Comments

On mommyness—

Jan 16, 2009

            I’ve probably said this before, but if I had to choose some identifiable brand for myself, it would probably be Shakespeare’s Bottom.  Yes, yes—the joke is built in.  Of course, I’m talking about Bottom the Joiner from A Midsummer Night’s Dream (I say “of course,” but if you haven’t read your Shakespeare then God bless you.  That’s another allusion, by the way, for those who wonder).

            Actually, my brother and I are both Bottom, but I am more civilized than Mike is. 

The part about Bottom I find the most undeniable is (and I am not quoting because I am not in the mood to get off the couch and pull the book down) this: while the parts for the revelry are being assigned, Bottom keeps trying to talk them into letting him play all of them – the great lover, the tragic female romantic part, the raging lion (Oh, let me play the lion too – I will roar ye as any sucking dove-).  And because he takes himself so seriously, he ends up wearing an ass’s head (gift of the fairies) through most of the play.  “They think to make an ass of me,” he says, as his friends take one look at him and run off screaming. 

I taught this play in to my high school students (after having played Puck a plethora of times over four years under the tutelage of Robert Stoddard who will never know that I have just made him famous since he never reads my blog).  When we’d get to this particular place in the play—you know, doing a little readers’ theater thing with the kids reading the parts—there’d be this  sudden fluttering all around the room, kids cutting their eyes at each other and laughing behind their hands.

OH MY GOSH.  As though the jokes weren’t a good two hundred years old and counting.  “You idiots,” I’d say to them (it’s too late to fire me).  “That’s EXACTLY what he meant when he wrote it. YOU THINK I DON’T GET IT???????”

            Anyway, you could probably cut to the chase if you just summed me up with: I’m a jack of all trades, master of none.  Which comes very, very close to my point, but without the silliness, which I would sorely miss in my life if you did.

            And why am I breaking this tale, pray tell?  (More Shakespearean language – get it? Get it?)  Because I’m thinking about what a lousy housekeeper I am, and how little closet space I have because most of it’s given over to felt, paint, files of genealogy, soap making supplies, Christmas ornaments, choir music, beads and quilting fabric (not to mention . . .oh, never mind).  Most of which I haven’t touched for YEARS (except for the Christmas ornaments).

            Evidently, I want to do almost everything.  And when you want to do almost everything, you have to buy the raw materials and the book, and the tools you need to do almost everything.  And once you buy these things, you have to keep them forever because, even though you only spent three days (three weeks, sometimes three years) doing a thing, and then stopped doing it, who knows?  You might want to do it again someday, which you will clearly not be able to do unless you keep all the stuff you need for doing it.

            Do I make myself clear, here?

            Chaz and I were going to attack this stockpile problem.  May I add to the above the fact that I am the historian of the family?  I gather the old things, the odd ancient embroidery, the beaded dress Mother Jeanne wore in 1922, every tiny thing every one of my kids ever made, certificates, my old marbles, legal papers—just call me catacombs. 

We started with the upstairs cabinet in my room on her day-off-from-being-an-anthropologist.  Except, it wasn’t really a day off from that, because isn’t that what anthropologists do?  Dig through middens and stuff?  Anyway, we started up there and it took hours, and all we ended up doing was throwing away some bits of packing material and old receipts and then piling all the stuff right back where we’d found it. 

            Clutter.  Yes.  That’s me. 

Me.  And dust, that seems to be me, too.  And in places, very small places, even grime.  And I don’t CARE.  (HA. Then why are I writing about it?)

            Because of my mother.

My mother, who has now grown beyond my reach.  She’s in another state – both of head and body.  And I think about her all the time.  In some ways, I am terrified of having to try to live without her input.

            But in other ways, I have to understand—I am now her.  Like accepting a mantle.  A calling.  In a skewed, through-the-looking-glass sort of way and for my own children, I have become Mom.

I’m the one who Knows What To Do.  I handle the money.  I stand between the family and the Tax people (me and my accountant).  I read my own contracts.  I deal with the utilities and the city government.  I’ve done twenty two years of cooking, some of it adventurous, if not successful.  I’ve had four kids—all Lamaze.  And all of them survived past their eighteenth birthdays (no guarantees after that).  Of course, I don’t know what to do in every situation (enter the government, aliens or floodwaters, and you got me trumped), but I can figure it out.  And that’s one of the most important things my mom taught me: that you can figure it out.  That you handle situations one moment at a time and you don’t give up. Because you are the citadel, the last defense, The Guy.

And she taught me this: that you can be whatever you decide you really want to be, and you don’t have to apologize to anybody for it.  You don’t have to choose the safe things like being a banker or supermodel, things that get you instant “respect” and free sky miles.  You can choose to live in the trenches, going for the hard stuff, like making sure the family corp is solvent.  Like having a child (or seven children) and guiding that child through the million hours of culture acquisition, conquering basic physics, lingual acuity, all the time keeping him safe in the face of the fact that kids come wired to self-destruct.

My mother set the bar very high. And now that I can’t talk to her about these things, I find myself with so many questions.  Some of them are “how?”, some “why?”—funny, considering how many hours we spent talking to each other over the years.  You forget to ask the most basic questions sometimes (like you forget to take the basic pictures). 

I write about my mother now in past tense, because I am writing about the mom I grew up with, the mom I knew as my best friend in the world.  She is still my mom, but now it is her turn to be cared for—and I am very far away, sorting through memories.

Mom was not a great cook.  Least I be maligned for this observation, let me hasten to explain that this is a quote.  From Mom.  According to mom, she was a plain cook.  I didn’t know that as I was growing up—she made absolutely the greatest fried chicken and mashed potato gravy, the best meatloaf (which I actually, at one point, started ordering as my birthday dinner), hamburgers, vegeroni – whatever, I loved her food.  She wasn’t impressed with herself, evidently. But I was impressed.

I have written that my mother’s gift was in order and plainness.  She loved systems, put them in place, and kept them rolling.  By plain, I am not using the word the way people do when they are talking about the opposite of beauty.  I am talking about beauty, unadorned.  She loved her home, and never did our houses feel empty or sterile; I’ve seen plenty of inhabited sterile houses—the people who live in them could moved away without taking anything, and the house would still seem totally empty and echoing. 

But our houses (and we lived in six of them) were always homes, warm, pleasant places of character.  They just weren’t fripperized.  She liked strong, simple lines, blocks of color, clear designs, and once they were in place, she let them be.  She leaned to the early American, which is really just a redundant statement.  She added the spice of a piece from Egypt here, a bit of the Holy Land there—and the hearth-true touch of walls of books.

Behind all of this, everything was organized, from every cent that came into our house, to every linen, every heirloom, every supply.  Her house was not, in short, like my house.  It was not a workshop.  She did not farm and harvest dog hair.  Whether she got pleasure or enjoyment out of keeping all of this up or not, I don’t know. I never thought to ask.

[She did try to help me to tweak my attitude, once when I was complaining about eternally being stuck doing the dishes.  She, herself, finally addressed that problem by buying a little TV for the kitchen so she could watch it while she did the dishes. That weirded me out a little.  It didn’t seem like Mom – who hardly ever watched TV while I was growing up – at least, not at night – and really didn’t seem to approve of it much.  Now, I think about that and I want to kick myself across the parking lot: that my mother would have to buy a TV because I was too thoughtless and entitled to spend that little time helping her.

She told me, every time I picked up a spoon, I should imagine I could see in it the face of one of the loved ones I was serving.  She told me this to save me from my bitter resentment. But all I could see were the faces of the people who were out there watching TV and playing games together while I was stuck in the kitchen, doing the dishes left from a meal it had taken me HOURS to put together.  The people I kept hoping would notice I wasn’t with them.

I’d stand there over the sink, nearly in tears and angry enough to throw every one of the dishes at anything that moved.  I really could have handled things differently.  I could have been civilized like Hartman Rector’s wife – she stood at the front door and called out to him – sitting in the car, waiting for wife and kids to come out so he could take them to church: “Tell you what, Hartman.  Let’s trade: you come in and get three children under five ready for church, and I’ll sit in the car and honk the horn.”  But I didn’t feel that confident.

Years later, the confidence came, and I did handle it.  I walked out into the living room and said very sweetly (even to guests): get your butts in there and help me clean up.  My mother would never have said “butt.”]

Anyway, at the very least, I am sure she found her work and the results gratifying.  And, really it doesn’t matter.  If she cheated and chose to do all this work because it was fun for her, or if she simply girded up her loins and did these things out of love and with marvelous grace, the end was the same for the fam.  We were pretty happy people.  Safe.  Inspired.  Welcome. Encouraged.  And brought up to believe in hope.

 I would say that I have failed miserably at achieving what she achieved, except that I honestly don’t think I have.

Alright, I get no thrill from cooking.  I did it three times a day for twenty two years, using Mom’s recipes  as the heart of my repertoire, but I never enjoyed it, not even once.  Cutting vegetables for a salad is something I wish I could do in my sleep.  But then, I’ve always been afraid of knives, so that wouldn’t be good. (Mom used to cut up chickens WITH A KNIFE, like a butcher, but the only time I remember her ending up at the doctor was when she sewed through her thumb making me a doll dress on her FeatherLight.)  And whatever day or year you happen to read this? I admit it, my bed is not made.

 I hate house cleaning.  It depresses me.  I feel oppressed when I do it, and then I resent EVERYBODY ON THE PLANET.  Is this bragging, do you think?  Like this makes me superior, somehow, to the people whose gifts in this area?  OF COURSE NOT.  Do I envy someone who gets absolute pleasure out of making things spic and span and organized and clean as a whistle?  You bet I do.  Because I LOVE the results.  If I could BUY the results, I would have them myself.  But I cannot want to do these things, as hard as I may wish for it.  Except, I don’t even wish for it.  I’m that much of a loser.

You may call this being domestically challenged.  You may call this slovenly.  Call it what you will, it is my life, and I choose it because there are other things I find I must do, and there are too few hours in the day as it is.  The things I choose instead are NOT defensible, they are not better, and they are not debatable.  And my mom would have taken you down if you tried to mess with me over them.   They are simply the things I choose.  And never mistake me: having a book published is not more admirable than making of your home a work of art.

Thus, if I have gifts, there are definitely elsewhere.  So I slog along with that example of my Mom’s looming over my shoulder, trying to play catch-up.  My best hope is that nobody ever comes to my house and notices the baseboards or the windowsills or the dust because, while I find I can live with them, I cannot live with them in front of an audience.  I don’t see these thing when it’s just us at home.  I only see them when other people are around, and then I feel the sharpest shame and embarrassment, and run around putting my body between the guest and the dead firebugs on that danged (all the danged) windowsills.  There.  I’ve said it.

So why do I write this out here where there is no shadow of a rock to hide me?  Because I’m sick of women who have careers pointing at women who choose to stay at home as though this is a lesser choice.  At the same time, I am sick of stay at home mothers being self righteous and pointing the other way.  Every life is different.

[ 2nd Digression: the sticking point is children—I am glad to point, and would do so with my buggy whip, at people who do not choose to live with and bring up their own children where they easily could—and then go around setting the results loose on the world to wreak havoc and do damage other people’s lives.

I have never been great at any of the things I’ve done.  But I’ll tell you what – dust, books, Christmas ornaments, whatever aside, I poured my guts out into the effort to give my children a full box of tools, love first among them, but including self-discipline, accountability, selflessness, strong bodies, strong characters, strong minds, creativity and an odd-ball view of reality.  This EFFORT is what I have to lay on the alter.  And lay it I will, for the good or for the bad: this is what I have done with my life.  It’s just this: I tried.  I honestly, really, tried my very best.  And I never put anything before it.   At that one thing, my very best.  I did. End of Digression.]

 

So if you come to see me, have mercy.  A little selective blindness.  Oh, just don’t close the blinds while you’re here (Wow—you guys must have a significant soot problem in this area).  And do NOT open them too quickly. (Is it snowing in here?)  Please don’t wear gloves if you plan on touching anything. (While both black and white gloves one pose problems, even the brown ones aren’t welcome).  Do not ask to use the bathroom (though G cleans those when he can), and if you do, just don’t look at the walls  or the corners of the floor.  Mostly, you can look at the mirrors.  Oh, yeah.  And speaking of walls?  It was a total shock to me when I found out that people actually wash them. Like, why?  Do you walk on your walls?  I say that, but after I took a close look in the upstairs hall the other night, I actually know why.  Do not open any of my cabinets or closets—my insurance won’t cover that.  Do NOT check out my George Forman grill. And please do not ask to eat off my kitchen floor.

If I get a little too snotty when I talk about these things (which I have done), please understand it is not disdain for housekeeping that you’re hearing, but defensiveness.

If you feel that you must withdraw your friendship after this, I will understand.  But I will not bring you any Christmas treats next year if you take this step.  Then again, after reading this, maybe you’re not all that interested in my Christmas treats.

It is certain that I have not succeeded the way my mother did.  I am not selfless and peacemaking as she has been, not organized, not as plain and clear and direct, maybe not as strong—but I still feel that, in my odd-ball, black sheep way, I did her proud.  Anyway, that’s what she’s told me, over and over again through the years.

So whatever I write about my mother, remember this: she was my hero.  She still is, in her fight against this thing that has crippled her brain and stolen her memories.  I don’t want her fate, but in some odd way, to follow her even into this would be an honor. 

Posted in Family, IMENHO (Evidently not humble), Memories and Ruminations | Tagged | 16 Comments