1 MORE NIGHT

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Only 1 more night in the apartment until we go on vacation! And then only a couple days after we return, we begin yet another move... into the house. So everything is in boxes yet again.

The first time we packed up our life (packing the house back in February), I got nostalgic looking at all the stuff and remembering where we had gotten it and looked at all the old photos and everything. Now the second time, I'm feeling impatient and like I really don't want to see some of this stuff again for awhile. And like maybe we should throw away some things? There are things coming in and out of some of these boxes, that aren't getting used... their only purpose seems to be going in and out of boxes.

I wonder what it will be like unpacking it yet again? Especially when the 20 boxes from the apartment join the 100 boxes that have been in storage for 5 months....

WHERE DOES IT GO?

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Becca's food fantasy

Becca and I were discussing our upcoming vacation to Florida. And she suddenly sat up in bed and announced, "I'm going to eat all of Baba's food."

And you know what? She will. Here's what Becca can eat in a day:
  • Breakfast: 2 granola bars, a banana, and milk
  • A.M. snack: an apple
  • Lunch: a whole sandwich, carrots with dip, and a pudding cup
  • P.M. snack: cheese and crackers
  • Dinner: a full adult portion right along with us, 2 popsicles, milk, and whatever else she can scrounge up from the pantry (dry cereal, for example)
And she would eat more if we let her! She would eat all day! She can down a whole burger, fries and shake from In & Out Burger... those of you who are familiar will know this feat is probably challenging for an adult.

I asked her where it is all going? She opened her mouth and let me look as far down as I could and then showed me her tummy. It all looked pretty normal, but how can it be?

And how can she still weigh 32 pounds? If I even think about this much food, I gain a pound...

COVET NOT THY NEIGHBOR'S SUNSCREEN

Friday, June 16, 2006

School's out. At our house, this means only one thing: camp's in session.

What amazes me is the amount of literature the camp feels we dumb adults actually need to get our kids to camp successfully.

When I was interviewing for graduate school, I went to a campus at which all the buildings were connected by an underground labyrinth. I was given a small slip of paper with cryptic directions. I had to share an elevator with a corpse and saw parts of buildings people seldom see. Needless to say, I was able to make it to the interview on time and actually, I am around to talk about it now, so I clearly made it back too.

Still, here I am, 20 years later, and apparently I need what amounts to a detailed handbook to tell me how to prepare my kids for camp.

Honestly, after reading all the material -- and somehow, there needed to be 2 completely different sets for each of my kids -- it all boils down to just a few simple Commandments. Someone should just put them on a tablet someplace. And then maybe smite the first couple heathens that don't do this stuff so everyone else pays attention.

  1. Signeth ye the liability waiver. Otherwise neither hand nor foot may be set in the camp.
  2. Camp hours are from 8 - 3:30. Seek not the aftercare, we haveth not.
  3. Woe be to the parent picking their child up after 3:30, they must wait in the Late Parent area and we will chargeth such a parent $15 per quarter hour or fraction thereof for such a sin.
  4. Apply thine own sunscreen when thou risest up. Covet not thy neighbor's sunscreen, as he may not enjoy the same Number SPF as you. Instead, bring thine own sunscreen to the camp.
  5. Sendeth with your child one extra set of dry clothing. A swimming suit does not count, for it is not intended to remaineth dry.
  6. Dresseth the child in closed-toe shoes. By this we mean, shoes that sealeth the foot all the way round. Flip flops are good to pack, as they may be used at the pool. However, do not sendeth the child in flip flops, as they are not closed-toe, as evidenced by the openings nearest the front and also, those that are present in the back.
  7. Yea though you walkest by the coffee shoppe, there is not a place for your child to buyeth lunch. You must sendeth a sack along with drink and snack. The camp does not refrigerate nor heat-up what you have sent, so avoid those Things Which Melt or which Must Be Melted.
  8. The camp provideth no towels, nor absorbent material of any kind save for toilet paper.
  9. Labeleth thine own items well with such black waterproof marker as is the good kind.
  10. Your child's camp counselor is Mitzi, Trixi, or Kua Lani, we haveth no other names for these. If you haveth questions about These Commandments, please beseech thy child's counselor, but thou must waiteth until after day camp is recessed.
I bet even if your kids go to a completely different camp, your pile o' papers say exactly the same things as mine...

BEDTIME: NOT FOR THE FAINTHEARTED

It’s 8:15. Becca’s in bed. She’s been fed, bathed, read to, kissed. By multiple people. Next stop: Dreamland.

“Mom?”

“Yes….”

“When I am thinking, what is my brain doing?”

There she is, looking at me with The Big Eyes, like I know absolutely everything. All parents suspect these times are coming and yet, we are completely disarmed by them. And at least at my house, they always seem to happen right before bedtime.

This means the answer will have to be easy for a 4-year-old to understand, and not too scary so she’ll still go to sleep.

I start to search through my mental file cabinet for what could possibly be said to answer this question. Myelin, synapse, neurotransmitters, posterior parietal cortex… eek maybe not.

Becca’s questions always seem to have a grossology element to them.
... What holds my eyeballs in?
... Why does my heart make a noise?
... Why doesn’t my hair hurt?

Gray matter? The cognitive mind? Descartes?

Finally I settle on a figurative explanation. “Your brain is like a computer. It has lots of wires and when you think, the wires send words and pictures to you and show you a little movie of your thought inside your head.”

“So my brain is drawing pictures in there?”

I realized that I only really gave a C+ answer and now I have to live with it. “Yes, sort of.”

“And if I close my eyes and think, I can see the pictures?”

“Yes! Why don’t you try that.” There now.

Then half an hour later, I’m tucking in Sarah. And here we go again! The same night! Usually I get some time to recover from these and try to learn from my mistakes before the next one rears its head.

“Mom?

(Uh oh!) “Hm?”

"When I grow up, I don’t think I’m going to have any babies.”

I know what’s coming already. “Why not, honey?”

“First of all… it is going to hurt. Right? I mean it DOES hurt!?! If they didn’t give you morphine it would hurt a TON!”

“Shhh… you’re going to wake up Becca.” (and this would be a disaster because then I would have both of them playing stump the judge) “Plus I didn’t get morphine, I got an epidural.”

“Well if you didn’t have an epi-whatever, it would have hurt!”

“Sarah. Believe me. The hardest part of parenting is the 18 years that follow the 7 hour birth.”

“Well, I’m going to adopt two children. And I think I want to be the home person, the man can be the work person.”

“Really? Why do you say that?”

“Because I want to know everything about my kids. I want to know what they like and don’t like, what they ate, when they slept. I don’t want to give that up to someone else.”

Ouch. “Sarah, I work, and don’t I know all those things?”

“Well, yeah I guess. But still. Mom, don’t you wish you were with us during the day? I mean, Dad does a good job and everything, but like, he’s not a mom. For example, let’s say I fell backwards in a chair, and the chair and me fell over, and the chair like fell on me and everything. Dad would be like, oh no! That chair is broken. And you would be like, my baby! My baby! Are you okay?”

“But that’s good, Sarah, it just means we have different roles in our family. Plus, why were you leaning back in the chair like that?”

"MOM!!!" (Eye roll)

By now, I’m exhausted. What was this talk about? Childbirth? Parenthood? Me?

Usually Sarah’s 8:45 p.m. questions are about the inequities of life:
... What is rape?
... Why isn’t there a woman president?
... Why do people care if you are Jewish or not?

Tomorrow night, we’ll be back to normal… complaining about buying the wrong toothpaste flavor and negotiating how many books can be read before lights-out. But tonight was a doosey. Sometimes I feel I’m pretty good at this parent thing. Tonight, I feel as clueless as I did before I had kids.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY (9 TIMES AND COUNTING)

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Becca attended her 9th birthday party since we've been here. I swear, she's on some sort of little kid birthday circuit.

Most of the parties are at a place that has a bunch of inflatable jumping contraptions. Becca loves them. It gives her the opportunity to bounce till her brains rattle (which she would ordinarily just do on the sofa), and bruise other kids (which she would ordinarily do only to her sister).

Today's was at a park. Next week we get to go back to the inflatable place and to a kid's gym (more bruisin' & rattlin', just on different equipment).

These are opportunities to see other sides of our child. Other people absolutely adore Becca. Her classmates in particular. She hugs them all and takes them individually to their parents when they're injured (a clever cover-up for the fact that she perhaps did the injuring). They all think she is "so cute."

?

Apparently the same behavior that gets her repeatedly sent to her room is adorably mischievous in small doses. Who'da thunk it.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SORT OF...

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Don's 50th is today. He went to the doctor about some athlete's foot and they gave him this.

I told him about all the pamphlets I have had to read... as a woman, you get a billion/the equipment is more complicated. But still, I could tell my tales of woe didn't help. I guess the deal when you hit 50 is... you go in for athlete's foot, and you come out with a pamphlet and a colonoscopy appointment...

A STUPID MARATHON

The ignorance party that is our Florida house closing seemed like so much fun, the large bank we thought we could count on has joined right in. Washington Mutual, our mortgage holder, has lost the wire transfer from the title company. They might find it by Friday. Meanwhile, we found out they had been paid by the title company last week, but the payment was short some money so the payment was returned.

It was short by $16.

12 YEARS

Monday, June 05, 2006

Don with two hot babes in a jacuzzi.
12th anniversaries are for linen. Neither of us are that good at ironing, so instead of buying each other jammies or a tablecloth, we celebrated by taking a little trip to Palm Springs over Memorial Day weekend. We rented a house there, and it was SO NICE to have more space for a little while. The kids each had their own room, so there were less Poundings. And the dogs were happily on Border Patrol all weekend, their noses and tails in the air. They found a dead lizard and were very concerned about this creature. After they worried and fussed over it for an hour, we had to get rid of it, for fear the dogs would have heart failure.

Officer Archie
We spent lots of time in the pool and the hot tub, shopped, walked around, and enjoyed the dry heat. We also took a tram up to an 8,000 foot peak in the San Jacinto mountains. It was like flying through an IMAX movie. At the top of the mountain, there was a little story posted about the creation of the tramway, and it was invented by some guy they used to call Crazy Crocker because most people thought this tramway could never be built. I don't know about you, but if I am 8,000 feet from terra firma and the only way down is a can hanging from a cable, I want to think it was invented by Boeing or something. Not Crazy Crocker. The ride down wasn't as fun for me as the ride up...

Beautiful from the top...

and designed by Crazy Crocker, look at the angle of those cables going down!

THE STUPID CONTINUES

We still have mortgage on the Marco Island condo which we no longer technically own. Sounds impossible, but it's true. The title company never paid the mortgage. So we got a monthly statement and were in for quite a surprise. By law, the title company is supposed to pay off all outstanding debts within 24 hours of closing. I guess that doesn't really deter some people. We are in shock and Don is on the phone every day trying to resolve this.

Meanwhile we have to plan for the NEXT move! I feel as if we have been moving for months. Actually this will be our third move, so we sort of have...