funkadelic

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Melancholy Holly Days

Christmas makes me melancholy.

It doesn’t have anything to do with presents or memories or stress.

I’ve ran the gamut of Christmas experiences - ones where I killed myself making everything perfect and ones where I kind of threw my hands up and said, “Eh…it will be what it will be” and it doesn’t really seem to have much bearing on the melancholy meter.

I’m old and crochety enough now that I pretty much do what I want.  For years I’ve made handmade Christmas cards with a ridiculously clever, self-deprecating, ironic newsletter (well, it is to me) but last year I just thought, “Nah…don’t feel like it” and the world didn’t stop spinning on its axis.

I love to make Christmas cut out sugar cookies, almond roca, and pecan tea tassies, so I will.   

Why yes, the Gingerbread man DOES have an icing diaper...cause we're creative like that.
 

 
I don’t especially like decorating the tree, but I’ve still got an 11-year old at home, so that has to happen, and of course, I enjoy it once it’s up (and I’ve cajoled, pleaded and pummeled someone else into putting all the storage containers away).

I’m wondering if maybe it’s the Christmas music that I love to listen to.  I can’t tolerate the peppy, cheery stuff like the aneurism inducing “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” or “Jingle Bell Rock.”  I tend to listen to more obscure stuff like Robert Downey Jr’s cover of Joni Mitchell’s  “River” and Mary Chapin Carpenter’s “Christmas Carol" from her "Come Darkness, Come Light" Christmas CD.  It speaks to my soul...and apparently my soul is one gloomy chick.

I load up my Christmas mix while I'm in the car, or let it play while I work in my office, and slowly but surely I just start to feel….”yearny” even though I don’t really know what I’m yearning for.  

I do miss the days when my kids were little and there was more anticipation and excitement, but I don’t think that’s it entirely.  I do know I’m happiest if I’m with my extended family – I miss being close enough to my brothers and sister that  we can all gather together at someone’s house where it’s loud and noisy, and we eat good food and laugh until our sides hurt.  

It seems I stay in a perpetual state of wanting to just curl up on the couch with a quilt and a cup of cocoa, and wistfully dream about some perfect holiday that I can’t quite put my finger on.  

Do you have a mental Christmas scenario that never quite manifests?  What do you yearn for?

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Notes From My Office Three Weeks Before Graduation:

Dear Skinny Jeans – 

I know you’re lonely on the shelf in my closet, but Zumba and Running are lonely too, and until I can visit them again, it’s not looking good for you.

Dear House – 

I’ve heard the fan blades and baseboards coughing from the dust buildup, but unless the Hoover decides to take some initiative and “suck it up,” they’re just going to have to wait until I’m finished with finals. Besides, I’m sleeping with the pillows that are begging to be washed and bleached, so they’ve got first priority.  

Dear Children – 

It is NOT NICE to do any of the following to Mom:
  •  Poke her when she’s sleeping and ask, “Are you asleep?
  • Transfer money from her account to yours without asking because you’re “out of gas” and you “didn’t want to bother me.”
  • Roll your eyes when I draw a blank on what your name is…and roll them again when I can’t figure it out,  even with clues.
Dear Office – 

Could we talk?  We’ve been spending a lot of time together and frankly, it’s not working for me anymore.  I dread walking in and seeing the piles of books and papers everywhere – you’ve really let yourself go lately.  I used to have fun when I visited you – I would scrapbook and surf the internet and tidy up household details, but lately you’re a real drag.   

You’re disorganized, you’re messy and to be honest, you’re just a reminder of all the fun things I haven’t been able to do for a while, and I think we need a break from each other.  Calm down!   I don’t mean right this minute - I’ve still got two presentations and three papers to finish before graduation, but after that…I think I need some time to myself and it would be best if I didn’t see you for a while.  It’s not you…it’s me.     

Dear Van – 
I’m only going to tell you this once:  DO NOT DIE ON ME UNTIL AFTER FINALS or I will scrap you so fast your catalytic converter will spin…and not in a good way.  I KNOW your struts need something,  and I’m not ignoring that groaning sound you’re making (sheesh…who could ignore it? – you’re such an attention hound), but I simply do not have the time or money for your drama right now, so just be grateful you got an oil change last month and you get gas every week.  There are plenty of younger, peppier, foreign cars that catch my eye when I’m driving around, but I’ve stuck with you this long, so try and return the favor. 

Dear Husband - 
The kids told me you were out of town.  Are you coming back?

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

What I’ve Learned in College

  SIT AT THE FRONT OF THE CLASS.  I have had more than one professor say, “The A-students are always in the front row.”  THIS IS A CLUE.  When you sit in the front row, they remember you, they learn your name, and they can see your facial expressions and tell when you are confused or are struck with a brilliant idea.  When you sit in the front row, you cannot text on your phone, surf Facebook, or read the assignment for your next class, but if you’re doing those things, you’re not going to get an A anyway. 

FOLLOW DIRECTIONS.  I have seen plenty of students smarter than I get lesser grades because they couldn’t follow directions.  It always reminds me of the test like this they used to give somewhere along the way in grade school.  The first instruction would be to “READ ALL INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE YOU BEGIN” and then there would be a complicated list of directions like, 
  • 1.      Put your name in the top right corner 
  • 2.      Draw 5 squares on the left side of test 
  • 3.      Draw a heart after question #7, etc.
When you finally reach the bottom of the test, the last question says, “Now that you’ve read all the directions, only do #1.”  You can be so brilliant the sun shines out of your bum, but if you don’t use MLA format, or provide two examples, or submit it electronically before 11:59 p.m., you have basically told the professor that you didn’t really pay attention to what they wanted.  This hurts their feelings.  Hurt feelings give them the latitude to not pay attention to what YOU wanted…an A.

BUY BOOKS ONLINE.  Thanks to half.com and Amazon and a million other sites, you can almost always get your books cheaper online than in the bookstore.  Get the list of required books from the campus bookstore, then order them used online.  Secret Tip:  Amazon will give students a PRIME membership that gives you “unlimited fast shipping, such as FREE Two-Day shipping and One-day shipping for $3.99 per item on all eligible purchases” for FREE.  Normally, you would have to pay an annual membership fee of $79, but if you have a student email account (you know…ends in .edu) then the membership is FREE.  I said FREE.  Killer deal.  Do it.

WRITE IN YOUR BOOKS.  I’m all for electronic texts, and I have the complete works of Shakespeare, Milton and Austen on my iPhone, because books are HEAVY when you have to carry 15-20 of them around all day for back-to-back classes.   But I still buy a hard copy so I can write in them.  You just got them for next to nothing on Amazon, so write in them.  Highlight the important parts, make notes in the margins, draw lines here and there and go crazy.  It’s liberating,  and heaven knows five years from now (or in my case, 5 weeks) you aren’t going to remember why you thought that passage was so important without the yellow highlighter help.  

  

GO TO THE LIBRARY.  I have a lovely office at home.  It has my laptop and three printers and awesome speakers for my I-tunes and a comfy couch with warm quilts, and every time I try to work there, I either fall asleep or am joined by a throng of people within ten minutes of starting to study.  It has sound-proofy French doors that I close every chance I get, but they can still SEE me, and if they can SEE me, then they think it’s ok to interrupt me.  

GO TO THE LIBRARY.  The study carrels are uncomfortable, the air vents always manage to blow either hot or cold air directly on me (never season-appropriate air, either), the seats squeak and some nitwit usually has his laptop sound so loud that I can still hear it through his headphones, but when I study there, I am highly motivated to get done and get back home.   

ASK FOR EVERYTHING.  Always apply for scholarships – most people are too lazy to go through the process and you almost always get money.  There are scholarships for single mothers, and children of employees who work in upholstery (seriously) and for people going back to school after an absence of five years or more.  There is money for every kind of demographic you can imagine, and most universities have consolidated the application process so you only have to fill out one master application, and it serves for every scholarship you’re eligible for.  Ask for help with anything that causes you a problem.  If your paper-writing skills suck, ask for help at the Writing Center – they’re just sitting there waiting for someone to come in.  Need help with your resume?  Ask the Career Center.  Not very good with Excel or Word?  The Technology Center is your friend.  Your tuition and fees have already paid for all of those services and more, so ASK!

BELIEVE IN YOURSELF, BELIEVE YOU CAN DO IT, BELIEVE THERE IS AN END IN SIGHT, BUT DO NOT BELIEVE your family when they tell you they will “support” you in this endeavor.  YOU interpret this support to mean they will, in cheerful Brady-Bunch style, pitch in and do laundry, cook dinner, clean house and acknowledge that writing deeply profound papers on “The Nature of Sermonic Language” requires more than ten minutes with a crayon and the back of an envelope while waiting on a child in the orthodontist’s office.  THEY interpret this support to mean they will ask how your test went before asking what’s for dinner. 

So tell me…what did YOU learn in school?

Monday, October 17, 2011

Rewind that Rerun

Tonight I saw the light.  It was on That 70’s Show and it was probably a rerun. 
 

Undoubtedly, Eli’s very most, all-time favorite show is That 70’s Show.  There were 200 episodes produced between 1998 and 2006, and I swear I know every single one by heart.  

EVERY day Eli sets the DVR to record EVERY episode on EVERY channel.  We have DISH TV and since I’m way too lazy to go see how many different channels and time slots that might be, let’s just say it works out to about a bajillion.  

Because I’ve had to listen to it virtually non-stop any time I pass through the living room, I HATE THIS SHOW.  (Well, to be fair, I hate just about all TV.)

Every night I clear out the DVR memory, and every day he records them all again.  I have had long heartfelt discussions with him, asking him to please stop recording them, explaining that setting that many timers causes everyone else’s shows to be bumped, which causes those bulgy veins to throb menacingly in people’s temples.   He says, “My bad” and promises not to do it anymore.  Twenty minutes later, his busy fingers are scrolling through the guide channel, setting recordings willy-nilly.

After I put Eli to bed tonight, I went back in his room for the umpty-eleventh time because he needed his glasses cleaned (Reason # 17 in a looonng list).  Making conversation, I asked him what he was watching on TV.  He told me about a movie that was ending, and then said, “You know what I’m going to watch next?  That 70’s Show."

I said, “That’s your favorite show, isn’t it, kiddo?  Don’t you ever get tired of watching it over and over?”

Somewhat surprised, he said, “Nooo…, I don’t think I’ve ever seen one that was a rerun.”  

Astounded, I said, “Honey!  You’ve seen them all a million times.” 

And then he said, “Oh, well I guess don’t know it because my brain is messed up.”

I pretty much end every day with my head in my hands, ashamed at once again losing my patience with him.  Night after night, after I put him to bed, my phone begins to ring.  Sometimes it starts ringing before I have even shut his bedroom door and made it back to my office.  If I don’t answer my cell phone right away, he starts calling the house phone.  The other kids get frustrated and say “take his phone away,” but I worry he won’t have it the one time he needs it, like the time his legs fell out of bed and pulled him halfway to the floor.  I worry he’ll lose his blankets and lay shivering all night, or that he’ll get an excruciating itch he can’t reach.  

Those things rarely happen; he mostly calls over and over for me to get him some Coke or clean his glasses.  I plead and beg and cajole and threaten and sometimes scream and yell for him to please not call me for the same thing again, because I have papers to write, and laundry to do, and sanity to preserve.

It never occurred to me that he doesn’t know he’s doing it, that he doesn’t know it’s a rerun.

I guess “my brain is messed up” too.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

It's a Little Tricky

This time of year four years ago, my life was pretty swell.  My husband had accepted a new job that paid him a ridiculous amount of money.  The youngest of my 4 children was finally headed to first grade and I decided to go back to school to get my degree.  We had a lovely home, we had friends, we were busy and normal.

On a Wednesday evening as I was getting ready to leave for school, the doorbell rang and I opened it to find a Sheriff on my front porch.  He informed me that our 20-year old son had been in an automobile accident and had been taken to the hospital.  When I asked if he was ok, the Sheriff looked me in the eye and said, “M’am, you should go to the hospital now.”  Eli had been on his way to work about 4:00 in the afternoon, and we later learned he tried to pass a car, clipped the bumper, lost control, crossed the center median and was hit by 5 different vehicles.  He was not wearing a seatbelt and was texting while driving.  He was unresponsive at the scene and life-flighted to the Atlanta Medical Center.  


When I saw him in the ER, he was lying on a bed with his eyes closed.  His shirt was gone, there was a small cut on his cheek and some blood around his nose, but he mostly looked like he was asleep.  I remember being thrilled when they told me he didn’t appear to have broken any bones.  I looked at his long, skinny body lying there and thought, “You crazy kid – you could have been killed.  Now wake up so I can beat some sense into you.”  

But he wasn’t waking up.  A scan of his head showed his jaw was broken in 2 places, his cheekbone was crushed and the bones around his eye socket were broken in several places.  He had sustained a severe brain injury, his brain was swelling at a rapid rate and they wanted to drill a hole in his skull to relieve and monitor the pressure.  When we asked what all that meant, the one response I remember was a Dr. who said, “Well, with a brain injury, the longer they’re unconscious, the more severe the injury and the longer the recovery.


Eli “slept” in a coma for almost six months.  

His hospital bill totaled over half a million dollars in the first 30 days.  About a week before Eli was discharged from the hospital, a drunk driver hit me and almost totaled my car. The company my husband had gone to work for folded, and my husband, a man who had never been without a job for 30 years was unemployed.  He stayed unemployed for a year. We ran through every penny of our savings and retirement funds in that long, long year.  We lost our home and all the equity built up in it and had to declare bankruptcy. 

When Eli finally came home from the hospital, he was about a 3 on the Rancho Coma Scale, which meant his eyes were sometimes open, he could sometimes turn toward sound or movement and could sometimes follow simple commands, such as “Look at me” or “squeeze my hand.”  For all intents and purposes, he was still in a comatose state.  He had to be turned every 3-4 hours to prevent bed sores; he was fed through a feeding tube in his stomach and given sponge baths in his bed.  He could not speak, or move any part of his body, except for his head and right arm. I went from being a parent who was thrilled that all my children were finally old enough to be independent, to having a 20-year old invalid who now required as much care, if not more, than a newborn infant. 


Every person I know has had trials, many worse than my own.  Some trials we just grit our teeth and get through them, but some trials won’t be over in a month, or a year, or maybe even in this life.  One of the most frightening things about Eli’s situation was understanding that it wasn’t ever going to be “over.”  And if that was the case, then I had to stop waiting for that day in order to be happy again.  I was going to have to figure out a way to be happy right now. 

Joseph B. Wirthlin said, “… in spite of discouragement and adversity, those who are happiest seem to have a way of learning from difficult times, becoming stronger, wiser, and happier as a result.”  Here are a few things I’ve learned about finding joy in the midst of trials. 

LAUGH.  I have a whole memory bank of horrible, terrible, days and nights spent in the hospital, but its way more fun to remember the times that we laughed.  Today Eli is confined to a wheelchair and cannot walk.  He has the use of his right arm, but very little functionality in his left.  Taking care of a person in this condition takes a lot of equipment, but that doesn’t make us good at using it. Once, while I was transferring Eli from his chair to his bed, the lift got tangled in his bed cord, collapsed the base of the lift and I ended up dropping him on the floor.  You know how when your kids are little and they get hurt, you try to keep your face impassive so they won’t know how freaked out you are, because if they see that you’re scared, they’ll be scared too?  Well, it still works when they’re 23, because I casually looked down at him crumpled in the floor and said, “Uh-oh, buddy, what are you doing down there?”  We laughed, and then I went screaming down the driveway to find my husband to help me pick him up.  

We laughed when we forgot to unclamp his feeding tube and it backed up and exploded all over his freshly painted room.  We laughed when he got his new electric wheelchair and drove it into every wall in our house and over everyone’s toes.   We laughed when he put his chair on full speed down the ramp in the back yard, hit a bump and threw himself face first in the mud 10 minutes before church on Sunday.  I won’t kid you – some things took a while before we could laugh at them, but laughing was so much better than the crying we had already done.

In trying to ascertain the extent of Eli’s brain damage, we compiled an activity box that had puzzles and games in it, and I explained to Eli that for every task he accomplished, he could punch a hole in his “incentive” card. After so many punches, he could get a treat or a toy from the “Reward” box.  He said, “Sweet.”   When his girlfriend came over, I said, “Tell Lindsey what you get when your card is all punched.”  He looked at her and said “Thirty dollars.”  

Another day I was trying to encourage him to speak louder and told him, “For every word you say out loud, I will give you a peanut-butter M&M.”  He proceeded to say about seven words.  I said, “That’s awesome! How many words did you say?” and he said “Seven.” “So how many M&M’s do you get?”  I asked. “Sixty-five” he answered.

They were small moments in long, dreary, painful days, but they went so far toward lightening our spirits.  In times of trial, there’s really only a couple of responses – laughing or crying.  I’ve done plenty of both, but I much prefer the laughing.

            LEARN AND GROW.  WHETHER YOU WANT TO OR NOT.  Joseph Wirthlin also said:  “… the dial on the wheel of sorrow eventually points to each of us. At one time or another, everyone must experience sorrow.  These experiences, while often difficult to bear at the time, are precisely the kinds of experiences that stretch our understanding, build our character, and increase our compassion for others.”

As Eli began to recover, we had no idea whether he had any memory of his life before the accident, we didn’t know if he would ever speak again, and we didn’t realize he could still read until we stumbled on it using flashcards.  We tried giving him a pen and paper to communicate, but he lost a lot of his fine motor skills and writing was difficult.  One day I thought of wheeling him up to the computer desk and putting his hand on the keyboard.  We asked him how he was feeling, and he painstakingly typed:   I FEEL BROKEN

I cannot imagine what it must feel like to be trapped in a body that can’t say what you think or feel, to look down at perfectly healthy legs that won’t work because your brain can’t tell them to - to feel like your body is broken.  But I believe that Jesus Christ knows and understands Eli’s pain.  When I knelt at the side of my bed, night after night, crying out to my Heavenly Father, there was no one who could take away that pain but Jesus Christ.  There were so many days that we sat in the hospital, sponging Eli’s body as he soaked the sheets with sweat because his brain couldn’t regulate his temperature.  Days I sat beside his bed holding his legs to keep his leg spasms from rattling the bed so loudly that people in the hallway could hear.  I couldn’t take away Eli’s pain – all I could do was petition my Heavenly Father that Eli and our family would get through it.  And slowly and surely we did, and along the way we definitely gained increased compassion and understanding for others

            BE GRATEFUL.  So many things were taken away from Eli and our family, but so many things have been given.  Prior to Eli’s accident, he was drifting aimlessly down an unproductive path.  As parents, we thought he slept too long, worked too little and we often only saw him when he needed gas money or food.  When he began to speak after the accident, the first words he said, over and over, were “I love you.”  From August, 2008, I wrote in my journal:

Eli is speaking more and more and it’s so unbelievable considering there was a time I sat at his side and prayed for him to please just open his eyes. It’s easy to get caught up in the minutiae of caring for him and forget that every word he speaks and every bite he eats is a miracle wrought by the prayers of everyone and the loving kindness of our Heavenly Father.

And what does he say? All day long he says, “Mom…I love you.” or “Dad, I love you.” Every bite he takes, he stops and says, “Thank you.” Sometimes I have to tell him that it’s ok to eat all of his food before he says thank you, or he’ll tell me thank you after every bite.

A few months later around Christmas time, I wrote on Eli’s blog: 

 Eli has been doing something funny for a while and I thought I’d share it with you. Whenever I’m tending to him or even just walking by, he will look up at me earnestly and say, “Mom…I love you.” I always respond “I love you too” and then he will grip my hand and with even more sincerity, say, “I love you more than Dad.” The first couple of times he did it, I thought a) Well, of course you do – I’m your mom!” and then I thought, “Boy, I hope Pete doesn’t hear him say that.”  At least that’s what I thought until the day I walked by his room and heard him say to Pete, “Dad, I love you.” I waited and here it came. “Dad, I love you more than Mom.”   Inevitably, one day Pete and I were both in his room and Eli said, “Mom, I love you more than Dad.” Then he glanced over and saw his father had obviously overheard.  Eli looked back at me, put his fingers to his lips and said, “Shhhh…don’t tell Dad!”  

We laugh, but sometimes when he tells me he loves me, there is such an earnest look on his face that it breaks my heart.  I wonder if he really wants to say more, but can’t articulate it. Is this the only way he has to express the depth of his love? By saying that it’s more than someone else he also loves?  Our Father in Heaven sent and sacrificed his Son, someone he loved more than anyone.  And he did it for us, whom he also loved more than anyone. “

Our Heavenly Father compensates us because He is merciful.  Any sacrifices we have made, any sorrow we have experienced, has been compensated ten-fold and I know there is more to come.  One of my favorite scriptures is John 14:18 I will not leave you comfortless; I will come to you.”  We will be comforted and we will be compensated.

            JUST DO IT.   What if you feel like you can’t find that joy?  Maybe you think you’re just a glass half-empty kind of person?  Is finding joy something you can learn to do?  I think it is.  

            My brother Jimmy was four years older than I, but we grew up so close people sometimes thought we were twins.  He was funny, charming, and charismatic and could make everyone laugh.  He looked out for me and protected me.  He was shockingly intelligent and athletically gifted.  He excelled at virtually everything, but sometimes people so “gifted” are bored at the ease with which they are able to master everything and everyone, and Jimmy was no exception.  He began to find a challenge in breaking the law and ended up going to prison for 25 years.  

While incarcerated, he escaped several times, taught himself to play the piano, overturned many of his convictions through his own legal research, wrote two books and became a rather accomplished “jail-house” lawyer.  He has an irrepressible soul.  Every time he called me on the phone, he made me laugh so hard my sides ached.  Jimmy could always find the joy.  

Several years into his sentence, even though he was convicted for a non-violent crime, circumstances conspired to have him sent to a Supermax facility.  Basically, Supermax was solitary confinement and sensory deprivation, where inmates were locked up 23 hours a day, with one hour out for a shower, phone and recreation.  The majority of the inmates sent there either slowly went insane or tried to kill themselves.  Jimmy lasted five years before the facility was ultimately shut down and he has since been released from prison.   

I recently asked him what things brought him the most joy when he was finally released, and he said, “EVERYTHING.   It’s all about perspective.  Every day that I can smell fresh cut grass, eat food when I want to, get in a car and drive wherever I please, is a perfect day.  I never take any of it for granted.  Every single thing brings me joy.”   If Jimmy can find joy, you can too.

One of the lasting effects of Eli’s accident is a poor short term memory.  One day I was trying to write a paper for class and I told Eli I needed to study and to please not bother me.  I had barely gotten started when he began to call me about every five minutes. “Mom, I need a cough drop.”  “Mom, I need a pillow under my arm.”  “Mom, I dropped the remote.”  This can go on all day, but I really just didn’t have the time or the patience for it this day.  He called again and said, “Mom, I need a drink of water.”  And I very firmly told him, “Honey, I have to get this paper done.  You are not going to die if you don’t get a drink of water in the next 30 minutes.  Can you please wait until I’m done?  And don’t call me again.”  There’s a good chance I might have raised my voice.  I went back to frantically typing away at my paper until after a while it occurred to me that he really hadn’t called me back.  Somewhat ashamed, I went upstairs to check on him and noticed that he had a full cup of water.

“Hey, who filled your cup for you?” I asked. 
“I did” he said with a big grin.   
“Get out of town!   How did you do that?” 

He began to explain how he got his chair up next to the sink, used a wooden spoon to push the faucet on, and then one-handed, he filled his cup, turned off the water and returned to the living room. 

“Wow” I said, “That’s awesome that you did it for yourself.  Was it hard?” and he looked up at me and said, “Mom…..it was a little tricky.”

Like you, every day I have is filled with some good, and bad, and sometimes, some downright awful, but if you look really hard, you can find a little speck of joy too. 

You might have to look really hard…and it might be tricky.  But I know you can do it.


Friday, September 23, 2011

Hello? Hello? Can you hear me now?

I, like probably most everyone else, have something of a LOVE/HATE relationship with my phone.


I LOVE that I can take my favorite songs and make ringtones from them.  I love even more that I can then assign those ringtones to different people.  There is undoubtedly something deeply Freudian in my choices, and I would be embarrassed to tell you about some of them.  The most innocuous ones are currently “Everybody Needs Love” by the Drive-By Truckers, set to ring when my kids call me, and the default ring for most everyone else is Train’s song, “Save Me San Francisco.”  I mostly like it because the refrain goes,

                “I’ve been high and I’ve been low,
                I’ve been “Yes” and I’ve been “Oh, Hell No,”
                I’ve been Rock-n-Roll and Disco,
                Won’t you save me, San Francisco.” 

Who hasn’t had an “Oh, Hell No” day?  Plus, it’s catchy.   

There was a dark period when Springsteen’s “Trapped” and the theme song from Dexter alerted me to every new call, but eventually my natural optimism resurfaced enough for me to make Bare Naked Ladies’ “If I Had a Million Dollars” the ringtone for “Unknown Callers”…just in case it was someone wanting to give me a million dollars.

I HATE that the lock button is so tiny I often can’t even see it, let alone tell if it’s locked or not.  Not too big a deal unless it rings during church…or class….or any other guaranteed maximum embarrassment time.  

I LOVE that my calendar, my contacts, my books, my coupons, my notes, my music and my photos are on it. 

I HATE that I feel like I can’t exist without it.  

I LOVE that I can call my kids, text my kids and FaceTime my kids whenever I want.

And sometimes I HATE that they can do the same to me.

Yesterday was a perfect example:

Sawyer Call #1:   
               
Saw:                      “How do you make the alfredo sauce for tortellini?”
Me:                        “Mix up ½ c. butter, ½ c. cream, ½ cup parm. cheese, toss w/ hot pasta.”
Sawyer:                 “Ok.  Thanks, bye.

Sawyer Call #2:  

Saw:                      “Where do you find tortellini in the grocery store?”
Me:                        “Freezer section at Kroger.”
Saw:                      “We’re at Wal-Mart.”
Me:                        “I’m still thinking...freezer section.”

Sawyer Call #3:

Saw:                      “We’re at Kroger now.  What does it look like?
Me:                        “Blue bag.  Still in the freezer section.”


Maddy Text #1:



Pete Call #1:

Pete:  
“Are you aware that Hudson tried to take Eli downstairs (in his wheelchair) and Eli drove off the ramp and is now stuck in the mud and it’s raining?

Me:                 “Aggghhhhh……”      
       
Pete was calling from Florida and I was in Latin class.  I’m still not quite sure why Hudson thought it was a good idea to call his father, who was 500 miles away, instead of me, only 12 miles away,  but I bolted off campus, frantically driving like a NASCAR contender, while imagining Eli lying face-down in the back yard.  (It's happened before...)

I called Maddy, but she was at work.  She called her boyfriend B and he and a friend said they would run over and help (Thanks, B & F).  By the time I got there, a neighbor had already came to the rescue, even going the extra mile to hose off his wheelchair wheels so as to not track mud in the house.  Thanks, C & M!

Once the adrenaline surge left me, things settled back to our fake-normal status, until I began to get my nightly phone calls from Eli.      

Eli Call #1:            Mom…my feet are cold.

Eli Call #2:            Mom…can I have some aspirin?

Eli Call #3:            Mom…can I have some more coke?

And just when I think I'm at my wit's end and my head is about to spin,

Eli Call #4:            Mom…I love you.

 And so it goes….

Friday, September 16, 2011

Channeling My 10-Year-Old Self

I don’t want to do my stupid, SMELLY Latin homework.  The teacher goes too fast and all the other kids are SMARTER than me and I hate it, hate it, HATE it.  I’m gonna get an “F” and then it will ruin my bright, shiny GPA and I will have gone to school, lo these many, MANY, TOO DARN MANY years for NOTHING, and everyone will point and laugh at me while whispering behind their grubby little pencil-stained hands, “Look, there’s the girl who couldn’t conjugate a third declension noun if her Imperfect Passive life depended on it” and I’ll never get a job and I will have to live first in a faded, dilapidated trailer, then downgrade to a very nice, only slightly used refrigerator box and it will be very, VERY, “movie-of-the-week” sad.  You would probably shed a glistening tear if you happened to drive by my charmingly (but frugally) decorated refrigerator box on your way to work at the job YOU have because YOU probably did YOUR homework.

In case you don’t know me from Publius Terentius, I’m a 50 year-old mother of four in my last semester of college.  I’m on track to graduate in December, God willing and the creek don’t rise, and assuming that an interrogative pronoun doesn’t sneak up on my Pluperfect Active tense self, tie my shoe strings together and then laugh hysterically as I writhe around on the floor while the big kids graduate with honors.

So here’s the thing:  I LIKE Latin.  I went through two semesters last year with destined-for-sainthood Mrs. Clouse and it was FUN!  LIVELY!  INTERESTING! Sometimes there were MOVIES!  And then Mrs. Clouse had the nerve to think that just because she had put up with untold legions of obnoxious students for a LONG TIME that it was OK for her to prance off into the Florida sunset and now Latin is not-so-much-fun.  The not-so-much-fun is compounded by the fact that I am taking not ONE, but TWO Latin classes in order to fulfill the language requirement so I can graduate with the big kids.  My second Latin class is a 4490 level Latin Historiography class, which is a fancy uppity way of saying that we’re studying the body of Latin writings, so we’re reading Caesar and Livy and Suetonius and we’re reading them IN LATIN.  I don’t know why it did not occur to me that this might happen.  I am hopelessly out of my depth. 

But here’s the real problem (and don’t bother telling me that this isn’t a REAL PROBLEM – because at this 11:18 moment on this Friday morning, it is MY real problem): 

In a normal semester, if I were to get too overwhelmed, I would just drop the class and pick it up another semester, when my head was more prepared for it, or my schedule would allow more time for it, or a Latin-loving Lothario would move in next door, be smitten with my clever wit and sexy subjunctive case and offer to tutor me daily until I was spouting “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori!” like Horace with his hackles raised.

But this ISN’T a normal semester.  It’s my LAST semester and if I drop, I can’t graduate with the big kids, and my HOPE scholarship money has run out, so I would have to pay REAL MONEY to take the class again, and the stubborn, mule-headed part of me (that my mother says never really went away) can’t stand the thought of letting a class get the best of me, so I keep showing up and looking bewildered, while making a valiant effort to read a language that is DEAD and that no one actually SPEAKS.  Just to add insult to injury, when I AM able to read it, it’s all about WARS and the HELVETII and Caesar bragging about bridges he built and Gauls he vanquished, and I’m pretty sure that if I were to occasionally stumble across something FUN or ENTICING, like maybe those muscular, buff Gladiator guys, 


or even some Gladiator sandals, 


I would be EXTREMELY more interested. But so far, ALL CAESAR, ALL THE TIME.   

And in addition to these two Latin classes, which aren’t as FUN! and LIVELY! as Mrs. Clouse’s class was (just sayin’), I also have a Senior Seminar class on John Milton (who was never, EVER, NOT EVEN ONCE, ever accused of dwelling anywhere even CLOSE to the neighborhood of FUN and LIVELY) and a class on Jane Austen (which IS fun and lively, but not with capital letters) and a Hebrew Scriptural Literature class (awesome) AND a Rhetorical Theory class, where our last reading was Plato’s Phaedras, an imaginary dialog between Socrates and Phaedras , involving a lot of horses and feathers and argument about which is better, the non-lover or lover, and I still haven’t figured out what the horses and feathers had to do with ANY of it, so there’s just enough brain-swirly stuff on my plate to make me forget the real problem.  

The real problem is that I don’t have a choice anymore.  I don’t want to delay graduation for a WHOLE ‘NOTHER SEMESTER for ONE STINKING class, so I really have to take it this semester, which means I’m just going to have to BUCKLE DOWN and PUT MY MIND TO IT and STOP BEING A CRYBABY and all that other crap I tell MY kids to do when they complain. 

THAT’S the real problem.  I hate not having a choice, and the thing I pretty much enjoy the MOST about being a grown-up is being able to do WHAT I WANT when I WANT, like eat Talenti Caribbean Coconut Gelato for breakfast, or purchase MANY sets of extremely high thread count sheets for my bed, even though I have 11 sets and REALLY DON’T NEED ANY MORE

My 50-year-old self realizes there is some faulty reasoning at work here, because I could still choose to drop the class, but I would have to pay the consequences.  So the 10-year-old in me is just going to put my hands over my ears and say, “la-la-la-la-la” until those rational thoughts go away, and then MAYBE I’ll do my stinking homework.  

Wow, I always wanted to be a TEN; I just thought it would be my pants size, and not my emotional IQ.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Run, Tanya, Run

Hi, my name is Tanya and I’m a runner. I can’t imagine that it’s any harder for an alcoholic to announce themselves, than it was for me to admit that. Not that I’m ashamed – it’s just that I don’t feel qualified.

About a year and a half ago, I made some changes and decided to start running and take a Zumba class. The Zumba was awesome, but the running took a little getting used to (and I never could have done it without the Couch to 5K app, which I can’t say enough about).
Now, I wasn’t a complete novice, since I had actually tried running before - ONCE. Thirty years ago my college roommate Robyn said, “Wanna go jogging?” and I said blithely said “Sure.” She ran me up one side of a mountain (I was living in Utah), back down the other and I staggered home, puked my socks up and never went again.
(This is the actual mountain. Really. Our apartment was right at the bottom, and no, I don't know what I was thinking.)
When I did start again, I eventually worked up to running 2-3 miles a day, three days a week, and I’ve done it for about 16 months, off and on. You would think that would be enough to make me a runner, but I still feel like the words “LIAR” are flashing in neon on my forehead.
So here’s the thing. I have four kids and I don’t have a problem telling people I’m a mom. Sometimes I’m a crappy mom, or a distracted mom, or a mean mom, but still…I never tell someone that I’m NOT a mom (tempting as it might be).
Years ago I took up photography, developed my own darkroom prints, studied the mechanics of composition and took photos semi-professionally for years. I don’t have the time or inclination to do it much anymore, but I still consider myself a photographer.
I have enough scrapbooking supplies to archivally preserve any memory you’ve ever even thought about having, and my shelves are filled with family scrapbooks. Yet when Eli had his accident, I stopped scrapbooking, because for me, it was all about preserving happy memories, and those were thin on the ground for a while. But I still consider myself a scrapbooker, even though I’m not currently producing any pages.
Why is it so hard to still consider myself a runner just because I haven’t run in a few weeks?
I don’t think we always perceive ourselves accurately. Even though I haven’t scrapbooked or snapped any photos lately, I still have all the supplies and skills, so I don’t feel false identifying myself as such. Yet I’m unbelievably conflicted saying I’m a runner if I haven’t run recently and religiously and successfully.
Maybe it has to do with the preconceived notions we have of the way people should be. The runner in my mental stereotype has a color-coordinated sports bra, ropy, muscular legs, and a ponytail that bounces while she talks (as she runs) about things like “endorphins” and “second wind” and “feeling the burn.” She has cool sunglasses and a tan, too. I don’t know why. She just does.
Sadly, none of these magical qualities have been made manifest in my experience. The last ponytail I had was probably tied with fat, fuzzy yarn for my third grade picture. My hair is more likely to be in full bed-head mode, standing on end in matted clumps, and one of my greatest accomplishments was to stop worrying that someone would see me...and laugh...and point.

I can’t talk about runner’s high or my second wind because I CAN’T TALK when I’m running…I can barely breathe. I occasionally pass other women who chat while they jog, and I usually try to trip them, if I can.
My running clothes aren’t color-coordinated - they’re drenched in sweat, and my running shoes give off a cloud of dust every time they hit the pavement because my daughter borrowed them to wear to the dust bowl at Bonnaroo. Now that I think about it, if you imagine that Pig-Pen character from Charlie Brown, you can start to get a pretty accurate visual.
My only special skill is the ability to put on a little extra burst of speed if a cute guy drives by.
So I ran for over a year, sweated my guts out at Zumba twice a week and dropped about 30 pounds. I felt good, but I still never felt like a runner.
I wonder what it takes?
Have you got any secret identities you’re afraid to claim? I’ll be brave if you will. Just say, “Hi, my name is ________ and I'm a _______." I promise not to point or laugh.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

You're Only as Old as Your Kids Make You Feel

A few weeks ago I celebrated (and I use the term loosely) my 50th birthday and I’m not happy about it. I went to bed feeling fine, but I woke up looking like this.


Well, I might not look exactly like this on the outside, but it sure seems like my brain does on the inside.

It was especially apparent to me when I went home to visit my parents in Indiana again. My last semester of college started today, and I’m taking 18 hours – so before my brain started to bleed from reading a couple hundred pages a day and writing endless papers, I headed home to see my parents. My agenda was pretty simple: I wanted to gorge myself on fresh garden tomatoes and Indiana sweet corn, and I wanted to go the Indiana state Fair.

Breakfast the first morning - Check.


Item number two – State Fair. As a kid, it seemed like we went to the fair every year as the last hurrah before school started. The anticipation started with the local movie channel showing the “State Fair” movie, and then Cowboy Bob and Janie worked us up to a fevered pitch.

Back in the prehistoric era, before Cartoon Network ran 24/7, Cowboy Bob and Janie were the only two cartoon shows on Channel 4, WTTV Indianapolis. Cowboy Bob was on at noon and he wore a black hat, stood around the chuckwagon with his dog “Tumbleweeds” and told bad jokes in between cartoons. “Popeye and Janie” came on after school and she usually had a Girl Scout Troop or a little league team as guests. The kids sat woodenly on risers in the background, waved at the camera on command, and if you were destined for stardom, a kid might be allowed to introduce the upcoming cartoon. Janie smiled a lot, but word on the kid street was that she was kind of mean in between cartoons when the cameras weren’t running.

Every summer, both Cowboy Bob and Janie would broadcast live from the Fairgrounds, spotlighting the attractions and sometimes interviewing kids who were the proud owners of a Grand Champion cow or pig. Watching their shows “on location,” seeing the flashing lights of the midway and hearing about all the delectable treats, was a 10-year-old’s version of hanging on the fence at the Red Carpet.

When Fair Day finally arrived, our whole family went, and if you think four kids were remotely interested in tractor pulls or home-canned preserves, think again. My parents dragged us at a snail’s pace through exhibition halls and cattle barns, when all we really wanted to do was make it to the glorious midway where we could ride nausea inducing rides, beg for deep fried treats to throw up colorfully on aforementioned rides, and somehow convince our parents that we were destined to win a jumbo stuffed monkey if they would just give us ONE MORE DOLLAR to spend on the shooting gallery/ring toss/ping pong ball in a fish bowl game.

We usually arrived home late that night hot, sunburned, and sticky, stuffed with food our mother would never let us have otherwise, and sporting some ridiculously overpriced, air-brushed t-shirt or a key ring with a pithy saying embossed on it (even though we had no keys to put on it, nor a car to drive). Good times.

Since I went to Indiana alone this trip, because my kids had already started school (and because I pulled out of the driveway really fast and they couldn’t catch me), it was just me and my parents heading to the fair.

The first order of business was to buy an all-day train trolley pass for $3 that allowed unlimited on/offs as it made a constant circuit of the fairground. We started in Pioneer Village and we never really seemed to leave. We heard lectures on gourds and their many uses, and antique woodworking tools. We watched demonstrations on tapping maple trees and grinding corn, and saw log splitters powered by steam engines.


I mooned over prize winning quilts in the “Home and Family Arts” exhibition hall.


I cruised the food vendors for roasted corn, elephant ears and fresh squeezed lemonade. I was fascinated by the lengths people will go to in search of a gastronomic sensation, but I resisted the lure of deep fried butter.
We went back to Pioneer Village where we admired candles made from beeswax, watched wool being spun and listened to an old-time piano player. When we needed a break, we sat and watched blue grass bands play, and some people even sang along to “I’ll Fly Away” (but not me, because I’m not THAT OLD… yet.) My step dad had his picture taken with "Possum Molly" and I gotta tell you, there was definitely some inappropriate pioneer flirting going on.


My parents loved Pioneer Village because they could remember using some of the old tools, or seeing their parents and grandparents do things the old-fashioned way, and we arrived home hot, sunburned and sticky, with our bellies full of food I normally don't let myself have.

But most of the exhibits we saw didn’t have anything to do with my life, so I’m left wondering again why I’m so drawn to these relics of the past. I can’t seem to make up my mind where I belong. I spend my days on a college campus where some of the students are so painfully young it’s hard not to spit comb their hair and hold their hand when crossing the street. Yet I was pretty ticked off when the guy at the fair wouldn’t sell me the discounted pass to ride the train trolley because “It’s for 55 and over, honey.”

I remember my mother telling me once that she always felt like she was about 26 inside and I thought, “Yeah, right.” Yet when my daughter reminded me that she will be 21 in about 6 weeks, all I could think was, “Really? Seems like I was just 21 – how can you be 21?”

My brain doesn’t feel any different than it ever has...except for those times when it sees me in the mirror and is shocked speechless. So I guess I'll just keep throwing away the AARP crap that is now flooding my mailbox, and scurry past mirrors without looking.

Besides, I know I’m not quite ancient yet…because I couldn't stop myself from buying a cool keyring at the fair this year. Although now that I look at it closely, it’s commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Pioneer Village…*sigh*.
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