Stuff that makes me happy

I’ve spent the week embodying that line “every day I’m shufflin”. Two positions have given me comfort; one in which I’m lying propped up on pillows, the other I’m walking around with my right arm tucked up in an invisible sling. While my body has been screaming, my spirit has been buoyed by the unexpected warmth and sunshine. This makes be happy.

Because I am uncharacteristically happy and because I’m sure Oprah has trademarked the phrase “my favorite things”, here is a look at some stuff that makes me happy.

This kid and his shenanigans.
bubble baths - which coincides with actually living in a house with a bath tub
These girls
... even though they act like drunken goats ...
Oh, and this guy and his collection of early- to mid-'80s gems. Hey! I'm an early '80s gem!
Sunny days!
Work/running/life buddy, Jane

Also: Amazon shopping, this book, Central Street Yoga, new running shoes, peanut butter ice cream, and the general feeling that I can thrive in chaos.

Forgetting to Inhale

 Life is crazy, I’m not going to lie. Last year we were so busy traveling that I never really had a chance to stop and think. This year is still the same busy-ness that so many of you live: work, kids, dog(s), grad school, family, house care… The list goes on and on and on. The biggest change has been moving, of course. I left my single-mama home, a space that Colby and I had to ourselves, with the luxury of not having to accommodate the needs of others. I left my support network of friends and family. I am no big fan of change, and it’s no secret that I would usually prefer to stick with “the Devil I know” than to enter into a new situation.
I wasn’t nice to my kid. I wasn’t nice to my partner. I reserved all my kindness and spent it at school, and some days I didn’t even have enough for them. I stomped through life, demanding that everyone Follow Me! Right now! Hurry up, I’m going to be late! The furrows in my forehead were dangerously close to becoming a permanent fixture on my face. This shit was not good.
 I knew this was not the kind of parent, or person, I had set out to be. I’m the first to embrace the humanity of mistakes, but I needed to make some changes.  Thinking back to my early years of parenting, and how I made peace with the incredibly difficult situation I was in, I remembered. I ran, I cooked, I went to yoga.
 I’ve been running for over a year now. That was a step.
 I moved through three rounds of purposely clean eating to re-center how I needed food and family to converge.
Then, I went to yoga. Which, judging by the length of this post, is another story (Matt says I tend to talk too much, get distracted too easily, but who cannot see that this all is a story about the exact same thing!? Sheesh). But anyway. After a mad dash down Central Street, I finally made it.
Poser
I want to stay there forever. People tell me what to do, when to breathe in, and out. It smells like Nag Champa. It’s sunny and warm. No one cares if have pigtails.
 Do any of you feel like somehow, some way, you resemble one of those dollar-store puzzles where all of the tiles are there, but you have to use your fingernails to pry the tiles apart and move them back into alignment, only to realize that you’re never actually going to be able to finish the puzzle?  That’ where I am. And while I’ll never get the perfect balance, and I’ll probably break a nail along the way, at least I have the edges finished.

The Dog in the Car Goes Bark, Bark, Bark…

Oh my aching psyche. It’s Monday of vacation week. I’m scheduled to write my big exam all weekend. Then back to school to prepare for March (a month only to be rivaled by October in teacher-land). I’m trying to focus on getting through this exam, though, so I’m just reading away. Everyone’s pretty accepting of the fact that I am a mommy out-of-commision for the week. Colby’s helping with housework and cooking and Matt’s trying to get home to help out. Bella is getting spayed tomorrow and I am as worried as, well, as worried as a mama who has nothing critical or life-threatening to worry about.

Lucky for me, my darling friend (and frequent partner-in-crime), Angie, agreed to ride along with me on our trip to the vet today. Bella needed to go in for her pre-surgery visit, and I needed an extra adult-sized pair of hands to help out. I called her this morning to make plans. While I sipped my coffee, leaning against the wall so my dead cell phone could plug into the outlet, I told her “Good thing it’s Bella. She rides so much better in the car than Sam”. I should have heard the universe laughing. Not regular laughing but snot-dripping-gut-clenching laughing.

Who? Me?

We spent the entire ride to the vet’s with Bella alternately jumping into Angie’s lap, onto Colby, or trying to climb over the driver’s side headrest onto my lap. She would weasel her little head between the seat belt and my seat so that her head could rest on the window sill (totally know that’s not the real word for it, but it’s all I’ve got). Or she would crawl onto Angie’s lap and stand, full and tall, leaning her snout into the small space where the dash and windshield meet. She dripped drool like a cheap faucet wherever she went.

We made it safely to the veterinary clinic after navigating a closed road and a rogue wood truck. We waited with poor, anxious Bella for an hour before we were seen. It took Bella nearly 30 minutes to let the vet near her because she was just.so.freaked.out.

The ride home went as before. Except this time Angie and I were so carsick that we layered our arms, one on top of the other, between our seats to create a barrier for the dog. We must have looked darling, the two of us nauseated, tired ladies. Our back seat was full of barking dog and lanky boy (eyes closed, headphones clamped tightly over his ears, head bobbing almost imperceptibly). She and I spoke in the code of mothers’ and their friends, a code that I know will only last as long as spelling out curse words. Eventually Colby will say “Mom, you know I can spell, right?” and soon he will be the one speaking in code, and I will be the one trying to decipher what is really going on.

We dropped Angie off, and I used her bathroom as she barfed off her back porch. I tentatively munched on a couple of crackers before taking my wimp stomach back to the car. On the way back to our house Bella jumped square into Colby’s lap. He was laughing and half-crying as I yelled “if she’s squishing your balls push her into the backseat!” and “if the dog is on your sack, push her back!”. I was so tired. The dog was still barking. I had this deep, primal desire to fish around in the backseat to look for a pacifier and stick it in her mouth. But then I remembered that she was a dog and not a baby. I made up a song using the words “balls” and “sack” as many times as I could. By the time we hit Union Street I was convinced that she was singing along with me. I was also happy that I had taken Colby’s itouch away, otherwise he would have been recording it.

Sigh. We’re home. They’re fed. I’m putting on my sweatpants, pouring a hefty glass of red, and heading to bed with a book.

 

Happy Monday, friends!

 

While the cat’s away, the mice will eat tater tots.

Colby’s gone with with my parents for the weekend. He had a 1/2 day scheduled for tomorrow and I was in a childcare pinch. Also, Matt is still working round-the-clock on an endless restoration. I’ve barely seen him since Thanksgiving. My patience with the whole situation of being the only adult around most of the time is wearing thin, but I still know how to enjoy my quiet evenings. What will I do in their absence? I will eat tater tots for supper. They are in the oven right now.

We’re embroiled in this whole pre-adolescent “I love you/I hate you” dichotomy, with nary an end in sight. Everything is either fantastic or life-ending, and I can barely get a word in without a major conflict that will *usually*, eventually end with “oh, cool, you’re right”, but it takes a loooong time to get there. This is the point where I want so badly to write about what is going on, to ask advice from you all, because you’ve been there. But it is also where I remember that his stories are not necessarily my stories to tell anymore. I am squarely where my parents always wished me: “Some day… I hope you have a kid that is just like you!”.

And this whole balance thing? Yeah. Not going so well. I finally broke down and sent Colby to after-school care today, but was so worked up after a faculty meeting that I tanked. I couldn’t find my pace, and I couldn’t take my eyes off the mileage counter on the treadmill. Now, I am a happy runner, but I was just not feeling it. I gave up after two miles, and left feeling so off my game. On the other end of the activity spectrum, I cannot read. When my students tell me they have too much going on to concentrate, I believe them. I just didn’t think it would happen to me. Luckily, I can try again tomorrow.

My students continue to cheer me up when I am bogged down  grading and data and assessments. Some funny stuff:

Student 1 – “Ms. Webb? For five dollars, would you eat a crayon?”

Student 2 – “Shit, I used to eat crayons for FREE!”

“Ms. Webb, I’m going to buy you a carnation for Valentine’s Day” I turn around to look at the student. He grins. “Nah, that would be weird. But if it wasn’t weird I totally would”

Today some students asked me to find out if the groundhog truly saw his shadow. I google, announce that yes, he saw his shadow and we will have six more weeks of winter. None of us could figure out if this made our predicted winter shorter or longer! I don’t know if this says something about our collective cognitive capacity OR the fact that we are just Mainers.

 

Well, it’s Thursday, my favorite day of the week. I am going to eat tater tots for supper, pop in at an event at Colby’s school, and do my Thursday laundry (so there is less to do over the weekend!). I am always wary of wishing time away, but I will gratefully bid adieu to this long, long week.

 

 

Communication Breakdown

See here.

Our morning began like most Saturday mornings around here do. Colby woke up early, and since he is grounded from the Wii, he spent the morning undertaking a tv watching marathon. Matt woke me up with what I’m sure was a hug, but more resembled a bear mauling a woman who was obviously not meant for mornings. Hanging from his neck, I whine-mumbled “Do I have to go to work today?”. The bastard told me yes. I opened my eyes enough to confirm that it was, in fact, too light out for it to be a work day. I rolled over and tried to go back to sleep.

But I had to get up. It was a big day. WE were going to the bank to open a (cue dramatic music) JOINT CHECKING ACCOUNT. I made a big deal of it. But not enough of a big deal to put on real pants. As we left I told Colby “we might as well be getting married” and asked him if he wanted to take a picture. He didn’t want to. He rolled his eyes back toward the television. We left in separate cars so Matt could get right to work after.

As I drove down Essex I got lost in a day-dream (should I change careers? should I have a baby? will I have any luck running at home instead of at the gym? what should my wedding colors be? maybe today’s blog title will be titled “da-dum-da-dum” and then the first line will be “PSYCH”! would that piss people off?) and consequently missed my turn. I called Matt. No answer. He must already be there since the closest branch of our credit union is FIVE MINUTES FROM OUR HOUSE. I went the long way, hoping had the good sense to stay put. I finally arrived and scoped out the parking lot. I didn’t see the car (which I refuse to drive) anywhere. I called again. I called again. I called Colby to see if Matt’s phone was at home. He didn’t answer. I felt a teeny-tiny pin prick in my Saturday morning balloon.

Assuming (ass out of you, ass out of me, I know) Matt was heading toward the Hampden branch, I hopped on 95 and was on the phone with my dear friend Angie before I merged. “He is an IDIOT!” I yelled into the phone. That poor girl. Just trying to enjoy her morning. Her husband piped up and yelled that the Hampden branch was closed on Saturday. What the fuck. Another call beeped in, and I heard Matt’s conciliatory voice as I turned onto the closest exit. “Where are you?” He asked. “Where the FUCK are YOU?” I yelled. Mad props to this guy, because I wouldn’t have responded as well to my words or tone. Because we both assumed incorrectly. I kept up the snark for 90 seconds or so before we hung up.

He called later to check in. I was out running, having a good run at that. We talked over the minutia that partners call to talk about in the middle of the day. While we were discussing where to put the treadmill I interrupted “I’m sorry I yelled at you”. It may be disconcerting to have slips in communication skills, but I’m so thankful we are at a point where we can acknowledge that while we, as individuals, are works-in-progress, we are a singular work-in-progress together.

Ahhh. It’s been a productive morning, though. I had a little drive (haha) and did some cleaning. I can hear the laundry drying. I ran with turkeys (literally! pics later) and ran two hills I usually walk. After I’m clean and smell better, I’m off with my boy to find a place to drink cocoa and do homework. Happy Saturday, friends.

To Do:

Oh my Gawd. Are you all swamped? Is your breathing fast and shallow? Are you RIGHT now on the phone checking the balances on the Verizon rebate card you got two years ago when you purchased a phone then forgot about? I am. Are you mooning over the snow and frigging around with your laptop instead of working on your pre-holiday To Do list? I am.

I slept until 10:37 a.m. Lesson learned – maybe take 1/2 a Xanax before bed instead of a whole one washed down by a cup of Sleepytime tea. Some days I amaze myself. Now I’ve had enough coffee and ibuprofen to eradicate the coffee withdrawal migraine I woke up with. Actually, I’m dressed (though not showered) and I’ve actually drafted and started working on my list. However, I’m not where I should be. This is where you come in. Really. Do you ever tell someone that you are doing something just so you won’t flake out on yourself? I do. I even tell my students to ask me “Did you run today?” if I’m especially bitchy and impatient. It works. Now I’m, let’s say “delegating”,  some responsibility to all of you. It makes me feel like a genius and an idiot all at the same time.

To Do:

  1. Retrieve water bottle and rice cakes from work
  2. Return bench to Christmas Tree Shops
  3. Get magazines for stockings from Books A Million. Bimmer and Mad.
  4. Drop off pay stub to Verizon store so I can finally get that discount I’ve been qualified to get for the last two years
  5. Pay overdue car payment – check written
  6. Pick up Colby’s last gift from Northern Kingdom Music
  7. Get hammer and other random stuff at Home Depot – still have room on that credit card
  8. Find the perfect present for my nearly-sister-in-law (Anna – if you’re reading this, tell Ben I could use some hints because that new edition of The Last Unicorn isn’t out yet!)
  9. Christmas jammies from Old Navy
  10. White t-shirts, Oreos – Target?
  11. Laundry – Started
  12. Balance checkbook – Done
  13. Pay bills – Done
  14. Wrap presents
  15. Plan menu for Christmas dinner
  16. Grocery shop
  17. Go to gym – packed for
  18. Eat. A lot.

I am admittedly delusional, but I think I can do this. My coffee is brewed, my travel mug washed and dried. If you see me stumbling around Bangor this afternoon, be patient with me. You see, while I am not underwhelmed by the amount of STUFF I have to do, I love this. I love this time of year, and picking out gifts for the people I love. And as much as I enjoy what I do for a living, I really, really love not going to work on a week day. I just may not remember your name today. Feel free, though, to ask to see my list.

 

Crazy Quilt

As I scooped up the last piece of quiche on my plate, I heard a knock on the door. Colby and I had brought Christmas dinner ( a la bakery quiche and fresh bread) to my Grandmother. She was going to her brother’s house for Christmas, and it was going to be the first Christmas morning in 30 years where I wasn’t going to see her. So we decided to have our Christmas visit early, even if it was a school night. I saw a familiar and much missed head pop in the door and jumped out of my chair to greet my “aunt” Kelly. Two hours and two pieces of pie later I left for my mother’s house. Another piece of pie later, Colby and I headed home. I like pie. I shivered as I drove, accepting the frigid air for the deep blue, star-laden sky it brought with it. While I talked with Colby about the merits of one bass player over another, drum solos, and influential songs; I was thinking about my good fortune/luck/general blessedness in being surrounded by women, each so different from each other, who each added a patch (or ten) to the quilt of grown-up me.

I always envied my friends who grew up in families full of women. I appreciated the toughness and quick wit that came with being surrounded by men, but something was missing. My mother came from a long line of hearty, Baptist, New England women; and while we enjoy a rich and fulfilling relationship now, that wasn’t always so. Mothers of single daughters, I’m sure you understand. At times it is hard to like your own children, as it can sometimes be hard to like yourself. I can only imagine how much harder that is when dealing with a daughter, say, anywhere between the ages of 7 and 22. I don’t have any sisters OR daughters, but from what I can see, sisters have discussions as well as arguments. They answer questions about mood swings, periods, boobs. They define their values and ideals by seeing themselves in each other, for better or worse. Parents may have to deal with multiple daughters, which can certainly be taxing, but the daughters maybe learn enough from each other to not need ALL of the knowledge of ALL things woman from one person.  My mother did not come of age in a time where women were encouraged to think about what it means to be “a woman”, and that world certainly never encouraged women to embrace the physiological, emotional, and even academic aspects of themselves. As the universe would have it, I was intensely, unremittingly curious about just these things.

And where better to learn about the female world than romance novels? Really, it’s all there. Okay. Not so much. But that was where I started. My fifth grade teacher can tell you how many she had to confiscate from me. All I can say is, it’s a good thing we didn’t have the internet. Who knows what I would have thought normal then! It wasn’t just the novels and teen magazines though. I was blessed with women. Women who were all willing to add a patch or mend my edges. I’m still waiting for the trim, but I think I have to do that myself.

Some of my aunts instilled in me a love of writing. They wrote letters to me at Girl Scout Camp. Some wrote when I was having a tough time. They sent cards covered in encouraging (and sometimes admonishing) words from front to back – leaving room for the Hallmark sign, of course. I learned that it was easier to express myself with the written word. I learned that my thoughts were important, that I was worth the time it took to write a letter or a card. One in particular taught me that divorce wasn’t the end, and that a niece was a niece forever. My uncle married again. His second wife taught me that it was never too late for love, and that there is always room for another family member. From them I learned that, exhausting as it may be, you can never have too much family. I learned to have open arms and an open heart. I learned that it was okay to wait for the right love, and that it was okay to try again. From another, I learned how to bake…with children. We would go to her house to make Christmas cookies. She would listen to us tell silly stories about silly pre-adolescent life, and later on, she listened with compassion as we wrestled bigger demons. She made the best damn cookies I’ve ever had, and I will use her recipes until the day I die. From her, I learned how to make messes and how to listen. They usually go together. My aunts always made me feel special, spent time with me, and were sure to be around for any major event. And you know what? They still do. For real. How lucky am I?!

But back to that night. I was thinking especially about three women – one who I had hoped to see – and two that I was with. First of all, I was with my grandmother. I have two spunky, caring, active grandmothers who have been instrumental not only my upbringing, but my son’s as well. Again, how lucky am I? I know exactly how lucky I am. I was with my father’s mother that night.

She lives on her own, and I wanted for once to make her feel as special as she made me feel. Every year she would pick a grandchild to attend The Nutcracker ballet with her. For most of us, it was the only fine art we were exposed to. I learned to love the ballet, consequently, so did my son. She taught me how to give myself a manicure, how to love your kids when you don’t like their choices, and how to always make time for a card game. She taught me that the skills necessary to sneak out would always be punished in a very creative way – like an early, heavy breakfast and a day of shopping. Try that one after you drank a fifth of brandy with whole milk in the woods. It’s not pretty.  Late one night, very early in my very unexpected pregnancy, I showed up, pajama’d and tear-stained on her front porch. She probably had to work the next day, but she put on water for tea anyway. When I told her I didn’t know if I could do this, she told me I had to, simple as that. She told me stories of her pregnancies, her children, her marriage. She started telling me narrative of her life, and I get a new piece of it every time I see her. From her, I learn every day.

My ‘aunt’ is not technically an aunt, but the mother of my cousin, if you can follow that. During those horrible, tumultuous teenaged years when my mother was probably torn between  hugging  me and throwing me off a very high bridge, she and another aunt came to the rescue. They were social workers, nurses, women’s health professionals, teachers, disciplinarians, and psychologists. They listened without judgement, gave advice sparingly, and never failed to let me know when I was making a bad choice. I could do the stupidist shit imaginable, but they would love me anyway. Then they would tell me to go fix it. Immediately.

I thought about them that night, at dinner, when my ‘aunt’ told me that her daughter, my cousin, was the first in her immediate family to go to college. She had just graduated. I thought about all my aunts had done with the limited resources they had. I wish we had a million women in the world just.like.them. so I could dispatch them to all the other young women who needed them just as much as I did. From them I learned to love and respect myself, to advocate for my own needs, to take responsibility for my actions, and not to judge. I learned to encourage others regardless of my own resources and accomplishments, and to never think less of others because they had more (or less) than me.  I hope my child will find similar people in his life when he needs to step away from me.  I will be sad, as I’m sure my own mother was, but he will need someone. That day will come sooner than I care to admit.

I hugged my aunt and grandmother when I left, squeezing a little tighter than usual. My aunt commented earlier in the evening how her daughter, a young mother herself, reminded her of me when Colby was younger. What I didn’t tell her was how I mirrored so much of my parenting on how she raised my cousin. It really hit me then, how most of us are pieces, provided and patched together by the various people in our lives. It really doesn’t matter how often we see them, because they are part of us every day. They keep us warm on cold nights, and when the world is just too much, we can rub our fingers against the patches to remind ourselves of whatever we need to remember.

With Thanks

Dear, Reader. It’s been awhile, hasn’t it? My absence has not been due to lack of material, I assure you.  It could best be attributed to equal parts contented laziness and schizophrenic bewilderment.

I remember writing my last post – I was blissfully post-run, but also blissfully ignorant about the state of my future. We were getting ready to move into a new house in a new town, all of us … together. I could not anticipate the incredible difficulty and joy about to come my way. I could have written so very much, like about any of the following:

Maine Marathon Relay with my lil' brother, Jeremy, and friends Martin and Stefano

-first race report!!!

-moving for those who hate change

Colby's First 5k!

-learning to be soccer mom

-cohabitation

-pre-adolescent dating protocol

-pre-adolescent anything protocol

-why the world stops for soccer season (alternately titled “Yes, we are eating cereal for supper again. Do we have a problem with this?”)

-failure

-acts of friendship

-faith

-power of silence

-balance

You get my drift. While I try to embrace the journey of each day, I don’t always succeed, and I seem to have better luck doing this when the outcome is positive. Fall has been full, and the deeper I get into this parenting business the more I recognize the responsibility I have to reconcile all pieces of myself, both for myself and my family. In that spirit, I am back.

Regardless of what you celebrate this week, I hope you all take a moment to recognize your own journeys. I have so many tangible things to be thankful for (health, home, warmth, food), but the knowledge that I am a work-in-progress, that my journey continues, sustains me today.

The last car load - from Milo to Bangor.

Bug Soup

I’ve been sitting here, for the past two days, stewing over the minutia of partnered communication. We’re still trying to sell my house, have found yet another property we’re interested in, and I find myself stuck in the “I’m willing to give so much but you’re giving nothing” mindset. Yesterday I actually had a mental list going. Not my proudest moment. This is not good. Now I’m easily peeved these days, and any aspect of Matt’s demeanor (body language, facial movements, exhalations for God’s sake) is fodder for my brain, which is already stoked with residual low self-esteem and general feelings of inadequacy. So I interpret every frown or deep breath as his super-secret-deep-dark-feeling-of-I-don’t-wanna-live-with-this crazy-bitch. It’s almost like, maybe, if I spend enough time trying to psychoanalyze the frequency of his eye blinks I won’t have to figure out what I think about our impending cohabitation. Um, yeah.

The funny thing is, in the middle of this general pissfest, I realized that this guy has loved me out of nothing. Okay, not nothing because I’m wonderful and beautiful and strong and all that shit. But he loved me out of my two-sizes-too-big jeans and out of the giant black hole I was in. One night when I inevitably began cooking dinner around the time it should have been on the table, I was rushing along peeling and chopping and measuring. I was getting a Russian Vegetable Soup facial as the steam enveloped us both, if only to remind us that we were all ravenous at 9 o’clock on a school night. One of us grabbed the canister of dill, and even though it looked off while I was measuring, I threw it in and stirred and stirred, happy with the addition and the prospect of dinner. Not long after,  I spied many, many specks that were not dill. I fished a few out and confirmed my suspicions; there were bugs in my soup. For the next 30 minutes we stirred the succulent soup and picked. Stir, pick. Stir, pick. Stir, pick. You want to know what we did next? Probably not, but I’m going to tell you anyway. We ate it, steamy and delicious, with hot buttered biscuits and tall glasses of iced water. Matt and I glanced at each other (when we stopped to breathe), complicit in the decision to not tell C about the guests-who-shall-not-be-named who briefly resided in our soup.

So you all want to know what real love looks like? A man happily eating the bug soup.