my husband is english. like high tea and the queen, like hogwarts and harry potter. As a confessed anglophile, I mostly love this about him. (the accent is fab and so are lots of the vacations.) but sometimes this bicontinentalism leads us to odd places and embarrassing discoveries. for instance, i present a recent conversation:
husband: hokey-cokey, little boy, you're ready to go.
me (smirking): are you saying okey-dokey or hokey-pokey?
husband: hokey-cokey.
me: well, that's not a real word. there's okey-dokey...you know...slang for okay. and then there is the hokey-pokey...the dance.
husband: i thought that was hokey-cokey too.
me: nope.
husband: i think it is.
me: only if you silly english people say it that way.
then, you know that phenomenon where you mention something obscure and then suddenly you see or hear it everywhere. well, twice in one week, i read the word "hokey-cokey," once in a book of nursery rhymes and once in a contemporary british novel. so i thought, well it really is the way those silly english people say it. until i went to wikipedia and found this, a brief and thrilling history of the hokey-pokey--which is more officially called the hokey-cokey!
well, you put your left foot in (your mouth) and you shake it all about.
wonder: am i the only one who has been saying it wrong all along?
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
the daddy deficit.
of course, he wasn't always my husband. at first, he was one of two boys who shared a flat with me and several other students during my semester abroad. the rest of the girls thought of him as the "weird one." but i was in love from the moment he accosted me in the hallway to find out just exactly where i had been
he wore a yellow t-shirt and shorts. he had a huge working vocabulary and an abiding love of foreign film. he liked to argue the salient points of deconstructionism and he stole food from our flatmates' cupboards. sometimes he replaced it with pricey organic substitutes, a practice that enraged our other resident male. (he took all my mars bars and left me with couscous, matt said, through gritted teeth.) come to think of it, he was kind of weird.
still, i spent plenty of afternoons sitting by the window in our common room, watching the sky get dusky and waiting for him to return to the flat in the hope that he wouldn't go straight to his own room. if he popped through the kitchen door, it obviously meant that he was truly, madly, deeply in love with me too. and not that he was after a bacon sandwich.
when he did decide that he was truly, madly, deeply in love with me (and that is another story for another post...or twelve) i was already back in america.
i spent years scraping the money together to "hop across the pond" or help him hop on over to my place. and in the weeks and months between visits, i went the stages of grief and more than my share of cookies, while i waited for a time we could be together permanently.
permanently is a pretty strong word.
the truth is that i never expected that--once reunited--my husband would never, ever leave the my side. literally. but someone i know has recently decided that this is a reasonable expectation.
a little background: my husband is a teacher, so he spent the summer looking after the baby full-time. they caroused on the couch, hung out by the baby pool, ate lots of yummy snacks and generally yucked it up while i was *slaving* away at the office. now, the summer is over and the baby is in daycare from 9 to 2. he has early mornings hanging out with me and then when i pick him up in the afternoon, he heads to the office to finish out the day. meanwhile, daddy doesn't usually get home until dinnertime. so all told, the baby spends more quality time with me now that he is in daycare. but less with time with daddy.
every evening, when he hears the key in the door, sweetie baby shows signs of anxious anticipation. and then, when daddy walks in the room, he breaks into a huge grin.
the only trouble is that then he doesn't want daddy to go anywhere. if daddy deigns to leave the room to change his clothes or go to the bathroom--meltdown. if daddy walks across the room to grab a drink of water--meltdown. if daddy stands up and looks in the direction--well anything but sweetie baby--you guessed it. meltdown.
after so many sweet hours together, the baby is definitely feeling a deficit in his daddy time. he seems to have a simple plan to combat the problem. never let daddy out of his sight again.
now someone new waits at the window for
wonder who watches out for you tonight?
Thursday, August 26, 2010
kool-aid anyone?
when i was four-years-old, my best friend was a little red-haired girl named susannah. she had narrow feet and chronic kidney infections and an older brother. i was covetous of susannah's life. i wanted her narrow feet and an older brother. she could wear all the cool shoes.
there was even a small part of me that wanted her mother. or really, i wanted my mother to be the kind of mom that her mother was. like i said, it was a very small part. this little piece of me wanted a mom who was home every afternoon, who was first in line to pick me up at preschool, who always had a pitcher of kool-aid waiting when we got home. instead, my mother worked sixty-hour weeks in a profession she helped to open to women. she was (she is) a pioneer. and this is the thing: sometimes life is tough on the frontier.
my mom stood up for what she believed in and she withstood a whole lot of back-biting and complaining. she ran errands and she ran meetings and she ran late.
it used to drive me crazy that i was always the last kid to be picked up from school. i was ashamed to end up in the principal's office, under the withering gaze of mrs. spenrath (emphasis on wrath), the school secretary. as i waited, i bit my nails and tapped my feet. i strained to hear the particular click of my mom's heels on the linoleum. i tried not to make eye contact with the mrs. s. i tried not to think about what might keep my mom from me--like a heart attack or a car accident or a freak tornado. my anxiety fueled horrific daydreams of death and destruction. surely it was only disaster that kept my mother from me? and when it turned out that she'd been caught in a meeting or stuck on the phone, i remember the anger and the strangle of tears. i was relieved and broken at the same time. just because it was a common occurrence, it never became routine for me.
you love your work more than you love me, i accused. i would never put other people ahead of my children, i swore. i won't be like you, i promised.
this week, i was late to pick up the little boy for the first time.
it happened like this: i was at a meeting in another suburb. i told the people at the table that i needed to leave, even if they wanted to stay. they all agreeably joined in the packing up of notepads and the gathering of purses and laptops. and then as i was heading down the stairs, one of them wanted to tell me just one more thing. and then as i was rounding the corner, one of them needed me to check my calendar. and then as i was crossing the parking lot, one of them asked for clarification about something. and then as i was driving away...
you get the idea.
as i drove over the speed limit, with one eye on the clock, i realized that there was no way i was going to be on time. even if i leaned forward in my seat trying to propel myself that extra inch.
i thought about that old promise to myself. once again, i was the one in a panic. what would happen to him if i didn't get there? who would i have to explain myself to? how could i make them understand that i had the best intentions? how do you tell someone that no, you do not have one more second for them? how do you ever explain that you didn't give away that time freely, that it was taken and that you wish you could take it all back. that you, too, would rather just pour a round of kool-aid.
my son is too young to know that i was dashing in at the last minute. but i knew. and as i tossed his bag over my shoulder and raced out of the daycare center with him on my hip hoping to avoid a confrontation with the staff, i knew that i was in the wrong.
i had been all along. tonight i need to call my mom and apologize. i'm sure it won't be the last time.
there was even a small part of me that wanted her mother. or really, i wanted my mother to be the kind of mom that her mother was. like i said, it was a very small part. this little piece of me wanted a mom who was home every afternoon, who was first in line to pick me up at preschool, who always had a pitcher of kool-aid waiting when we got home. instead, my mother worked sixty-hour weeks in a profession she helped to open to women. she was (she is) a pioneer. and this is the thing: sometimes life is tough on the frontier.
my mom stood up for what she believed in and she withstood a whole lot of back-biting and complaining. she ran errands and she ran meetings and she ran late.
it used to drive me crazy that i was always the last kid to be picked up from school. i was ashamed to end up in the principal's office, under the withering gaze of mrs. spenrath (emphasis on wrath), the school secretary. as i waited, i bit my nails and tapped my feet. i strained to hear the particular click of my mom's heels on the linoleum. i tried not to make eye contact with the mrs. s. i tried not to think about what might keep my mom from me--like a heart attack or a car accident or a freak tornado. my anxiety fueled horrific daydreams of death and destruction. surely it was only disaster that kept my mother from me? and when it turned out that she'd been caught in a meeting or stuck on the phone, i remember the anger and the strangle of tears. i was relieved and broken at the same time. just because it was a common occurrence, it never became routine for me.
you love your work more than you love me, i accused. i would never put other people ahead of my children, i swore. i won't be like you, i promised.
this week, i was late to pick up the little boy for the first time.
it happened like this: i was at a meeting in another suburb. i told the people at the table that i needed to leave, even if they wanted to stay. they all agreeably joined in the packing up of notepads and the gathering of purses and laptops. and then as i was heading down the stairs, one of them wanted to tell me just one more thing. and then as i was rounding the corner, one of them needed me to check my calendar. and then as i was crossing the parking lot, one of them asked for clarification about something. and then as i was driving away...
you get the idea.
as i drove over the speed limit, with one eye on the clock, i realized that there was no way i was going to be on time. even if i leaned forward in my seat trying to propel myself that extra inch.
i thought about that old promise to myself. once again, i was the one in a panic. what would happen to him if i didn't get there? who would i have to explain myself to? how could i make them understand that i had the best intentions? how do you tell someone that no, you do not have one more second for them? how do you ever explain that you didn't give away that time freely, that it was taken and that you wish you could take it all back. that you, too, would rather just pour a round of kool-aid.
my son is too young to know that i was dashing in at the last minute. but i knew. and as i tossed his bag over my shoulder and raced out of the daycare center with him on my hip hoping to avoid a confrontation with the staff, i knew that i was in the wrong.
i had been all along. tonight i need to call my mom and apologize. i'm sure it won't be the last time.
Monday, August 23, 2010
g is short-form for germs. and guilt.
week one of play-school.
august in texas and still
he has his first cold.
his teacher is great.
she won't send him with strangers--
unless they are germs.
if you two stayed home
he might not ever get sick.
what, ho, mental health?
no vaccine will ward off
every scary thing out there.
this one's gonna hurt.
you are afflicted--
acute guilt for a cute kid.
it's a chronic case.
the working mom's plight,
no way to protect your heart
or his body now.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Why are things so hard for you?
today is my anniversary. four years ago, in the week leading up to my wedding, in a fit of exhaustion and self-pity, i asked my mother, "why are things so hard for me?" (eventually, when we all know each other just a little bit better, i will tell you more about where this question came from, lest you think i was bridezilla and that it emanated from some deep dark place where the peach embossed napkins did not match the peach tulips in my bouquet. gasp.)
i didn't actually expect an answer. but my mother looked me straight in the eye and said, "things are hard for you because you choose hard things."
have you ever known in the moment that something was going to stick with you for the rest of your life? that you were being called out in the best way? that someone was gifting you with an essential truth about yourself? that it might haunt and inspire you for years to come?
there are ancient cultures that believed one is more susceptible to this kind of revelation when at a crossroads. of course, back in the day, it was pretty unusual for two roads to meet. so when you found yourself there--with a choice to make--it must have been comforting to believe that there might be some kind of divine revelation, some sense of the holy to guide you.
a wedding is quite a bit about intersection and choice. but i refuse to believe that it is only in the largest, most public events that we choose the direction of our lives. at my wedding, i chose the hard thing, but i have also had the joy and luxury of choosing it again and again--as has my husband. for more than a thousand days, we have woven our paths together again. we've stayed at the crossroads together, waiting to see what may be revealed to us.
and lots of days i feel like the luckiest woman in the world. even without the tulle and the tiara.
Monday, August 16, 2010
how to send your child to daycare for the first time.
your problem is that you have always been farsighted. most people don't get that way until they turn forty. but, you were born unable to see clearly the things that are right in front of you. it's a strain to look at your infant son while he nurses. or to see your husband smile as he leans in for a kiss. even though you can see mt. ranier looming on the horizon all the way from texas.
close your left eye--the bad one--so that you can look at your baby. really see him. he lies beside you in the bed, his hair damp and his mouth slack with sleep. for months he's woken up at seven on the dot, but today, he's sleeping late as if he senses a change too. linger in this place, this space. know that as soon as you get up, the spell will be broken.
it hurts to be this close to him.
roll out of bed. make it across the hall before you hear your son stirring. damn, you think, racing back. he's pulled himself up, rocking on his knees, ready to follow the sound of your footsteps. he would crawl right over the edge of the bed if you weren't there to catch him. of course, he would.
put him in the bouncer while you get breakfast together. notice how much taller he's gotten over the summer, the way he's standing flat footed now where once he was on his toes. leave him in the bouncer while you get dressed. leave him in the bouncer while you throw things in the bag he'll take to daycare. diapers--check. wipes--check. alternative outfit 1. alternative outfit 2. milk. jars of food. pacifer. sippy cup. lovie. leave him in the bouncer while you throw things in the bag he'll need when you pick him up from daycare and take him to the office. diapers--check. wipes--check...
impatiently, he waves his arms at you, ready to be rescued again. sweep him up. cover him with kisses. eat him up before giving him his breakfast.
spend ten minutes talking him through the importance of the first-day-of-school clothes. tell him about the unfortunate year that you wore a t-shirt with three laughing cows to start off sixth grade. promise him that someday, when he has a say, you'll try to walk the fine line between letting him make his own choices and protecting him from any mistakes of bovine proportion.
as you load him into the carseat, talk about how much fun he'll have with his classmates, his teacher, his friends. realize that these are his first peers. worry a little. will there be pressure to walk? to talk? to be thinner or fatter or happier?
when you pull up to the school, you notice other mothers getting out more children with more organization. they are better dressed, more well groomed, thinner. worry a lot. run a hand over your messy bun.
his teacher is standing at the door when you get there. she holds her hands out for him and speaks in that high friendly voice that people always use for small children and small dogs. he looks up right away. he smiles and leans forward. "are you ready?" she asks, and you are about to answer that you don't really think you are and then you realize that she is talking to him. "to have some fun?"
stand in the doorway watching him. he doesn't look back at you. instead he fidgets in her arms, wanting to be put down, to go and play. as soon as she puts him on the floor, he scoots to the far side of the room. he puts his mouth on a bright plastic toy, satisfied.
don't cry. this is what you wanted for him all along. remember that if you are going to leave him at daycare with strangers, it is easier for you if he seems to like it.
see you later, baby, you say. and as you walk back to the car, you do just that--see this baby, this boy, in five years. in ten. he is starting kindergarten. he is starting college. and at every stage you imagine him just as he is now. ready to make his move, ready to lengthen the distance between you.
it is a curse and a blessing, this long view.
close your left eye--the bad one--so that you can look at your baby. really see him. he lies beside you in the bed, his hair damp and his mouth slack with sleep. for months he's woken up at seven on the dot, but today, he's sleeping late as if he senses a change too. linger in this place, this space. know that as soon as you get up, the spell will be broken.
it hurts to be this close to him.
roll out of bed. make it across the hall before you hear your son stirring. damn, you think, racing back. he's pulled himself up, rocking on his knees, ready to follow the sound of your footsteps. he would crawl right over the edge of the bed if you weren't there to catch him. of course, he would.
put him in the bouncer while you get breakfast together. notice how much taller he's gotten over the summer, the way he's standing flat footed now where once he was on his toes. leave him in the bouncer while you get dressed. leave him in the bouncer while you throw things in the bag he'll take to daycare. diapers--check. wipes--check. alternative outfit 1. alternative outfit 2. milk. jars of food. pacifer. sippy cup. lovie. leave him in the bouncer while you throw things in the bag he'll need when you pick him up from daycare and take him to the office. diapers--check. wipes--check...
impatiently, he waves his arms at you, ready to be rescued again. sweep him up. cover him with kisses. eat him up before giving him his breakfast.
spend ten minutes talking him through the importance of the first-day-of-school clothes. tell him about the unfortunate year that you wore a t-shirt with three laughing cows to start off sixth grade. promise him that someday, when he has a say, you'll try to walk the fine line between letting him make his own choices and protecting him from any mistakes of bovine proportion.
as you load him into the carseat, talk about how much fun he'll have with his classmates, his teacher, his friends. realize that these are his first peers. worry a little. will there be pressure to walk? to talk? to be thinner or fatter or happier?
when you pull up to the school, you notice other mothers getting out more children with more organization. they are better dressed, more well groomed, thinner. worry a lot. run a hand over your messy bun.
his teacher is standing at the door when you get there. she holds her hands out for him and speaks in that high friendly voice that people always use for small children and small dogs. he looks up right away. he smiles and leans forward. "are you ready?" she asks, and you are about to answer that you don't really think you are and then you realize that she is talking to him. "to have some fun?"
stand in the doorway watching him. he doesn't look back at you. instead he fidgets in her arms, wanting to be put down, to go and play. as soon as she puts him on the floor, he scoots to the far side of the room. he puts his mouth on a bright plastic toy, satisfied.
don't cry. this is what you wanted for him all along. remember that if you are going to leave him at daycare with strangers, it is easier for you if he seems to like it.
see you later, baby, you say. and as you walk back to the car, you do just that--see this baby, this boy, in five years. in ten. he is starting kindergarten. he is starting college. and at every stage you imagine him just as he is now. ready to make his move, ready to lengthen the distance between you.
it is a curse and a blessing, this long view.
Sunday, August 15, 2010
hello.
when i was in ninth grade, my world history teacher had us create a poem "in praise of" ourselves. the format was supposedly taken from African tribal culture, from the rituals of claiming adulthood. we were to compare ourselves to an animal or object, something swift or powerful, something majestic (think: cheetah, gazelle, the ocean at night, Emmett Smith at the peak of his career with the Dallas Cowboys). each poem began with the following words: 'here i am, a XXX."
i remember watching my nearest neighbors--a popular sophomore class leader and a baseball player--quickly dash something off to satisfy the assignment. for some, this was an easy exercise. for those who loved high school, who felt young and powerful and lithe and free, who thought these just might be the best years of their lives--well "here i am, a cheetah" indeed.
my problem was that i was the new kid and i felt about as powerful and free as a speck of sand being yanked back and forth by the tides of that old ocean at night.
it didn't help that when my teacher asked what i thought i might compare myself to, i told him the truth. a tea cup. and then he proceeded to sing i'm a little tea pot with hand motions in front of the whole class.
starting to blog reminds me a little bit of that old assignment. there are people out in bloggy-blog world who know themselves already, who can speak with an authority that i find hard to claim. and yet, i find myself clearing my throat to add my voice to the throng of women who have found a place from which to speak.
here i am, i guess i am saying. again.
more than a decade later, i'm still a tea cup. still a little bit ordinary and a little bit fragile. still ready to pour myself out.
wonder if you ever really change?
i remember watching my nearest neighbors--a popular sophomore class leader and a baseball player--quickly dash something off to satisfy the assignment. for some, this was an easy exercise. for those who loved high school, who felt young and powerful and lithe and free, who thought these just might be the best years of their lives--well "here i am, a cheetah" indeed.
my problem was that i was the new kid and i felt about as powerful and free as a speck of sand being yanked back and forth by the tides of that old ocean at night.
it didn't help that when my teacher asked what i thought i might compare myself to, i told him the truth. a tea cup. and then he proceeded to sing i'm a little tea pot with hand motions in front of the whole class.
starting to blog reminds me a little bit of that old assignment. there are people out in bloggy-blog world who know themselves already, who can speak with an authority that i find hard to claim. and yet, i find myself clearing my throat to add my voice to the throng of women who have found a place from which to speak.
here i am, i guess i am saying. again.
more than a decade later, i'm still a tea cup. still a little bit ordinary and a little bit fragile. still ready to pour myself out.
wonder if you ever really change?
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