lisahartlieb

COLD BUT PATIENT

This morning, a thin shattering of ice floated on the back-porch buckets.  The iris shoots and lily leaves didn’t notice, but we dragged the rosemary and sanseveria back into the kitchen last night.  No harm.  Pretty soon, everything can move to one porch or another.  Pretty soon, the green will be darker in the trees and frost will be just something I imagined, unreal in the shimmering heat of summer.

At this tenuous time of year, we fall asleep with windows open and wake shivering.  It’s good to feel the air, and good to burrow under heavier blankets before dawn.  To feel the transition seems important.  Watching the season change isn’t enough when warmth and sun and green things sustain us in so many ways.  I’m happy to shiver a little in the name of change, when an open window at five in the morning would have meant misery just a month ago.

My sweetheart had to wear a stocking cap and a scarf to watch daughter-softball at the high school this afternoon.  At least it’s sunny.  My own small person and I are settling into a sort of hibernation, but she’d rather go outside and shiver.  I’m not okay with that, and I stand my ground under this blankie on the couch.

Tomorrow will be warmer.  A fort-improvement plot brews in my head, but the “in my head” part doesn’t satisfy the stir-crazy half of this couch bound duo.  Tomorrow, we’ll lash sticks together and fashion a roof made of army tent leftovers.  I have patience enough for both of us.

BECAUSE THERE’S ALWAYS BACON

Lately, I’ve joined groups on Facebook dedicated to cooking in cast iron.  “Kentucky Cast Iron Cooking” is my favorite so far.  Kentucky food looks familiar.  The corn bread is properly yellow, the beans properly soft and creamy and mostly pale Great Northerns or navies. The gravy doesn’t look at all like gravy, but that’s the way it’s supposed to look in Kentucky.

Two skillets have come to live with us this month, bringing the total number of skillets to six, all #8s, I believe, or #10s.  Add to that one plain dutch oven of the same gauge and one larger camp oven, a corn-stick pan, and that’s it.  Still on the lookout for a griddle, round with a handle, and a spare lid so the dutch oven and the skillets don’t have to share just one amongst them. If I’m very lucky, maybe a hibachi will turn up. I do love a kebab.

Why so many?  One was Gram’s granny’s and one was Papa’s mother’s.  One, exceptional because of its smoothness, I acquired at the yard sale down the block about twelve years ago.  One newer pre seasoned Lodge came with my sweetheart, and the two new-old ones came with ridiculously low price tags: three dollars each, on two different days at the flea market.   Those are for camping, lacking provenance.  They’ll gain status with time, I’m sure. The corn-stick pan replaces one I left with another house in another life, when I thought that baking cornbread was something that I wouldn’t do again. I was wrong.

Maybe I’m greedy.  The foreverness of cast iron pans reassures me that no matter what, if I am careful and avoid soap and tomatoes in these vessels, my daughter’s daughters will bake a very nice cornbread in her great-great someone’s skillet as I have done too many times to count.  I want my name to stay with them, or just my title. When I use either of the granny-skillets, black iron gleaming, I imagine those women, aproned, holding the pan handles with a dishrag.  My hand becomes their hands, and I feel more real, connected to my past.  The taproot effect: if I keep my roots deep enough, I’ll never know drought.

My small person is almost nine years old now.  At nine-almost-ten, I learned how to measure out proper proportions of yellow meal, flour, oil, baking powder and salt-no-sugar, one egg only, to fill a hot skillet full enough but not too full of batter.  The only utensils required were a teaspoon for the baking powder and the short-handled, worn-down wooden spoon known as “the wood spoon”. The ingredients went into a bowl, always the same bowl, and with luck, a nice, stiffly fluffy mass would develop while the skillet heated in the oven.  Pouring semi-solid goo into a four hundred degree metal pan thrilled me at nine.  My love of certain foods comes from the act of preparing them with my Gram.  Maybe my own small person will come to love what we cook together, especially if an element of danger can be incorporated.

The family of pans and griddles should keep growing for a while, and will shrink again when our small people leave us.  Four women-to-be wait to inherit the weight of someone’s grandma’s essential piece of cookware, but maybe they don’t know it yet.  Future apartments will require at least one good skillet per daughter, and before they leave us, they’ll find a favorite something to cook.  My responsibility is to maintain the seasoning and spurn the soap, and maybe write down a few recipes with real measurements before I forget.  There’s time, but only a little.

I read group members’ posts on these cast iron cookware forums, and the most common question is always, “How do I get the rust out of this pan, and how do I make it cook right?”  Kind strangers throw advice involving vinegar and oven cleaner and bonfires and bacon grease.  All of them will set those pans straight with patience, but how did they come to such a sorry state in the first place?  My heart breaks to see a skillet that’s been tortured into rusting.  Modern convenience is to blame.  Dishwashers, detergents, overzealous brillo-wielding well-meaning germophobes…all when nothing hot water and heat and oil will chase off every stray microbe better than anything that claims to be antibacterial.  I love that dishwasher with all my lazy heart, but it’s death to beautifully seasoned cast iron. My favorite advice to save a skillet that seems unredeemable?  Throw it in a fire all night, and fry onions in it the next day, but don’t eat them because they’ll be black.  That skillet will gleam.  I learned this the hard way, after a long-ago roommate stored a batch of tomatoey chili in my first good skillet.  The chili tasted like metal and the deep black coating of the pan came off in great flakes.  One back-yard bonfire finally undid the damage.  I don’t know why the onions helped, but they did.

The Chinese grow a certain onion specifically for christening woks.  Those woks  need love, just like cast iron, and a panful of not-so-tasty green onions tossed with plenty of oil is the first dish to come out of a new wok or the best thing to revive the slickness of a neglected one.  Knowing that on the other side of the world, hopeful cooks are crying oniony tears over their very important pans makes the world seem smaller.

In June, I’ll be squatting over a little stove full of kindling and frying whatever will stay fresh enough during a week of no-fridge camping. Onions shall certainly play a part, and so will potatoes and cornbread. While I’m down there, I’ll think of my grandmother’s grandmothers bending over a fire to flip hoecakes, of the luxury of standing to do the same work at a black iron stove, and my ridiculous repeat of the primitive ways that were shed in the name of safety and ease.  My little portable bucket-sized stove matches ones now used all over the world to efficiently cook food with as little smoke and soot as possible, a huge advancement from open wood fires.  What’s that stove made of?  After hundreds of years of technology, the best material for the job turns out to be cast iron.

I think my small person will learn to bake a pan of something next week.  Maybe not cornbread, but we have other options.  Skillet cookies are pretty awesome, and there’s always bacon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THIS IS OKAY TO PUBLISH

Theme: plain food.  I’ve never tried this one before, but I’m ready for a challenge.

Baked chicken, steamed broccoli, maybe a baked sweet potato? I once listened to a program on NPR about a woman who was served exactly the same meal for supper every night of her life, until she went to college and had to eat in the cafeteria.  She didn’t know that not everyone ate baked chicken, steamed broccoli, and a baked potato every single night, until she crowed to her new classmates about the fabulous, exotic food offered by her midwestern college’s kitchen.  It had never occurred to her that her mother served one meal and only one meal and her mom must have been a little weird.

I ate Oscar Mayer bologna and Kraft singles on white bread with Miracle Whip, corn curls, canned peaches, Oreos, and an RC cola for lunch every day of my sophomore year of high school, unless salisbury steak or chicken fried steak or roast turkey was on the lineup.  Every day. Gram accommodated my lunch request without question.  The winter before, my house had burned down, so we were all a little weird.  Bologna, no crust, fixed something in me that missed the sameness of my old house.

It worked, and Papa always took the same lunch to work every day, anyway.  My lunch was devoid of much nutrition but filled other needs. As for Papa, the only thing that changed for him was the swap of tongue for ham when Gram had the stomach to do the tedious, gut-wrenching process of cooking a fresh tongue.  I peeled and she dug out “roots” with a very sharp knife.  Cow tongues are huge, and messy, and really should have stayed in those cow’s heads.  She was so relieved when cheap tongue became chi chi and the price went up at the butcher shop.  After that, ham all the way.

Ham, to me, will always be an enormous thing with a bone that benefits from being baked and glazed with mustard and brown sugar, much soaking required before baking. The square stuff from the deli isn’t ham.  It’s just the pig leg version of head cheese, which has its merits when one can overlook the bits of ear and snoot.

No one has ever told me what I can and cannot eat.  In this way, food remains in a happy place in my head.  I eat when I’m hungry, stop when I’m full, and I love to feed people I love.  However, besides having a healthy awareness of my physical need for certain foods, I’m very attuned to the emotional meaning of something like properly prepared ham, or bologna with no crust.  I pushed vegetables on my kids for years before I realized that they wouldn’t die without cauliflower, and none of them may ever enjoy a beet the way I enjoy a beet.  They liked my chili mac, at least.  My smallest person must only taste a bit of anything on her plate and stop when she claims fullness, whether there’s suddenly room for ice cream five minutes after supper or not.  It’s not my place to tell her what her body and soul need.

I sometimes slip out of range of the signals from my own body and soul. These last few weeks of being me did some damage which I’m actively undoing.  Last night, I slept all night for the first time in a month.  Tonight, I intend to do the same.  A bowl of Breyer’s chocolate ice cream with Ovaltine sprinkled on top would help, but I’ll shop for that tomorrow or the next day.

Five rather long posts are hanging out together in my list of drafts.  This week and last have called for crazy mad output of words, but not one of those words makes for appropriate blog content.  Hitting that “publish” button would do more harm than good.  I now have those words, and I’ll commit them to paper where they belong, and delete them from this website, and look at them in ten years and feel relief that I’m over all of that.

Now, it’s time to talk about the relief that comes from knowing I’ve weathered another storm without losing my mind. I forgot my mommy’s birthday in my bewildered fog, but it’s lifting. I’ve gained some knowledge, a little power, and a few more coping skills that don’t make me feel like coping is a trial. Still here, just me after all, and I’m okay with myself.  Still properly left of center, still planning obsessively for summer trips and next week’s supper menus.  Some things endure through the worst of times and make them less bad.

Next time, I’ll tell you about the camping that’s happening soon.  And what I’ll be cooking, of course.

 

WINDOW UP HERE

I opened the window up here today, the one at the foot of our bed.  The one she sleeps near must stay closed, without a screen to keep her from falling.

These windows have opinions.  Some of them don’t care whether they ever slide up or fall down, lazy, needing a stout stick in the frame to let the air in.  Some of them care very much, and stay shut.  A hundred years of rain and paint makes them impossible to persuade otherwise.

I want to open them all, reach a long arm inside, between panes, to clean the cobwebs away.  Wind blows in the dust, pushes in the leaves that might turn to good seed-sprouting compost in another year.

And these gutters grow the prettiest maple sprouts every spring, babies forever, never much past August’s drought.

What a house we live in, settling deeper into itself since we left it standing still but not, still easing and leaning where it wants.

 

Day One, but the rest will be on paper.

Ship’s Log

Day One

Woke at six, smelling skunk.  Sure that some member of the crew had fallen victim. Came into living quarters to find all at ease, skunk strike far away.

Made coffee.  Bitter, but drinkable.  Surprised co-captain by touching coffee maker at such an early hour. 

Folded laundry. 

Sorted laundry by owner, then placed folded laundry in vicinity of final destinations.  

Delivered first mate to her bus stop.

Home now, preparing to meditate for ten minutes, stretch ten minutes, then study for French exam.

This is an exercise in holding myself accountable for taking care of business.  Part of that business includes making happy happen, but it can’t happen if life piles up in the corners.  Clean clothes, trimmed small-person fingernails, finished paperwork, and comfortable places to sit make happy easier.  

Onward with the day, fully prepared for the happy to hit, any minute.  

EVERYTHING AND A STICK

Let’s get in the car and go.  Everything can wait.  We’ll take them along, our beloveds.  The cat even likes a drive.

Pack one bag.  We can get the rest where we land, and not bother with the what-ifs. If the weather is wet, we’ll find ponchos.  If it’s hot, we’ll just wear less of whatever we packed.  Let’s stay out of the cold, okay?

I have everything ready in my head, everything we need to be gone for as long as we want to be gone.  I know where to get it all, from shelter to a stove to comfortable places to sleep.  Everything hides somewhere in this very house, or at least in the basement of another.

Give me time to gather, please, before you announce your desire to move along.  The  vehicle will hold everything and then some.  We are in no hurry.  Choose carefully what you really need for sincere comfort and pleasure, and I will handle the big picture stuff.

Bring your own pillow. I can’t pick a pillow for anyone but myself, can you?  My own mother can’t understand what makes a good pillow good to me, and I don’t know why my own daughter likes the pillow she needs every night.

Do you have a bear or a doggie or a piggy?  We’ll need those friends, too.  The real dog will want his blankie, now that he’s chosen a blankie.  The cats require places to sleep and places to poop and possibly a great deal of catnip to stay mellow.

 

 

Travel, for me, means movement.  Arrival ends travel, unless something waits for us, someone wants to see us, and we are expected.  To be expected and happily anticipated is a blessing.

Even without a destination, the art of moving from place to place feels like a gift.  New things to see out the windows are gifts.  Strange trees, surprising views, shocking smells through the open windows will make us happy.

Consider carefully what you would put into your own bag, while we wait here under this roof.  In my backpack, I will carry scarves and dresses and the softest sweater I can find.  I require a good hat, a Tilley if I have my pick, and more than one swimsuit.  Do you need a favorite pair of jeans, or will we skirt around the cold and damp?  In winter, I dream of a place without cold or damp, and blue jeans are punishment.  I choose something looser, with pockets, if I must wear pants at all.

Also in my bag goes a blank, big book and pencils.  A glue stick is essential for maps and leaves. If space allows, I like the big stick for balancing when I walk in slippery places.  I’ve fallen enough for a lifetime, and my walking stick might as well be a security blanket.  Shells and rocks must come home as precious souvenirs in the smallest of quantities, and sometimes they stink.  Ziplock baggies solve that problem.  What other oddities make us feel at home away from home?  How about a soprano recorder?  I think we all know a song or two, and maybe one of us will remember how to read sheet music, to expand our playlist.

The picnic blanket stays in the car always, with the corkscrew and the cutting board and the kettle.  You carry a kettle, too?  So, you understand.

Those things and a very sharp knife make life on the road livable and pleasurable.  I have traveled alone and with companions; a good companion changes a trip into a holiday, while a bad companion turns the road to anywhere into hell.

I know who needs more space than the cabin of the biggest van can provide, and they stay home or meet me there, now.  I’ve also learned who causes a need for separate hotel rooms or a separate tent on the other side of the campsite.  In a way, these are good fences that make good “neighbors”, and make the morning after so much more pleasant.  If you snore, you’re on your own at bedtime, unless you snore so adorably that the sound makes me giggle in the middle of the night.  You know who you are.

Winter and school and work keep us here, for now.  Summer seems far, far away, but when it comes, let’s get in the car and go.  We can decide where to go when we get into the car, and feel adventurous and spontaneous and wealthy in our janky little Jeep, because we’ll be together.

And we’ll have everything, just like we do now.  We have so much of everything, because have Us.

And a backpack.

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OURS, WITH FRINGE

My name is Lisa, and I care what I drive.

This confession, admission, comes on the heels of acquiring a replacement for the sedan purchased just two years ago, in the aftermath of leaving my husband.  That car was and is a very good car bought for a very good price, and it’s in fine shape and has low miles for a Honda that’s been properly maintained.  I’d considered selling it last year, but the whole process gets complicated when a replacement ride can only be obtained with the profit from the sale of the current ride.

My cousin solved that catch-22 by selling me a Jeep on very gentle terms.  This Jeep, I love.  So far.  Snow and four wheel drive go well together.  We’d have been stuck last week, truly homebound, if the Honda was our only option.  It would crawl through the drifts, but I do not like the sensation of riding in a two-ton sleigh.  The Jeep does not slide.  The Jeep moves with confidence, and my only concern is about the other drivers with whom I must share slippery roads.  Even with excellent traction and a nice wide wheel base, the Jeep and I move with caution, deliberately.  Deliberate doesn’t describe some drivers, especially drivers of enormous, growling trucks that I know push through the snow on the power of rear wheel drive and testosterone and overconfidence.  At least the diesel engines get troublesome at low temps, I’ve heard.

I care what I drive for practical reasons. My vanity does not come into play.  The Honda looked sort of sporty, low to the ground, two doors, a smooth flow of sparkly gold steel that loved to go fast.  The only two speeding tickets I’ve ever earned were in that car.  Men of a certain age smiled and waved and honked when I drove it while I wore sunglasses.  Something about the sunglasses set them off, I think, because without sunglasses, the honking and waving dramatically decreased.  So, it was kind of a cool-looking ride, to some, especially bored truckers with a good view down into the driver’s side window.  The Honda garnered compliments.

Everyone likes compliments, but I disagreed with the nice people who flattered the car. The problem?  I don’t like hitting my head when I get out of a car, I don’t like the idea of glass up above where steel should be, and I think regular car trunks are a good way to forget what I’m carrying.  Not much fit into it, anyway. Unloading the Honda for the almost-last time, I discovered a forgotten tool box, a very ripped yoga mat, three blankets, the carrying case for some jumper cables but no jumper cables, and many Goodwill-bound bags of mystery clothing, among great clods of earth from the time I dug daffodils on the side of the road in Kentucky.  Now, I know the same trunk holds just my good suitcase (unpacked, how odd), that tool box, and a bunch of Keurig coffee pods that I can’t use now.  The damned coffee machine broke.

We, the current residents of The Charming Wreck, can all fit into the Jeep together, at once.  The dog can sit in the back end, where a trunk would be in an average vehicle.  This simple convenience changes the game, opens up opportunities for travel-with-dog, an idea whose time has come.  He has good manners, and I know he’s ready for some sightseeing.

My small person believes that two people can sleep in the back, an idea I had not suggested but I’d considered.  I like the way she thinks. Living in a van down by the river is a concept that crosses the minds of more that a few of my female friends, so close to the edge of the possibility of poverty, and I appreciate a vehicle large enough to accommodate a mattress.  A part of my brain has always been reserved for worst-case scenarios and how to make a worst into an adventure.  My bags stay mentally packed after eighteen moves, some movement by choice and some by necessity. Someday, we’ll go home forever, but for now, we are here and happy.  I know what I’d grab if the house caught fire, and what we’d need to get by until home happens.  We don’t need much.

However, we wouldn’t live down by the river.  We’d get ourselves to a beach, and make a worst case scenario into a colorful gypsy-esque life chapter.  I’m on the market for a sturdy but cheap footlocker to hold the basic gear for such an event.  Curtains for the windows would be a stylish touch, and screens to keep out mosquitoes seem essential. Carrying warm things and comfortable things and cooking things is common sense in any life situation, (see any bug-out youtube advice video), but choosing those things for function and form makes for good fun.  That foot locker will get the paint job of its lifetime, and so will the cargo pod that may or may not still be under my ex’s back porch.  He doesn’t use it, and he’ll be glad to see it gone.

I care about what I drive and I take care of what I drive.  To be nickeled and dimed feels better than to be dollared to death.  The Honda’s needed its fair share of belts and parts, but I can count on it to keep on keeping on when I pass it along.  The Jeep soon needs brakes, and in another ten thousand miles, I’ll take care of that.  Spend to maintain, not to attain. We have everything we need, some things in triplicate.

Except for a little trailer.  Maybe someday, a little camper.  Maybe we’ll make a little trailer into a little camper!

Too much?

For now, my small person loves riding high in the back seat of the Jeep.  Her view has improved dramatically, and the climb into her spot no longer requires her to be a contortionist.  The door handles vex her, but these handles require a bit more muscle than she owns at eight years old.  I just open both doors on the driver’s side and tell her to climb across, problem solved until pushing a stiff button and simultaneously pulling a heavy door falls in can-do range.  This boxy old Jeep with rusty rims won’t win any beauty contests, but we think it’s rather cool.  When I deemed the weather too nasty to put that beloved small person on a bus without seat belts–INSANITY, NO?–she was excited to be seen getting out of a life-sized Tonka truck.

She cares, too.  She liked opening her own back door and climbing down with more grace that she could ever muster in the clamber out of the back seat of a coupe.

I think we’ll go fabric shopping together, and she can practice her sewing skills by making tiny curtains for our gypsy caravan, with trim of bobbly pom-pom fringe.  The Jeep will feel so stylish, when we get to that beach.

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NEVER MIND ABOUT WINTER

Two hours on the couch with my thoughts and on the floor with a daughter with a sketchbook and building blocks, and life is good.  February drags on as always, but I’ve changed my mind about it in the span of a morning.

I watch travel TV  from home, where we are snowbound by choice.  My small person and I stay in until we can’t not trudge out to get art supplies and pay a bill, and maybe get a book that the library did not have yesterday.  Still, sitting in this warm house in pajamas feels best, for now.  She gathers bits of paper and ideas and consent: yes, we can get her cousin a necklace with a heart pendant for Valentine’s day, yes, the Grover Cleveland project can include flowers and glitter.  I gather minutes of comfort until real life shoves snow into our boots.  It’s deep out there today, but we have things to do.

This winter in the Midwest has given us good snow, the kind that lasts for more than a day.  We’ve been snowed in often enough to send the public schools into a scramble to add “instructional days”, which really means that the kids will lose a holiday or two, but only if the school board can agree with parents at a meeting in a few days.  I don’t care.  I just tick off the days until summer frees us from the grind of bus stops and homework and so much structure.  My small person and I do not like winter, a prison sentence of a season.  Spring sends us into the back yard to find green things, growing things, and sweet black dirt where seeds have the best chance to turn into flowers.  I keep my cold-hate to myself, but she pronounces her opinion in Crayola marker on bits of boxes waiting to be recycled: I hate winter, she writes but does not say because hate is a bad word here.  I see her silent words and I remember being her size and knowing that the trees would never be green again.  February is a hand-chapping struggle.

We sit in classrooms and at work and on this couch, and we wait, watching for the trees to wake up.  When the trees trust the tilt of the earth and brave the chilly air with their new leaves, smiles bloom among us.  The houseplants migrate to the porch.  The cat might even go outside this spring, if we trust her to stay away from the terrifying street out front.  For now, she stays in, with us, where we know we are all safe in this sweet old house.  This house makes winter less so.  The small person’s bright classroom in its strange old building with tall tall windows makes winter less so.  The wait feels less long when sunlight fills the rooms in which we wait.

Still, the travel TV does more harm than good.  Too much green, all out of season, and all out of reach, and the water on the TV is so blue and warm.  Palm trees grow in pots in Illinois.  So do lemon trees, thanks to sincere wishing by a small person right around Christmastime and a little sneakiness on my part help Santa prove a point.

This morning, we plotted a map from the back door to the sturdy new-old truck, from our driveway to the first stop on the errand list, with plenty of room for “let’s just go home already”.

Never mind about all of the winter-hating.  We are warm, safe, loved, together.  We have only a few more weeks before we burst into the green part of the year and into fewer hours bundled into whatever keeps us from freezing at the edges.  The windows will wrench open soon enough. Never mind about anything but this gift of a day with a sparkly little girl and later, a beautiful boy and his beautiful snow-loving dog.  We have everything.

Now it’s noon, when I had decided that the outside part of the day should begin.  Time to boot up, wrap up, trundle carefully into the bigger world, to find some flowers for Grover Cleveland.

grover cleveland flowers

 

 

VEHICLE = PHYSICAL FORM

A dream dictionary landed on my desk last week.  I had complained about getting little rest, because my head goes zoom all night.  I drive through mountains with no roads and on long straight paths through salt flats.  In my dreams, I go fast, my wheels stick to the road like I’m on rails and I wake up with my heart racing. My cousin/employer/friend took note and brought a reference book from his days as a dream hotline operator.

Yes, that’s a job.

During waking hours, I am cautious and obey the rules of the road, except for the sudden smattering of speeding tickets last year.  My car rides so smoothly that going 80 doesn’t feel like 80.  I’ve learned my lesson, and now, I barely go the speed limit.  Back to my old, easy ways.

I only drive to class and to work, and work keeps me as sharp as other parts of this life-education situation.  We talk about lots of things at work: gun laws to stock fluctuations to dream interpretation to extraterrestrial life to the virtues of a good station wagon.  Pretty soon, some car swapping will happen among us, so lately, we’ve talked about what we like to drive. I’ve been dreaming of a different car since I had to bring my small person’s new bicycle home sticking out of the sunroof.  Coupes have no cargo space at all.  Trunks are for people who think that they only need to carry a spare and a jack.

My vehicles had always carried whatever we might need to do anything, go anywhere, for any length of time.  That’s freedom. I dream of big steering wheels, tow packages, roof racks, and trailers.  My cousin has three vehicles and only needs two, so I am taking one.  He’s keeping an impractical, cushy SUV with an engine that needs some love, and a wagon. He won’t part with that wagon for any price, but the older Jeep can be lent out to me, family, employee, trusted person, temporarily or permanently.  We’ll see.  I’m curious to know if I’ll drive it and feel that “oh-what-a-relief-I-must-own-this-thing-forever” feeling, or if it’ll  show me what I really want.  A forever car is what I’m looking for at this point in my life.  I’d wanted to keep my beloved Blazer forever.  Eleven years in my first vehicle was a good run, but I didn’t know then what I know now about saving the equivalent of a small monthly car payment in case of big repairs.  I did the small ones myself.  Things were different in 1983, room to crawl under and room to dive in.

Do cars even have carburetors any more?  No one talks about carburetors.  I miss conversations about rebuilding rather than replacing.  A monkey with a little money can rebuild old parts, but now, we just throw out the old and stick in a new.  Makes me uneasy, really.

My non-cousin/other co-worker/friend  has exactly my now-car but with a smaller engine.  He loves it, has owned two or three in a row, considered it his own forever car. He also has a new baby, and a two-door anything does not work well with a car seat.  He’s mourning the coming loss of his version of our accidentally matched cars. I’m celebrating the loss of mine.

My small person will celebrate gaining anything with four doors and room for the whole household including the dog. I value her input, and I choose to act upon her opinions whenever possible.  She has a great point there.  She is less than five feet tall and must go all origami to fit into the back seat of our two-door vehicle. The dog looks at me like I’m crazy when I ask him to sit back there, so he rides up front now, head touching the sunroof glass. I do think he feels like the front seat is an upgrade.  At first, I expected him to be uncomfortable, because he prefers the back of his daddy’s car, but the front seat of mine gives him a fine view and opportunity to stare down other drivers when we are stuck in traffic, eye to eye.  The dog appreciates a good double-take and a wave. He actually wants to drive, always calling dibs on that seat, but he just can’t turn the key yet, thank goodness.

My current car serves a fine purpose: I move a limited number of passengers from place to place reliably, but the inner workings are too complicated. I can change oil and tires and wipers and air filters and thermostats, and sometimes, a bad hose.   I can diagnose issues based on smell and sound. I used to be able to do more things before cars had computers in them.  I like old thing best.  I like old cars, but with gas prices so high, old cars are just dream cars.

My dreams always include cars.  Last night, I sped along a winding wooded road with sometimes Betty Draper and sometimes Don in a small pink Mustang convertible as gorgeous as they were.  Betty stalled the engine and told me to go find a phone.  I told her that she needed to get out of the driver’s seat and let me make that machine GO.

It did.

I hollered something about giving it hell and popping a clutch, and I left Betty/Don standing in the road in my dust and flew around curves, not caring if another car got clipped.

A little voice of caution told me to slow down, be careful, you’ll get in trouble.

I woke up happy.  Caution doesn’t get a say in my dreams.

images

SLEEPING NOT LIKE A ROCK

An hour into real, deep, down-the-well sleep, a very hard head knocked into mine.  The owner of said head woke up momentarily to laugh at our situation.  “I was dreaming that I was at the park and you were a rock!”  My head was a rock, to be exact.  

We readjusted our blankets a few times and now she is done kicking, back to honest sleep.

She is VERY soundly asleep again, my small person. I am not.  The cat’s awake, too.

To keep the peace among ourselves concerning blankets, she has hers and I have mine.  We tried a traditional sheet-blanket-comforter arrangement.  One of us shivered or sweated the night away, sure that the other didn’t love us enough to be more considerate (in the unconscious primordial selfish act of sleeping) to be fair with the blankets.  At least, that’s what I think she thought, according to the mornings’ laundry list of sleepy wrongdoings on my part.  When she stole all of the blankets, I unwound her and did my best to hold on to a corner when the rewinding began.

My small person and I sleep in her bed every night that she is with me.  When she spends the night at her daddy’s, she sleeps in a room with her big sister or in her daddy’s great big bed. She chooses not to be alone at night.  I don’t blame her.  Fortunately, she still sees me as a safety and not a liability after the last time we slept in my very big bed at the Yellow Cottage.  She doesn’t see me as a magnet for the violence that fell upon us.

I had worried about that, until her bed arrived at The Charming Wreck and she asked me to not make her sleep alone.

We talk before we sleep, serious and silly conversations that drift from subject to subject.  Last night, she wished to go back in time.  What would you do in the past? I asked.  She would have told me not to move to that house.  Skip that one, steer the other way, anywhere but there, she emphasized with waving arms and bugged out eyes.  She wishes to go forward in time, too, to see what will happen here.

Here, I assured her, we have people who care very much about us. We are never alone.  We even have Jake the Enormous Dog, who is nearly as tall as she is now.  With that giggly bit of reassurance, she fell immediately into sleep.  We are loved, and the dog is huge, and Squirrel still sleeps on our feet up here in her in-between room.

She sleeps beside me now, and I’m typing with one long skinny leg stretched across my arms in her bed.

We’ve solved the blanket issues by choosing our favorites from the mishmash collection of quilts and comforters that came alone with us from the cottage. I choose a strangely heavy quilt made of not-so-soft fabric. I like the weight, and the faded roses on one side, and the box-pleated trim.  She likes a very puffy, very purple fuzzy comforter with a silky side and a fluffy side.  It came into our lives when we took a trip to the store just to pick out her new bedding, for her new room, almost two years ago.

She’d never been given such a choice.  We’d always done what I always do, just used what we have or what we’re given.  That day, she got to be her own interior decorator, and she chose soft things in loud purples and pinks and blues…on clearance, my sweet girl.  Those red discount tags make her decisions easier on both of us.  She felt like a smart shopper, and I felt relief at the small cost of getting her everything she wanted, even the star-shaped throw pillow.

I’ll play this upstairs-downstairs game until she chooses to have her bed to herself again.  While she still wants to share her space, I store up the sleepy conversations and the funny head-bonks and waking up to a before-bedtime-bathified unstinky foot in my face in the middle of the night.  Too soon, she’ll be big.  She will kick me out, and downstairs I’ll stay.

I’m happy to be the rock in the park in her dreams.

He's huge.

He’s huge.

FORGETFUL

Sometimes, I forget that I am not alone.

I had grown used to detailed, silent, fast-paced conversations with myself.  This is how I got by, how I adjusted to the lack of another human who gave a whit about anything I did or didn’t do.

I carry the people I love with me everywhere I go.  I look to their faces when they are not near, imagine conversations about simple things like an interesting jacket at the thrift store, or more difficult things.  Can I pull off this pillbox cap? Should I take that new job? What do you think of eating in the back yard tonight? This habit began when Alone became my chosen state of being. The responses were fabrications to make me feel less pain of loss.  I missed my beloved people, so I saw my dear eldest daughter’s face assessing that idea or that feathered hat and raising her eyebrows or smiling in approval.  I missed her so much that I made her up until her father, the controller of her place in the world, and her mother, more lax, gave her raised eyebrows and smiling approval back to me for my enjoyment now and then.  Still, alone most of the time.

When I met a beautiful boy, the alone lingered.  Our schedules with children often conflicted, and I couldn’t quite figure out how to be a regular feature in his life.  We stayed connected with smatterings of words in text messages, never phoned, spent an evening or an entire night a couple of times a month when we could.  He rode around with me in my heart wherever I went, too, all sparkling green eyes full of love, but he was usually physically elsewhere.  He had a dog that needed to be walked, and he didn’t spend much time in my world.  I was a visitor in his.

I shared my actual home and my real life with my small person.  She made Alone different.  When she was by my side, a walking, talking, thinking being drew me into important heres and nows, and I welcomed being so necessary to her wellbeing.  She was and is necessary to mine.  This small person in that sometimes lonely house, a house that grew around us and to suit us, kept me on my toes.  When only one grownup lives in a house, one must be sure to be the grownup most of the time.  Sometimes, I forgot on purpose that I was in charge and played like a small person, and we ate ice cream for supper at the drive-in on the edge of town.  We could do that.  We were alone.

Days without that small person or work landed smotherlingly upon me, at first like blankets too heavy for the weather.  I learned to shuffle the weight aside.

Knowing how to mow the lawn and fix the septic and reglaze a cracked window, and doing those things, had caused trouble in my not-alone years.  Those jobs belonged to someone else who did not do them, despite claims that such things would get done without my help.  Alone, I just did, and no one felt mocked by my silent doing.  I never meant to hurt, just to make things less broken. One by one, a wrench and a ratchet and good meal at a time, the heavy blankets lifted.  I fixed flat tires and rearranged bike parts to make things roll better, and I got only gratitude and joy from my small housemate.  I maintained a working toolbox that I could openly call my own.  Alone became easy, the tools diverse, within reach.

But, buried somewhere in that earned ease hid a grain of melancholy, grief at having had to estrange myself from so many people and things that were once a part of me, just to find a place where I could move the furniture and not be in trouble.  My rage at being in trouble at all over making small decisions arrived in a rush one evening, after I bought an electric fireplace on clearance.  It’s a silly thing, but I’d have suffered for bringing it into the house when I was not alone.  Sitting in front of it, feeling a bit gloatish at having found it for such a good price, I remembered in a rush what I’d have had to endure if I had not been alone just then.  My adorable little fake fireplace would have been mocked, and it was, upon being seen by my small person’s father.  For the freedom from mocking and anger and petty taunts I smashed my family to pieces and dragged my daughter out of the mess.  Alone, I learned to accept what I’d lost–family, friends, familiarity–because of the peace we, daughter and I, had gained.

Solitude with intermittent bouts of togetherness became the only way I found peace of mind.  Now, very unexpectedly, I am not alone, but the peace has lingered.  I worry too much again, a habit I’d shed during Alone, but I’m working on that.  The electric fireplace looks lovely where we are now.  No one has made fun of it yet, so I think we may have landed in a good place.

I was alone, and  I was fine.  I took good care of us, my small person and me.

Now I know, but I’d like to forget.

 

 

 

HAPPINESS, LIKE THIS: PROGRESS

  • Play Wiffle Ball
  • Throw a Frisbee
  • Watch rain from a porch
  • Ride a big girl trike

Picnic

Paint anything that holds still

Drive away without a map but with a tent

  • Do yoga
  • Drink water
  • Grow my hair long, long, long
  • Visit a strange place with familiar people

Visit a familiar place alone

Work as an artist’s model

  • Restring the banjo to an open chord
  • Play it
  • Learn how to speak French without blushing
  • Burn incense
  • Dust
  • Apply for a job that I’m not qualified to do, and get an interview

Get my dry cleaning done more than once a year

Demand to learn to engrave

  • Host
  • Find serving dishes and diner dishes to stack on the cupboard shelves
  • Point out beautiful, mundane things to my small person, like the texture of stacks of plates and mugs all in rows
  • Run while I still can

Crochet until that blanket is big enough for two

  • Convince myself that knitting is never going to happen

Mow the lawn

  • Make the lawn smaller

Dance

Eat outdoors

I brought that patio table along for a reason, you know

  • Get rid of

Get rid of more

Maybe even get rid of a whole car

Learn the laws of the bike trails regarding mopeds

Get a moped and make it run like new

Learn to rebuild a thing like a moped

  • Take a class just because I love the subject
  • Take a train

Take three classes because my life got in the way before I could finish them

Embrace an empty day

  • Release guilt over sleep
  • Sleep differently
  • Dream just as much
  • Listen to the dreams carefully
  • Floss

Kayak

Canoe

  • Cook

Grow

Remember the recipe.  It’s foolproof.

MOPED EXPLODED

I MUST DREAM IN COLOR AFTER ALL

I often dream of cars and truck and bicycles and mopeds.  This morning, I spent time in my sleeping mind with a station wagon.

Vehicles do occupy my waking thoughts more than I think you might think.  My first boyfriend, whose name I sometimes struggle to remember, made a game of naming the make and model of other cars on the road.  In the beginning of our year together, he always won.  By the end, I had learned enough to hold my own.  The game had one rule: blurt out the kind of car before the other person did.  No prize, no glory except in being right.  We both liked to be right, at eighteen.

He was pompous about cars but didn’t own one.  His dad was a gear head with several projects in the garage, but nothing drivable.  His mother’s regular ride was a rust bucket once-yellow Gran Torino with a top speed of 160.  She often lost paychecks to pay off speeding tickets earned on the way to work.  I had never met a family so passionate about cars but so car-poor.  I think the boyfriend played the name-game because of that.  He wanted something, anything, of his own to drive, and I never let him drive my Blazer.  He would have done something stupid and ratted out my transmission.  Boys loved my Blazer, but did not respect the four-wheel-drive.  My dear truck had had a full life as the work vehicle for a game warden and knew how to handle off-road conditions, but that didn’t mean that a testosterone-fueled fool could get behind the wheel on my watch.  That boyfriend’s insistence on driving my truck to senior prom was the beginning of our end.  I drove and his friends shamed him, but the Blazer was good to me for ten more years. I still miss it.  It was red with white panels.

My own family, the one who raised me, had one car and one car only, which was my mother’s.  It was usually red.  I still think red is a perfect color for a car.  She’s had others since the red ’78 Firebird in which I learned to drive, but none of them seemed like they would stick.  Her current car is red, a relief.  Maybe she’ll keep this one.  Changing vehicles stresses me out, even if it’s just my mom doing the shopping. My other family, the one who raised my father, had beautiful and interesting things to drive, as well as projects in garages.  My uncle always had some bizarre new thing in the shop.  My cousin collects Jeeps, weird ones, but has a passion for the Ford Taurus station wagon, pre-1996.  Another cousin works on airplanes, but loves his Ford station wagons, too.

This morning, I dreamed of a station wagon.  No one seems to respect the wagon.  Driving a station wagon has earned no one any cool points.  Ever.  The station wagon in my dream had a rumble seat, which was cool, and a flip-out tailgate table, which was cooler.  Ford Taurus wagons have both.  The coolest thing about the dream wagon, though, was its location and the things attached to it and the things that had ridden in it.

The passengers–five of us, and a dog and a cat, with one other cat curled up grumpily in the rumble seat–were sitting at the rest stop at the top of the world, on Donner Pass off of highway 80.  In my dream, we’d come from where I am now and we were all comfortable and not at all the grouchy, road-weary beasts one usually sees at rest stops.  The luggage pod on top had rainbow flames on it.  The wagon was darker, forest green like the pines all around us. It blended in to the backdrop of Ponderosas except for those flames on top. We were on our way to northern California and decided to have a picnic by the little lake. I remember stopping there in real life, once, on my way to San Francisco, but we did not have a station wagon or a picnic.  We just all needed to get away from each other for five minutes after nearly losing our minds on the salt flats. Trees needed hugging, for sanity’s sake, for the smell of something other than ancient dead fish.

Dreams of traveling are often better than real traveling, but it doesn’t have to be like that.

I could see this station wagon from our blanket.  The best part of the dream wasn’t the car, but the fact that I’d pieced together this machine that could transport some people I love in comfort from one end of the country to the other.   Well, I did appreciate the paint job on the luggage carrier.   A white window confused me until I remembered that  the smallest person in the entourage had a seat there, and a fondness for stickers.  The rear windows had curtains, for naps with the dog, and shade for the dog.  We had bicycles on a little trailer, and tents that I knew were tents but looked more like something made for Bedouin shepherds than backpackers.  The whole outfit, station wagon, roof rack, trailer, all of it, was a beautiful thing to me.  An accomplishment.  An assemblage of mismatched things made whole, and eager to move or stay put indefinitely.

My Jeep-collecting, station-wagon-driving cousin once took classes on dream translation, and worked a dream hotline.  He tells me that any vehicle, in universal dreamspeak, indicates healing.  I dream of strange thought-powered bikes and fixing engine troubles with just a stick, and strapping essential things to the outside of the car I have now because not everything I want to carry fits in the sedan-sized trunk.  I don’t know if his translation of my vehicle dreams is true.  He could be shoving me along a good path, out of kindness.

I already own that luggage pod, but I don’t have a roof rack upon which to bolt it.  It’s battered from disuse, and I think it’ll be happy with a new paint job.

rainbow_flames_by_mariusic

SIMPLE, LIFE.

My student status may change, as of Wednesday.  I may not be one at all.  The God of Financial Aid has laid his eyes upon me, weighed me, measured me, and found me wanting.

Taking an Incomplete last semester dropped my completion percentage too low.  Boom.  No more money for me, says the federal government. Good thing I paid attention to a creeping feeling of paranoia which turned out to be not-paranoia, and checked my online records.

So, I wrote the God of Financial Aid to explain why I took that Incomplete, complete with a carefully edited-by-the-detectives police report.  No photos, which I didn’t want to see anyway, and no names, which I very much wanted to see: a real name to attach to the face I last saw on the other end of a fist. My excuse for the Incomplete seems valid, and I have data to back it up.  However, writing another description of why I wouldn’t let my small person go back to her babysitter in our old neighborhood was a trial.  The beater-upper still lives there, within blocks of The Yellow Cottage.  Loss of childcare is a valid excuse, as is a medical emergency.  We had both.  Making both and all easily digestible and not pitiful for the ears of the financial aid committee wasn’t easy, but I think I managed.

Tomorrow, the decision will be made.  If my university wants me back, I’ll keep on this track of working a bit and studying a lot and plugging away in the same fashion next fall.  If my university deems me too much a pain in the ass, I’ll adopt a different life and make the most of it.

Working more comes high on the list, and without too much effort.  I already work at a place that will be happy to have more of me around, especially if they can afford to pay me to be around more.

With more work comes more money, and a healthier savings account.  The cushion I usually maintain has gone flat, and I like things puffier, for softer landings.

If I am not a legitimate student, I still have classwork to complete from last spring, when I fell off the face of the earth post-break-in at The Cottage.  That constitutes only two hefty essays, but I’ll enjoy writing them.  Writing keeps the gears greased…and I have plenty to say, even on the stressful eve of my academic future’s fate-naming.  Imagine what my poor professors endure from me on a good day with a good topic to focus my rambling!

Speaking of rambling, a non-college life will free up time for my mind to dally around within itself more deeply.  Why do I compulsively journal?  What standards do I enact regarding what  may be public and what I hold private, bookbound, longhand?  Am I a narcissist?  If I am, how can I undo THAT mess?  Note to self: look up standards for NPD.

Symptoms of Narcissistic Personality Disorder

In order for a person to be diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) they must meet five or more of the following  symptoms:

  • Has a grandiose sense of self-importance (e.g., exaggerates achievements and talents, expects to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements)
  • Is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love
  • Believes that he or she is “special” and unique and can only be understood by, or should associate with, other special or high-status people (or institutions)
  • Requires excessive admiration
  • Has a very strong sense of entitlement, e.g., unreasonable expectations of especially favorable treatment or automatic compliance with his or her expectations
  • Is exploitative of others, e.g., takes advantage of others to achieve his or her own ends
  • Lacks empathy, e.g., is unwilling to recognize or identify with the feelings and needs of others
  • Is often envious of others or believes that others are envious of him or her
  • Regularly shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes

No, no worries there.  I do believe that I’m unique and special, but I think everyone else is, too.  That belief system sort of negates the status of unique and special, so never mind.

I’ll certainly read less if my university doesn’t want me back, but what I do read will be more entertaining.  Not that Sociology books aren’t absolutely the most entertaining academic material I’ve ever read–seriously, I usually buy them when they’re assigned–but I’ve read enough journals and textbooks to fill my brain twice.  I miss my evenings with cookbooks, and planning themed meals, and shopping for the weird ingredients for those themed meals on my days off.

Another change will be what I cook and when I cook.  My food prep skills suffered during my alone time.  We ate when we were hungry, whatever sounded good enough.  Once, supper was ice cream with a fruit salad chaser.  Other times, we snacked on nibbly things all day and went to bed full.  My small person knew where to find all of “her” kinds of foods, and sometimes went days in summer without asking for help with something to eat.  The bowl of her foods lay within her reach–protein bars that I called chewy bars which made them palatable–and the fruit dish stayed stocked, and the fridge’s middle shelf kept her juice and yogurt and port wine cheese spread cool.  She learned to spread peanut butter on bread by herself without tearing up the bread too badly.  Summer was easy.  Winters, I kept a crock pot of something noodly on hand, or we dug into bowls of mashed potatoes.  With raw carrots and ranch dip, we faked our way through meals, and other veggies slipped in, incognito.

Now, I want to make entrees and side dishes that feed our souls as well as our bodies.  My go-to shelves of vegetarian cookbooks are boxed up somewhere, for now.  I don’t need a recipe for a few things, but the joy of cooking lies in the details.  MFK Fisher didn’t title her book The Art of Eating for nothing.  A trip to the library  to pick up some fresh inspiration is in order.

When I work more than I study, little projects happen more easily.  Being a student and a mommy means that time off should be spent studying or playing or cleaning.  Remove the load of studying, and hobbies pop back into focus.  A crocheted blanket in the making waits for me in a basket under my desk as I write, just in case my fingers run out of words.  Maybe I’ll finish it by summer.  Big blanket this time, a real bedspread, even though it’s just a giant granny square destined to wear fringe.

In my future without an education, maybe I’ll really sell my detested, reliable two-door coupe and buy a four-door anything but sedan.  I never did get around to painting the Accord.  I fixed up her insides, instead, and she’s running as smoothly as ever.  My small person dreams of not having to crawl through a slit to reach the back seat.  I dream of cargo space for necessary things, like a tool box and a tent.  This is one of my dream cars:

dream car

I have simple taste.

 

NOW I KNOW

I learned last fall that I am of a type, and that type has a name.  I am a Damned German.

Six of eight great-grandparents came here directly from Germany.  Some of the Germans were Catholics, maybe a reason why they left home.  Those named Hartlieb filtered through New York along with neighbors from Germany who remained more-distant neighbors in Illinois, on land grants.  The ones named Goss and Prott, Protestants,  came up the Mississippi River on a steamer from New Orleans.  The ship’s logs lists familiar names, families whose great-grandchildren attended school with me.  Maybe they met on those ships and made decisions about the new lives ahead, and chose their farms according to shared temperaments. Where they settled, we all stayed, and most of us still stay.  Good soil acts like a magnet.  Local histories share that truth: Missouri’s alkaline limestone lay too close to the surface for anything but grapevines, past the river valley.  Deep black soil waited under lightly wooded plains here on the east side.  Not a stone in sight, and enough trees to make planks for the small frame houses with steeply pitched roofs that shed snow as well as their southern German counterparts.  New country, same culture.

I can recall from memory nearly every small town in a thirty or so mile easterly-facing semicircle from St. Jacob, and the names of the families who came and stayed.   My move to Edwardsville at twenty added a few known-places, and delivering flowers in St. Louis rounded my knowledge to a full circle, with St. Jacob smack in the center, still.  This is where my ancestral We, with waves of other German immigrants, settled.

I only know how to be German-American.  Until this summer, I did not know that I was anything but American.  A friend who grew up in Kentucky told stories about the unpleasantries of having a Damned German neighbor when he moved north, and he unknowingly described my entire hometown and quite a lot of me.  If he had landed where I was born, instead of where he lived among Italians and Mexicans and other Kentuckians, he may have fled back south.  Just mowing the grass was a trial for him.

My German-American grandfather taught me that property lines must be precisely known and respected.  Trees should not reach over, lest something fall onto another lawn and cause trouble.  Once, a pear tree dropped fruit and attracted bees which stung a Swiss neighbor’s son.  He was allergic, and nearly died.  His poor mother forced whiskey down his swelling throat and my grandfather took an axe to the tree, cursing the pears for falling and the possums for not eating them up and the tree for growing there in the first place.

Lawns mattered. Mowing required great care.  No clippings could fly across the lines.  Any carried by the wind must be raked back across, quickly.  To stray with the mower onto the neighbor’s lawn was seen as a sloppy insult, a sort of claim to space, even if that neighbor was eighty and fragile and mowed her own lawn every Wednesday without asking for help.  No one ever asked for help, and everyone mowed their lawns on Wednesday.  A fence and a shed that crossed my grandpa’s property line had to be moved, unquestionably, eighteen inches to the north.  If that newcomer neighbor hadn’t called the police to complain about his barking dogs the summer before, maybe the fence could have stayed, or maybe Papa wouldn’t have shown the neighbor an imaginary line a touch too far to the south in the first place when the fence and shed were in the planning stage.  The neighbor sheared two feet off the back of his new little barn rather than start from scratch, and the two men never spoke again.  I think it was all about the dogs and the police.

Home repairs happened in stages and with as many salvaged materials as possible, as the money came in to fix this or that.  My Papa’s father built a house from the ruins of a tornado-smashed Baptist church.  The Baptists must have taken the weather as a sign from God, because they did not rebuild.  Leftover broken brick became a lighthouse-topped goldfish pond that filtered cold water into the basement dairy at the big house.  The goldfish kept the algae down, and the fishy waste from the pond fed heavy-bloomed red roses in brick planters on either side.  Useful things could and should be made beautiful, but things made just for their beauty were rare.

Flowers were an exception.  Flowers must grow around the house and in the lawn, like row crops never harvested.   Tulips and irises and daffodils and sweet peas took no effort at all, and marigolds were absolutely necessary for the tomatoes to survive.

Help came from within the family if at all, or subtly from outside.  A few good bricks from that church ended up in the chimney of the house where I lived when I was small, and a few uneven boards became a bedroom wall.  My grandpa remembered building the wall with his father.  Papa was big enough to hand over this tool or that, but not big enough to swing a hammer with his brothers.  Luckily, family included children and clusters of cousins and marry-ins with skills.  No one paid to have a lawnmower fixed, or a blade sharpened.  If you couldn’t do it, you called your grandpa’s brother’s son-in-law who did it for nothing but supper.  Germans spend as little as possible on labor, which means we try to spend nothing.  A pie may arrive on a helpful person’s doorstep, but never cash.  Money could be lent, but just giving without expecting to be repaid happened more often, and without being asked.  To need was a shame, is a shame. To help is an honor, given freely when a glimpse of need slipped into view.  When repayment of money happened, the return of the cash usually became the source of an uncomfortable conflict, an envelope stuffed into a mail box or an open truck window after many refusals to accept it back.  

The tiny kitchen in the tiny house where I grew up was the center of our universe.  My Papa did not trust food from restaurants, unless he knew who made the food.  I know that at some point, he knew the people running the two diners in town, because I have seen pictures of a teenaged Oats, my grandpa, my Papa,  eating at the counters with his friends.  He showed up in our local history book, proof that  someone other than his mother or my grandmother had prepared food and he hadn’t died from eating it.  My grandma prepared ten different meals, maybe twelve, and that is what we ate.  Meat, potatoes, gravy, pickled things, and whatever grew that week.  Vegetables did not come out of cans unless she canned them from the garden.  Wintertime meals were boring, but corn on the cob in July doesn’t taste anything like corn on the cob in November.  Kohlrabi kept, turnips kept, cabbage kept, and so that is what we ate until radishes sprouted in the back yard again.  Pickled things, sweet and sour, and jams were part of most meals.  Beets are still my favorite, and sauerkraut is still a side dish to me.  Barbecue didn’t exist, and ribs were roasted like any other cut of pork and served with mashed potatoes and warmed sauerkraut.  Cold sauerkraut gives me the creeps, but mix it with buttered potatoes, and that’s good food. 

Molasses, Gram’s favorite, was not on the table.  She brought a little Kentucky with her, but none of it landed on our plates.  Cornbread was highly suspect and required slabs of butter to be edible, and only with ham and beans and fried potatoes, but not greens.  God, I loved greens, with that thin, salty, smoky pot likker…but those were food for Gram and me, once I learned that she wasn’t from St. Jacob but from places I wouldn’t see until I was an adult.  She remembered rolling hills and half the corn going to the hogs and half to the still.  I only knew Stag with salt until I begged for her growing-up stories to supplement my own mental palate.  Germans made beer in big brick breweries, drank whatever beer came from the nearest town because fresh beer tastes better, trusted the tavern to always have Bock in spring to go with the wurst.  No need to run a still, and run afoul of the law.  See barking dog reference above.

Reputations could be ruined by a police car parked in front of the house, or grass too tall, or torn-up trousers for anything but field work.  Things could be shabby, but must be clean.  My meticulous teenaged Papa once threw a pair of slacks in the oven after he noticed that his mother had patched a hole in the pocket.  He was vain before I knew him, and he sent away for a proper suit for his own funeral years before he died.  An older ancestor on my other side shows as much or more care with his dress in a photograph in that same history book where I found evidence that my Papa ate a diner hamburger.  “P.J. Hartlieb, telegraph operator,” in a wide fedora, and a wider Hartlieb grin, as he stood next to the railroad office.  He didn’t need that fedora to take messages, but my grandpa didn’t need to throw those patched trousers in the fire, either.  That telegraph operator was my paternal great grandpa whose father had settled on a farm the next town over before the towns were towns.  In a generation or two at most, those refugees had snappy-dressed American dandies for grandsons, products of free land and good, black soil that gave them more than enough to feed all the children and dress them well and keep them busy and fit with the work of farming and the play of surplus income.  A short train ride to St. Louis gave a ready market for crops, but left the Germans free to avoid the cities altogether if they so desired.  Most of my ancestors did.

My Papa went to the city once when he was a teenager, and that was enough.  He saw it, and liked St. Jacob better.

Later, he saw France and England and Germany through the eyes of an unwilling American soldier who wrote his mother letters begging to pull whatever strings she could to bring him home.  He had killed five Germans, and his fate was sealed.  Hell waited for him, he was sure.  He survived the Battle of the Bulge, but one winter in France froze his feet and maybe saved his life because he had decided to stop shooting back.  He was a murderer, damned anyway, and waited for death like some of us wait for an expected rejection letter.  His brothers fought longer, four boys all gone to war from the same family, and all of them came home, too.

Stubbornness runs through our veins, and his decision to put away his firearms stuck.  He shot rabbits so the family could have meat, but only once.  They ate pancakes in lean times after that.  Killing a chicken broke his heart, so much so that he mourned and lost his appetite.  My stubborn grandfather brought home cats and dogs that no one else would feed, much to my grandma’s dismay, usually when she was off having surgery or on vacation.  He wouldn’t let them die when he had scraps left on the table to keep them alive, the ugly and unwanted.

My Germanness was pointed out to me by a southerner.  Now that I know, I wonder how my city-born Southern-bred grandma endured the closed, tight life of a very small town where everyone knew everything but said nothing.  She relied on us, daughters and granddaughters, to be her closest friends.  My mother and my daughters are my own closest friends now, but my partner isn’t my adversary like hers was.  Her free nature must have been something fascinating and interesting to him in her youth, but later, something to  be managed into submission.  Because of my non-native, non-German grandma, we were different in a town of Same.  Because of my own mother’s choice of husband, I was very different in that same town, but that is another story, unrelated to cultural ancestry.

To understand and be willing to follow convention without question, when the matter is something as simple as when to mow and where the clippings should go, makes life easier.  To pick up a ratchet set with the intention of fixing something without calling a trained professional makes me feel good, because the thing does get fixed by me or by one relative or another.  Paying someone to change my oil still rankles that sensibility, but cars are different now, and too low to the ground, and too full of computerish bits…but the oil gets changed on schedule, because that is how one keeps a car running.  I am grateful to my rigid German DNA for those sensibilities.  The toilet has been running since I moved to this current house, and I’ve reached my limit of patience, but the thought of fixing it makes me happy.  The part only cost six dollars and change. A plumber would charge seventy bucks just to drive over and tell me to replace the thing that isn’t working, for which I don’t know the name, but that doesn’t matter as long as I know that it’s the part that doesn’t work.

Holidays came with certain traditions, none of them explainable to non-Germans, maybe.  We opened our gifts, every one, on Christmas eve, after an early supper.  I don’t even know why.  I do know that Papa started shopping from catalogs in October, because he wanted the kids to have Christmas even if he was dead by December.  Everyone had an early dinner on Christmas eve, then opened gifts.  Santa and his minions played a role, with jingling bells outside the window in the dark, sometimes leaving footprints on the roof if there had been snow.  We got our presents earlier than everyone else in the world because of a letter sent every year, explaining to Santa that we would expect delivery on the 24th.     No postage necessary, as the letter could be left near a window to be picked up. The letter was only a reassurance to me, worried by all of that Christmas Morning talk at school.  The idea of waking up to gifts left by an intruder in the night made me uncomfortable, even though we only had one door that locked and one that had a wooden hatch.  Santa slipped in while we were in the back yard before dinner, or at a Christmas program, or just in the kitchen.  And Christmas day was for sleeping in and playing and eating leftovers, anyway.  Explaining this tradition, trying to entice partners in my adult life to embrace Christmas morning as a time to relax and cook a serious breakfast while the kids play, has been a flop.  Maybe next year, I think every year.

And for the parts of me that made me very much Other in the town of Same, I am also grateful.  I now live in a town made entirely of Other, and I  have made it my home and my daughter’s.  She is Of Here, this smallish university town, where academic immigrants outnumber agricultural immigrants now.  She fits in perfectly.  I see my stoicism in her unwillingness to cry.  I see her inner-city Detroit-bred father’s ease with change.  I see her great-grandpa’s tenderheartedness and her other great-grandpa’s pragmatism.  Save the mouse from the cat, unless the situation is hopeless, then just grab something heavy and get it over with for the mouse.  I see my father’s bravery and sharp wit and freedom of expression, but thankfully, less of his immortal and immoral recklessness.  My small person thinks things through.

She’s a little blonde German-American girl like I was, quiet when nothing good comes from speaking up, but sure enough of herself to say her piece when something must be said.  In that way, we are different.  I just thought and thought, and never said a word.

She knows where the hammer lives and does not need anyone’s permission to put a nail back in place as long as the hammer goes back in place afterward.  And she gets presents on December 24th, dammit.  Nobody, not even Santa, is welcome at OUR house while we are sleeping.

That nonsense can happen at Daddy’s.

PEAS HAVE OPINIONS

In our garden, the peas will grow from St. Patrick’s Day onward, quick up sticks and strings for the little pea-fingers to grasp.  Peas are a rare treat; I eat them raw, sweet, sad to have so few after I shell them if no one tells me no. Papa used to blame blackbirds for his scanty empty pods still on peavines, but looked at me while he told Gram that story.  He showed me how to unzip carefully to not lose a pea from the pod.  I’d helped to plant them, I mourned when we thinned them, and my share never reached the kitchen.  In our garden, we shall have peas and I will not eat them all up unless no one bothers to stop me.  

In our garden, herbs for cooking and herbs for making us healthy and happy will share space with the peas, then smother the empty vines.  Basil and parsley and garlic chives and thyme ring in my ears like music.  Things for tea will mingle together, so that anyone can rip a handful of green from the tops and have something to drink with a little honey.  The rosemary wants to stay in her pot, after all she’s been through, and be bolder yet again at the end of another summer.  Rue just for the carpets, lavender for everything,  catnip and chamomile for sleep, lemon balm for our throats, and bee balm for the bees.  In our garden, bees will be happy.  We need them to be happy.

Flowers shall fill every space between the herbs.  Beautiful things feed us and soothe us as well as beets.  In our garden, zinnias and cosmos and coneflowers and other thready-rooted things belong among the onions.  Lilies deserve top billing, a favorite, worthy of the sacrifice of a little root vegetable space in the soil.  One thing up, one thing down, one after the other after the other.  Green beans chase up the same strings as the now-dry peas, but taller.  Sunflowers and beans get along so nicely, like tomatoes love basil for the up and carrots for the down.  I used to know the rapid-fire patternings of successive planting by heart, and crop rotation and tilling schedules…

In our garden, there will be no tomatoes.

Maybe one.  I like the way the fuzzy-hairy vines feel, and the way the sun-warm fruit falls off into my hand.  The job of going to the garden for The Tomato for Supper was mine once I was old enough to make a good decision about which one would be perfect today but mush tomorrow.  I do wish that I liked the taste of a tomato, but I’ve given up on that.

This spring, I shall plant a garden anywhere I can find enough sunlight.  Can I put green beans in the front yard?  What about basil and thyme and zinnias and carrots and beets and onions?  Can I till the lawn into luscious black soil, or do I still live in a series of planters?

The rocks came along.  They don’t care where they live, but peas do not grow well in pots.  Peas have opinions.

In our garden, I will forget to remember why no garden but the one I planted as a refuge ever flourished. The soil I stood upon then was made of different stuff, so many generations of the same tomato that no tomato would grow there for seven years.  I will forget that the garden that exploded into life and made cabbages as big as basketballs was put in place only to feed my then-empty heart.  It did.  Everything in that garden at the house that isn’t there bloomed radically and shockingly, forty sunflowers to a stem when there should have been one, with neighbors stealing the seeds in the hope of the same thing happening for them next summer, and so many tomatoes that the man who stole three a day on his walk through the alley was a relief.

Always too many tomatoes, but my stem-crushing masses of  sunflowers were just plain sunflowers down the street the next summer.  In the garden where I slept and prayed and grieved and celebrated, the sunflowers kept me alive with their inspiring aggression and the spearmint erased any stink that clung to my dresses when I walked away from the real world where only one sunflower per stem grew in smaller yards of prettier houses.

The catnip was just a lure, always flattened, like I flattened the ever-widening swath of spearmint.  Less lawn, more good things to eat and drink and smell.

In our garden, Papa’s irises will finally bloom again.  I came back to them in October, and they’ve asked for more sun.  The daffodils seem happy, dutifully giving yellow to the gray-green world when yellow is the only new color available.  There’s enough spearmint to sleep in again, after my long absence.  Nowhere but here has it survived, and I am grateful that it waited for me and pushed out whatever evil anti-spearmint agent hides in the soil of this other, better town.

This spring, I may not get those peas.  This summer, I may not get a single leaf of basil, but we shall surely have the best, sweetest spearmint, enough to keep us in tea and mojitos and spring rolls and great vases of it brought into the house for flowers if flowers do not grow.

I can make do with those pots in case our garden doesn’t happen, but when I leave again, the spearmint’s coming along in a pot whether it likes it or not.

 

 

 

I’M NOT SCARED.

Once upon a time, not that long ago, getting a knock-down-drag-out virus was scary.  Living alone with a small person means that one person is available to be the grown-up, and that person was me.  I had very good neighbors and an even better boyfriend to lend a hand or deliver soup, but being alone and too sick to go out made me feel a bad kind of vulnerable.  What if I slipped in the bathroom in my rush and hit my head?  What if my fever, the one that comes with hideous-real nightmares that send me screaming from the room, shows up and I scared my little girl? What if I just couldn’t drink enough and fried my electrolytes and didn’t wake up at all? The what-ifs fueled the adrenaline that kept me on my feet when I should have been under a blanket.

Now, we live here.  I got sick, and I did the usual “leave me be, I don’t want to infect anyone” behavior.  Being sick is bad, but being the introducer of some viral nastiness to someone I love is so much worse.

Here’s the amazing thing about this round of flu: no one got angry at me for being sick and I didn’t worry about making my little girl sick, either.  I was fed and checked on, up here in the empty top half of the house, and my grossness was not acknowledged.  I’m gross, to be sure.

The small person had no reason to need me to touch her food or drinks or silverware, thus risking infection and continuation of the grossness.  Oh, she hates to throw up.  Only once since age two and mobility arrived has she ever missed the bowl or the bucket.  She simply can’t abide vomit anywhere but AWAY, and the only time she missed was outdoors.  She was outside the hospital after a concussion, on our way to the ER, and convincing her that the inevitable throwing up could happen on the ground took some work.  I had to promise not to make her walk past it on the way back to the car.

This time, I didn’t worry about my fever spiking when I fell asleep, because help was steps away and I know he crept upstairs to peek now and then.   I didn’t worry about falling down when my legs wobbled, because he would have heard the thunk. He helped, and kept me at a distance so lovingly that I forgot I hadn’t been hugged in twenty-four hours until he did finally hug me, unexpectedly…and delicately removed that shirt to put it directly into the wash.

I’m not alone any more, and I wasn’t worried about a thing besides missing work.  I do miss my small person, but she is supposed to be with her daddy right now, anyway.  I’m sort of used to that part.

I was never afraid to live alone, at least, not until the last moment I lived alone, but being a sweaty, dizzy, feverish mess always sent me to a bad what-if place in my head.

The small person makes a joke of her fears, with a funny face and a “Mama, aaahm skerrrd!”  Then mama stands nearby and makes her scary what-ifs go away, but I can’t be my own mama all of the time.

When I might have felt skerrd in the other versions of my life, those bad what-ifs never showed their ugly faces.

The bad what-ifs haven’t made much of an appearance lately at all.  Some of them actually happened in a big way, not too many months ago, but now we are here.  Other what-ifs could have slipped in to take their places, but I’ve decided that I’m not going to let them hang out with us any more.

The cat stayed in bed with me.  The ginger ale flowed like wine.  The eggs, always my first test of food tolerance, arrived perfectly boiled with toast.

Now, I can take another try at sleeping.  I didn’t get much of it done last night, so I think I’m due for a few uninterrupted hours.

Let the nightmares come.  I’ll wake up to the sweetest dream of a life.

JUST FRUITCAKE, REALLY.

I really want to make this, minus the candied mixed fruit. More dates, more cranberries, but I’m so sickly fascinated by the rainbow of former “fruit” that I can never seem to put it into the bread. I just put the jar back on the shelf. Once, an expensive jar was passed to me from my grandma, a relic, too expensive for her to want to use but too pretty in the bottle to throw out, the label too nicely decorated…but I finally had to throw it out, in case my curious, maraschino-cherry-loving Thundergirl might eat it and die of ptomaine poisoning.  That’s what Gram said would kill you if you at bad food, but I don’t know if it’s still called that.

Amaretto might be even better than red wine, too, especially for basting. We had a “family” bottle of that, too, but I went and drank it all, all three tablespoons left in the bottle, after Gram died.  My dad had given her the bottle, swiped no doubt from the bowling alley, and that one big swig proved that booze doesn’t go bad.

YULE! An excuse!

“Fruitcake of Erebor”

8 oz golden raisins
8 oz candied pineapple
1 lb candied mixed fruit — NO. Well, maybe. It’s so pretty. Is it food?
8 oz dried figs, quartered
8 oz dates, quartered
6 oz dried cranberries
½ – 1 cup red wine

Combine fruits and wine and soak overnight.

8 oz butter
8 oz brown sugar
½ cup molasses
4 – 5 large eggs
1½ + ⅓ cups all-purpose flour
¼ + ⅛ tsp baking soda
¾ tsp cinnamon — I would add more
1⅛ tsp nutmeg — more
¾ tsp ground cloves — a little more. Don’t want to numb our tongues
4 oz blanched almonds
8 oz lb pecans
4 oz walnuts

1 cup red wine (optional)

Preheat oven to 300.
Cream butter, sugar and molasses. Beat in eggs. Gradually add flour, soda and spices.
Add the batter and nuts to fruit mixture and stir well.
Grease 8” foil loaf pans (4 – 6) with vegetable shortening. Fill each pan @ 2/3 full. Bake for 1¾ – 2¼ hours until done.

Pour about 1/4 cup of wine over each loaf when taken out of the oven. Remove cakes from pan immediately and set on wire rack to cool.

Wrap each loaf in plastic wrap (or cheesecloth), then with aluminum foil and store in refrigerator. May be basted with additional wine weekly, if desired.

 

 

Now, back to sleeping off a bug, definitely not ptomaine poisoning.  I blame finals stress for letting a chink form in my immunity armor, and that crack let in something that was very happy to take over my digestive system for the last 24 hours.  I’ve had tea and toast and two boiled eggs and a little more ice cream than might have been good for me, just now, because things seem to be cranking into reverse again. Maybe if I hold very, very still, it’ll be okay.

I’m over being dismayed by being robbed of a day and a night.  It won, the bug.  I got sick.  But now, I’ve had an hour of daydreams about fruitcake and I can hear a guitar being played downstairs.  Earlier, I heard real singing, the way we sing when we think no one can hear or we know we sound good.

He sounded very good and happy, and I’m happy for that.

When I feel better, I’ll tell you about an alternate universe I visited while I slept.  The daughter was a champion moped racer in a culture that valued mopeds and bigotry, but we took care of the bigotry part, so all that was left was fertile farmland and love and a really confusing kind of ice cream.  My life work was to train moped racers how to disassemble and reassemble their bikes like rifles are handled in the military.  That was part of racing, breaking down your bike and putting it back together in the middle of nowhere.

High fever, anyone?

DECEMBER FIFTH, I THOUGHT THIS.

I wished for just a moment today, a guilty speck of a second, that the bruises would come back.

A person with two black eyes can rest, and not wonder so urgently when the hurting will stop.  I am impatient with my face now.  When I wake up, my sleep-smooshed nose dances dangerously close to a throb and my patchwork forehead feels the poke of an invisible fork, rhythmless and teasing.  There, then gone, maybe for the day, maybe just until I open my mouth to say good morning to my beloved people.

I don’t want to look the way I feel when I wake up, but I know that some mornings, I do.

When the bruises showed, every morning also showed a new and slightly improved version of my face when I risked a look in the mirror.  My reflection never horrified me, but I may have become stuck staring, or more likely, caught staring.  The patterns and their associated sensations were something that I would have documented, had I been able.  I wasn’t, so I rested and waited patiently to be all better.  I wish I could have put together a plot of those face-patterns with a word-map of how each had arrived and how a finger pressed here or there changed the colors under my skin.  The pairing would have made a fine thing to read and see, now.  The terror thus removed, my face would have been a project.  A dynamic work of art.  Living evidence of evolution and healing.

Now, I see just same-colored skin with two thin lines where the outer stitches used to be, and I feel hard knots under my forehead and eyebrow where inner stitches used to be.  My nose looks like my nose.  Nothing shows, and I move through the world at almost the same pace as the people around me, and those people don’t look at me with disguised double-takes. Acquaintances who know still linger when they look, well-meaning but curious.  I tell them I am fine, just learning to maybe be happy with Bs this semester, easing the discomfort with a smile and a joke about school and nothing more personal.

Still, sometimes I desperately want to lay still after the walk from the car to the building on campus where I must read small print and hear loud voices saying important things very close to my head.  The way I walk, sometimes a little carefully or a little hurriedly to get where I need to go to find a quieter place, is the only thing that shows. now.  The reading hurts, the loudness hurts, and the long walk is too long.  I have laid aside the fear, chosen to forget the human who caused this and give my whole self to human forgiveness and health, but I get angry at the physical pain.

My body betrays me when I count on it to move when I say go and understand when I say think.

Complaining also hurts, so I don’t do it.  Much.

Gaining those bruises and living to see them fade has made every day a gift.  When my small person is bouncy and I am exhausted, gratitude for her good health outweighs my urge to dial her spirit down to a more manageable level.  She has her own invisible bruises, and she sings them away, sometimes for both of us.  She can’t possibly know that and does not need to know.  She never complains, but she marks that painful night as a reference point for the beginning of this new life.

In this new life, her mommy takes extra naps and does not jump on the trampoline yet.  We live in a new house with new people who fascinate her.  She would follow them all around, watching and talking and inviting them to do this or that all day long if I didn’t see that they are too kind to tell her to let them finish homework or the latest episode of a favorite show in peace.I actively suppress worry that her joy at being here might wear on the quiet inhabitants of our new house, but so far, no one has complained about us, and I let her bounce to some degree until it’s bedtime or my face hurts from shared laughter or quiet solitary concern for our place in the peaceful mesh of the established routines here.

She is of great concern to the dog, but he is not the boss of things.  So is the cat, but I have no idea how to make a Squirrel not be a Squirrel.  Squirrel has at least learned that my no means no concerning the Christmas tree and the kitchen counters and how to come when I call her out of the attic.  That’s progress.

We progress.  Every day, I learn something about my physical body.  I am not as delicate as Gram believed me to be, after all.

I accept the frustration and anger at my body for its small betrayals.  The morning fork that pokes my forehead can be quieted with meditation, and the nose throb only happens when I forget that  I have a nose that would benefit from a force field that spans from chin to cheekbones.

 

 

 

I wrote this last week, to try to make peace with my face.  Everything that has anything to do with pain centers on the middle of my face.  Today, not the fifth of December, I had an unfortunate run-in with a blood-spattered bottle of body wash, and my day went to pieces along with my heart.  Fortunately, I had help in putting the shards into order well enough to see today as another gift, and I can sleep knowing that sometimes, nightmares end with a better kind of reality than the sweetest dreams ever dared allow.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM THE WITCHES FORMERLY OF THE YELLOW COTTAGE AND NOW OF THE CHARMING WRECK

Hello, Friends and Family!  Thundergirl and I want to wish you a happy and healthy holiday season, and also to tell you a little about our 2013.

We started the year, as usual, with the rainbow Christmas tree still aglow from ’12.  It’s so hard to say goodbye, and with an artificial tree, there’s no expiration date!  So, we kept it up until Valentine’s Day.  We did consider hanging hearts over the snowmen, but changed our minds when we realized that the “adding” could go on forever, with shamrocks for St. Patrick’s Day, eggs and bunnies for Easter…

In March, I began a new job working out of state.  My dear friend Kelly’s family started a new jewelry store in eastern Kentucky, and he asked me to travel there on days when Thundergirl stayed with her father.  What an adventure!  Traveling to a new part of the country really felt like traveling to a new country.  Sometimes, the town of Hickman literally became an island.  Being right there on the Mississippi during spring rains can get pretty soggy!  And I never really did cross the language barrier, but I learned enough to get by.  Before I left for good, I was lucky enough to get to know Squirrel the Cat.  She has been part of the family since May, as an early birthday gift for Thunder.  She earned her name with her lovely half-Tabby-half-Abbysinnian coat and her amazing climbing skills!  We almost lost her to a lung infection after a surgery, but we learned that the stress of separation is too much for her to bear and her immune system becomes compromised when she is alone in strange places.  Lots of TLC and tuna worked magic, and she has been one of the best things to come out of my temporary life as a gold dealer in Kentucky!

I stayed in that position with the company for three or four months, and now I work locally for Kelly’s other business that he co-owns with my cousin Bill.  I am a salesperson-slash-researcher-slash-token “girl” at Marine Coin Company in Marine, IL.  Our customers range from little old ladies getting rid of broken jewelry to young numismatists searching for that exact date of that exact penny to finish off their coin collections!  We also do a brisk business in gold and silver bullion sales, which our customers see as a smart investment for the future.  Speaking of the future, we also offer dehydrated and freeze-dried meals for your long-term food needs.  If you get snacky in twenty-five years, you can pour some boiling water into a foil pack and have amazing pasta alfredo with chicken in under twenty minutes.  Our unofficial motto is, “It’s better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it!”

Thundergirl and I have experienced some big, big changes this fall, too.  After experiencing an assault (on the heels of a break-in earlier this year)  at the Yellow Cottage, Thunder and I have a new home.  We live in the house on Troy Road where I first lived in 2003, which by coincidence is now the home of my sweetheart, Geoff.  He christened it The Charming Wreck, and he sure got the “charming” part right! I can’t bring myself to call a home filled with so much joy a “wreck” of any kind. He and his amazing daughters have welcomed us–and Squirrel–into their lives, and we are blessed to be a part of such a wonderful family.  What could be seen as a tragedy, a shocking random attack in the night, has become a confirmation of the true meaning of love.  Many friends lent help with our move while we recovered, and we owe great thanks to the generous people who stood up for us when we could not do it for ourselves. We are very, very lucky to be safe and healthy.

Geoff is a joy to share a home with, and our natures seem to compliment one another well.  I love to cook and putter in the kitchen, and he claims to enjoy doing laundry!  I may never stop being amazed at my clothes appearing clean and folded with no effort from me!  I am re-learning the art of preparing meals for many tastes, but so far, I haven’t had too many serious “flops”.  We have three uniquely-opinioned palates to please: one committed vegetarian, one suspicious of anything not composed of peanut butter and jelly on white with no crust, and one who would maybe rather leave the veggies off the plate entirely!  Planning suppers keeps me creative in the kitchen, and I really enjoy the process. I hope my captive audience enjoys my results!

Squirrel the Cat has new playmates here, and they are learning one another’s habits bit by bit.  I am not sure if Squirrel had ever seen a dog in real life, but Jake the Dog has been patient and gentle with her.  We all hope that their galloping games of tag will someday evolve into naps together on Jake’s big couch, but for now, we are happy with the mutual playfulness.  Tommy the Cat isn’t so sure about her new “sister”, but she has learned to assert her power in the household pet dynamic: she is the boss, applesauce!

School goes on for me…and on…and on…but I’m taking a light class load and really enjoying every minute.  I’d expected to graduate in May, but that date has moved a little further into the future.  Missed classes have been a problem, with one doctor or another poking and prodding.  Maintaining my GPA has been challenging, but so far, so good.  Fortunately, my broken nose is almost healed for Christmas, and it seems to be in a nice symmetrical shape!  Graduation is still a light at the end of my tunnel, and I look forward to where my degree takes me, whether it be a new career or further education to get that now-less-elusive career.  My dream job is to work in family counseling, and I can see the steps along the way to that dream. I am blessed with so much support for my dreams!

Thundergirl’s third grade year has been a huge success for her, too.  Just last night, her teacher described her as “a friend to everyone” and “a joy to teach, a self-starting learner.”  Raising this small person to be kind and thoughtful is the greatest accomplishment I hope to achieve in life, and again, I can say, “So far, so good!”  She works so hard for her good grades and has just learned to truly love reading.  All it took was a move from Tinkerbell’s Fairly Adventures to the Guinness Book of World Records!  She left the book in her desk this week, Thanksgiving break, and her little heart is nearly broken over it.  She also recently made a big choice to let me trim her long, long hair into a chin-length bob, and she looks so adorable.  She is very happy with her decision and even happier to be able to brush her hair alone in the morning!  Seeing her personality evolve and grow fills me with so much joy.  She also loves to teach herself to play songs on the piano and recorder by ear and to take walks in the neighborhood with Geoff and Jake the Dog.  Her baton-twirling skills have also exploded since starting baton lessons in September, and anything and everything gets twirled, including her recorder!

As we settle into this new version of life, we feel so grateful to be happy and safe and warm here in our new home.  Sitting here on the couch, listening to many many renditions of Heart and Soul, finishing the last bit of our first Holiday Letter, with Geoff away at his daughters’ parent-teacher conferences and those daughters on a plane to Florida for Thanksgiving with grandparents–have fun at the beach, we miss you already!–I feel like life couldn’t get much better.

We wish you a healthy and happy Hanukkah, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Yule!

The Witches formerly of the Yellow Cottage and now of  The Charming Wreck

 

 

 

Okay, that wasn’t so bad.  I read a few online holiday letters to get a feel for formatting.  Exclamation points everywhere!  Everywhere!  And wow, we don’t hold back about medical conditions.

I found myself grasping for ways to explain some major life events without being morbid but without candy-coating, and I wish I felt entitled to brag about how well my step-daughter is doing, and what a wonderful person she is, and how happy I am so see her grow and evolve into herself.  I can’t take much credit for that, so I left it out.  She lives with her mother and her father now, and they must be doing things very right.

I also suppressed the urge to crow about Geoff’s girls, amazing as they are in their own ways.  Again, those sentences were edited out because I don’t feel like I have bragging rights just yet.

This time of transitions will come to an end.  Next year, I might send out a real holiday letter that includes absolutely everyone.  Until then, I’ll just watch them all bloom closeby, and continue to take partial credit for this one small person’s loveliness.  That’s the thing about transitional periods: they end, and evolve into other things.  Next year, I might believe every sparkly thing I might write, Christmas-candy-coated things to make people laugh and smile and feel happy for us all.  And maybe a little jealous because those awesome things aren’t candy fluff, but real as real can be.

Give me time.  We’re busy transitioning, joyfully and gratefully and in our own time.

BETTER NOW

Because of an ugly incident at the cottage, we have been swept into a new version of life that might look like an old version, if you didn’t know better.

The room that would have been Thundergirl’s, had we not moved in a rush after I got pregnant, is now her room.  The sink in it still works, which makes taking care of the aquarium a breeze.  The bathroom plumbing needs less attention to function, but no one likes to shower when such a lovely bath is just at the foot of the stairs.

Before this house was my home a decade ago, I chose it from among a handful of “nicer” rentals.  I didn’t plan to live here, but I was helping my new boyfriend find a place to bring his kids.  He wanted fireplaces and kitchens with breakfast bars and hardwood floors and open floor plans and landscaping.  Kids don’t care about landscaping unless they’ve done the planting.  He toured this patchwork house, its Korean landlady pointing out its many lovely features–built-in china cabinet! bay window in dining room! enormous master bedroom! sun porch!–and led us quickly past the cracked plaster and the most tilted parts of the probably-once-gleaming hardwood floors.  I saw a house that could handle two small people with grace and confidence.  One more chip in the paint wouldn’t lose any deposits.

I remember saying afterward, “I like this one the best.  It’s the cheapest and biggest, and closest to their new school. They could have a tire swing.”

I don’t know why he signed the lease, so deep was his dislike for this house, but he could afford the rent here and the two mortgage payments on his other houses.  His estranged wife lived in one in Texas.  The other held non-paying renters also in Texas.  A third that I didn’t know about went into foreclosure in Louisiana.  Back then, I did not ask questions.  Later, I figured things out on my own and still did not ask questions, but some questions never found answers anyway, like why he signed the lease here.  Or why I moved in.  He never asked me to stay, but as months passed and his babysitter became unreliable, I started to keep a toothbrush here.  One day, we brought my cats and my clothes and my chair.  That was all I owned then, and an easel, and my books and bears.

I had not wanted to move from this house a decade ago, but another lease was signed for a house that looked like the kind of house the father of my baby had wanted in the first place.  So, I packed, because what else was there to do?  The new rental was big and fancy, but as hard as I looked, I couldn’t find that house’s sense of place.  Living there gave me a real room to decorate as a nursery, which I’d never dreamed of doing.  When I wanted to feel at home in that house, I sat in the green velvet rocking chair from Goodwill and imagined rocking my Thundergirl-to-be, and felt satisfied with the paint job I’d done, and the crib I’d assembled, and the curtains I’d hung, and waited.

How I came back to this place after a baby, four moves, a marriage and a failure is not complicated.  I happened to fall in love with a man who liked this house well enough after his own divorce to sign the lease.  I don’t know why this was the house he chose, but I could ask.  If he remembers, he will tell me.  I know why we are here together now.  He loves us so very much.

That’s important.  He tells me.

 

 

Some places, some houses, have character enough to make cracked plaster charming.  That big house had no voice. This house, now home again, has begun to whisper its memories.

Who drew the cross on the basement wall?  Why does one room stay so warm and another so cool?  How has this lovely glass light fixture gone unbroken through so many college-town tenants?

The thing about this house that feels right and good isn’t just it’s lovely, odd bones and its comfortably creaky doors and stubborn windows.  It is a capable place, big enough for growing people and not so big that anyone can hide away.  This house wants to be a home, to throw its occupants together at regular intervals and still offer them little retreats with interesting views.

Here.  I am here now, one daughter’s whole lifetime in progress later.  This is still a fine house, two other renters and a few upgrades and a few new cracks and a new owner into the future.  The splintery floors are carpeted and the three different wallpapers in the kitchen got a coat of glossy paint.  No one has bothered to paint the cupboard that I didn’t get to before moving out, but I recommend Kilz gloss enamel with great confidence.  Not a chip since I painted it over the old brown mismatched cabinets.  Maybe that last one will finally get its turn at white matchiness.

The life I lived here before seems like it was lived in another place, but I must have been here.  Polishing the mantel–in the bedroom, not the living room–felt familiar last week.  Dusting under the tub, the big beautiful pond of a tub, certainly felt familiar.  The steep climb up the stairs, and the necessary genuine grip on the handrail, came back to me instantly: muscle memory, duck on that step.   Yes, I’ve been here.

I’d never expected to live here when I first saw it, and certainly never expected to live here again.  We may have been chased from our cottage, but we’ve found home where we began.  This place I’ve pointed out to my small person her entire life, the house with the ruby-diamond window.  She has always known it, always wanted to see inside, see her unseen past, her origin story.

Now I can explain that history does not exist, but memories are as real as today.  The past hugs us close and we are its caretakers. If we listen closely enough, even a house will whisper stories of what we were then.

We know without a doubt what we are now.  We are loved.

 

OUTSIDE, OVER THERE

God help us, we lost the cat for an hour and a half.

We didn’t know, for a while.  Then, the house felt strange.  Then, I remembered an open-screen-door conversation between daughter and her best friend.  Where daughter goes, cat goes.

Cat left when daughter left, and no one noticed.

Daughter and I looked for half an hour, then ran a necessary errand.  Car conversation, zero.  I asked if she was okay, and she said, “I will be,” and looked out the window. In her mind, the cat could be anywhere, even across town where we made our short trip.

One neighbor has a pack of Siberian Huskies with an established dislike of cats.  Two houses behind us, forest and fields begin, and we’re visited by every furry thing at night.  Daughter’s best friend has a Rottweiler, and across the street lives Lieutenant Dan, who barks at us through an attic window, from his favorite spot on his parent’s bed.

We are surrounded by cat-gobbling predators, and the cat is naive prey.

As I called and prayed to the things that keep pets safe, I heard Maurice Sendak in my memory, chiding:

“When Papa was away at sea,

and Mama in the Arbor,

Ida played her wonder horn to rock the baby still –

but never watched.”  

I had not watched. I was reading.  Daughter was playing.  We had let the cat loose, maybe to meet the goblins.

Words fail to express how much we love this cat.  This darling, spoiled, overprotected little beastie makes our tiny witches’ cottage feel just right.  We divide our time here into two unequal segments based on her arrival.  She belongs with us.  She is of us.

In the end, we found our beloved creature stalking things in a neighbor’s yard a block away.  She did not and does not come when called unless she feels like it, and fortunately, finally, she felt like it.  I called with the right tone of voice, and her tail stuck straight up, giving away her hiding spot for just a moment.

Now, the cat has much paw-tending to do.  She’s fully engrossed in cleaning her nails and her whiskers.  We had rain all morning, and she is muddy.

The silence of worry has broken.  Songs burble from the bathtub-splashing daughter like every other night, but more so.

We’re all home, and we’re all right again, and I didn’t even have to snatch my yellow rain cloak to climb backwards out my window.

 

 

 

ALL CAPS ARE ONE CLUE

Very few things make me angry.  In fact, I can’t remember the last time I was really steaming mad.  I say this to give a baseline for my temperament.    I’m pretty level, that is, until I have to put any medicine ending in “cillin”, or the like, into my system.

I become a bitch.

Every time, I expect my reaction to be different, neutral.  I’ve looked at lists of side effects of antibiotics on websites, talked to my doctor, asked friends and family how they fare.  No one claims “bitchface” as a side effect.

I had strep throat every six months as a kid, like clockwork.  Penicillin, Dimetapp, two shots in the butt on two consecutive days to really rev up the process.  I thought that the long, long wait at the doctor’s office and the knowledge that a nurse would inject my skinny butt with a thick needle of sludge was the cause of my terrible mood during recuperation.  My family certainly did what they could to make me comfortable, frail as I was.  I hated them all, quietly, as a child hates anyone upon whom she depends, until the bottle of pink stuff was finished.

When I was in high school, penicillin’s global effectiveness waned, and ampicillin came in pill form.  Oh, what a relief to just swallow and not taste!  What an injustice to have to crawl out of bed to go to school!  There, as a single feverish soul among the throngs, I found more people to despise.  The first day or two, my mood was overwhelmed by whatever affliction that created the need for medication.  Feeling better made me feel…better.  Then, the bottle must be emptied.  The whole bottle, because no one wants to feel like part of the reason for antibiotic-resistant bacteria that might eat off our faces some day.

As an adult, I’ve been prescribed every antibiotic out there.  It’s not just the cillin that’s evil.  Anything that forces my immune system into overdrive makes me think ugly, ugly things and feel even uglier things.  I become quick-tempered and easily confused, and those two make terrible bedfellows.

Last week, I had a kidney infection, but I didn’t know it.  Today, I have two different bottles of chemicals in pill form that are supposed to make my back stop hurting and my temperature stop going up.

I expect to have no reaction to these medications other than feeling less and less sickly, with a bit of nausea thrown in.  The doctor told me that nausea would definitely be a part of my life for the next two weeks.  No problem.

If I start to hate everyone’s nauseating guts, I won’t say a word.  I’ll just think nasty things, and write ranty facebook posts late at night, in capital letters, and delete them before anyone can see.

VERB

I will make time for you.

I will tell you how I feel, even if I don’t think you want to know.

I will listen.

I will imagine the world through your eyes and your experiences.

I will show care for what is important to you.

I will make love a verb.

I will believe your truths.

I will grow with you, even if our tendrils curl in different directions.

I will be kind to you.

I will remind you of what is wonderful about you when you have forgotten.

I will, always.

 

 

REPACKAGING

I may need to go clothes shopping this fall. For some women, seasonal shopping happens every year.  I shop every now and then, for fun.  The same clothes have fit for fifteen years or more.

This summer, I have worked hard at adding curves.  Miles on the bike rather than in the car, finishing the whole damned sandwich, and a beer now and then have added up to ten more pounds than I had this spring.

Blessed goddess, the girly pounds have landed right where I had hoped they would…but now, my pants pinch.  Sweaters are snug.  My favorite tank-tops are no longer appropriate outer-wear.

Now, I have to ask myself, what is my style at forty?  Given the loss of a handful of essentials that have lasted for so long, what will replace my perfect little black dress?  It came from an estate sale in 1998, with a tag from 1968.  Macy’s doesn’t carry that designer any more.

The mall, including but least of all Macy’s for some reason, scares me silly unless I’m there with a big budget and shoes on the brain, or Olga’s Kitchen as my only destination.  I’ll still cruise my beloved thrift shops, but I need to replace a few staples sooner than the usual cruising speed allows.

So, to the mall I must go before the weather turns colder.  My jeans aren’t comfy, and I seem to have worn holes in the elbows of most of those suddenly va-va-voom sweaters.  Somehow, my rounder frame also makes the sleeves of shirts too short, too.  Who knew?

To accept shopping, I must ALWAYS have an event in mind.  This fall, I will just pretend to shop for being a fabulously dressed grown-up.

That, joyfully, could mean anything.

 

 

BUT I HAVE LOVELY FEET

My hands have never been pretty.  My hands are useful, and capable, and nimble, and patient with tiny things and demanding with big things.

Since age five, I’ve lived with a thick callus on my right ring finger.  The callus comes from the way I hold a pencil, which is the wrong way.  I hold chopsticks wrong, too, but the food gets into my mouth and the words get onto the page, so wrong is the wrong thing to say about my way of holding.   Lately, the pen in my hand causes just a little pain.  The callus grew thinner with time and typing, and pressure from hours with a pen bruised my fingers in a strange way.  I expect this to be a temporary problem.  The callus will come back with time, and enduring a little pain to make it useful again is necessary for my grade point average.  In this way, my hands demand big things of me, or I of them.

One finger bears a scar from aflint-knapping attempt at age eight.  Another is numb along one side from a butter knife bagel accident.  The flint cut, I expected before I even began.  The butter knife?  Who knew? And I have burned my fingers into blisters so often that I wonder if my prints still make sense, consequences of baking and acetylene with just the right amount of oxygen mixed in.

For a few years, I wore a complicated ring on my left hand.  I wore it to make meatloaf.  I wore it to mow.  I wore it to garden.  I only took it off to bathe the baby, because I scratched her once with it.  Now, all of the rings stay to the right, and none of them need to sparkle.  One, my grandma found thrown into a box of curtain rings, discarded by its owner’s widow out of grief.  I have worn it since I was seventeen.  Others are discards, too, unwanted promises sold for a few dollars just to get them out of the house. I rescue the plainest from a refinery-bound bag and take them home as a small part of my paycheck. I make them round again and stack up on my fingers and the preciousness looks better for the scuffs, yellow gold with dents and cracks, always repairable.  I never worry about losing this part or that.  These rings fit, and if they don’t, I can bang these tiny metal things into shape with a demanding hand and a tiny hammer.

The black under my nails tonight comes from my baby’s bike.  We traded the slick black BMX wheels for lime-green girly-bike wheels, for the sake of a coaster brake.  Her little hands can’t squeeze the pulls quite hard enough to cause a full stop, so we swapped and made do, made a better fit.  She handed me my grandpa’s tools and gave advice, and in between her jobs, she built a house for a caterpillar.  Her nails are dirty tonight, too.

My small person’s  small hands look like doll’s hands, like mine never have.  Her knuckles exist as a part of a seamless taper from palm to end.  Rings slip off, her fingers are so smooth.  She proudly shows off signs of use, patches rough from monkey-bar swinging and baton twirling and falls from the bike.  Hopefully, she’ll have fewer falls, now that the bike stops before she has to run it up a grassy slope to slow down.

As my hands grow even less beautiful with time, I will count the calluses and scars as prizes.  The plain gold bands can stack into flexible armor for my fingers for defense against power tools and poverty.  When my hands no longer do my bidding, I will hold my fingers up to my eyes and remember being seventeen, when my grandma dropped the first plain ring into my open palm, with the words, “Don’t forget where this came from.”

FLOWERS ENOUGH

It’s nighttime.  A month ago, right now was evening.

My black kitchen window bothers me, even though I moved the trash cans from beneath it so that the raccoons can’t look in at us and freak out the cat in a big, big way.

Our weather has been downright heavenly, as though San Diego floated in on the wind and landed right on top of this town.  Last summer, we baked.  This summer, we basked and biked and played and left the windows wide open.  The flowers on the front porch did not die, even though I did not water and dared them to wither.  They rallied.  We still have flowers. So, it’s been a good summer.  Long, middling-hot days and nights cool enough to require real blankets on the beds.  Now, a little cooler, a little wetter, but still so nice.

What’s not nice is the dark.

The extra hours of Day we steal all summer long are opportunities for being out and about with out a coat, to throw the frisbee with the hole in it and bounce on the trampoline which fortunately has no hole.  My brain soaks in these hours of happiness and tries to store them for winter, like field mice with seeds.

I had a book about a mouse who wasted his days looking at the sky and rainbows and flowers while the industrious field mice hoarded grain in their burrows.  He, in the end, fed their souls with his stories of color and light.

My family could not have known when I was very small that I hated the cold and dark and the leafless trees so very badly.  That book helped, and I can still smell its pages, musty from being stored in the basement between my time and my aunt’s, not quite a generation.

My bloom-hoarding goes on in the still-warm days of late summer and early fall, for as long as nature allows.  Then I turn inward, and wait for something to bloom again.  We always have enough grain, but enough flowers?

Never.

SALT TINDER HOPE

I am a prepper of a different sort.

I found my emergency cache today.  My mother’s basement, the current holding pen for the contents of her former storage unit, contains things that I had expected to need when my own SHTF.  That happened seventeen months ago, but I found ways to keep my essential stash intact.  Worse things may have been heading my way even when things were very bad, so what I carried out of the shitstorm fell in the middle-priority category.  The high-priority goods stayed hidden away, sometimes picked through and brought home an item at a time when the dust settled, but mostly purposefully forgotten.

The fall of Rome and the end of days got nothin’ on an uprooted mother faced with being sent to the street with her child.  Let the castle crumble; we needed a place to lay our heads, out of the rain.  We needed a way to cook our food.  Less obviously but just as essential, we needed memories to touch, so the stories would be told properly when we were once again home, somewhere else.

So, one borrowed-vanful at a time, I hoarded those essentials:

Artfully packed crates of  cookware and utensils.  A little stove. Salt. A box of matches, sealed, tarps, sleeping bags, cording, flashlights.  A good knife and a good dangerous knife, just in case.  Cots and chairs. Emergency candles, antibiotics, needles and thread, tweezers, biodegradable soap, 100% DEET, water purification pills.  Flint and tinder.  Super glue, now hard as a rock in its metal tube.  Did you know that a serious gash can be glued shut to stop the bleeding?  The good tent, I never found, but I have a better one now.

With the ready-to-run things stored, I had the peace of mind to think of irreplaceable things, useless but priceless to my small person’s place in history:

Paintings, photographs, books of recipes written by Gram.  Dad’s Busch crate full of art supplies. A glorious explosion of silk flowers in a brass vase, reworked wedding decorations.  Bingo chips in a box decorated by my mom when she learned to love bingo and we all went every Saturday night.  Halloween decorations made by my aunt.  A table from the New House and three speckled, foggy mirrors too heavy to lift alone.  The arrowheads from Neighbor Ron, who loved us so much though he barely knew us.  Tools in strange boxes, filthy from the oil field, smelling like Papa.  I still smile when I smell crude oil, which can’t be described.  Nothing else smells like it, not even sticky summer blacktop which seems like it should be the same thing.

Her blankie and mine and her teddy bear and mine stayed in the car, always in those uncertain days, until bedtime.  We would not leave Pibble and Ted behind.

Today for the first time, I saw again for the first time a little of what I expected to need, plus a little more.  The boxes stayed closed,  but they have labels.  I wrote so carefully with my Sharpie.  Shouldn’t a woman so filled with uncertainty and heartbrokenness , to the point sometimes of panic, have scrawled like a madwoman on those plastic bins?

The act of putting useful and important things out of the way, out of harm’s way, eased that panic.  I could sleep at night after the Fall of the household, knowing that we could run with the clothes on our backs and still, someday, be able to look around and see a few things that could make us comfortable.  Finding those things wouldn’t be blind burrowing.  The food prep stayed in this box, the water containers and dry bags in that box, the teapot and creamer shaped like a cow right there.  The writing on the boxes can be read even without my glasses, it is so sure and bold.

I’d packed away those things hoping that the next spring or maybe even that very fall, after never really having to leave, I would retrieve that box of pots and pans for a camping trip.  I’d unpack on a picnic table next to a fire-pit and put a kettle on to wash what had gotten musty in storage.  That image was my one life-line, a mix of memories of doing just that one perfect day in Michigan, and a hazy daydream of forever, after healing and relearning to be together.  I had hoped for the best.

I prepared for the worst, and we are better for it.

GOOD CAT

The cat lives her whole life in four rooms plus bath and cellarish basement.

She has food, water, snacks, toys, and a place to pee and poop.  The cat has companionship when we are home.  She has my chair to climb and scratch with impunity and no consequences.  I only know what the cat does when we are not home when she leaves evidence: torn scraps of paper, cupboards thrown open, laundry strewn, those sorts of things.  Do we keep putting magnets and homework on the front of the fridge so that she can pull it all down for fun, or does she dislike magnets and papers on the fridge, and we’re just making more work for this busy cat?

The small person constructs elaborate habitats out of tables and chairs and sheets.  We make chains of pipe cleaners to drape around these cat-centered places.  Special rugs, the cat’s rugs, always line the little homes.

We try to make this a good life for the good cat.

Still, the cat rushes out the door and onto the hot sidewalk at every opportunity. Grass doesn’t grow in the house.  Sun doesn’t warm the carpet or the linoleum the way it warms the walks.  Outside,  she would find too many moths to ever catch, at last, and squirrels to chase with her whole body, not just her heart.

My fear of a coyote or the dogs next door making lunch of the cat keeps her imprisoned.  I tell the small person that maybe the next place we live will have a fence and fewer wild things, and they can go outside together.  Cats who live an indoor life are safer and healthier, but how can anything stay sane with no way to go outside and play?

In four rooms plus bath and basement, she lives alongside us and participates in everything we do.

Last night, she helped to make the bed by trying to kill the mattress, then the fitted sheet, then the top sheet.  Once they seemed sufficiently dead and immobile, she allowed me to float one blanket after another on top of her as she made sure those sheets didn’t wake up and cause more trouble with their billowing.  She stayed a lump under the quilts until I made her move.  Sliding my feet under the sheets would have incited another round of sheet-killing.

This morning, she helped with the laundry by supervising every step of the complicated process of washing with the world’s second tiniest washing machine, which lives in the bathroom.  Then, she helped with mopping the floor after she slipped off the edge of the sink by peeking too far over the side to watch the water slosh in the washing tub, and sloshed herself halfway into the toilet. Every fall in the bathroom seems to end up with the cat in the toilet.

She might sometimes curl up nearby, and always sleeps at the foot of the bed.  We hope that this winter, our first one together, she will curl up on a lap now and then.  Right now, still lingering at the end of kittenhood, she is far too busy to sleep during the day.  There is laundry to do, after all, and sheets to subdue, and rugs to rumple, and moths and homework to eat, and beads to fetch, but only the special strand of beads from her former life.  Only those will ever be worthy of her fetching, and only when she offers to fetch by plopping them at our feet. I wake up with beads dropped at the bottom of the bed some mornings, a failed attempt at nighttime games.

I think we make a good life for her.  I think she would tell us if we weren’t.

MY PART, HAPPY KITCHEN EDITION

All that needs to be done are the dishes.  With dishes comes the usual sequence of wiping-down of countertops and sink and cabinet fronts…

What I’m saying is that I have a few chores to do.

In this Yellow Cottage, today, the small person tidied and polished the Octagon and did cat duty without being asked. She’s done her part in the kitchen, more than I have.

The Octagon is a mid-century-modern yard sale purchase from two blocks away. She discovered that treasure and she feels responsible for its keeping.  That table may be her first real treasure.  She wants it to stay shiny and unmarred.  The table I’d chosen, a year ago, I chose because of the number and quality of its mars.  She did not appreciate them the way that I did, so now, we have a table that seats eight in a kitchen that feeds two regularly.  With four ancient chairs, somehow, it works.

Long view becomes apparent: she likes company.  She’s a people person, subtly.

I must like company, too.  I have plates-cups-bowls-you-name-it for twelve.  Those are only the rocket-age porcelain special company dishes, still unused except for tea parties for two.  The diner dishes, everyday-tough, unbreakable, but heavy enough to break toes, stay in constant rotation.  Years ago, I had diner-dish service for twenty-five.  I might still have as many, packed away, but I forget them because of why and how they were packed.

But, despite the details of hidden kitchenware, I need to do the dishes.  There aren’t many to do.

And the table is already spotless.

NOT COOL

I am not as cool as I would like to be.  Yesterday, I was downright lukewarm.

My mind isn’t always kind to me.  My thoughts might wind around a certain bothersome spot, a point on my memory map made of words.  Did I misunderstand something?  Have I been assuming bliss?  Could I have become ignorant of something very important while leaning too heavily on sweet easiness?  I’ve made grave errors like this before.  Must remain vigilant, must watch for bad habits that become big deals.

That spot around which mind became tangled rendered me immobile and dumb.  Where the water is deep, arms and legs had better keep moving at just the right pace.

So, I sank.

The deep end had taken my breath away for a terrifying moment, and only a moment of solitary breathlessness was enough to cause a scramble for solid ground or at least a view of the bottom unwavering.

I sloshed into the baby pool, suddenly not able to tread water with the grownups.  I flapped, heavy and wobbly, like the babies, and baked uncomfortably in the sun.  I cried like the toddlers who scraped their knees on the rough bottom, but put my mommy-face back on when my own small person popped in for snacks between trips around the block.

The cause of the internal crisis doesn’t matter.  What matters is that it could happen at all.

I don’t always know how to handle myself with grace yet, in this deeper version of life.

NOT HERE.

Where do words go when no one wants to hear them, should not hear them, won’t be understood even if they are made into sentences?

This blog serves me well as a landing place for words that don’t fit elsewhere, but I do edit as I write.  Where do the words belong when editing would kill them and make me feel watered-down and muddy?  The blog is not the place for everything.  It is the place for the best things made of the best, clearest words.   Present unspoken words attach themselves to real, possibly ridiculous, frightening, very jarring feelings that have no place here.

Facebook is a filtered, sanitized forum.  Not there.

Journals feel like mental acts of masturbation, now.  I unearthed a couple that I wish I hadn’t, from when I had learned to hide my private words for fear of having them broadcast loudly and publicly.  The handwritten words on those pages made me too sad to read after so much had changed and so much has happened, and I pitied the woman who wrote them.  I pitied and disliked her.  She, that bewildered and angry and stupidly stoic version of me, made me angry on her behalf, but also angry at her for not doing things differently then.  She was short-sighted and weak.  She might be the me of today when I look back. So, now, not there.

Telephone conversations fall flat when small words mean so much.  Big words don’t belong, or can’t be remembered, when the small important words are so hard to say.  To say them out loud isn’t an option right now, anyway.  A small person listens, always, when she is home.

My head and heart, my whole body, my everything, spills over with words that can’t be said anywhere in good form.  The words I won’t say become a tight, hard mass in my throat.  I push the hot sharp shape into my chest, where it tries to make me cry, then to my belly to start the process of digesting it and letting it melt away.

It’s always worked before, but I’m out of practice.

 

WELL, WONDERFUL

This year’s been weird, but I’m learning how to make it less so. I am learning to live well in a wonderful way.

I spent the evening re-writing class notes and re-reading chapters.  This isn’t so bad.  I am doing my senior year right, baby.

In a flush of confidence, I put the books down and made a sandwich.  I made a damned good sandwich, with toast and pickle loaf and salami and plain old American cheese and mayo.  I drank an overly large beer along with it, whose label inspired the whole sandwich operation.  4 Hands Pyrus Saison goes well with pork, and the only pork in the house, sadly, was pickle loaf.  Bacon came to mind, and carnitas, and picnic shoulder smoked until if falls off the bone.

I had pickle loaf.

It worked with white-pepper and orange infused beer, so my belly is happy.  My mind is happy, too, because I found a way to enjoy what was in my fridge to the fullest.  Live within my means, love my life, eat good things, smile more.  I watched a few old episodes of Breaking Bad while I ate that sandwich.  Add to the completely un-guilty pleasure of the evening.  The last one is playing now, as I write, barely awake in this roadside treasure of a recliner.  Yard sale?  Flea market?  Something like that.

Now, I’ll go to bed on my perfect square of a mattress, alone for now but in the right place at the right time, and sleep well.  A full stomach and a big beer will make sleep deliriously easy.  Squares make for good sleep, too.

Sometimes, simple things make a day doable.  Some days, that’s all I need.

HOLIDAY

The small person is having a grand day in our neighborhood.  She pops in with her best friend now and then, requests food, and runs back out or stays to change costumes or build a house for her single doll, almost identical to her best friend’s doll.

So far, two swimsuits, one dress, one “exercise” outfit, and one grand gown have been on her body.  Bless her, she hangs up the wet things and throws the dirty into the world’s second-smallest washing machine after checking for stains to pretreat.

Grapes, cheese sticks, pizza, garlic butter, and water have left this house in her tummy and her friend’s.

Someone has a wading pool and someone has a big pool, and now everyone has a bike, because the youngest member of the crew just inherited my girl’s too-small bike (which we purposefully planted in her auntie’s driveway) and can ride pretty confidently on two wheels all of a sudden.  That five-dollar bike from Goodwill has been the right fit to make that happen for two of them, now.   My person has graduated to the BMX level, just as suddenly.

I sit with my pizza and my books and hear her name called across the block, mixed with shrieks and shouts.  All day, giggles and yells have rung through our usually silent part of town.  Today, the small people run the streets and we big people get to watch the show.

They know how to make a holiday.

PINS AND HAMMERS, A COMPARISON

Today I am the artist and the carpenter and the wrecking ball.

But not then, when I was a different thing altogether.  Then, I was still. And shrinking.

Some cells exist within bones just to carve away at other cells, superfluous bits or underused bits.  I remind myself that lack of movement, the good kind, the active-dancing-jumping-playing-learning kind, will take away from my core, just like osteoclasts rob the bones of the too-still.

Being too-still used to happen to me for years at a time.  My body moved and moved, my mind whirled, but my real life just spun in circles.  That version of stillness goes unseen by everyone but the person who’s become the human gyroscope: all energy, nowhere to go, hoping for another shove to keep going but unable to do the shoving.

When I chose to wear wheels instead of the unmoving pin at the bottom of the twirling top, I expected the people I loved to jump on for the ride, too.  Some did.  Some, I scooped up in my arms, not giving any option but to roll along.

Some refused.  They liked my pin.

What they did not understand was that the perfect circle in which I moved was allowing bits to fall away without my permission.  Reaching out of the whirl slowed the spin, but too far or too eager, and I might wobble to the ground.

Now, the ground has become familiar again.  It’s full of worms and bugs and life, like it was when I moved very close to it, curious fingers in the soil and hope in the seeds.  Sometimes, it scrapes my elbows bloody.

I feel my bones grow thicker as I swing my hammer and hang paintings on these walls: my paintings and hers, and someday all of ours, if we learn one another.  That thought makes my heart swell and sometimes my eyes spill over, too.  My tears become another testament to the artist-dreaming and wrecking and rebuilding.

Looking into the sun with tears in my eyelashes reminds me that there are colors for which I have no name.  My colors, welcome even when I admit that I’m blinded by them, fill my palette.

It’s heavy, hard work.  Some days, I don’t want to do it alone any more, but I’m not doing it just for myself.  That would be simple work.

There’s someone along for the ride, who also loves those worms and has a spectrum of her own to use as she wishes.  Her wheels need to roll, always, fast and sure and not afraid of landing and breaking.  Her hammer already strikes with enough force to shake my whole beautiful world.

 

 

 

ISHYNESS, A CELEBRATION OF FLAWS

My little tank went to see my lovely mechanic today.  Remember the big bad things that needed changing to make her safe again?  Well, not so big.  Not so bad.

Turns out that a single bolt missing from a catalytic converter cover can cause a whole lot of clanging.  Yes, that missing bolt also caused the cover to get ratty and holey and require replacement.  The price of two pieces of steel and four bolts stunned me a bit, but I had imagined huge panels of car underbelly flapping and sparking near gas lines.  No, just a little cover for an important part.  Now the clanging doesn’t send my worry into high gear.   Will we explode?  Nope.  We just sound funny for now.

And the brake squishiness?  Only the front wheels are thin.  No bad rotors.  No bad lines.  Two discs out of four ain’t bad.

The mirror can’t be found at a junkyard, though.  They all want me to take the whole door, and I’m not prepared to do that much disassembling and hauling, and then have most of a door left over.  Nobody has time for that mess around here.  A new mirror has to happen, but my lovely regular mechanic can do that, too.  Someone in Wisconsin is boxing one up tomorrow to send this way.

In short, none of it will take much time to fix, or much money.  The little scratch-dent scar on the door will get a good coat of wax, the bumper will get bumped back into place and held up with a new clamp, and the car will be as good as new.

Ish.

The wonderful thing about ishiness is the freedom it offers.  We can move forward without fear of another scar, because damage has already been done.  The fun can begin.

Roof rack?  Absolutely.

Hitch?  Yes, I’ll have one of those.  A hitch is cheaper than a roof rack!  Who knew?

Grill guard?  One must exist that will fit, somewhere.  If not, who do I know with a welding rig?

Let the fun begin…just as soon as my parts come in from Wisconsin.

 

 

 

LOVE THE ONE YOU’RE WITH, AUTOMOTIVE EDITION

My car requires some changes.

I chose “changes” rather than “repairs” because right now, it starts, goes, and stops when I ask it to do those things.  However, when a sleeper-sofa lands on a car, that sofa makes some changes of its own.  It’s time to change some of the things back again.

The car of my dreams is not a two-door Honda Accord, but the thing runs like a tank.  Because this tank is paid for and cheap to insure, making it into the car of my dreams is simpler and less financially risky than selling it and starting fresh with an unknown machine.  The sensible car can be my Dream Machine.

(Just an aside: does anyone miss Baskin Robbins as much as I do?  Seriously, I just saw a commercial and memories of laboring over the BIG DECISION based on 31 flavors came rushing back.  I always went with very exotic French Vanilla, by the way.  Chocolate ice cream was a staple at home AND IS THE BEST FLAVOR ALWAYS, but even at eleven, I had francophile leanings.)

So, this sleeper-sofa ripped the driver side mirror off of my tiny tank and barely dented and scratched the door.  The body shops who inspected this damage want a lot of money to undo these changes.

I know how to navigate a junk yard. I know how to replace a side mirror.  I like using tools to take things apart and especially to put them together in different order.

The little dent seems comparable to a scar: it carries with it a story, not negative if no one was seriously injured.  I drove a Chevy Blazer for twelve years, and for ten of those years, my front bumper stayed smashed into a huge snarl because I hit a signpost in the parking lot of Great Clips.  Simple version: she chopped off my waist-length natural blonde hair in two great hacks, not clips,  and took “long wispy layers” to mean “Carol Brady”.  I cried when I got outside, and blinded by the setting sun, I did not see the sign for the shopping center on parking space in front of my truck.  Lesson?  Cry over your hair, and the universe will give you something to cry about.

So, I didn’t cry about the skyfalling sofa.  No one got hurt, and the trash company that sent the sofa sailing just cut me a check.  On the day of the drop, I walked out of the house hoping that it’d just be totaled.  Now, I’m relieved that so little damage happened, because I respect my car’s never-say-uncle constitution.  It goes.

One little problem is the stopping.  Now and then, things get sludgy and squishy and squeaky,  and the light comes on.  Time for brakes?  Yes.

Another little problem is the clanging.  When I drive over pot holes, I’m reminded of that one time I landed poorly off the ferry and heard a serious bang.  Ever since then, the little rattle has become a very subtle (but very loud to me) gonging.  Gong, clang, worry worry worry.  That’s me doing the worrying, not the Honda.  The Accord abides.

Here’s the plan: Autozone or junk yard for mirror.  A pair of chromey truck mirrors would be cool, actually, but I’ll probably get one to match the car if one can be found.  The idea of digging into an old car for parts gets my heart fluttering.

Brakes.  Essential.  I know that they’re protesting now, and they need to be given attention before they stage a strike and the pedal hits the floor.  That happened in the Blazer once, and that was the day I learned that my ability to set panic aside for a moment to deal with a urgent present mess was a skill that did carry over from my younger days.  It’s all in the downshifting, friends.

Metaphor there?

And the clanging could be anything, but it seems ominous and evil.  My lovely mechanic will tell me all about it.  He talks to me like I’m not a girl, even though he does compliment my toes when I have a fresh pedicure.  I think he’s slept with at least one of my boyfriends, but I don’t have hard evidence and of course no hard feelings.  We get along well like that.   Maybe he can make the bumper look straight, too, *pun pun pun*.

 

Now, here’s the best part of Plan Dream Machine…

 

If repair funds remain after brakes and clanging are cured, then…

If such a thing can be found to fit, a roof rack comes next, with a flat cargo basket clamped upon it.  Think Mad Max camping sedan, and you’re getting close.

I know a hitch will fit, but a pro can do that work.  Lowering an exhaust system on a car that already drags the street sounds hellish.

Lastly, I’m going to paint it myself.  Not all over, but in stages.

So, little Honda Accord Coupe with a little dent in the door and a crooked back bumper, you’re getting a very practical makeover with a  life-as-art paint job.  By me.  I used to be a Real Artist, too.

I’ve always held off adding things to my vehicles in the name of resale value (though I’ve always driven my cars until the wheels fall off), avoiding the embarrassment of my former spouse or current children (whom I managed to embarrass anyway with my idea of essential cargo), and expecting the “perfect” vehicle for my life to come along to be modified to suit me.  What’s obvious now is that there’s no such thing as perfect.  There’s now.

Now is as good as ever.  Maybe better.

 

HATEFOOD

I trust my kitchen.  The cutting boards stay sanitized, the water for dishes is hot hot hot.  Spans of time in restaurant kitchens taught me the mantra, “First in, first out,” and I do rotate.

Then, something went terribly wrong and I’ve gone into digestive upheaval.

I hate food.

I hate my kitchen.

I especially hate salad.

 

WAIT, PLEASE.

Cicadas sing us out of summer.

Sih-CAY-duh, say you.  Chi-CAH-dah, say we.

The small person runs the neighborhood, free for a little while longer tonight.  She will come home itchy and dirty and happy and then she will climb into the small tub here at the cottage to make a ring that I smile to scrub away, later.  A tub that needs scrubbing tells stories of bike rides and back yards and laughing until she falls down, disassembled by her joy.

I sit by the open screen door and listen to the joy and the cicadas.  In a minute, I’ll get up to wash dishes before she comes in.  The hot water should be ready again in time.

Summer ran short.  I’d planned camping and trips and time away from our familiar place, but then, this familiar place felt like enough.  We didn’t need to leave here, I just needed to let her go a little further into this small neighborhood without me.

And with that, she’s in the door.  The street lights came on.  She’s filling the bathtub because she feels cruddy, claiming starvation and singing songs I don’t know and offering a running monolog of the evening’s freedom.

The dishes can wait.

 

HEAD, HEART, SPINEFIRST

I just wrote a post about past relationships, and deleted it.

Each one  deserves its own private entry in a real journal. Each one taught me something important, even if it was something unpleasant about myself.

One love led to another and another.  Some introduced the next, but expressing my gratitude for helping me meet the next sparkly thing never really came off well.

The conclusion of that deleted post should have said something about winding paths, and lessons, and how lovely my sweetheart is.

Then, I realized that all of my past relationships have taught me to be too careful with love.

Some day, I will unlearn my caution and barrel headfirst and heartfirst into love, regardless of how it might blow up in my face, because this time, it won’t.

SIGNAL

And today, the whirr of the cicadas has sent me in search of the exact pattern of the veins on the wings.  They’re beautiful and spare.

My Papa taught me to say the name of this insect: “chi-CAH-dah”.  That crescendo-vibrato buzz, when I was smaller, signaled that summer had to end soon.  I dreaded the beginning of each new school year, with the same thirty kids I’d known since second grade.

I loved learning, but School was a nightmare.  My teachers loved me, but the students didn’t at all.  After fourth grade and being placed in a gifted class, my social experiences took a nosedive.  As the only one pulled out for the most amazing (to me) chance to learn logic, and higher math, and creative problem-solving, I had a target on my back.  The nice girls avoided me to avoid their own punishment for being seen with the freak, and the not-nice girls punished me for raising my hand in class after long, long pauses of frustrated teachers.  If I’d kept my hand down, the teacher would have re-done part of the lecture to help us understand, instead of making the class lose recess for daydreaming in class.

I was the lucky one who daydreamed my way through every minute of every day, with half an eye on the chalkboard and half an ear to the lesson, who had the answers for the pop quiz despite plotting ways to make a kiln in the back yard without getting in trouble for playing with mud AND fire.  Mud was okay, but the concentrated blast of heat for baking mud into little effigies took some slyness and an accomplice in the form of my Papa.   He had coal oil and bricks, and the tin match box in the shed stayed magically full.  He could claim the cloud of smoke as his own, while I wrapped my clay rabbits and mother figures in bundles of straw and threw them in with the fallen branches to make them last longer than even Papa.

The mud and the fire and the soot and smoke taught me more than the words half-heard while I stared out the window and waited for 3:08 p.m.

My grandma taught me that every day should be appreciated as one of the good old days.  Yes, even when things seem to be crappier than you thought possible, and summer is almost over, and you have to come in earlier because the street lights come on earlier and the cicadas sing Autumn is Coming and You Will Have To Wear Shoes Again Soon.  Some of those days were really very bad, but most of them were lovely, and she was mostly right.

In a week and a half, my small person will go back to school in a new place for her bump up to third grade.  New building, bigger, much much more to navigate.  She has rebelled against planned activity this summer.  She wanted to run wild with her friends in this little neighborhood, with her own back yard to dig up.  She wanted me home, to make lunch, and to tuck her in for an afternoon nap now and then.  I couldn’t do it this year, but she’s already plotting next summer’s arrangements.  She’s looking forward to school like I never did, but she is made of different stuff than I was.  Am.

We both want summer to last forever, school or no school.  We listen to the cicadas and yell over the roar when we sit in the back yard, and wonder what makes them go so suddenly silent each night.

Cicadas and August and the end of overabundant chances to wonder make us both a little blue.  Skirts feel better on the legs than jeans.  Flip-flops feel better than sneakers any day.  Warm air and a little too much sun win out over chill gray, and bike rides didn’t happen often enough.  Kids on buses are always kind of unpleasant, so we’ll ride bikes to school just a few blocks away.

My job, like the job of the big people who made me Me, is to bounce us past the blue and into a version of Good Old Days Now.

This fall, when the days get too short for my wellbeing, I’ll shock myself back into gratitude with a pair of temporarily painful permanent cicada wings on my shoulders, another symbol of freedom and perseverance and change.

That seems inevitable, but I could change my mind.  Life is long, and it’s only August.

cicada wingcicada wing

BEEP

I save episodes of TV shows until I can watch them all in a row, so I don’t have to hang off the cliff until the season actually ends.

I let the oven timer continue to beep when the food isn’t quite finished when time’s up, so I don’t forget it.

I don’t pop open a beer until the whole yard is mowed, and I mow more happily because I think of sitting in a tidy yard with a symbolic beverage.

I pile my fruits and vegetables on a huge tray in front of the juicer and combine with increasing creativity as the week goes on, to use stuff up.

I ride around with laundry in the car until I make myself go to the laundromat, even if I look like I’m a crazy person in my Honda.

I buy textbooks even though my university has a rental program, because I might need to know something after the class is over forever.

I hang sparkly things and bunches of herbs on a low pole on my porch to ward off approaching intolerance of the various witches at this cottage.

I have my quirks.

BOOK OF

The lists gather in little books. The little books gather in stacks on my shelves and hide in drawers, and sometimes, in suitcases.  Better to keep them in sight.  Little books get musty in the dark.  Little thoughts grow smaller.

 

 

The covers all say the same thing: Book of Lists.

Keeping these lists and these little books reminds me that I’ve had the same dreams for twenty years.  They remind me that I am the same, too.  Some things will always be important to me.

Some things that land in lists sound very selfish when I re-read them, but they’ve earned a place in the WHAT I WANT, SELFISH EDITION category.  That’s one that doesn’t change much over the years, and always includes a camper and something to pull it.  Now that the Old House is gone, a garden is back on the list, too.  When I feel alone, I believe that companionship is a selfish desire.  Pretty hair usually makes the cut, no pun intended.

In these little books, a dose of GRATITUDE always finds a home.  My daughter always heads that list, and my family and friends come next.  When I have love, I’m grateful for that.  A comfortable bed, a job, good health for me and mine, a running lawnmower, and the things left to me by now-gone loved ones must always be written with a heart full of gratitude, on that full set of pages.

One book keeps the WORK thoughts segregated entirely from the DREAMS.  Work lists deserve no space here, and my dreams make me blush.  My dreams come hard to paper, even.  I am careful of them and their power if they come true or if they don’t.

One book holds safe the dreams, and one lines up DECISIONS with questionable pros and cons.  My pro may be your con, and vice versa, but it’s my list.  The decision book can’t sit on the top of the stack.  The ifs that stuff its covers make me restless.  The cons reek of heartlessness.

Many TO DO lists read decades later fill me with pride and relief at having done.  I did lay a brick walkway around a circular medicinal herb garden, with four rays pointing north, south, east, and west.  That became a tattoo, also checked off a list.  The tattoo took fifteen years, but the bricklaying only took a week and and a homemade wheelbarrow and some scrap from Les Nugent’s demolished house.

Most of these little books can expect to be lost to time, never read by anyone, sometimes not even read by me again, once filled.

If my future self forgets beautiful today as I have sometimes forgotten yesterday, I have a list for that.

 

 

 

SORTED, SORT OF

I once gave a very sad person the advice, upon hearing from his own mouth that he was a loser, “What would you do if you weren’t?  What would a non-loser do?”

His answer was simple: he did a load of laundry.  He later used the laundry as a solution many times over when Loserville crept too close.

Very recently, I pulled my head out of the sand, or maybe my own butt, and noticed that I’d gone on autopilot.  Where did that plane land?  Loserville, or a suspiciously nearby suburb, possibly BarelyMakingEndsMeetVille, NotDoingYogaVille, DrinkingSodaWithEveryMealVille, SleepingNeverVille, or WhereIsMyOtherBootVille.  Time to move along, so I did.

I chose to  drop an extra concentration, to graduate in May.  Win!

I completed the terms of a random audit to get school money.  Win!

I checked the university’s website compulsively for weeks, to confirm my academic progress status.  Win!

I complied with the federal government to get an extension on credit hours to complete a degree. Win!

Then, I spoke to a Real Live Person about the consequences of getting some incompletes and completely not doing my summer class.  Not a win.

Today, I gathered the material for an appeal to the Gods of Financial Aid, and composed a letter of crow-eating and explaining my extenuating circumstances.  Sometimes, when your house is turned upside down and shaken for no good reason, you lose your shit.  That is precisely what I did: lost my shit.  Describing that process in a way that made me sound not nuts took a little care.  I also spoke in person to one of my lovely professors and rallied his support for my cause.  The other one has other life-things to manage right now, so we’ll talk in August.

This will get fixed, now or later.  I will graduate from school in May or maybe next December.  Next December is the worst case scenario.

When that worst case scenario isn’t so bad, anything is possible, and everything is doable.  When Loserville and its surrounding ‘burbs grow blurry in the distance, amazing transformations happen.  Even with the crow-eating of this morning, today has been a very good day.

Boxes of family china found safe homes in the basement, my car is clean, my kid is having a good time running the neighborhood in red ballerina slippers, and I’ve corrected some problems that come with having my bank card information “compromised”.  The automatic payments are all in their right places again.

Later, there will be fried chicken smells in my kitchen, and the plants will get watered in their new home on the back porch.  Win!

Thank you for listening.  I had to get it out.  This was a selfish, boorish post, but cathartic, as in, “My name is Lisa, and I lost my marbles very quietly over the summer and now I’m herding them back into the jar.”

I am steering clear of Loserville.  People stop in for a visit and sometimes never leave, chained by nothing but frustration made of a tightly knit or widely spread smattering of tiny failures.  Once you’re in, you don’t see that real life is made of such things, and without them, it’s not real.

I choose to take it all in, complete with the yucky bits.  I choose to consent to experience every last bit of everything.

I am loved.

I am capable.

I am fallible.

I didn’t do a load of laundry, but I did sort it out.

I did sort it out.

 

CARBURETOR.

  • Drain tank, flush hole.
  • Detach hoses, blow out.
  • Note: gas tastes evil.  Remember to ride bike more.
  • Remove air filter, look with disappointment at the dirt.
  • Unscrew nuts from bolts that hold air filter holder in place, lose all spacers in guts of mower.
  • Curse, feel not Zen-like at all.
  • Take off carb cup, experience creeping bewilderment.
  • Flip all moving parts, ream with pipe cleaner.
  • Suspect that neighbors are watching.
  • Get the WD40, douse, decide that was a bad move.
  • Disassemble top of motor to reach lost spacers, find them all, rejoice.
  • Repeat in reverse order, pull ripcord.
  • Listen to engine run for three seconds and die…again and again.
  • Pack tools, come inside, find towel to place on couch to prevent grease stains.
  • Write a blog post as reasonable alternative to shoving mower into the street to become a hateful version of roadkill.  I need my neighbors to continue to like me, even if I’m the crazy lady who attempts small engine repair in a sundress and cute wedges.

 

 

LESSON, EXPECTATIONS EDITION

Sometimes, when a cat looks interested in a certain corner, and her caretakers move some things from that corner, all hell breaks loose.  Did not expect all hell to break loose over breakfast.

That cat is fast: less than ten seconds after the Very Interesting Corner was opened up enough for a paw to reach, a mouse finds itself snagged on the Claws of Doom.  Prey, plaything.  Thunder doesn’t know whether to celebrate the find with her beloved cat or save the tormented mouse…and we’re eating breakfast.

Cat, mouse, zoom-zoom-zoom.  Thunder, with bowl, giving chase and giving up, round and round.  Me, on a chair not because I want to avoid a mouse, but because I don’t want to get caught between cat, mouse, and Thunder bearing mouse-rescue bowl which sometimes seemed more like mouse-smashing bowl.  Oh, yes, that was briefly an option.

Let’s just smash it, she suggested.  My look of horror led to her explanation: mouse might be injured, and she would just END IT.  Pragmatic to her core, my Thundergirl; fortunately, she chose the saving over the smashing.

Problem: mouse had run under the stove.  Out comes the storage drawer.  No mouse.  Cat enters freshly opened under-stove territory and proves us wrong.  Two of the four beings in the kitchen leap onto the same chair to avoid having our toes mistaken for a mouse.

“Why are you afraid of a mouse, Mommy?” I’m not, I explain, still perched on one chair, inches from her face.  I’m afraid of the cat chasing the mouse.  She is relieved that her mother is not a mouse-fearing wimp.

“It didn’t seem like the kind of thing that would make you freak out, actually.  It’s not like we have a coyote in the kitchen.”  I suggest we move to separate chairs.  They’re sturdy chairs, but anything over a hundred years old has to have its limits. This makes her laugh, not at me this time but with me, a relief.

More zooming, and then…plop.  The bowl lands over the mouse.  Girl beat her cat to it.  We slide a baking tray under the bowl, and she escorts the terrified little rodent to the far reaches of the back yard.  I peek through the curtain.  Her face has lost its adrenaline-rush maniacal grin, and she frowns, talking to herself on the long walk back.

The mouse just sat there in the grass after all.  It had expected to die, she tells me.  If it still expects to die, it’s definitely going to die now.

Thank you, child, for learning this in your own way.

A COMPASS AND A MAGNET WALK INTO THE WOODS

The map flew away in a gust a few miles back.  The sun set right on time, and the stars are pretty, but of no use when north doesn’t mean anything.

A lovely little fairy flits above my head always, swooping down now and then for a kiss and a hug and a popsicle or a peanut butter and jelly with no crust.  She ate the crust twice, without complaint and with bravado, so that proves something to me in her opinion.

A handsome sparkling companion joins me for stretches, holding my hand, and offering smiles.  He drifts off, but returns sometimes when I expect and sometimes when I don’t.  Maybe he’s looking for his own map.

I’ll keep to a path, sleeping when I’m exhausted, eating when I’m starved, but moving moving moving when my legs can do the work.

There’s nothing else to do, so I do this, and remember to look up as much as I look down.

Looking down does me no good; flying is just a good hard fall interrupted by forgetting to land.

 

LEARN IS A STRANGE WORD IF YOU SAY IT OVER AND OVER TO YOURSELF

This day hurt.  

The job came with its own good reasons attached.  Helping.  Earning.  Learning again.  Staying close by.  Being of use.  

I left for what must be better reasons.  

And then, a note from my university that the financial aid I expected might not arrive.  I’m on academic warning or termination, but the feds who dole out the money aren’t sure where I land on the scale of success to failure.  No idea if I’m still in that yellow zone, or in the red.  I’ll finish the incompletes from spring semester and maybe all will be well.  Strike that.  All will be well, but it took a few hours for the powers that be to tell me that I have a bit of hope.  Hope is good enough for the end of this day.  I’d misplaced it around three. 

My small person wanted to stay with me today.  She got “in trouble” yesterday at summer camp for getting out of the locker room too slowly.  A complicated shirt was at fault—I could barely get the thing on her in the morning—and a counselor raised her voice to her.  We are silly, but we don’t yell.  Miss Malorie yells at everyone, and my dear small girl got an earful of her own for the first time at camp.  She was shamed, and now she’s scared.  I took her back today anyway, and she was careful to avoid the yelling counselor.  She didn’t want to go, but my need to earn money trumped her desire to dodge random raised voices.  

The pragmatic mama wanted to point out, “That’s life, baby.  You will get unfairly yelled at, now and then.”  I did say a version of those words, with added sympathy at her shamed feeling.  She works so hard at being good—too hard, sometimes.  I’ll bet Miss Malorie got yelled at a whole lot when she was small, or she would know better than to raise her voice to a child in a locker room, vulnerable and struggling and frustrated with a shirt that looks really cool but causes wardrobe malfunctions.

I understand.  

I landed in the crosshairs of a situation that I don’t really comprehend, but I removed myself with sadness and purpose.  Grownups have that privilege, most of the time.  Lesson: I am strong enough to jump when the high-rise is smoking.  Don’t wait for the flames to lick my toes, even if I might easily convince myself that it’s really just a barbeque on the third floor.  

I’m shamed by failing to maintain a pace I had set, but that’s life, baby.  I didn’t drop that class when I should have, when my mind was spinning with change and strangeness and fatigue.  Lesson: I am fallible in big, fat, life-altering ways.  I’m tangled in my complicated shirt right now. Don’t wear that again, dumbass.    It’ll get done, this degree, and when I finish, I’m going to celebrate from the nursing home if I have to.  

I want to be with my daughter when she needs a fucking break, but I can’t always, so I planned a playdate with a friend for tomorrow and a sleepover at home for tonight, and no one will yell if she doesn’t move fast enough from point A to point B.  Lesson: I am her first and last resource, so when she calls for help, I have to do what I can to help her navigate this big world.  She is small, but she matters the most, and everyone needs a break now and then.

Telling my people about my hurtful day eased the shock and sharpness.  I have resources, too, who hug me when I stop by on a moment’s notice and who answer the phone when I call in a panic and who say yes to moving a little bit backward when I had thought that forward was the only option.   Four, in just one day, these people of mine, grabbed me by the collar and shook in a most loving way.  Lesson: don’t hide away when the bad stuff challenges me to a staring contest. Ask, and hugs happen, the real kind with words of love and reassurance.  

Today hurt me, but I’m learning my lessons.  

 

 

 

IT WOULD HAVE BEEN A PRETTY CUBICLE, ANYWAY

I forgot myself in the pursuit of the American Dream.

The words “financial stability”…”401K”…”benefits”…sweet to my ears, a ping in my heart.  I’ve never known any of that.

I am a willing learner, an eager employee, a dedicated and able-bodied member of every company I’ve ever been a part of.  I’ve loved my jobs, except for the Chinese restaurant.  I even liked the diner with the floods and the cockroaches, despite the floods and the cockroaches.  My resume, however, resembles that of a very, very creative middle-aged college student locked in time.

There’s nothing there that qualifies me for anything more than interesting dinner party talk.  Spin all you want.  I make pretty things for other people, sometimes on other people, sometimes for other people to eat.  All pretties.

Then came Obama, and a speech about dedicating a year to bettering society.  I signed up for nursing school and dedicated myself to getting As and letters of recommendation.  When clinicals and Life intersected badly, I moved my goal a little to the left and moved to a four-year university for a Sociology degree.  Sociology—> social work?—> all described to me by fellow students, and the general public as worth less than the paper upon which the degree would be printed.  It seemed like a means to an end of my goal, a necessary step to springboard into grad school.

No, instead, I switched to Employment Relations. HR.  In academic-speak, “Applied Sociology.”  A real job with a bachelor’s, which I would need to support my daughter alone, because alone we had become since nursing school began.

Paycheck.  Benefits.  Steady.  A cubicle, even!

And over the last few months, since adding that Employment Relations concentration to my degree, I’ve felt burned out and hopeless about my future.  I was being smart, crafting a resume that would get me a Real Job at the finish line, right?

It took very direct conversation with someone who loves me to wake me up.

“What is your dream job?”

I could not think of answer, and I started to cry.  I forgot my dream job.  I forgot my dream.

During the conversation, I jabbered about being burned out with my life, school, recent failures.  I jumped into an explanation of how I could most easily earn a living without this degree I’m pursuing, with some refresher training and basic equipment.

I spent the evening with my dear sweet handsome man, and I woke up in tears.  This time, simple sorrow at having lost my ability to have a dream.  Dream job, dream anything.  I forgot to dream at all.

I remember now.  Dreams resumed, to be tended properly.  Dreams die if they’re not fed and watered.

Thank you, darling, for reminding me that I don’t want that cubicle.

I LOVE ME SOME CRAZY

I love some bipolar folks.  They’re mostly all under the care of medical professionals now, to some degree.

They’ve all, for the most part, ridden out their personal hellish roller-coaster trips by self-doctoring with alcohol and off-the-books drugs; however, a solid diagnosis–and a little handful of helpful pills and therapy slow the ride to a pleasant go-round on the kiddie coaster. To see a beloved tortured soul become the glorious person I only glimpsed in the past, the core of what made them worth the price of admission to their personal Crazyland, to sit and have a conversation and realize that the brain running the business end of things really is still sparkly and beautiful but now running at a smoother  idle, is gratifying and priceless.  Some of them, I’ve lost to the world, and I hope they’re okay wherever they are.

Those people have stomped and railed at me and at the world in our histories.  They’ve dragged me though some nauseating loops and drops.   I still remember that one time, in between rages and triumphs, when things were perfect, and smiles weren’t painful work, and all was right in the world: easy coasting, to be relished. My father must have been bipolar.  He sparkled, then glowered, and the glimpses of the Real Dad in between were so rare.  I didn’t mourn his inevitable early death; to me, he was just an abstraction, a series of stories about “the old Jerry” and my own experiences with the Daddy of the present, a force of nature to be controlled with dire consequences to happen if I failed.

Still, I am part of that dangerous electric energy and it is part of me.  My daughter says that I am three quarters Quiet and one quarter Loud because I am a Hartlieb.  It’s in me, and she’s done the ratios, figured me out at age eight.  I tell her the best stories I know about her biological grandfather, and she feels bold and brave and beautiful to have had such a person for her mother’s father, a man who cheated death three times in his youth and who could see things that no one else could see and who drove backward all the way from one town to another just because.  She feels like a swashbuckling princess.

I love some depressed folks, too.

I’m sometimes one of them.  If not for my small people, I might have finished my degree years ago and have a career to call mine, but then again, maybe I wouldn’t have bothered to get out of bed for a long time.  A really, really long time.  When my Papa died, I only kept moving to be a good companion to Gram.  We had so much fun together.  She was my best friend, sometimes my only friend, my whole life. Without Gram, I didn’t move much for a few months.  Bed, kitchen (every few days), bathroom, library and store (every few weeks), garage (when the lawn needed to be mowed), and back to bed.  Books.  No internet then. Just one book after another, carefully chosen to induce as many tears as possible so I’d have an excuse to do that silent wail thing that happens in grief.  Everything hurt.  The grass grew too fucking fast.  The TV didn’t make any sense.  Clothes all itched or drooped on my frame. Driving was just another possible way to die when everyone and everything seemed close to the brink of death, so I stayed put or rode the bus.

But that’s at least one more quarter, the sadness, holding grief dear forever, wanting to wail it out when the smell of Thanksgiving hits and there’s no grandma sitting across the table to tell me how to cut the onions for the turkey dressing.  It was the hard way, by the way, with a tiny paring knife and no cutting board but a paper plate, all teary eyed while she decided whether the sage from 1975 was still good enough to use one last time, even though Emeril said to throw everything out once a year.  Gram taught me many things, but one lesson I wish I’d skipped was how to hold on to loss and keep it fresh.

With my small person, I share stories about Gram’s amazing cookies and how we ate big family dinners in shifts at one tiny kitchen, and how everyone wanted to stay at her house when they came to visit from Kentucky even though there was nowhere to put all of them, ever, so her grandma slept in the bathtub.  She glows with pride at her ancestor’s generosity and kindness and good cookies, and feels wealthy because she knows how to share even when she has little, like her great grandmother Betty Mae.

Now, here’s the point: we all carry an amazing cocktail of predispositions.  My sky-high manic father gave me the freedom to laugh, all valves thrown open, when life gets weird.  Nothing’s scary when you’re immortal, and getting lost just means finding new places to go next time.  My careful, doting grandmother gave me a sense of dearness for the people I love now, because some day, I’ll leave or they will.  No way to know the order of things.  She outlived one child, lost her father to suicide and her mother to fast and aggressive cancer.  She never stopped loving any of them.  She never forgot.

I try to be my best self for my own child.  She watches and learns just like I did.  I learned to become invisible when mania turned to rage and when contentment turned to sorrow.  I learned to respond to the people around me by ceasing to exist, slipping out the back door or just out of the line of sight and into my own imagination until the storm passed.  For my own child, I embrace the skill of deflecting lightning by telling her to dance to the thunder.  There’s nothing for her to fear.  I can take the strike, and we will dance like wild things in the rain.  She will never need to duck for cover near me; I know when things get too real, and I stand a little taller so she can splash away in the puddles below.

My genetic and environmental cocktail sometimes whirrs me into despair, sometimes into happy dancing over a certain smell in the air.  Most of the time, I ride very comfortably in between, grateful to have witnessed extremes but never to have lost myself to them forever.