Brown Betty

I ran into one of those moms the other day.  The kind that thinks they’re all that and a bag of chips as Teacher Girl says.  She always was a sun worshiper, but holy Moses, it’s caught up with her, if you know what I mean. 

We each have a daughter the same age.  Twelve years of school they were together.   Twelve years of PTA meetings, ice cream socials, fun night, back-to-school night, orchestra concerts, open house, wrapping paper fundraisers, track meets and college night.  So when I saw her I said, “Hey, how ya doing?”  She looked right at me and there was absolutely no reaction or acknowledgment, no oh geez, it’s been awhile since I’ve seen you.  Nothing, like I wasn’t even there standing two feet in front of her talking.

That’s life in the Mom Kingdom when you’re a lowly serf, and if I thought faster on my feet I would have said, “Oh, I’m sorry.  I seem to have mistaken you for a pair of loafers I used to wear.”   

Oh, Brown Betty, bam-a-lam.

The Summer of ’90

To my Dad, who I miss always and who entered this world with a wink and a sparkle on this very day………..

There were so many people at my dad’s wake that the funeral home had to call the police to direct traffic.  Neighbors and friends came, all of St. Jude’s came, the suits and hardhats from the Edison Company came, and his favorite nurse from the oncology unit came.  When Lou saw me, she asked to get a cut to the front of the line and as we moved forward she said, “You should know that your parents handled all of this with grace and a sense of humor that we don’t see very often.”  Yes, those two had quite the fan club.

Just two years earlier, I sat in the bleachers in Wrigley Field for a spring game while Mom and Dad were at an appointment to find out if the melanoma that started behind Dad’s eye had moved on to other places.  The Cubs won a squeaker that day and going home I thought maybe Dad could squeak by too, but that was not to be.  What came next was months of chemo, scans, experimental drugs and a prescription with unlimited refills written for Uncertainty.  There was plenty of that when I arrived from the East Coast with my three year old in May to stay and help out until my husband came back to get us in July.  Dad didn’t have much energy and so we spent afternoons in the family room watching the Cubs.

I can’t remember a time when I haven’t loved baseball, but the ordinary habit of watching the game when all around us seemed to be a brewing crisis made me want to scream.  “The bullpen sure could use some help, huh, Kate?” he’d ask.  How was it that he could calmly remark about the bullpen when it was obvious that nobody needed more help than him?  But I would sit with him while my daughter napped and it was a relief when she woke up and saved me from pretending that Dad wasn’t getting worse, because looky here, the sun is shining, the Cubs are holding their lead and all is right with the world.

By Labor Day when we returned, Dad had decided to stop his treatment and spent most of his days in bed with the game on, and what was sad in May became heartbreak in September.  With summer nearly over, so, too, was my father’s life while Harry Caray and Steve Stone provided play-by-play in the background.

Before the sun came up on the morning of September 15th,  Dad moved on.  He had always been an early riser so it was fitting that he would slip from this world while it was still asleep and very quiet.  Later that day, Chicago defeated St. Louis 6-2 and Dad would have been so proud that we beat the Cardinals in their own house.  The Cubs would end the season in 5th place that year and three weeks after his death, I gave birth to a son who shares my father’s name.

What would be my longest, saddest summer drew to a close with a departing gift from Dad.  When it seemed that hope had taken a sabbatical that year, he turned to baseball to show us the way to another day, another chance, another turn in the batter’s box.   I never returned to Wrigley Field after his death, but I keep track of our team and will cheer for them until the end of my days.  My mom carries on these many years later with the same grace and humor that the oncology unit saw long ago, while faith moves this family of theirs forward, one inning at a time.


Wide Load

I’ve got big hair.  When it’s summer, I’ve got really big hair.  The humidity is like an inflatable device pumping my hair follicles.  I hardly ever wash it because it gets so excited that it blows up even bigger.  When I paint anything, it gets in my big fat hair because I don’t allow for clearance, and it would be helpful to have a beeper like garbage trucks to warn me when my hair is backing into something.

I was making the bed and heard a buzzing in my head.  Mother Ship.  I hit myself in the head and it stopped for a second, but then started up again.  I shook my head a couple of times, but that seemed to make it worse.  Maybe I was having a stroke.  I think I’m having a stroke about once a day.  More when the Visa bill comes.

Turns out, all that buzzing was due to a fly being stuck in my hair. A fly that had probably cruised every pile of dog crap in the neighborhood was now in my hair.  Oh, I  know, it’s disgusting.  Once I figured that out I really went crazy, hopping around, screaming like a little girl and hitting my head.  The varmint finally found the way out, but sheesh, I was sweating and hyperventilating and my head hurt from hitting it so much.  I had to sit down and rest after that and then the damn Visa bill showed up in the mail and I should have called 911 as soon as the day started.

Driver’s Ed

Mallie Bee has been slow to learn how to drive.  It’s fine by me because teaching a Fisher how to drive is MY LEAST FAVORITE THING TO DO.  However, she’s about to be a senior and needs to get crack-a-lackin.  Her friend is taking a driver’s ed class which has lit a fire under her, so she’s been studying the driver’s handbook in order to get her permit.

At dinner she asked us to start quizzing her.  I started with the easy stuff about two cars getting to a stop sign at the same time and who has the right-of-way.  The one not yapping on a cell phone.  When merging, should you slow down, speed up or maintain your speed?  Correct answer: Maintain your speed, but I slow down due to crippling merge anxiety.  Orange signs signify what?  Two lanes are closed, nobody’s working and you’re sitting in the front row for the movie.

Then the Boy Child asked how you identify someone blind in a crosswalk.  Hmmmm……thinking caps everyone.  And he says “by their white neckerchief.”  White neckerchief?  I never heard of that.  Oh yes, he says.  It’s in the handbook.  Seriously?  Yes, old mom who hasn’t looked at the handbook in forty years, a white neckerchief means a blind person is crossing.  Who the heck wears a neckerchief?  Blind people, he says.  How do they know which is the white one?  Big Daddy weighed in on that one saying he’s pretty sure it’s a white cane and not a fashion accessory that identifies a blind person.

And the Boy Child thought it over and said oh yeah, maybe it is a white cane and not a white neckerchief after all.   Miss Daisy looked at us like we have no idea what the hell we’re talking about and it’s no wonder she’s in no hurry to take her driving test.

Travel Bug

The Boy Child returned from his Excellent European Adventure, and driving to the airport I was about to jump out of my dry, crinkly skin I was so excited to see him.  Out he comes into the terminal with his big ‘ol smile and I swear he looks older, like a guy who’s got a lot more confidence cuz he’s gotten a taste of the fabulous world out there.

We stayed up until midnight while he passed out gifts and showed us the snaps he’d taken.  How very British.  In between I asked the mom questions.  How did you sleep?  Did you like the food?  Did everybody get along?  And then I asked this………. were you constipated?

Big Daddy and Little Big Daddy were like WHAT THE WHAT?  Why would you ask that?  Geez, oh man, are you kidding me?  Har, har, har, that’s so dumb, Mom.

Ten years ago, we went to the beach in South Carolina for a week.  I’ve got a whole album of snaps where I have a forced smile that is more like a highly-controlled grimace.  My memories of that trip are of laying in the sun, day after day, trying to relax while being so constipated that I was more likely baking my bowels like a birthday bundt cake, making any movement of them impossible.

June 21st

This is a picture of Big Daddy back in the day.  Whoooooeeeeeee, I thought he was so cute.

Today is BD’s birthday.  He was born on the first day of summer which is fitting since he packs a whole lot of light into every day.  He was a teeny weeny three pounds when he was born prematurely and ever since goes all out no matter what he does.  It’s what I love about him and what makes me crazy at the same time.  Either way, going on that blind date date way back when was one of my smarter moves.

So to Mr. BD…………Happy birthday.  Happy year.  Happy first day of summer.

I Heart My Crib

About ten years ago, we did some landscaping.  I told Big Daddy that we should hire a landscape architect to draw the plans for us and we could do the work.  Landscape architect?  Little woman, he says, do you lay in bed at night and think of ways to spend money.  Sometimes it’s the only thing that takes my mind off my nighttime hotties.

When I have an idea to do something that involves BD’s cooperation, I float it out there like a balloon.  If he has an absolute fit, I don’t do it.  If he has a mild fit with muttering about how he needs another bike, I do it.   How many bikes do you need, I mutter back.  Lordy, don’t ever let him decide to count my jeansAnkle, skinny, cropped, wide, stretch, not stretch, dressy, not dressy……..

When the landscaper came, I had a table full of pictures from magazines.  I took her around my house.  See, I said, it’s cottagey and not perfect and my landscaping has to be like that.  So you want a controlled chaos look, she says.  Yes, yes, just like my hair.  She drew us a plan and it took six years to finish.  The first time we went to the nursery to buy bushes we had $300.00.  In Nurseryville, that’s really funny.  We moved dirt until we couldn’t lift our arms to even drink the beer we desperately wanted.  If you want to know why landscaping is so expensive, try doing it yourself because it will beat you until all you can say in an itty-bitty voice is, “Mama, mama……..help me.”.

Was it worth it?  Every time I walk out the door, I can’t believe I get to live in this house.

Books & Branson

You might not know this, but Branson doesn’t have a real book store.  I wanted to buy a book while we were there and couldn’t find one on the shopping center directory so I asked somebody working in one of the stores.  She told me they have a Books A Million at one of the outlet malls and a Christian bookstore, but not a regular book store. 

I went into the 5 & 10 that’s been in business for fifty years.  I’ve never seen such a selection of hairnets in one place.  Light brown, medium brown, dark brown, blonde, red, black, auburn.  You name the color and there’s a hairnet for it.  I did not even know that you could buy hairnets anymore.

But no books. 

I saw my little ballerina doing this and bummed a book off somebody to make the time pass and someday I’ll probably regret not buying myself a couple dozen of those hairnets.

D’oh

There’s this fancy shmancy thing you can do to post on your blog when you’re gone.  You set it up for the day and time you want it to post and it automatically does it.  Oh, technology.  Is so techie for me.  It works like a charm unless you save it as a draft instead of publish and then your little plan goes poof.

This learning curve is way too curvy for my wee little brain.