Oct 26, 2013

3 long months and counting

Dearest Papa,

Today, it is three months today since we lost you. Three very long months. I have missed you every day. And you have missed so much, not the least of which is Lucy in the dress that Jamie found at a secondhand store.


Lucy started Kindergarten. So many firsts - her first field trip (to the pumpkin patch), her first fire drill, her first trip to check out her own book at the library.


She is taking it all in stride, making friends, and soaking in knowledge like a sponge. You would be so proud of her.


Her art teacher taught her about drawing the human form and since then her artwork has changed. She wants to draw all of the time, on any piece of paper she sees.


My advice: don't leave out your tax or banking documents.


Henry is growing through a more challenging stage. He has had a difficult time adjusting to his new preschool. A constant stream of recent viruses (including one very special double-ear-infection-sinus-infection) has not helped.


He has made some BIG strides - potty training, dressing himself, playing cooperatively with others, riding a bike. Here he is, my own captain underpants.


He knows every letter, number, shape, and symbol. He loves worksheets and other games that challenge his mind. We are prepared for this gloriously nerd-like side of him, but not so much for the sports questions he has about baseball, soccer, and football. I think we will be signing him up for sports soon. He got some informal practice throwing sand at the beach. Unfortunately for Lucy (and dad and me), his aim is spot on.


We got the costume box out and he has been wearing them all over town this month. I thought putting a freshly potty trained boy in complicated-to-get-out-of costumes would be inviting a lot of mess, but he has been wonderful - so good that superhero status is probably just about right.


And I know you would be as happy as I am to see Dane's "Bat Bat" outfit walking about town again.


He has so many questions about you and your death. They come out of the blue, often while waiting in lines. At Fred Meyer "Does it hurt to drown?" At Ikea "When can we go see Papa?" As you can probably imagine, this leads to a lot of public crying by yours truly. Yup, I am a walking faucet. What else is there to do when he explains that his nap simply MUST wait because he really needs show you his new and-woops-now-dead pet beetle.


Your son is doing well. The way you and Lynda raised him and the example you set for him shines through. He does you proud over and over again every day.


He does have a few new gray hairs and he looks exhausted as often as not. He struggles to understand where he fits now that you are gone. Your relationship was a cornerstone for his Tribal identity and maybe that bridge has to be rebuilt. Or maybe he has to see that it has been there all along. At any right, a big pillar has gone out from under him. It will take him some time to believe he has what it takes to move forward without you.


And me? I don't know. So many busy nothings and big things and schedules to organize and parts to remember that keep our family running – I feel like I am running a three ring circus most of the time. I don't know what it felt like to drop from an airplane with a parachute or work explosives on a dam, but I can tell you that it takes a certain amount of bravery and skill to load the kids into THE BIG CAR cart and make a grocery run through Fred Meyer.


I would not call my responsibilities torture but keeping things rolling is not always a joy either. This mommy job has a steep learning curve and I'm still on it.


In the quiet moments, I miss you. I am still no where near prepared to think of you gone. It still hurts so much. Luckily, this kind of view helps a lot.


I feel a quiet evolution starting inside me and I don't know what it means. Everything in the world looks different now. Every. Single. Thing. Do you understand that? Do you know that you are that important to me? I had a chance to say the words and I think you believed me. For that, I am ever grateful.

Thankfully, there is still my mom and Lynda too. Top to bottom, they are both so amazing. And B and Bonna. And siblings and cousins and dear friends. The holidays will bring us back together. Maybe my dad will come for a visit here. Maybe life will start to smooth out. Maybe. Maybe. 

With all our love, 
Margaret

Oct 7, 2013

Just the kind of Monday Garfield warned us about

From start to finish, this has been a ridiculous day. I wish I could say it was a fluke, but with all the moving parts we have in our schedule lately, it's not the only one of its kind. In fact, this is kind of our new normal level of chaos. See if you can see just why it has me near cracking at the seams...


First of all, I don't usually work Mondays, but after some mayhem and missed days last week,  I had some urgent work to do today.

Fine. Found babysitter for Henry and got Lucy off to school.

I get in the car to go to go to work and it is out of gas.

I get to the gas station and realize I don't have my wallet.

Fine. Back in the car. Back home. Back to the gas station. And now, to work.

I get to my office needing to make some calls and I have no phone. Also I have no Internet as my ethernet cable has been dragged to the next room because a work order hadn't been completed to give someone else internet access. (Remember, I'm not supposed to be at work on Mondays so these things aren't supposed to be a problem.)

Fine. I go for my cell phone and I can't find it. Oops. Hoping I only left it in the car across campus.

Gah. Whatever.

Hurry. Hurry. Ignore the hopefully-not-too-urgent calls, drag back the ethernet cord and get some stuff done.

Dash out. Go straight to Henry's school for a behavior conference. Behavior conference? Yes. And while in the grand scheme of things, this might be an insignificant blip. For the moment, it feels just shy of completely overwhelming.

Get through the conference. Don't cry until I hit the parking lot. (+10 points!)

Get home to relieve the babysitter. Spend the next hour reading Mickey Mouse books on the bathroom floor while the boy is practicing but unproductive on the potty.

Way past nap time and starting to show. Henry won't nap so I lock him in his room at which point he - guess what... needs to poop!

I mistake his banging for "general banging" and not "I need to go to the bathroom" banging and ignore it just long enough to miss the big event and come into the room with a kid who has not napped but has pooped. In his room. He is also full of questions about why I wasn't there to take him to the potty.

Nice one mom. (-5,000 points)

Fine. Produce a mountain of laundry cleaning it up.

Snack. Go pick up Lucy.

**Bright spot**
Daddy shows up at school to meet us. Chances of survival rebound significantly. (+10,000 points!)

Home. Almost sit down to dinner as a family but just then Henry wants to go sit on the potty.

Spend most of mealtime in the potty reading Mickey Mouse books. Again.

Finally all sit down. Both kids have to be coaxed into eating any dinner. Henry defaults after 2 bites.

Fine. He does not feel well. Let's get him some medicine.

Get him in the stroller and start down the street until I realize that a stroller tire is completely flat.

Of course it is.

Into the car. To the store. Home again where both kids are starving because guess what? They didn't eat their dinner!

Oh lordy.

Fine. Feed them a snack while promising tomorrow night "you better eat at dinner! Because there is nothing afterward." Sure, sure mom. They do not seem moved.

While they make a mess with their snack, clean up the mess of dinner specifically cooked for the kids that they wouldn't eat. 

Pajamas. Tooth brushing. Some inane reading of fairy junk.

Upstairs: lights out.

Downstairs: preparing to start the whole rigamarole all over again tomorrow.

To top it all off, I have not seen my mom in 212 days. (-5 million points)

Oct 1, 2013

Sea garden pasta


Step one
Align the stars so the love of your life happens to be someone who can hook you up with a steady supply of morel mushrooms.

Step two
Birth a cute kid who will pick out pasta shells and dream up her own sea creature dinner.

Step three
Throw together your ocean:
  • Coral: morels
  • Rocks: beans
  • Peas: pearls
  • Shells: pasta
  • Water: cream cheese with blue food coloring
  • Octopus: sculpted hotdog with caviar eyes (glued on with mustard)
Step four
Serve with a snorkel.