Car games

29 December 2008

I am, honestly, amazed by the ingenuity my family has exhibited over the past few days. For example: driving home from Sandy with Laurel and Kate, Kate-ey introduced me to a new game called "Days of the Week". It goes something like this:

To the tune of The Adam's Family

Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)
Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)
Days of the week, days of the week,
Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)

There's Monday and there's Tuesday
Wednesday and there's Thursday
Friday and there's Saturday
And then come Su-unday.

Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)
Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)
Days of the week, days of the week,
Days of the week! (*snap* *snap*)

At this point it is someone else's turn to pick a topic:

Months of the year (*snap* *snap*)
or
Types of weather (*snap* *snap)
or
Co-on-tinents (*snap* *snap*)

Bones of the arm provides an interesting challenge, being rather short, States of the Union is difficult, but possible, capitals of Europe is more of a challenge, mainly because I only know half of them. My favorite, by far, is Olympic Events (*snap* *snap*), Olympic Events (*snap* *snap*), Olympic Events, Olympic Events, Olympic Events (*snap* *snap*): There's Skating and there's Down Hill, and the skeleton, etc...

Car rides are never dull with these kids.

Of holly berries and celebrations

26 December 2008

December 25th is Christmas because of the traditions that have made it so for hundreds of years: St. Nicholas with his red robe and gifts, the manger scene with kneeling shepherds and adoring angels, Christmas carolers out in the snow, and a Yule log in the fireplace.

My family celebrates with variations on the theme beginning with yards of popcorn-cranberry strings and four days of caroling to everyone we know in the valley. On Christmas Eve, after clam chowder dinner, we produce a spectacular Christmas pageant (complete with all the regulars plus King Herod, four or five sheep, a chorus of angels and usually a couple of Marys). We kids give the parents a talent show (the price we pay for our years of music lessons) and then everyone takes turns opening their new Christmas pajamas.

The kids pile into one (often small) bedroom to watch movies and wait for Santa to visit. At the appointed hour (always hours and hours before I'd like to be awake) Mom and Dad come in for Jesus' birthday party. We sing Happy Birthday and eat cake while we discuss our new-year's-resolutionesque presents to Jesus and decide on new gifts to give him in the coming year.

Then we open presents. The aforementioned traditions were established, for the most part, by our dear loving parents and are based on decades of their own family traditions. So we the children have decided to create a few traditions of our own.

The electronic whoopie cushion was first given to me by my brother Isaac, and has since been regifted to various members of the family. It is a delicate matter as to who will next receive the revered EWC because they must be old enough to know better than to open the box and use it but young enough to recognize the importance of passing on the tradition. Thus far, my parents have never been gifted the EWC; we are not sure if they qualify in either respect.

Isaac introduced the tradition of giving alternatives to current technologies: A few years ago, he gave me a real-genuine-imitation cell phone which doubled, for a week or two, as an edible banana. It came with instructions on convincing your friends that it was, in fact, a real cell phone. This year he gave me an i-pod (see fig. 1).

I'm not really sure how the tradition of movie-marathons developed but this year we carried it on with the Mission:Impossible trilogy beginning at 11:30 pm Christmas Night and culminating in six children sleeping through hours of explosions and intrigue.

I've decided we should make a tradition of sleeping all day on the 26th.

Where's my shovel?

22 December 2008

Usually dinner is a relatively calm affair at home. Excepting only that time Mom started a food fight with her cantaloupe. Or when Isaac and I were laughing so hard during the blessing on the food that we shook the whole table. Or every time someone leaves the table for a minute and we hide their food in the dishwasher.

Ok, it's hardly pastoral, but I think this evening was an all-time high with a resurgence of our favorite Dinner Table Telephone.

Originally, this game began with my Dad, years and years ago, "Houston we have a problem".... which got to me and became (somewhere along the way) "You stink. We have a problem."

Tonight Kate began with: A Scissor-Brained Haircut... which became: A Disappearing Haircut ("Oh, is that what your father has?" Yes, Mom.)

Mom: An inconvenient proposal... Dad: Something got scrambled .... Me: I want a larger tankard?

Laurel: I want a purple teddy bear... It's a big purple moo-pee. [come now. what?]

Jared: Aliens eat pickles by the toaster... [actually, that one stayed pretty consistent.]

Mom: Isaac's fingers give me the willies.... Dad's fingers are little Willys.

Tommy: Why did the polar bear cross the road?... To get to the other side.

Dad: All things excellent are as rare as they are difficult to obtain... LDS democrats are rare and amazing...

Kate: You are all nincompoops... Kshuh Kshuh Kshuh pixy poop. To which my dad replied, "Well, I'd rather have the pixies; I don't know what a Nincom is-- at least I know what size of shovel I need."

By this time I was laughing so hard I could not, in fact, see through the tears that streamed down my face, but I wiped them away long enough to see my mother attempting to hide her own laughter.

Ah, dinner time at the Hales' home.

A small thought

18 December 2008

My pal asked me yesterday what I needed in my life to be really happy-- he corrected himself, "--to be really content?"

I laughed it off, not sure how to respond: friends make me happy, avocados make me happy, good grades make me happy, Christmas will make me happy.

"I think I need to study my scriptures better." he answered his own question.

I love friends that quietly, intentionally or no, point out that I need to reevaluate my priorities.

Picture print by currier & ives

28 November 2008

I love Karen Carpenter. She is the voice of Christmas. In fact, it's not Christmas until the day after Thanksgiving when Mom turns on the Carpenters. I hear, like herald angels announcing the season, those first notes: "It cayme upon a midnight cleeer!" And thus the season is ushered in, safely after we have Given Thanks.

This year though, I had a change of heart and Christmas began a little early.

Last weekend Bryan and I stopped by SmartCookie for some dessert. It was still days before Thanksgiving, but ice cream shops all over Provo were already breaking out the eggnog and peppermint flavors. Of course, I would never pick a Christmas flavor before the official inauguration of the season, but something suddenly over came me and I heard myself asking for "two gingersnaps with peppermint, please."

What? Blasphemy!

The girl handed me the ice cream sandwich, and for a moment I stood stunned by my sudden rebellion against all that is holly and ivy.

But gingersnaps are my favorite, and the peppermint smelled so much like childhood...

One taste was all it took and I became a forever-changed woman!

"This tastes just like Christmas!"

By the time we climbed into the car and cranked up the Christmas carols (I love Karen Carpenter!), I couldn't quite remember why I had whined for all these years about pre-Turkeyday Yuletide Joy!

Moral of the story: I love Karen Carpenter. Did I mention that?

I am thankful for the scientific discoveries of pavlov

24 November 2008

I didn't really consider the implications of a vegetarian Thanksgiving until Jacob mentioned cooking up his 20lb turkey. And then I started salivating.

What is thanksgiving without that crispy skin which clings to the sweet, flaky flesh of a basted and stuffed bird? Without gravy or liver? This is moral dilemma to a new extreme.

And, oh! the Friday Sandwiches, with all the leftovers spread and piled between two thick bread slices.

Thanksgiving is flag-football with the Copes and Grandma's orange rolls; it's fold-out tables borrowed from the church and that yam dish my mommy makes. But never has November's 4th Thursday been a real celebration without a dead, plucked and roasted bird.

hmm. Tofurkey?

Appeal

17 November 2008

The Meringue House
Provo, UT 84604



November 2008

Oxford English Dictionary
Oxford University Press
Great Clarendon St.
Oxford OX2 6DP

To Whom it May Concern:

I am generally a prescriptivist grammarian, though I recognize the merits of the descriptivist school; I believe it is the tradition of our language that gives authority to English teachers and editors. So it is you, the prescribers of our language, to whom I apply.

You recognize the manifold responsibilities of the English language to communicate not simply in strings of well-defined but ill-fitting words, but rather through the art of connotation and well-crafted syntax. For example, admonitions such as “have a heart” or “look sharp” are nonsense if understood literally, but said thus, these idioms mean more than their component parts. Even more so, compound words play on the unity of their form: sunshine- a single unit of verb and its subject, or together, or themselves. The form of each highlights the intrinsic unity of the two-words-made-one and so speaks more than each word might alone.

And so I have reached the substance of my appeal: it seems most logical that eachother, as a compound word, be added to the dictionary. Standing separate each and other cannot convey the unity necessary as two friends hug eachother, or two lovers clasp eachother’s hands. I ask you to take this suggestion under serious consideration, recognizing your solemn responsibility to protect and nurture the purity and correctness of our English Language.

Communication is the stuff of our souls given a common voice, and our written language ought to reflect the depth of these souls.

Sincerely,




a girl

The ovid-mcfarlane test

08 November 2008

Part I

Please take out your copybooks. On my mark, you will be given ten (10) minutes to unscramble the following words. There may be more than one correct answer for some words. Please try to find at least one correct answer for each scrambled word.

After the ten (10) minutes, please answer the questions in Part II.

Go.



1.rapiuoh

2.iieergfl

3.hiacd

4.naalct

5.iinnarcad

6.ynnfet

7.ttyoban

8.taeynsrc

Stop.


Part II

What is your age?
What is your gender?
What level of education have you attained?

How many questions in Part I did you answer?

How many questions in Part I do you think you answered correctly?

On a scale of 1-10, with 1 being hardly and 10 being very, how would you rate the difficulty of the above exercise?

On a scale of 1-10, with 1 being poorest and 10 being excellentest, how would you rate your performance on the above exercise?

Do you consider yourself a narcissist?… Ok, they don’t ask this question. But they ask a whole stream of questions to see if you are, i.e. On a scale of 1-10, how cool are you?

Stop writing now.

Please hand in your copybooks to your teacher, or head of class.

Your answer sheets will be tabulated and then destroyed.
There are minimal risks associated with this study.

...wanna know the answers?

stay tuned.

I'm just messing with you.
I am a psych major.

Answers

(The following is intended for human test subjects who have completed The Ovid-Mcfarlane test and who have sent their results to The Committee for the Study and Repression of Narcissistic Tendencies to be tabulated)

The Ovid-Mcfarlane test is a measure of the reaction of narcissists to an impossible task.

If you scored negative for narcissism (see final question of Part II), you're results are unimportant to us and will be ignored.

If you scored positively for narcissism, then you were probably frustrated with the questions in Part I, and most likely thought you did really well, considering.

You didn't do well, because you can't.

For anyone who is interested, only three of the scrambled sets of letters unscramble to actual words: 2, 5, 8.

This is a test. This is only a test. In case of an actual study this would be followed and proceeded by a tome of legal release and disclosure forms.

Thank you for your participation,

The Committee for the Study and Repression of Narcissistic Tendencies.

October remains

23 October 2008

The sunshine that was savored by the summer-lush leaves has seeped through every vein and now is shining and falling from crisp branches. Like sunbeams on the wrong side of autumn-grey quilted clouds.

The grass crunched this morning with the gasp of first frost. These mornings, the air is heady with fresh celebration of cold; sparking and sharp. I wore a red sweater because joy like new winter is too glorious for my usual drab.

The vestiges of summer are being buried slowly beneath the walnut trees, and the close mountains are frosted in orange. Once the shadows have swallowed dim twilight, winter tickles the darkness with chill breeze.

I think hot chocolate is in order.

Teacher evaluation

17 October 2008

Explain this course in fifteen words or less:

Reading load is heavy,
like your accent: monotone.
But heaviest of all are
my eyelids.

I do

10 October 2008

I've got this thing for history. It landed me in a dead-end major which I loved intensely, but which provided me with minimal marketable skills. As my ANES 101 class reminded me weekly, you have two options as an Ancient Near Eastern Historian: museum curator ("And here we have the bronze beard of the late Amenhotep II, 7th Pharaoh of the 18th dynasty of Egypt") or translator of obscure languages ("ראיתי אש ירדת מהשמים ונפלת אירושלם"*). By-the-bye, The Next Indiana Jones is no longer a viable/marketable option.

So this year, I picked a new major with a few more post-grad options, but history still pulls at my heartstrings.

I was just reading about Roman marriages- here in Happy Valley I get my fill of the Mormon variety, but the Roman wedding ceremonies were different in a beautiful and exotic way.

The bride wore saffron- I'd like to do my wedding in saffron maybe with burgundy?- and around her waist she knotted a braided rope to represent fidelity. The ceremony began at the bride's home, where her parents gave her away and the bride and groom exchanged their vows:

"Ubi tu Gaius, ego Gaia."
Where you are Gaius, there I am Gaia.
Where you are Father, I am Mother.


"Ubi to Gaia, ego Gaius"
Where you are Gaia, there I am Gaius.
Where you are Mother, I am Father.


Gaia, the Mother Goddess, the Earth, is the first goddess of fertility; as these young couples took eachother's hands in covenant, they promised to be parents together, to raise a family together. For the Romans, the purpose of marriage was family.

I'm not exactly jumping at the bit to get hitched, but I wonder sometimes how marriage would be different today if our vows were made not only to eachother but also to our children. Ought we not also promise to have and to hold our children till death do us part? Marriage becomes even more selfless when you see it that way.

I feel like now would be a good time for the music to start... "Family-- isn't it about time?" But see, here's the thing: It is really all about family. Marriage I mean. I think the Roman's had that bit pretty strait.

Vote yes on Prop 8.

*"I saw fire descend from the sky and fall upon Jerusalem." Or something to that effect.

Multivariate increase of m.c.escher’s popularity

07 October 2008

song chart memes

All I can say is I wish I'd thought of this first.

Growing apple trees

30 September 2008

I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree...
A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;
                "Trees" by Joyce Kilmer

There are apple trees growing in my front yard. That delicate reach of leafy arms someone once called lifted in prayer, the smooth stretch of young bark, tugs at my soul and my own arms ache to reach upward.

But actually my apple trees don't. The last gardener was training them to bend out along the fence-line, all around the roses. So they sit flat and squat like a child's drawing: six even arms protruding from a fence-high trunk. The sweet green apples sit on the hard ground where the branches have bowed to lay them. I ate one after school last week and it tasted of grass and sunshine and a bit like summer rain.

But the gardener's left or moved on or retired. The roses need clipping and the geraniums need weeding. The apple trees are sending out odd limbs vertically; they look skewampus for their reaching and remind me to prune this week.

Some days I am an apple-tree fence. But today I am a renegade twig that can't help but stretch out of bounds to pray.

Litmus test

20 September 2008

School House Rock would have its young and impressionable viewers believe that the Pursuit of Happiness chiefly involves chasing after young colonial women and is therefore reserved for young athletic colonial men.

My dear Reader, may I impress upon you the ridiculousness of this claim by suggesting a few simple pleasures in my own Pursuit of Happiness:

1. Cheap white nail polish—the kind so thin it runs down your nails clear and pools into French tips. A very sophisticated and classy look for only $1.07 at your local Dollar Tree.

2. Ceramic Scrabble tiles—smooth edges and a soft, hefty, cool feel. Rattling around they make a satisfying clinkety sound.

3.(Vegetarian) EggMcMuffins for breakfast—toasted English muffin with sharp cheddar and egg over-easy. Definitely to be eaten over the sink; drippy yoke and all comes off as quite barbaric even sans the Canadian bacon. For culinary perfection, serve with a tall glass of tomato juice.

Red pine lake

13 September 2008

I fell in love this weekend again with my mountains. On California’s tree-lined streets and wrapped in her bay-fog I forgot the sweet breath and wide embrace of the mountains I have loved.

Friday afternoon we threw together some gear and strapped on our packs. The head of the trail was deceptively flat, paved and civilized, but as soon as the cars were swallowed from view the path crumbed into gravel and then into a damp creek bed.

My lungs were sore form the valley’s pollution and my legs tired from its concrete stairs. But I was in my mountains and my soul laughed at the red of the wild berries, the whisper of yellow in the leaves, the soft cool of wet air that kissed my thirsty skin.

True love is waking up to the cold of pre-dawn, the air burning against your face. It’s the smell of dew on the living earth that fills your nostrils and fills your head— alluring, enticing. It’s the bright of first sun that washes slowly down the mountainface to fill the dark lake and warm the shadows. It’s waking up aching all over from loving the climb too much.

But Saturday is laundry day and homework and housework so now I’m back in my house in the valley, sitting by the window wondering what my mountain is doing.

From the library of m. f. hales

06 September 2008

I have of late been looking for a few new good books. I was about to label “good” as the operative word here, but I believe the significant terms in this passage are “good”, “new” and “books”. I have recently had my fill of bad old movies, shocking fresh news, and ridiculous fugitive pranks, so I think a nice new good book would be just the ticket.

A while ago Cait passed on a warning “Always read stuff that will make you look good if you die in the middle of it.”

As in “I wouldn’t get caught dead reading…”

So, with all this in mind, imagine my joy when right in my very own inbox I found a message from Amazon.com, "Amazon.com has new recommendations for you based on items you purchased" and of course based on the predictions of the Amazon.com Crystal Ball. I read on with mounting anticipation:

Veronica, by Roger Duvoisin— Veronica, a hippopotamus who wants to stand out from the herd and be famous, travels to the big city where she indeed does stand out…

Saving Juliet, by Suzanne Selfors— Selfors injects an angst-ridden 17-year-old Manhattan actress into Shakespeare's star-crossed romance, yielding hilarious and often very clever results…

Shark Girl, by Kelly Bingham— Jane, 15, is smart, good-looking, and the best artist in her school. After a shark attack at a local beach, nothing is the same…

Useful Fools, by C.A. Schmidt—What makes a terrorist?


All I’ve got to say is Amazon.com better have nothing to do with my obit.

On the campain track

05 September 2008

Now that I talk to adults again, politics figure more heavily in my conversation than they have in recent months. But I'm not sure if I oughtn't to have discussed elections with the kiddies anyway- this seems right up their alley:

"I guess I’ll go with the McCain cockroach. I think he’s got gentler eyes.”

The New Jersey Pest Management Association organised a cockroach race representing the presidential contest. John McCain’s roach won, but ominously appeared to fall asleep the moment it crossed the finishing line. MyCentralJersey.com, August 21st


Hmm.

Pieces of me

01 September 2008

I saw some old friends today: dinner with my best buds, dessert with my old neighborhood, and I realized these friends are a piece of my soul that I had forgotten I had lost. And now I am found, Back home.

Home is where you keep the most boxes.

Also. Home is where you are whole.

Pumpkin pie and the friendship-day present

27 August 2008

Once upon a time is a good beginning for a story, particularly a Pumpkin Pie story, which this is, because it’s a story about Pumpkin Pie.

Pumpkin Pie lived with her mother and father, her three sisters, Peach, Plum, and Pecan, and her brother named Chicken.

One day a new family moved into the house next door. They had a pet boa constrictor and a toucan, and books and books full of pictures from all the far away places they had lived. But most importantly they had a little girl just Pumpkin’s age.

Her name was Annabelle, and she and Pumpkin Pie became best friends right away. They had tea parties and played Monopoly. Annabelle taught Pumpkin how to sing songs in a funny language, and Pumpkin taught Annabelle how to jump rope double-dutch.

One day in school, Pumpkin’s teacher announced it was National Friendship Week. Pumpkin Pie ran home after school. She wanted to do something special for her best friend, Annabelle

“Mommy, It’s Friendship Week! Can we make a present for Annabelle?”

Together Pumpkin and her mother made a delicious batch of cinnamon rolls. They wrapped them in pink cellophane with a note: “Happy Friendship Week!” and tiptoed over to Annabelle’s house. They set the plate on the front porch, Pumpkin gave the doorbell a hard ring, and Pumpkin Pie and her mother ran back to their own house.

It wasn’t too much longer before there was a ring at Pumpkin’s door. She opened the door so fast, she caught sight of Annabelle running across the lawn. Pumpkin smiled, there on her front porch was a box that said “For Pumpkin, my best friend!”

Pumpkin carried the box to the table, and carefully lifted off the lid. Imagine her surprise when she found only a pile of mud in the bottom! Pumpkin Pie began to cry.

“Why Pumpkin, what ever is the matter?” her mother asked.

“I thought Annabelle was my friend, but all she gave me was a box of mud!”

“Oh, I’m sure she is your friend, maybe where Annabelle comes from it’s nice for friends to give eachother mud.”

“I don’t think so! I think she’s mean!”

“Maybe you should ask her, I’m sure Annabelle would explain.”

But Pumpkin Pie was so angry she didn’t even talk to Annabelle all day. Pumpkin dumped the box of mud out her window and she just sat in her room and sulked.

All week Pumpkin Pie wouldn’t talk to her best friend. She ran home from school fast before Annabelle could catch up. When Annabelle came by to play with her, Pumpkin Pie pretended to be busy. Pumpkin didn’t answer the phone, and she wouldn’t sit with her at lunch.

It wasn’t until the next Friday that Pumpkin Pie looked out her window and saw some little green seedlings growing out the pile of mud.

And it wasn’t until much, much later, when the small seedlings had sprouted into a bed of beautiful flowers, that Pumpkin Pie finally understood: there are many different ways for people to say “I love you.”

My mommy told me this story or something like it. I’ve been thinking about it a lot recently for a number of reasons; I hope I have changed much in the 15 years since Mom made it up the first time, but I’m still not sure how the story ends.

Good morning starshine

16 August 2008

This week I’ve noticed that I sing a lot. I’m sure it’s because in just over 36 hours the Wilson household went from Filled To Capacity to Me, and I have been singing to fill the silence.

I would here like to take a moment to expound upon the term “Filled To Capacity”: This lovely, four-bedroom Tudor was home to, besides me and Jane in the cottage, Auntie Lynne, Uncle Dow, Mariah, Abe, Pete, Hannah, Becky, plus Mom, Christian, Kate, Tommy, plus Johnny, Mikey, Levi, plus sometimes Adam, and whoever else came to dinner—the old piano teacher, the flute teacher, the Mia Maids, some friends from Europe, Adam’s classmates etc. etc. etc. “Me” refers to the mass exodus of everyone else to various corners of the country, while I remained to keep house. The silence, which is: actually hearing the soft purr of my laptop, has been a bit of a shock. So I sing.

Besides my best Jazz standards and the latest Broadway hits, I have been digging up a few old childhood favorites. While taking my girls for a picnic Wednesday, I suddenly remembered this timeless classic; I think it was Ava’s hysterical screams at a nearby bee that triggered the wave of nostalgia:

Shoo fly, don’t bother me,
Shoo fly, don’t bother me,
Shoo fly, don’t bother me,
For I belong to somebody.

I feel, I feel, I feel,
I feel like a morning star.
I feel, I feel, I feel,
I feel like a morning star.


Rising? Faint? Unnoticed? I’m not really sure how a morning star is supposed to feel.

Not even wensleydale?

13 August 2008

So, I’m reading this great book about changing your life completely just by being ridiculously honest about yourself. So I’d like to practice here:

Confession #1: I ate the whole box of Trader Joe crackers,

Confession #2: in just four days,

Confession #3: and I’m not sorry. Except I am sorry that Mom took the rest of the smoked Gouda.

Well, I feel so much better.

5:57

12 August 2008

The loneliest part of living
alone
is not the clock, which chimes
unheard
all day,
or the radio, left on,
forgotten,
entertaining the kitchen wall,
or the feeble light of the telephone
blinking
because no one answered,
or even the dripping faucet which,
unnoticed,
bothers no one’s conscience,

but the back door,
which is locked,
and shuffling for my keys,
I have time to consider
that the dishes are still undone,
that I’ll have to go shopping soon,
that dinner conversation will be the comics again,
that my footsteps will fill the whole void
because there is no one here to play the piano.

Carrot tops

08 August 2008

The door opens on Hannah and Becky lounging on my sofa, scooping out fingerfulls of nutella.

Hannah: Hi!
Becky: Write about Hanny and the nutella! uproarious giggling.
Hannah: Look Mally! Crams her whole hand in the jar of nutella.
Me: I'm gonna' call you Hannah-Banan-n'tella. Ella for short.
Becky: More giggling as Hannah licks off her whole hand.
Hannah: I think I have nutella up my nose.
Becky: I like that picture. But I think it's ugly.
Hannah: I have to go to the library.
Becky: Can I have some nutella?
Hannah: There's no more.
    Pulls out another fistful.
    What's everyone laughing at?
Becky: Snatches away the jar. Exit left into my bathroom.
    from off stage Wow! that's really messy nutella.
Hannah: I'm a messy nutella.
Me: You're face is a messy nutella.
Hannah: I know.
Enter Becky scraping empty jar.
Becky: Let's go buy some more.
Hannah: I have to go to the library.
Curtain.

Wake up call

03 August 2008

This morning I woke up at two minutes to six, as I do every morning—it’s possibly the only thing I learned in school that I have not yet forgotten, but instead of rolling over and back to sleep, I shook myself awake. Something was clinging to my ankle. In the half-lucid haze of waking I muddled my dream about street sweepers with the smell of unfamiliar sheets—then I remembered.

I’m playing mom again this weekend for Chubby, Ty-ty, Sadie and Matthew and Allie. The hand in my bed was Sadie’s. Halfway through last night’s Broadway production I called Bedtime! (“You’ll laugh! You’ll cry! You’ll refuse to wear pajamas! A 2½ hour smash-hit for the whole family!”) Sadie announced she would be sleeping in my bed. Sure. Just go to bed. I was busy wrestling a screaming Chubby onto the changing table.

When the final curtain closed on the five sleeping kids, Ty-ty’s bloody nose had been staunched, Allie had called her mother 5 times to say goodnight, Matthew had moved all his sleeping things into Ty-ty’s room, Chubby had been rocked to sleep, twice, and Sadie was sleeping, sprawled across the bed, on both pillows, snoring. As I curled up at the foot of the bed, trying to burry my head in the covers, Allie came in, dragging her sleeping bag and pillow. She’s 12, but even 12-year-olds can be scared to sleep alone.

But I was the only one awake at 5:58 am: lying upside down in bed listening to the quiet breathing of early-morning sleeping. I carefully pulled my ankle loose and opened wide the bedroom’s French doors: the early, fresh cool sifted into the room and I lay back down. I must have fallen asleep then because it was nearly an hour later when my dream (that lanky street sweeper again, and in a Hawaiian-print shirt from the bowling alley?) became entangled with the whining of a fire truck.

Grumble, grumble, EPA! I rolled over and pulled the covers to my ears…

“Fire! Fire!” It was Allie, wide-awake and panicked.

The sirens were still singing out alarum bells, and I realized they were on our street. I sat up, and scanned the room, surprisingly calm for the frantic note I could hear in Allie’s voice. No fire, no smoke, Sadie was still sound asleep, only Allie stood cowering in the middle of the room. She whimpered and looked out the big windows— then I saw it too. Across the backyard and above the neighbor’s roof, dark gray smoke churned into the sky.

Mesmerizing, really—thick air so dirty with fire’s choking vomit, like crumpled velvet draping on the great magnolias that ringed their yard.

“There’s a fire!” Allie was crying now, and I snapped the porch doors closed.

“It’s okay,” I tried to console her, "Do you want to help me check on everyone, make sure they're okay? The firefighters are already there, we're all safe, everything is going to be fine…”

She was, in fact, inconsolable, and preferred to pace the room, alternately crying and staring at the smoke in silence.

When the dark gray finally turned to white steam, I coaxed her away from the window,

“Allie, it’s going to be okay.”

“I’m just so scared!”

“Of what, honey?”

She shook her head,

“I’m just scared!”

I didn’t know what to say.

Welcome, welcome Sabbath morning.

Accio butterbeer!

31 July 2008

For no particular reason, while standing at the top of the stairs, I suddenly remembered it was Harry Potter's Birthday. I noted it to Mariah and we shared a spontaneous Harry Potter birthday handshake.

I don't know why shaking hands seemed like the best thing to do. But it did at the time.

Happy 28th Harry!

Travel log iii: sneakers at the ritz

26 July 2008


Yesterday we drove to The City because it was Saturday and beautiful and because Cam promised to show us around his city if ever we came for a visit. Getting out the door, there was some small todo about wardrobe; Auntie Lynne couldn't find her new hat, Becky wouldn't wear her pink dress, but we finally piled into the Merc: Mariah, Becky, Aunt Lynne and me- off for a little touristing, a quick bite to eat and Kate's concert that evening.

I should have payed more attention when Auntie Lynne handed me a black blouse to bring "in case Cam dresses up too. Though I guess you two can go cazh together." But I couldn't imagine Kate's concert was a formal sort of thing and I felt plenty dressed up for that in loose khakis, a cute knit top and my favorite slip on sneakers. I had intended to iron my pants, but I opted to wash my hair instead—what more can you ask for on a lazy July morning?

Cam lives in a neat mid-century modern house overlooking the Pacific. The hills in San Francisco are such that every three block offers some amazing view, but as Cam led us out to his back porch, I gasped at the picture-postcard he wakes up to every morning: The fog had cleared for an unusually clear day and the checkerboard of colorful rooftops spread across the mid-summer green of hills rippling down to the ocean. Church spires marked some cathedral in the distance and wooded hills to the south cradled the scene.

I think I could have snapped a couple pictures there and called it a day, but you can't visit SanFran without a drive through the Presidio, pictures in front of The Bridge, a walk down Pier 39, and a stopandgo drive around China Town. The Golden Gate bridge was breathtakingly beautiful with the flakes of sailboats scattered below and the hazy hills of the continent rising out of the dark bay on the other side. But even that picture seemed ordinary after Cam's backyard view. We did visit a stunning church in the Italian district; just in time to wish some newlyweds goodbye, admire the intricate architecture and slip out before the next bride and groom arrived. But by then it was 4 o'clock and time for tea.

And I finally understood the hat, pink dress and the black blouse. Four o'clock is teatime at the Ritz Carlton, which is, of course, the only place to go if you're out and about in SanFran on a hot Saturday afternoon.

Valet parking, brocade couches and me in my favorite sneakers, sipping peppermint tea—onesugarandcream. Of course I declined the salmon caviar sandwiches for the vegetarian tea of eggplant pesto on rye, and bell-pepper-cream on crackers. And scones with clotted cream, little biscuits and dainty pastries with jam from tiny jars. Naturally, a woman with long wavy hair played the harp in the background—a selection of Disney classics for the table of little girls wearing pretty dresses and swinging their legs. The five of us sat primly and gossiped (about ourselves, who else?) and tried to act posh. Just a few friends up for a day in The City.

And me in my favorite sneakers.

Mommy talk

23 July 2008

This one's for Jo.

I see now that I've oversimplified the thing. Mommying I mean. With all due humility, I confess I've been foolish and naïve. A few years of changing diapers is hardly qualification. Of course this too will be foolishness in years to come, when I have some. Kids of my own, of course.

But this summer's been good preschool for the degree no one is ever awarded— you never graduate from being Mom. You just have tests all the time, 24-7 homework and laundry to do besides. Textbooks are hard to come by, and the study group is just you and Dad. Course objectives? I think I'll start with keeping the little darlings alive: Mark crashed his bike and Cal cut open his food, I stopped Ava from eating paint today and four-year-old Tommy from jumping in the pool. I'm sure my own children will be at least that creative.

But then I have to wonder, am I protector first or teacher? Maybe a little paint would do Ava good. Do I make their beds because I love them or do I love them enough to teach them to? If I just fought the TV-battle and the homework-battle and the jumping-off-the-garage-roof-battle, should I really ask him to pick up his socks right this minute? Should I ask an hysterical child to say her bedtime prayers? Is time-out really for his good, or should I be the one sitting in my room?

There are no answers yet, really. Even kids know "maybe" means you weren't listening. Or it means you're lying and "no".

So I just have questions but what more can you bring with you to the beginning of a new school?

Trivialities

16 July 2008

I think mothering is the closest mankind will get to manipulating the timespace continuum. Not like I know, but Mr. & Mrs. InHawaiiForaWeek are loaning me their six children, and three dimensions just aren't enough to contain these little kids: Two-year-old Sandy runs on rocket fuel I’m convinced, and it takes all the running you can do just to keep up with her. Mark is seven and talks at the pace of a tree growing, but you must stand still and listen; he only talks slow and knows if you’re not paying him mind. Try listening to him closely, while catching Sandy as she streaks out the back door. And Mia has her own four-year-old speed, sort of sluggish between the hours of 7 and 1, but then like some supernova she explodes (about the time she should take a nap).

You can try to dole out your time as you like: 18 minutes to boil noodles, 13 minutes to load the car, 38 minutes to run the wash, but you have to measure out enough time to loose gallantly at cards to Kali, who’s ten. And listen to Mark, Gregory and Mia all relate the story of the April Fools Prank. And get milk for Kali, water for Sandy, no ice for Mark, sippy cup for Mia, and the phone is ringing for Bradly, turn off the movie, sweep the floors (again?), push their swings, wash the dishes, turn off the TV, change the diaper, preheat the oven, phone’s ringing, someone spilled! can I eat this? help me say please no thank you stop pool park dinner dishes, empty the trash, water the geraniums, and imagine—I still have time to read (after Goodnight Moon, Little Bear, Hop on Pop OnefishtwofishFancyNancySleepingbeautyblueberriesforsal) my book.

Out of the mouth of babes

11 July 2008

"Are you mawwied?"
"Nope, not yet."
"Oh yeah, 'cause you have wittle dots awl over your face... Fle- Fwwweckles."

Back at the old game

09 July 2008

My boys finally tired of Pirates after two months of walking the plank and avasting ye lubbards in the back yard. I suppose two months is a long time when you're three and four years old, and it had now lost it's scurvy charm, as had hide-and-go-seek, duckduckgoose, and bubble wands. When I wouldn't let them watch the Backyardigans ("But you never let us watch kids shows and i just wanna watch TV all day!") Tyrannosaurus Caden decided it was high time I was dismembered or at least severely disfigured. Luckily I learned my dinoskills from the Velociraptor Master Morgan Gibbons, so I gave a jurassic squawk and hoisted my assassin onto the couch. Needless to say, the T. Rex was no match for my tickling claws.

Cal, once his older brother was incapacitated with giggles, leaped from the coffee table like some sabertooth spider monkey. He landed on me, and more tickling ensued. Caden burrowed under the cushions in escape, and, burying the monkey under floral print pillows, I flapped my wings and stated after my escaping prey. It was halfway around the dining room table, mid raptor leap and squawk, that I became suddenly very aware of life. At which point I started laughing. My life is completely ridiculous sometimes.

"Hey! Chase me! Dinosaurs don't just laugh!"

Oh excuse me. "Squawk!"

Sabbath day observance

06 July 2008

I keep a notebook full of the ways I see God in my life each day. Some entries relate His nature's beauty, some His encouraging trials, all describe the tender mercy of my God who never forgets me.

Yesterday He gave me rain. Rain in torrents that veiled the windows and littered the forest's leaves to its floor. Lightening that lit up the sky more beautifully than any fireworks show. Thunder that rumbled like the deep breathing of the earth itself; I had forgotten the way thunder jostles the air and ripples through you- tangible.

Mrs. Lobauch let me sit on her porch to watch the heavens empty on her sodden Carolina forest. My parents sat inside to chat, but I sat in a stiff deck chair and let the heavy wet air embraced me. Here I breathed in thick breaths of my favorite air on earth.

This morning smelled like the sweet wet of a Carolina summer storm. This is the smell of home. They pray for rain here to water their summer-parched earth. I pray to thank God for His rain that watered my desert-parched soul.

Buried treasure

05 July 2008

34.479 N
77.445 W

Seriously.
If you can find it, we'll even let you keep it.

Uncle Greg buried it for the little kids on Tuesday, but their pirate-y treasure-finding skills were no match for his pirate-y burying skills. Actually, everyone looked for it. And it's still safely buried.

Looks like this round goes to Cap'n Greg.

Building sandcastles

04 July 2008

Fourth of July at the beach is the coconut smell of sunscreen, sand in your ears (and nose, eyes and hair), Grandma's giant bucket of licorice, and most of all my daddy's sandcastles. In our backyard we build tree forts, and on graph paper he sketches space stations, but on the Carolina coastline he turns sand into towers, walls and palaces: a fortress for an afternoon.

He started after breakfast. With the shovel and a few buckets-- "see, we'll carve out a channel here and the water'll sort of wash out to a delta over there... this hole we'll dig down to the water table and the moat can drain into here..."

A bridge, a tunnel, two fortresses with access roads, a giant hill in the dry moat-lake, and towers of drip castles on every level. Daddy took a lunch break, but just for a bit; low tide is the very best time for building.

He looked a bit like a kid out there, kneeling in the middle of his piles of sand, patting down the walls, and dribbling up the towers. I built up the battlements, the guard hills and towers. Jack got knighted Head Castle Protector and helped dig out the moat. Sussy and Brigham picked shells for decoration and the neighbors came by to stare.

"Will it be there tomorrow?" the little boy asked.

"We'll see." said his dad.

"Not a chance." I promised.

About dinner time the tide rolled in, just like it always will, and we finally stood back from our masterpiece and watched it slowly melt.

"You know, I was thinking we should've set up a camera and made stop-motion clips of it washing out."

"I was thinking the same thing! But we should show the whole thing build up first and then wash out."

"There goes the first bridge!"

"Yeah, didn't expect that one to last long"

Daddy chuckled, "Nothing's supposed to last long— it is a sandcastle."

Topsail Island, 6:45 am

01 July 2008

The Ocean entices too many off the creative brink called Poetry, like some siren song seducing every vacationer's pen. It is glorious to see the horizon curve around, full to the brim with greyblue. And the gangly seabirds that peck in the surf simply beg to be likened to something. Perhaps it's the early sunlight: blinding pink to the east, stretching my lanky shadow to the west. But I'm determined not to compose another beached whale of clichés. In fact, I'd rather just sit, still. Left well enough alone, the Ocean is its own poetry.

Perhaps

29 June 2008

silence is the most beautiful language:

which spoken with the ear comprehends
the tongues of discontent, of frustration
to which voice gives understanding
that turns to thought
to plan
to hope

which comprehends and counsels
in a dialect of love

Perhaps that language
sounds most sweetly
of Above.

Les mots justes

26 June 2008

Abe's back from Scout camp so we swapped riddles over dinner tonight: the answers are all English words from common vocabulary.

A five letter word that reads the same with four letters cut off.
           -6th grade EEE

Two definitions and two ways to pronounce
two words with the same spelling-
one capitalized, one lowercase.
           -Daddy

Two words nearly identical,
but opposite in gender and number.
The second is made by adding one letter to the first.
           -Unremembered

House of cards

24 June 2008

I learned a new game last week. Sadie taught me Ka-¢hing!, and since we lost the instruction booklet, let me explain just how to play:

Contents
29 cash cards in denominations of green-1, red-2, blue-5 and yellow-10
35 stock cards of different values and categories
2 wild cards "to buy things with"

Set Up
Deal out cash cards to players—Sadie plays banker:
    “Everyone gets three green ones… and I get two red ones…”
    “I've only got one red.”
    “Well, I get more than you because I’m in charge.”
    “Can I have four yellows then?”
    “No.”
    “Please! Yellow is almost my favorite color.”
    “Well fine, but I get all the blues then…”
Illegal exchanges are encouraged to facilitate the realistic distribution of wealth.
Arrange stock cards artistically—Sadie plays stockbroker.

To Play
Player to banker’s right begins
     “Except I actually get to go first because it’s my game… you just get to buy one card from the top or the bottom—like this…”
Player selects a card and banker sets the price:
    “That’s three greens and two blues and a yellow… Now you go.”
    “I pick farmland for six”
    "OK, that costs four greens and two blues and tree yellows.”
    “That’s not fair, I’ll just pay a green and a blue.”
    Sadie made her sassiest face, “No. I’m in charge because it’s my game.”
Play continues regardless.
    “Well, actually now I get to go as many times as I want, ‘cause it’s my house. And you don’t live here.”
    “That’s not the rules.”
    “Ha!… You lose! ‘cause I get all the money in the whole world!”
Any player who attempts to follow “rules” loses.
When all the cards have been bought, stolen, or discarded under the rug the game is over; whoever own the game wins.

But I'm not complaining; it kept the banker happy.

Wonder

19 June 2008

I hope
I am never too old
to kneel
on the sidewalk,
face pressed against
the warm ground,
to watch a snail breathe.

Travel log ii: anomalies

16 June 2008

1.
“Walk like a dog across Alma.”

I could have sworn that was the mechanical command from the pedestrian traffic light. In Salt Lake, the walk signs just chirp for crossing. But not so in California.

The voice repeated: “Walk like a dog across Alma.”

I didn’t. But pedaling down Lytton I considered: I sort of look like a dog; hunched over my handlebars, panting in the beating sun.

Incidentally, it doesn’t say that. But a month of crossing at Alma and Lytton, and it still sounds to me like a game of Simon Says:

“Walk like a dog across Alma.”

2.
I call the cyclist Algernon because he has long curly hair that looks like an Algernon’s hair, and because of his penny-farthing bike, which looks like the bicycle of an Algernon.

I first saw him a few weeks ago, riding at the far end of Bryant. He waved and smiled and I realized I had been staring at him balanced on that ridiculous thing. The penny-farthing is really a graceful looking bicycle: the seat is perched on the enormous front wheel with a thin frame bending to hold on the back wheel, which is tiny and looks like an afterthought; the whole contraption reminds me of a picture I once saw diagraming the butterfly's proboscis.

And I rather expect the thing to capsize at every moment, but today I saw him trundling away full speed down University Av. Apparently Algernon has everything under control.

The circus comes to town

13 June 2008


Me.
I am the circus.

Ty-ty, Chubby, Sadie and I, rolling into Eleanor Park, were spectacle enough to put Barman and Bailey to shame. As a general rule, these children are a spectacle—no, that's unfair: Sadie is always a spectacle; she likes to cut her own hair, wear her pajamas all day, and live every moment at full, four-year-old volume.

The boys, on the other hand, are as quiet as their sister is loud and are prone to morosity. Chubby can’t talk yet and Ty-ty, when he hasn’t locked himself in the computer room, only mumbles where he finds it absolutely necessary.

Like when we visited the bats at the children’s zoo:

“Dija know there’s a bat with six-foot wingspan?”

“What was that Ty-ty?”

“Dija know there’re bats with a six-foot wingspan?”


He's right; it’s called the flying fox bat. Except this zoo just has Egyptian fruit bats.

But they moved last week, the kids I mean, away from the zoo and the museum and the library. So their mom suggested we bike to the park.

Bike? I imagined myself like some mad dog-walker: griping leashes to 15 bicycles, being dragged along by these little energizer bunnies. Funny, in my imagination little carbon-copy Sadies were pedaling all 15 bicycles.

“You can take my bike, it has the baby seat on the back and the Burly’s all hooked up. Ty-ty just likes to wear skates and hang onto the back. I’ll only be gone an hour or so, so just bring them home when they get tired.”

The Burley, I found, is a brightly colored bike trailer—so the bike is transformed into a sort of circus caravan. Oh also, Mom is much taller than I, so I pedaled on tippy-toes. Where is a tutu when you really need one? We only wanted for clown paint. Or streamers or something—a dancing poodle. No matter, the other park goers stared at us all the same; me and my ragamuffins were loud and wild and so full of joy to be out in the sunshine with the grass and trees.

Pedaling tip-toe back down Channing after a rambunctious afternoon of monkey bars and pushing swings, I thought to myself I must remember this when I am Mom. What a good adventure for a lazy afternoon.

May I suggest something from the vegetarian menu?

07 June 2008

In a saucepan, heat a splash of olive oil over medium heat. Add a few teaspoons garam masala, an onion (sliced thinly) and a cup or two of vegetables (bulb fennel, celery, bok choy, etc.) cut in thin strips. Add salt if you like. Cook, stirring ,until onions caramelize. Mix in a handful of dried cranberries and extra firm tofu, crumbled—I like more, some like less. Remove from heat, add chopped cilantro and some pistachios. One time I added fried rice. Another time zucchini. Also eggplant is an excellent addition. And blueberries sub well for the craisins.

Or there’re family-style burgers at 5:00, with garden-fresh lettuce and three types of cheese. The Wilsons always serve their burgers with a variety of French cheeses.

Common cents

04 June 2008

A penny for your thoughts is a steal in this information age.
A stuffed shirt with business cards can charge 10,000 times that to give you his two cents.
But I'll just take the penny.
Today my thoughts are buy-one-get-one-free.

Sweeter, goodness knows

02 June 2008

Häagen-dazs' Chocolate Peanut Butter Ice Cream is a beautiful thing for two reasons: number one- Dutch cocoa blended slowly, carefully, into rich, thick ice cream; number two- ribbons of natural peanut better folded in, smooth, sticky. Perfection.

And now, for a limited time only, you can have all the calories and none of the guilt because this pint-sized indulgence can help save the world’s hardest worker: The Honeybee.

Yes, dear reader, the honeybee is responsible for the pollination (ergo propagation) of about one third of American's diet1. But in the past two years, bees have been disappearing at an alarming rate! Conservative estimates suggest that 25% of honeybees have vanished,2 while in some states beekeepers report 90% of their colonies have been lost.3 Experts agree we have a crisis4.

Fortunately, you can help. Häagen-dazs' super premium ice cream5 is sponsoring a campaign to raise awareness and funding to protect our honeybee friends. Check out their website6 for more ways you can help to save the bees, or simply stop by your local grocery store and pick up a pint of Häagen-dazs' bee-friendly flavors7.

____________________
1Agnew, Singeli. “The Almond and the Bee.” San Francisco Chronicle October 14, 2007: p12+.
2“Bees Vanish, and Scientists Race for Reasons.” The New York Times Online.October 14, 2007.
3Arrandale, T. "Mystery of the Vanishing Pollinators." CQ Researcher, 17:2007. pp 985-1008.
4Berendaum, May R. Testimony before House Subcommittee on Horticulture and Organic Agriculture, March 29, 2007.
5 HDIP Inc. May 7, 2008, http://www.haagen-dazs.com.
6Visit http://www.haagen-dazs.com
7For more information regarding these "Bee-Dependant flavors" visit HelptheHoneybees.com


{And now, behind the potted plant: Honeysuckle Rose. Of course, no one does this song like Jane Monheit, but then again, no one does it like the Muppets either.}

Snapshot

30 May 2008

To really appreciate the moment, let me explain the proceeding pandemonium:
It was nothing particularly unusual; Lilly threw My First Potty Board Book at Ava because Lilly is two and likes throwing things and that book was particularly handy and also because Ava wouldn’t share the Playskool chicken. So Ava threw the chicken (because four-year-olds like to throw too) at which point Lilly pinched her.

I have found it best to let these tiffs blow over, but Lilly pinches hard and Ava’s screams (of pain unfeigned) were my cue to run interference. I tried a few distractions (“Ava, come show me your dollhouse!”). These were met with shrieks of protest. And my most diplomatic reasoning (“I can see that you’re upset, sweetheart; Can you use words instead of screaming?”) met with similar objection.

Not one to be left out of the fun, Lilly caught the spirit of the thing and began to launch Noah’s Ark&Friends at the closet target- me. Besides strong pinching fingers she has a strong throwing arm and surprisingly good aim.

“Okay, good throwing Lilly; but please don't throw at people”

“NO!” was punctuated with a flying plastic cheetah.


And this is how it started. I can’t now recall just how the hysteria subsided, but somewhere between the hippo sur l'aile and air-born Noah himself, Ava announced she was going to play dress-up and the chaos was suddenly over.

I was still recovering from the flying zoo as Ava helped Lilly into Tinkerbell’s fairy dress, and Lilly helped Ava find her Snow White red hair bow. I was asked to fasten all their Velcro and was given the feather boa as thanks. And also the butterfly wings and the princess hat that matched.

Then we went sidewalk chalking.

I wish I were a neighbor who might have peeked over the backyard fence and seen the three of us scribbling away: Lilly looked the very picture of a fairy with her runaway blond hair of tight, tiny curls and her face crinkled into her gleeful (impish) grin; Ava, herself a blonde Snow White, chattered about her favorite princesses as she minced around in her Plastic Glass Sippers With The Little Pink Bows, practicing her A-V-A in pink and purple chalk. If I had been watching from across the way, I would have taken a picture.

But I wasn’t. Instead, I sat in the middle of it all and drew big flowers in orange and blue.

Dyslexic solution ii

25 May 2008

When setting the table, I recite this rhyme for each place setting:

The fork is bereft on the left,
The cup, knife and spoon on the right,
The plate's in the middle,
The napkin (for spittle)
Beside the fork is polite.

[Credit is due to my mother, whom I love, who helped me compose this as a child. Incidentally, setting the table helps children learn the difference between the two sparkly colors- gold and silver.]

Strawberry poisoning

16 May 2008

We washed them, so it wasn’t the insecticide. It is just this: our stomachs can’t hold that many sweet and cool, soft, California ripe, juicy, red strawberries.

Oh little mouse, What are you doing?

I, for one, was just sampling the available produce. Lemons and lettuce are ready enough, I suppose, but why not strawberries when they are so easy to come by! They sell them here by the double flat; twelve of those little baskets- the flimsy, green baskets I horded as a girl to make dolly-shopping carts and handy treasure keeps.

And they just sat there, plump, on the counter, their seductive smell asking us not to let them go to rot in this record mid-May heat.

So we ate them. All. And now, red-sticky-fingered, we are sitting in a miniature garden of flimsy baskets and strawberry caps. My grin is painted juicy red and you’ve a sticky smudge across your chin—sure signs of strawberry poisoning.

Travel log

10 May 2008

The bit of riding you never forget is the concept of the thing. Pedal, pedal, pedal. That's about it.

Unfortunately, after a eight-year hiatus, it is the 656 muscles of this human body that forgot how to ride a bike.

They remember now, and I rather think they shan’t forget in a hurry.

This week I rode about 46 miles all told. Not a bad warm up for an amateur. Of course, if you know much about biking, you realize this is about the equivalent of running 6.5 miles.

But don't worry, I'm just getting started.

{a little background music, courtesy Yves Montand}

Mad-lib

06 May 2008

“How’re you doin’?”

Spencer first pointed out to me that, in honesty, this question can have many answers—many conflicting and contradictory answers.

In fact, I can think of a hundred honest answers on a day like today.

Out the window is __(weather condition)__—so indicative of my mood. The ___(mood)___ sunlight is unexpected, _(conj.)_ so is every day’s hum-drum, so I guess the fault is my expectation’s.

I’ve been ___(gerund)___ a lot on that. On _(personal pronoun)_ expectations. When do ___(adj.)___ dreams of ___(noun)___ begin to warp reality? __(verb)__ they? Sometimes I ___(verb)___ that I ___(verb)___ too much in my ___(adj.)___ reality. _(interjection)_, Balance, I ___(adv.)___ forget how ___(adj.)___ you are.

The birds are ___(gerund)___. No time for ___(gerund phrase)___.
It's time to ___(action verb)___.

An explanation: why I dream of airports

30 April 2008

They are only the entr'acte
to a gust of
fresh wind with a new taste
and wide views of
something the landscape artists
just refaced.

Step inside and leave behind
the old,
paint-peeling,
lifeless
set. It folds into my window view
that clouds obscure.

Closed For Renovations.

Wait for it
unfolding, newmade:
the cloud-curtain rises on
fresh paint and adventure.

Complementary bag of peanuts?
—maybe Jack's Magic Beans.

Chasing paper cups

18 April 2008

I sat with friends on the lawn behind the Maeser. The conversation had evolved from the Economics of Gift Giving to the True Love of God, and no one seemed to notice the paper cup. It had escaped from someone’s snack garbage and encouraged by the gusty wind was making a break for the free world.

I considered stopping it. I would clamber to my feet, and hunching to avert attention, scramble around the circle to intercept the runaway. Bending down (ungracefully of course, for it is difficult to stoop and collect garbage with any measure of finesse) I reach as it stalls then follow as it tumbles on—a sequence repeated across the grass in an unaccompanied and increasingly complicated Charleston Swing: two-step-jog bend reach ‘n’ miss again, follow the lead of the little paper cup.

I didn’t move. Instead I watched it stumble-trip alone across the lawn and out of my peripheral vision. I heard it scuttled across the sidewalk and onto the asphalt; the clatter like a herd of crabs—a pod of paper cups—skittering for the ledge and stairs and then trees.

It went and I sat and listened to them talk of God’s Love—saturated with His Goodness. He never requires only gives and gives and gives. He is never depleted for giving selflessly, infinitely. We can never return, let alone pay in full. Even if we tried; we are too human. But still God never stops reaching.

Dyslexic solution i

12 April 2008


When I can't tell someone’s left hand from their right, I simply set them at the piano—
mentally, of course.

The melody is to their right
and the low, droning bit to their left.

The trouble with eating in class

26 March 2008

Billy Collins is a lean and tender
T-bone steak, best served rare
with a side salad and something light;
perhaps a sweet Cabernet Franc.

It should not be served with inordinate
amounts of BestWest Steak Sauce,
as if a bottle of that
could sharpen the wit of him.

Principles of Biology has left
a dry aftertaste, and I sit down
salivating for a succulent cut
of the real meat.

Unfortunately, my teacher cooks
experimentally,
and with Sunflower hot-mitts she serves
to us Lecture 29:

Poetry Meatloaf. Which is not
fresh or moist or seasoned right.
But I am hungry. And she doesn’t seem
to have anything else on hand.

Shakespeare in bite-size bits and
Collins ground in with Nash
and something green that doesn’t
seem to belong to anyone

all garnished with slivered Poe
and a slimy ketchup marinara.
It slices neatly and leaves no crumbs
and everyone tucks in quietly.

Except my vegan study partner
who sips her Algebra noisily.
I choke a bit and try
To swallow gallantly.

Meatloaf is barbaric.

A nod to A. Maslow

20 March 2008

A good friend once asked what of the things I feared did I most want to do? I answered rather patronizingly, that I didn’t want to do anything I feared because I don’t like the things I am afraid of because I am afraid of them.

Since then I have realized how many fears I confront each day and strangely enough I have found a masochistic pleasure of sorts in digging from the depths of my soul the things I fear the most.

Then I take a deep breath and jump.

My greatest fears are, ostensibly, the dark and boys. The first seems too cliché to be true, the second too ridiculous, but there is nothing that frightens me quite so much as walking home in the dark, and there is nothing that makes my quite so uneasy as looking a boy in the eyes. I am sure, dear reader, you can only imagine my utter dread at the prospect of a safe walk! But I digress; it is enough to say that these have become rather commonplace fears and facing them a rather mundane exercise in self-actualization.

So I dig.

On my birthday my Dad set the beautiful dark chocolate raspberry torte in front of me and handed me the knife, at which point I panicked. I am 20 years old, and I am afraid of cutting my own birthday cake. I looked at it sitting there innocently on the plate:



I’m pretty sure that's undefined. Which might explain why it scares me. It's the same thing with pie:

yep. Irrational and imaginary.

Dig.

The Darfur Action Committee was the most unorganized band of six people I had every seen crammed in a HBLL study room. To my query regarding authority one quiet girl answered, “I think there was a president. Maybe named Ben? He’s been MIA for about a year.”

I don’t mind sitting in on meetings, I sign petitions, and I donated my $10 to Ralph Nader’s Alternative Commencement, but I am terrified of responsibility, of standing in front of a crowed, exposed for their criticism. What if I have to answer questions? What if they want information I don’t know?

I raised my hand and said I could organize a petition. Nikki asked me to be co-president. Sure. And I volunteered to speak on China’s Policy on Darfur.

Dig.

I made dinner for my roommates last week.

I called a friend for no reason yesterday.

I walked in the dark.

I blogged.

Exercise in simplicity

03 March 2008

I like to write.
I like big words.
I like little-known grammar rules.
When I write down my thoughts, I like to use a thesaurus to help me learn new big words.
I do this because I think simple writing is dumb.
Maybe my writing is confusing, but it is better to confuse some readers than to write boring things.

But forgive, dear reader, my verbosity; I have simply imbibed too much Charles Dickens.

Train of thoughts

29 February 2008

I woke up late and decided to dress in last winter’s olive green. My hands looked for my Gap-long-sleeved in the colorblind dim of 7:15, feeling and weighing any darkness with arms.

But. I’ve developed a habit of putting away clothes in my laundry bin, or in the Rubbermaids under my bed, or sometimes in the bankerbox on my closet shelf. Rarely will I fold clothes into my chest of drawers, and only with great patience and soji will I ever hang up a thing. This makes dressing more like treasure hunting, the excitement of which is usually enough to entice me out of bed. This morning, however, the excitement was lost on me as I rummaged, grumbling, though all my worldly possessions.

The brush-teeth and out-the-door hour ticked past as I emptied my drawers and repacked them.

I don’t particularly like olive green. I didn’t like it last winter either, but since I had decided upon the thing, I couldn’t see much sense in reconsidering. In fact, at 7:45 it’s still difficult to see much of anything.

Five blocks away, the bell rang delivering students from 7 am class, and I found my gapstretchT folded between two pair of jeans—incidentally, right where I put it Saturday.

I was late to for Greek, but what’s a few minutes on a lovely spring morning? Some students get a week of spring break—you wouldn't begrudge me 10 minutes?

Though it was a bit cool for a real spring break. Fortunately, I wore a sweater buttoned up warmly all day.

Regarding civic duty

25 February 2008

I haven’t the time for a thorough analysis of my convoluted (and at times contradictory) political views;
I have only three words:
Vote Ralph Nader.

In which I begin

24 February 2008

The most ridiculous thing is the hour at which I began. Scout said I should create a blog, and I said I was going to sleep, but the seductive blinking cursor proved more tempting than my bed.


So here I am:

seduced and tired, offering up my soul to the pagan gods of cyberspace.

I have begun and now I shall repent and go to bed.

 
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