Tuesday, December 24, 2013

New Diet

I have started a new diet based on an article I read in the Heath section of the Sunday Seattle Times.  I normally don't seek out the Health section, but it is next to the crossword puzzles on Sunday, so there you go.  Sometimes when I get stuck on a crossword clue, my eyes will wander to the health section.  Normally the articles are about problems I don't have that are cured with things I have never heard of.

This article said (based on my skim of it while doing the crossword puzzle) that eating between meals can put stress on your liver and mess up your metabolism.  They recommended going 4 hours without eating.  That includes milk in coffee.   I read a wonderful article in Harper's a while back on the benefits of fasting.  I thought about it, but I can barely manage three hours without eating, let alone a week.  

While I was fascinated by the Harper's article, I was motivated by this blurb in the newspaper.  I don't mind being a little pudgy, but I certainly don't want anything bad happening to my liver.  And I don't even know what my liver does.  I know the heart circulates blood, lungs bring in oxygen, and our brain is where we think.  But the liver?  What exactly does it do?  How does it work?  It filters out stuff, but beyond that, I really couldn't say.  Since I don't know what it does, I don't know if I can be fixed and therefore I should take care of it, right?  Might I be the only person motivated by ignorance? Maybe if I knew more about the liver, I might not care.

When I read this article, I started to realize how often I munch.  In the morning, I might wake up before seven with my daughter.  I might grab a bite of leftovers from the previous might's dinner.  Then around 8:30, I will sit down for breakfast with my son.  Then after I walk the dog, I might have another snack around 9:30.  Then I'd eat lunch around 11:30, snack around 4:00 with kids, and so on.  Grazing. 

So I've stopped grazing and only eat at meals.  We'll see what happens, but the verdict isn't in yet.  I've been a little cranky lately. (See article on rage.)  Maybe I was in a perpetual food coma before, and that deadened my emotions.  While I might be pissed off the the universe, my jeans are looser.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Rage, Discrepancies, and the Holly Jolly Cure

Rage: pure, unfiltered, unadulterated anger.  I have become too familiar with this feeling as of late, and I am not happy about it.  I am used to feeling annoyed, irritated, frustrated, mad, upset, disillusioned and displeased.  Rage is new.  I looked it up in the dictionary to see how it differs from regular anger: it is defined as "violent, uncontrollable anger."  The rage I have been feeling lately certainly is uncontrollable.  I don't want to be angry, but this anger has a mind of its own.  And violent.  The rage doesn't make me violent towards other people, but it feels like there is violence inside of me, wanting to get out and scream, kick and bite.  I mostly just scream.

(I could list all of the things I am angry about here, but I won't.  Privately, I can list out the people and things that are the victims of my unregulated emotions.)

I mostly wonder why this anger isn't just regular anger: why does this tip it over into rage?  I look at people like Nelson Mandela or Gandhi.  Surely, they saw unfairness in the world and sought to correct it.  How did they manage to keep their emotions in check while dealing with major social injustices and I can't keep it together over my son's Lego Club?  Do I have the misfortune of being at the whims of a middle aged woman's hormones?  Or, has my crap-meter hit the "maxed out" state and the next thing that came along pushed me over the line?  There have been cases (see the recent redrawing of the Seattle Public Schools boundaries) where I have kept my cool while the rest of the people I knew were in nuclear meltdown.  Is my current rage over these new issues stored up old rage, locked up inside of me, looking for a way out?

I wish I knew.  I've talked to friends about my recent bouts, but in the context of the specific irritating circumstance.  I want to know why I feel rage at all, why the topic of annoyance consumes my mind.  I become fixated, unable to think of little else.  And my fixation isn't productive.  I am not able to rationally find a solution.  Instead, I find more reasons to justify why I am so pissed off.  "And another thing..." The closest thing I can find it that the root cause is the discrepancies between the way I think the world runs (or Lego Club or Rec soccer) and the way other people thinks it should.  In the gap between the two resides my anger.  The anger also lies with my kids activities.  Maybe I am not as in touch with them as I used to be, and that gap causes me turmoil.  I need to rely on others to take care of my kids, just as I take care of other children.  This change and transition means loss of control.

Maybe Gandhi and Mandela felt lots of rage, but were effective at managing it.  Maybe they needed to defeat apartheid and English Rule to keep the demons away.  Likewise, maybe Gandhi's kids got on his nerves.  Maybe Mandela's friends didn't do what they said they said they were going to do.  Maybe apartheid and English Rule were small mountains to climb compared to managing a house and kids.

I have been somewhat lucky that my anger has fallen during the holidays, and a little "holly jolly" has helped me feel better.  At times when the rage ebbs, I have felt like George Bailey before he jumped off the bridge and Clarence saved him.*  Like George, I reached my nadir in the Christmas season.  One day when I was angry, we bought our Christmas tree, went to dinner, and we came home and put up the decorations.  It was hard to stay mad when I was digging through boxes finding ornaments I made when I was seven.  The other time I had three parties to attend.  I put on a happy face and told myself "No bitching allowed." By the end of the evening, I didn't need to fake it.

* Funny sidebar. My friend Heather and I watched "It's a Wonderful Life" in high school.  My parents were out and I turned it off when George was marching through the snow after all of the money in the bank was lost.  My mom came home and asked if I liked it.  I said it was the most depressing movie I had ever seen and couldn't watch it anymore.  I didn't understand why it was this great Christmas classic.  She recommended I watch the end.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Kate's Cottage and the Post Office


I wrote this essay a few years ago, and thought I would share it here.            

           I close the front door to O’Rourke’s Post Office after I tuck Maureen and P.J. into bed, and in the morning, the dollhouse door is open.  I wonder if the latch is loose, perhaps slipping open when my kids bound through the house after they wake up.  I close the door for the fifth time this week while they are getting ready for bed.  P.J. is brushing his teeth in his white flannel pajamas and I ask him if he knows why the door is open.
            “I check it in the morning,” he says shyly, with his dolphin toothbrush sticking out of his mouth.  I imagine my four-year old son peeking inside in the morning, right after he goes to the bathroom and just before he comes downstairs.  O’Rourke’s Post Office is part of P.J.’s town built in the nook between his and his sister’s bedroom, a room littered with wooden trains, plastic trucks and Lego buildings.  Building the Post Office was a family project.  Now it sits down the street from Kate’s Cottage, a dollhouse I built eight years earlier under radically different circumstances, at a time when I didn’t know if I would ever become a mother or have a family.
I built Kate’s Cottage when I was pregnant with Maureen.  Entering the third trimester of my third pregnancy, I had hoped that this baby would survive.  My first pregnancy ended in a full-term stillbirth, the second in a first trimester miscarriage.  My husband John and I had recently moved from Chicago to St. Louis and lived in a cramped two-bedroom apartment in a town where we had few friends and no family.  Pregnant and lonely, I wanted to build a dollhouse instead of shopping for nursery furniture or cooing over tiny baby clothes at stores designed to appeal to the giddy and romantic notions of expectant mothers.  I was terrified of losing another pregnancy, and building Kate’s Cottage was perfect a perfect substitute for nesting.  I could have spent this time looking at real estate, but wasn’t ready for the commitment.  I needed a child before I would be ready for a real house.
Losing Ada wasn’t supposed to happen to me.  I was twenty-nine and in perfect health.  I did water aerobics through the whole pregnancy, only ate the healthiest foods and didn’t touch soda or coffee.  I had access to some of the best prenatal care in the country.  I thought that unexplained, unexpected stillbirths occur in developing countries, not in the heart of downtown Chicago to overeducated women like me.
A few days after Ada’s memorial service, John and I went to the hospital’s child loss support group.  I saw the sign on the door, and thought if I didn’t go in, perhaps I could fly around the globe like Superman and turn back time to before Ada died.  But I was grief-stricken, not delusional, so I walked into the class.  Like many people who have experienced a major tragedy, I divided life into before and after.  I felt like I was living in a black and white movie, after having lived in color.  I ached for the time when green and blue and yellow would replace the gray.
Women told their stories.  A red headed woman from a large family lost twins and described the shame she felt for not being able to reproduce when everyone around her was fecund.  A couple in their late-thirties lost a beautiful boy after years of infertility.  Like Ada, their son’s death was unexpected and unexplained.  I understood the general idea of support groups was to commiserate based on the theory that pain shared hurts less than pain bottled up.  Yet, this group made me feel worse as I had a new list of things to worry about: fertility issues, chromosomal abnormalities, or someday I might be too old. 
As I listened to more women talk, I slipped into a trance, to a far away day in the future, when I would have kids.  I tried as hard as I could to see myself in five or ten years, when my family would be complete.  It was a vague place, with no color or scent.  As hazy as it was, that blank place kept me from total despair.  Someday, I won’t be so miserable.  Someday, I’ll have a family.
            The day after the infant loss support group, I needed an emotional boost so John and I went to the Shedd Aquarium.  I decided that getting out and about would be more healing than sitting inside and crying in a corner.  At the aquarium, we were surrounded by dozens of elementary school children on a field trip downtown.  I watched a six-year-old boy put on an otter costume as a docent explained how the layers of an otter’s skin protect it from frigid water.  That little boy and all of his curious classmates affected me more than women with infants in strollers and toddlers padding along with their stance widened by a diaper.  I didn’t want a baby: I wanted a family, a family John and I could bring to the aquarium and read Winnie the Pooh to and teach to ride bikes and play Candy Land.  I wanted to go to high school graduations, have Thanksgiving dinner with my kids when they come home from college, and plan weddings.
            Watching the little boy in the otter costume was my nadir.  John saw me—both heartbroken and amazed—and wondered if we should go home.  I wanted to stay, not because I enjoyed suffering, but this was filling the gaps in my imagination from the night before, when I tried to envision my life a decade later.  What I had missed was now tangible.  After we had been at the aquarium for two hours, John and I sat in the back of the dolphin and beluga whale show.  I watched the kids watching the animals swim and jump overlooking Lake Michigan.  Their laughter and energy was contagious and I was happily lost in the reverie of having my own busy and creative brood.
Dreaming of having a family and making it come true were two different tasks, and the power of positive thinking could not outweigh my fear of losing another pregnancy.  After Ada died, my obstetrician said to wait six months before trying again in order to give my uterus time to heal.  I obeyed, and then became pregnant right away.  This pregnancy felt great—too great, in fact.  I didn’t have any morning sickness and I wasn’t tired at all, all of which I saw in hindsight as signs of a miscarriage that didn’t self-abort.
In the second winter after Ada’s death and in the third trimester of my third pregnancy, I found Kate’s Cottage on a website from a shop in Derbyshire, England.  The dollhouse kit seemed perfect.  I had just quit my job as a project manager with one of the Big Six accounting and consulting firms and I needed something to keep me busy until the delivery.  My new high risk-obstetrician in St. Louis patronizingly smiled when I told him about the dollhouse.  He must have been amused I had quit the life of a corporate road warrior and was building a dollhouse, a hobby for homebodies.  I felt like a loser, trading my frequent flier accounts for wallpaper paste and wood glue.  I was living in a new city with no job, no friends, no baby, a husband who worked endless hours in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, and combined student loan debt greater than the cost of my parents’ four bedroom suburban house.  In the asset column of my life, I had a kit to make Kate’s Cottage.
Kate’s Cottage cost an irresponsible sum, with shipping from the U.K. costing half as much as the house itself.  The kit weighed at least thirty pounds and took six weeks arrive on my doorstep.  I imagined it traveling by slow boat across the Atlantic.  Kate’s Cottage, unlike formal and fussy Victorian or Queen Anne-style dollhouses, looked like it belonged in a bucolic small town.  With a cheerful white exterior, exposed wood beams and a red brick foundation, Kate’s Cottage looked like the home of Huckle Cat, a character I would later meet in P.J.’s favorite book, What Do People Do All Day? by Richard Scarry.  Kate’s Cottage was cozy and warm, like a home I hoped to have.  I imagined children playing outside in the lush, green field, running up and down the cottage stairs, and then sitting by the kitchen hearth while the mother warmed cider on the stove.  Kate’s Cottage was kid-friendly, too.  No room would be off-limits to messy children.
For three months, I channeled my grief and fears and hopes into this cozy miniature home instead of preparing my own nest.  In my real life, my first pregnancy had left me with everything I needed to take care of an infant: a crib, sheets, pajamas, a car seat and more.  In the world of Kate’s Cottage, the only furniture I had was a bed and a table my Aunt Pat had given me as a girl for the dollhouse my father had never finished.  Beyond those items, I didn’t care if the dollhouse was empty:  I wanted to build and paint and create, to have something to show for those spring months in case my womb failed again.
            I bought cedar shingles for the roof and oak-patterned paper for the floors.  Afraid of exposing my fetus to possibly disfiguring paint fumes, I worked on the back porch in the warm spring days.  Even though the outdoors provided more than ample ventilation, I wore a fume mask.  I double gloved my hands lest the chemicals seep through my skin and cross the placenta.
When I ran out of paint, I went to the hobby shop after one of my twice-weekly obstetrician visits.  In the parking lot, Kenny Loggins’ song “House at Pooh Corner” came on the radio and I sat and cried.  I was terrified about losing another baby.  In the last days of my pregnancy with Ada, I had looked at the date on my yogurt and I’d happily thought:  I’ll be a mother before this expires.  Now, I couldn’t picture my life beyond my due date, good or bad.  I couldn’t buy yogurt or milk or bread.  We ate out all of the time because I couldn’t stand the possibility of my food having a longer shelf life than my unborn baby.
            I plugged along, finishing Kate’s Cottage with a big belly, a few days before I went into labor.  Maureen popped out with her fists curled into tight little balls and her arms shooting straight out to the side, strong and muscular compared to Ada’s flaccid limbs.
            “It’s alive!” I said, as if I was not expecting her to breathe.  The doctor cut the cord and gave my baby to the neonatologist who was clearing the meconium from Maureen’s airway.  I was not wearing my glasses and I couldn’t focus on the baby from where I was sitting.  I couldn’t walk over to the table to see her as my legs were paralyzed from the epidural.  Maureen was looking at the wall and I couldn’t see her face.  She was only ten feet away yet it felt like a chasm between her bed and mine.  No physical feat could bring me closer.  I didn’t mind the distance.  Just don’t let her die, I thought.
After ten minutes of confirming Maureen was a robust and healthy baby, a nurse handed my daughter to me.  According to the infant loss books I had read, the moment I held my new, healthy baby was supposed to be filled with rapture.  It wasn’t.  It was filled with fear.  I counted each breath and feared my breast pressed against Maureen’s nose would suffocate her.  The New York Times ran an article about mothers whose children have a near-death experience.  While their children quickly rebound from a rare illness or a major car accident, the mothers spent the following months anxiously reliving the near miss.  As a mother who lost a child, I thought minor incidents were near misses, that my daughter was narrowly defeating death.  Hours after Maureen’s birth, I was wakened by her cough.  I lifter her, patted her back, and she spit up a mucus ball the size of a strawberry.  I was convinced I had saved her life.  If I hadn’t picked her up, I was sure she would have choked to death on her own phlegm.
Like many new mothers, I wasn’t prepared for the lack of sleep, the baby’s constant crying and my overwhelming sense of incompetence.  I also wasn’t prepared for a second wave of grief from Ada’s death, as I now had a tangible reminder of what I had lost.  Maureen’s real milestones and Ada’s missing ones were the same.  I was living in a neutral zone, trying to balance the joy I felt with Maureen and the sadness I felt for Ada, yet feeling neither fully.  When we took Maureen to a restaurant for the first time when she was a week or two old, a mom with a toddler and a preschooler came up to me and gushed about my beautiful baby.  This initiation to motherhood—chatting with strange women about sleepless nights and breastfeeding—was bittersweet.  I was happy to finally be in the club and painfully aware this was what I missed with Ada.
Maureen’s crib was next to our bed, and the dollhouse sat neglected on a table in the second bedroom until we bought a five bedroom, ninety-five year old house around Maureen’s first birthday.  Kate’s Cottage moved to the guest room on the third floor of our new home, sequestered away like a museum piece.  When I was building Kate’s Cottage, I joked that if the baby was a girl, I would give it to her, and if it were a boy, I would keep it for myself.  In reality, I never visualized children playing with it because I couldn’t imagine actually having kids.  I thought of it as Ada’s dollhouse, to be put up on a shelf, never to be touched.
When Maureen was a toddler, she would visit Kate’s Cottage on the third floor, gently opening and closing the doors, as if she knew it was sacred.  She would lift the roof and peek at the brass double bed with the wedding ring quilt my Aunt Pat had needle-pointed for me two decades earlier.  Maureen’s friend Spencer was not as gentle with Kate’s Cottage.  One day, his little fingers poked out the acetate windows.  Maureen and I were both silently aghast.  Spencer’s mother, who was usually quick to correct her child, didn’t seem to notice what he had done.  Perhaps to her, Kate’s Cottage didn’t appear to be the treasure it was.  I didn’t know what to say so I didn’t say anything.  I didn’t want to make too big of a deal out of the damage: I’d rather have kids who occasionally wreaked havoc than live alone with the illusion of perfection.  I took the plastic windows and put them on the top of my dresser in my jewelry box for safekeeping.
The winter before Maureen turned three, our family was busy planning for P.J.’s arrival. I soldiered on, creating a life-size nursery for the first time.  John and I ripped out the worn blue shag carpeting and cleaned the pine floor underneath.  My friend Gwen painted his room with animals from Eric Carle’s books.  P.J. arrived that spring, born the day after Easter.
The four of us moved to Seattle a year and a half later, and Maureen wanted Kate’s Cottage to stay in the cardboard moving box in our unfinished basement.  Our new house was half the size of our old one and there wasn’t an ideal place to keep it.  Maureen didn’t want her toddler brother poking it apart like Spencer.  I agreed – I didn’t want to see the dollhouse destroyed by busy little fingers, either.  When P.J. turned four, I thought he would treat Kate’s Cottage respectfully, so I brought it upstairs where he later created his town.  The idea of keeping Kate’s Cottage a museum piece had passed.  I didn’t want to be like my mother who keeps all of the special stuff hidden away and never used.  Kate’s Cottage belonged in the world of the living, not left pristine from a bygone era.  I wanted Maureen and P.J. to see the dollhouse while they were still kids, not see it later as something I kept hidden from their childhood.
P.J. and I carried Kate’s Cottage up from the basement and put it in the nook between his and Maureen’s rooms.  P.J. found a little blond doll in a pile of toys and put her on the front porch of the dollhouse.  He rearranged his train tracks so they would pass the house so the doll could watch the trains chuffing along.  One day, as P.J. was saving the little blond doll and Kate’s Cottage from an imaginary fire, I found the old dollhouse catalogue from England.  P.J. and I poured over its pages for bedtime reading.  He studied the houses, shops, garages and gardens, imagining all of the things he could add to his town.  Of all of the buildings, P.J.’s favorite was O’Rourke’s Post Office.  Maureen wasn’t interested in looking at the houses: she would rather play chess or read about Captain Underpants than futz with dolls.  P.J. loves to build more than anything else, and I thought making the post office would be a good mother-son construction project.  He could paint and wallpaper and help me glue the walls together.
Once we decided we were going to build the Post Office, P.J. looked at furniture in the catalog.  He was most interested in the appliances.  “It needs a washing machine,” he said, skipping over the pages of Edwardian dining room sets.  We ordered the house, a washing machine, a new bed and two dolls online, and went to a local dollhouse shop to look at the extras.  While Maureen sat in a corner looking at the dollhouse books, P.J. examined paving stones for the sidewalk and roofing and flooring options as if he were a contractor shopping in a minature home improvement store.
The box with O’Rourke’s Post Office arrived three days after we had ordered it, most likely carried on a direct flight from London to Seattle.  I dragged the heavy box into the living room and opened it before P.J. came home from preschool.  P.J. was disappointed that I had I opened the box without him, but I coveted those first moments alone with the woody scent of the fiberboard and the smooth texture of the floors, walls and roof, exactly as it had been eight years earlier.  My small partner and I fit the pieces together using masking tape for the dry run.  We tested the doors and window frames to make sure they fit in the right places.
When it came time to prime the walls and floors, P.J. was less interested.  Frustrated by the foam paintbrush, he decided he’d rather go to the park with his dad and ride his scooter.  Maureen, who loves art, suddenly found this previously boring project worthy of her attention.  Her desire to work with me was a dramatic turnaround from a few days earlier when she missed the school bus, a tragedy of major proportions in her second grade world.  Her day was ruined and I was the villain.
Maureen and I spent the better part of a Saturday peacefully priming the walls, the memory of our argument fading as we worked together while listening to music.  Sitting in the kitchen, she wore a red plastic smock as she rolled the paint on the walls and floors, while I painted the detailed storefront.  Working on the post office was a balm for Maureen and I, just as working on Kate’s Cottage was a balm to me years before.  We trimmed the wallpaper with small pink handled scissors instead of with the X-Acto knife I’d used eight years earlier.  P.J. picked the brick wallpaper instead of the grey stone for the exterior I preferred.  Maureen painted the doors and windows peacock blue—not the color I would have chosen, but not much of life is what we choose.
Over the following weeks, we continued to paint the walls, stain the shingles, and glue the house together.  John wired the house for electricity, and P.J. tested the lights, each one as they were installed.  P.J. pasted the oak-patterned paper to the floor.  The result was a little lumpy -- far lumpier than anything in Kate’s Cottage, but that’s okay.  This dollhouse isn’t mine.  It’s ours.
The kids cleared a spot in the extra room on the second floor, and John and I carried the Post Office upstairs.  To my kids, building the Post Office was simply a neat family project.  To me, it was the other side of the mountain, the time I tried so hard to picture years ago.  I wish I could go back and talk to the woman I was in the infant loss group, the woman crying at the aquarium, the woman building Kate’s Cottage.  She could never comprehend the complexity of Maureen and P.J., but I wish she could see her future home, the walls of her dining room covered in preschool art work, Legos on the floor, the chess board with pieces in mid-game.  I wish she could see O’Rourke’s Post Office, as it sits in the town, protected by the firemen and down the street from Kate’s Cottage, whole again with its windows back in place.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Ephemeral

My thoughts are fleeting
Escaping from my head
As fast as they come in.

It is not quite haiku, but close.  I find that my memory isn't as robust as it used to be, especially in the short-term capacity.  The hard part is that I remember that I have forgotten certain things, as things like names and the time of my daughter's next soccer game and its location slip away.  I knew I knew it moments ago.

Pen and paper are
My saving grace
Telling where to go
And what to do.

The New York Times had a series on Writers on Writing back in the 1990's.  One of the writers (I can't remember who, but I could google it, I suppose) said to write down good ideas the moment they come to mind, as they are ephemeral and will float away.  I finally understand his point.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Less

This Christmas, I want my kids get to get less.  I don't mean I should look at how much money I spent last year, and then only spend 60% of that.  No.  I mean I would like them to come out of Christmas with less stuff than before they started.  I am not sure how to accomplish this.  We tried a garage sale this fall, but as my hair dresser said, it was a fail.  (I'll write about the garage sale soon.)  We don't have a large house, so that limits our consumption.  Still, I feel like we have more stuff than we need.

Actually, by having less, we'd gain extra space in our small house.  A friend of mine just unloaded one of her daughter's large toys, and was delighted to see the floor.  Then her architect husband went out and brought a large printer, which took up an equal amount of square footage.  Sometimes, you can't win.

Three Things I am Afraid of

(I suppose the title should be "Three Things of Which I am Afraid."  Sorry, Grammar Zealots.)

Stephen King wrote a list of the top ten things people are afraid of, with things like spiders and the dark on the list.  (I'll have to look up the list.)  In addition to meeting grizzly bears, black bears, and/or brown bears in the wild,* here are three things of which I am afraid.

-- Migraine headaches
-- Depression
-- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

I am afraid of other things, too, like someone I love getting hit by a car, but this list contains the three things for today.  Like a car accident, these three could strike at any time, with little known reason for the cause, and no simple or readily accessible cure.  People have to suffer to an extended period of time with these three before people start seriously thinking about treatment, and in the meantime, life would be pretty miserable.

I almost fear speaking their names, in case the gods or fates are watching and decide to afflict me.  All three would be like being trapped inside of Sartre's version of hell in No Exit, minus the companionship.  Maybe it would be the isolation I would fear, that others wouldn't been locked in with me, that I'd be in my own orbit of misery, without anyone to connect to or with.  Which begs Sartre's question in No Exit, "L'enfer, c'est les autres," or "Hell is other people."  I'd rather have company, thank you.

* I am also afraid of the grizzly bears at the Woodland Park Zoo.  Have you seen that moat?  Don't you think a grizzly could get a nice run going and fly over it?  Yeah.  I do.  I get hives when I walk past it.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Fox's First Thanksgiving

On Thanksgiving, Fox was in the kitchen all day waiting for food to hit the floor. At the end of the day, John was carving the turkey. We were putting food on the table when Fox found a corner and started licking the floor. It turns out there was a "waterfall" (my son's word) of turkey juice coming off the counter. Fox had found his treat and his ears were covered in turkey juice. We decided to wait until after dinner and after his walk to give him a bath. On the walk, Fox met another dog. Instead of sniffing each other's noses and behinds, this dog went straight to Fox ears. I am glad it was a small dog, otherwise Fox might have been mistaken for a drumstick.

Fox and Cliches I Have Seen

"Barking up the wrong tree."  I've heard the expression for years, but now I have seen it.  The squirrel went up the other tree, dear Fox.

"Running away with your tail between your legs."  This morning, Fox and I were walking when he heard a ruckus that caused all of his little alarm bells to start ringing.  I think maybe a dog barked and a cat squealed at the same time, which in dog language means the apocalypse is coming.  He ran so fast the leash pulled his little eight pound body flying into the air.  Then he started sprinting with his front and back legs synchronized, which is as fast as he can run.  His tail was almost dragging on the ground, poor thing.  He was as scared as I have ever seen him.

These are not cliches, but things I have seen:  Downward Dog and Up Dog, the yoga poses.

 ~~~~~~

I am writing about my dog because my kids would be furious if I were writing about them.  My daughter called me a cyber-bully because I once quoted her on Facebook.  (And here I am quoting her again in the cyber world.)  Does the kid have a point?  Eh.  I wasn't being mean or calling her names, just using her words and likeness without her permission.  She is not a politician whose chose to live her life in the public eye who knows their actions are being watched by others.

Thankfully, my dog can't talk or read, so I think I am good here.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Life's Plot

May you live in interesting times. 
    -- Chinese curse

Grandfather dies, father dies, son dies.
    -- Chinese blessing

I was reading Margaret Drabble's "The Pure Gold Baby," which is told from the perspective of a friend of the hero.  The friend watches Jess raise her intellectually disabled but otherwise pleasant and happy daughter.  Anna was the pure gold baby because of her easy temperament.  But this was the child that never grew.

This novel got me thinking about the plot of our lives.  Do lives come with a plot, an even story line with ups and downs, and then tidy conclusions?  I suppose the basic plot of an American life would be

  • Go to school, 
  • Go to college, 
  • Get a job,
  • Get married,
  • Have kids,
  • Buy a house,
  • Raise kids,
  • Take vacation,
  • Maybe get a dog or cat
  • Kids repeat cycle, and then
  • Retire and die.

Depending how things go, some lives are mostly comedies and others are mostly tragic.  Some people have the good fortune to sweep along at an easy pace with nothing unsettling happening along the way to disrupt the pattern.  Some lives predictably follow this storyline to the point of boredom, with nothing interesting--good or bad--happening along the way.

In the "The Pure Gold Baby," a friend watches someone else life that didn't follow the script.  I am thinking of my friends whose lives have varied from the pattern, for better or worse.  On the better side, some might skip the step of getting married or going to college, and manage just fine.  And then there are those of us who hope to follow the plan, but get waylaid such as the parents of children with disabilities or mental illness, who will tend to their children throughout adulthood.  Some lives are cut short.  Parents might bury a child, or a child might lose a parent.  Some get divorced and then don't have a companion.  Some might live in poverty or be unemployed, where making ends meet or finding the next meal is their challenge.  Some lives have a blip or two of tragedy, where others might be mired in chaos.

On Thanksgiving, I am thinking of all of my friends and family whose lives have varied from the script, for better or worse.  I am most thankful for the empathy, support and love I received from my friends and family when my own life deviated from the plan.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013


This is a picture of Fox sleeping on the couch in my office.  Notice the couch and pillow match the background of my blog.  Rarely am I this coordinated.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Random Thoughts


  • I try to use my powers for good, not evil.  Once in a while, a little evil pops out by accident.  Sorry.

  • Some people are so toxic, you need to wear a hazmat suit to talk to them.  

  • If you are thinking, "My gosh, I hope I am not toxic," you very likely aren't.  If you are thinking "The only toxic people I know are the ones who don't agree with me..."  then you might need to take another look in the mirror.

Morning, Mourning, and Let it Be

Last night, there was a School Board meeting here in Seattle where the Board voted on boundary changes.  Part of my volunteer work means following this and in some ways, being a part of it.  I am not going to talk about the whos and whats and whys.  I am going to talk about the morning and mourning after the vote.

The morning after brings change.  I was thinking about this as I was walking Fox after I dropped the boy off at the bus.  It was a cold yet bright, sunny morning, fallen leaves covered in mist and frozen to to the ground.  With any change, there is a loss.  It might a good loss -- meeting a new friend might mean the loss of loneliness.  In those cases, we look at the upside of gaining a new friend in terms of what has been found -- companionship, camaraderie, fellowship.

But other times, when we look a change, we look at the loss of what we had.  It is hard, and unpleasant.  It can make us mad, sad and want to tear our hair out, especially for those who are most impacted or who worked hard to make sure the changes were in the best interest of the greater good.

When a change impacts a larger number of people -- say the families of 51,000 students -- emotions are all over the map, coming in every color of the rainbow.  One group's win could be another group's loss.  And of the mourners, people might be sad for very different reasons.  What is for the greater good might place extra hardship on certain individuals.  I was reading some comments last night and saw pictures of families at the meeting carrying signs.  Each of those signs had different words, but they all meant "Please don't hurt my child."

I've been through several major tragedies.  Epic ones.  I am not saying that moving one kid to another school does not cause angst and anguish.  Rather, losses have similarities whether they are big losses, little losses and medium ones.  First is mourning the change.  The second is coming together.  The third is rebuilding in the new world, until we come back to ordinary time.  But first today, let us be.

After my daughter Ada died, I was in a restaurant with my husband when the Beatles' song "Let it Be" came on.  I had heard it hundreds of times but never fully grasped the meaning.  I had tried so hard to do everything right.  Everything.  And the outcome was not what I had planned or expected.  I had no control.  I didn't die, so I still had to get up every morning and carry on.  I had to rebuild, create a new life that was far different from the one I wanted.  It was horrible.  "Let it Be" does not mean give up or give in.  It means sometimes things hurt, and is okay to feel the pain.

When I find myself in times of trouble
Mother Mary comes to me
Speaking words of wisdom, let it be
And in my hour of darkness
She is standing right in front of me
Speaking words of wisdom, let it be

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Anti-Depressant Hot Chocolate

I found the recipe in the New York Times years and years ago.  It cures the blues in a big way.

1 tbsp cocoa powder (I use Hershey's Special Dark)
1 tbsp sugar (I have a special supply of Demerara for this purpose)
1 oz. dark chocolate (54% or higher cacao)
8 - 12 oz. milk (I used skim, or non-fat as they say here in Seattle)

Whisk the cocoa powder, sugar and a little bit of milk in the pan until it is like a paste.  Add in the rest of the milk and chocolate.  Cook until it lightly boils.

The New York Times recipe also calls for chocolate whip cream.   I generally don't have time to make whip cream on a Tuesday afternoon, so I skip it.

Mood

I am reading "The Pure Gold Baby" by Margaret Dribble.  Here are a few fabulously depressing quotations from this book.  By fabulous I mean when you read then they make you smile a little like a Baudelaire poem because life really cannot be that bleak.

"He has resigned himself to a life of unproductive daily anguish."

"Steve's manta, which he once repeated to Jess, goes:
The day is agony
The night brings no reprieve."

"I feel anguish, and it is not of the body, so it must be of the spirit."

Here is a Baudelaire poem I love from college.  It is not that bleak and fatalistic as some of his others.  At times, don't we all feel like the albatross, where we soar in some environments and flail in others?  And what about those jerks on the boat who drag the bird down?  Don't you kind of wish they get washed overboard?

The Albatross
Often, to amuse themselves, the men of a crew
Catch albatrosses, those vast sea birds
That indolently follow a ship
As it glides over the deep, briny sea.

Scarcely have they placed them on the deck
Than these kings of the sky, clumsy, ashamed,
Pathetically let their great white wings
Drag beside them like oars.

That winged voyager, how weak and gauche he is,
So beautiful before, now comic and ugly!
One man worries his beak with a stubby clay pipe;
Another limps, mimics the cripple who once flew!

The poet resembles this prince of cloud and sky
Who frequents the tempest and laughs at the bowman;
When exiled on the earth, the butt of hoots and jeers,
His giant wings prevent him from walking.

— William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)

http://fleursdumal.org/poem/200

I love this fabulously depressing poem from Harry Potter Puppet Pals video "Snape's Diary."

Button, oh button, oh where hath thou fled?
Did thou tarry too long between fabric and thread?
Did thee roll off my bosom and cease to exist?
How I wish I could follow thee into the mist.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-a8USS84F4

Sunday, November 17, 2013

What He Doesn't Say to Me

I love you.

I've missed you so much.

I am so, so sorry.

It is okay.  I really do love you.

-- Things the boy says to the dog, that he doesn't say to me.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Pearls

Forgive me while I indulge in a First World Problem.  I have a small handful of other problems that could be a topics in a Shakespeare tragedy, but today I will focus on the light and fluffy.  Or the bright and iridescent.

Within the last year, my husband has offered to get me a string of pearls.  I can't remember if it was for my birthday or Christmas or in honor of us having our first date twenty five years ago.  He is not a big gift giver, and I am in charge of the money in the house.  With the exception of buying a new bike, it is natural that he would check with me first before making a large purchase.  He was thinking of getting an heirloom quality strand -- something I could wear to the ballet and important meetings and then pass on my daughter.

I hemmed and hawed.  I am painfully practical and mildly frugal.  I don't wear much jewelry other than my wedding ring, a pair of pearl earrings, and the watch I got as an engagement present.  I wear the pearl earrings because I am not creative enough to decide which earring to wear on any given day or with a specific outfit.  My teenage daughter has dozens of costume jewelry earrings, mixing them up every day.  Either I lack her flair, or she lacks my staidness.  Pearls match everything, at least that is what I tell myself.

The practical side me didn't want to spend all of that money on something that I would rarely wear.  That money could be earning interest or dividends or could be saved to send the kids to college.  Better that than sitting on the top of dresser.

Thoughts of pearls also brought back not-so-fond memories of the 1980's where at my preppy high school I wore a fake strand of pearls on a regular basis with my white turtlenecks, crew neck sweaters and permed hair.  The pearl earrings somehow aren't part of that faded picture in my mind, though that was the era when I got them.  Maybe because I wear them every day, they transcend fashion and time.  I don't know.

I brought the question up with three middle-of-the-road friends.  By middle-of-the-road, I mean not my most admirably frugal friend who makes her own hamburger buns and invests the savings in the stock market.  She is a master of minimalism and simplicity.  Nor did I ask one of my good friends from college who on any given day elegantly wears the price of small car in bling.  In terms of jewelry, these three friends were neither too much or too little.

Each of them said, "Get the pearls."  I was surprised they did not fully empathize with my quandary and questions this arose in me.  They were of the mind "Your husband wants to get you a nice piece of jewelry.  Let him."

One of my friends blamed Seattle.  "It is this town," she moaned.  "People don't wear jewelry here."  She is originally from California and had lived in Brooklyn.  "In New York, some women had diamond rings so big they could barely lift their hand.  They needed slings to hold their arms.  This," she pointed to her multi-diamond and sapphire rings that stretched to her knuckle, "was nothing in New York."  In Seattle, her rings catch the eye.

My friend the artist grew up in the South where a woman would get a strand of pearls to mark various milestones in her life:  getting married, having a baby, etc.  The strands started out short and would increase in length as the woman aged.

"Women wear several strands at a time," she said, "with the older women wearing ropes and ropes of pearls."  I imagined them looking like flappers, or flappers looking like them.  

For some cultures, jewelry is an important part of life.  My great-aunt, who was Italian, made a hobby of collecting gold.  I asked my college friend, who is Taiwanese, why jewelry is so important.  "It is portable wealth."  Over the ages and around the world, there have been periods political unrest and upheaval.  Gold, gems and pearls often kept their value in times of uncertainty.  Unlike a house or piece of furniture, jewelry is easily transported.

My teacher friend believes jewelry is wearable art.  On the Ave there is a jewelry shop called Danaca, where women hone their craft in silversmithing and experiment with new techniques in jewelry making.  I love this place.  I got a periwinkle beaded necklace with a clasp moulded out of silver clay there.  It is one of a kind and makes me feel like a princess.  Seriously.  The necklace looks like something Cinderella would wear.  My teacher friend was with me when it caught my eye. 

After a thoughtful conversation about pearls over lunch, my teacher friend wrote me an email.  I am thinking she has the final word.

Remember, jewelry not only makes a woman look beautiful, more importantly, it makes her feel beautiful.  I may be headed into the leggings-and-tunic stage of my life (also known as “middle age”), but that is no reason to relinquish the pursuit of feeling beautiful!

Pearls:  yes!

Saturday, November 9, 2013

We Haven’t Killed the Dog Yet, or What Makes him Stronger


For thousands of years, man and dog have lived together.  We have had a dog for six weeks.  During this time, I have made multiple calls to vet to make sure we hadn’t done something inadvertently wrong that could cause him to die.  We have had better luck with children, one who has lived to be ten and the other thirteen.  Unlike the dog, neither of our children have been on the cusp of death. 

One could argue that I am neurotic and have an abnormal fear that my dog might die from our poor custodianship.  Here is proof. (Clarification: I mean proof that I am neurotic, not a poor custodian. But you be the judge.)

Things to fear that could kill our dog:

  • Bloat, 
  • Running away and getting hit by a car or bus,
  • Chewing an electrical cord,
  • Choking on a lego,
  • Death by onion, garlic or currant,
  • Biting someone and then need to be put to sleep for being a maniac because we did not sufficiently train him, and
  • Eating some random thing found outside, like a berry, leftover food such as a Kidd Valley hamburger or birthday cake from QFC, or cat poop.

Last night while we were eating dinner, Fox was nipping at my big toe.  I was going to put him in the bathroom for the meal, but my justice-seeking son thought that would be cruel.  The dog training book said give him something else to chew, like a toy or bone.  As fate would have it, we were having BBQ pork ribs I made in the pressure cooker.  John finished them on the grill.  Fox loves meat.  Any kind of meat.  Raw, grilled, beef, pork.  He loves to stand by the grill and see if anything will fall his way.  My DH, who never had a dog before, gave Fox a bite of pork chop while he was grilling.  Fox turned into Cujo for the rest of the evening.  Porkchoporkchoporkchoporkchop must have been his only thought for two hours.

So Fox was nipping at my toes, and someone thought we could give Fox a bone from the dinner table to chew.  This brought along a chorus of “This Old Man” and thoughts of weren’t we so lucky to have an animal to partake in the bones from our table.  We knew chicken bones were unsafe as they splinter, so we figured we were fine.  He seemed happy with the first bone, so we gave him another.

After dinner, P.J. saw Fox chewing on shards of bone.  When we looked for the rest of the bones, we couldn’t find them.  Fox ate them.  All of them except for a few mini scraps.  I tried to pull him out from under the couch, but Cujo wouldn’t have it.  I grabbed his collar and dragged, risking my fingers to get the last bits out of his mouth.

We figured Fox was done eating the bones and hadn't choked on them, so we passed that near disaster.  John took a bone in his teeth, and crushed it himself.   Now we had to hope the Fox’s little digestive system could handle the load of broken bone.  I called the emergency vet, and she said to feed Fox soft food to help the bones pass through his colon without causing damage.  Oy.  DH went to the store and bought Fox some soft food, his third meal of the evening after his regular dinner and the two bones.

The vet asked if Fox was acting normal.  Fox was better than normal.  He was Super Dog after eating more than a weeks worth of protein in bone marrow.  He was sprightly, strong and focused.  Focused on getting more bones.  His coat seemed to shine and he was happy.  So now we have Super Dog on steroids, and had to wonder if he would die tomorrow when this passes through his system.  We weren’t worried about our weak dog who couldn’t lift his head, nor a tired dog who only wants to sleep.  We were worried about our pomchi who had enough energy to run the Iditarod.

I began to wonder about all of these rules from the dog books about things that could kill them.  If Fox were in the wild and caught a rabbit or rat, he would likely eat a bone or two along the way and it wouldn’t kill him.  Likely, the bones would be a source of calcium for a week.  But Fox isn't a wild dog.  He is a lap dog, bred to be small and civilized.  He is a far cry from the wolves living in the wild.  Likewise, the rest of his body is used to small and soft food, not whatever rodent he can kill.

I am happy to say Fox lives.  Really.  I am afraid I’ll get one of these check-up calls from the Humane Society and I’ll have to tell them he died from eating something he shouldn’t have, and they will regret ever letting us have one of their animals.  I am glad he is sturdier than we are smart.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Swearing

I love to swear.  I don't drink excessively, smoke or use drugs, even caffeine.  Cussing is my vice.  I was at a meeting yesterday morning with three women from my volunteer day job.  We sat in a corner in a coffee shop and an elderly couple sat next to our table.  I am sure we looked innocent enough, like a couple of stay-at-home moms enjoying a cup of tea after dropping the kids off at school.  We were having a lively debate, and more than a few expletives were dropped.  The best when was when one of my more articulate friends said, "We need to kill this motherf--er."  (Note: This "motherf--er" was an idea, not a person or animal.)  I was shocked.  I don't think I had ever heard her swear.  It was epic.  In the 1970's, we would have been smoking.  Today, we drop f-bombs.  I felt bad for the couple next to us.  I am sure their ears hurt by time we left.  I bet they wished there was a swearing ordinance in Seattle that where people can only swear outside and more than 30 feet from the front door of businesses.

Last night, swearing continued, though this time as the topic  of conversation.  I went to an event at the children's theater where we met the playwright for the upcoming production of James and the Giant Peach.  After dinner, the playwright was sitting with the director.  I sat down at an empty seat at their table and asked the writer, "Is there swearing in this play?"  I was kind of hoping there would be.  My son P.J. has read the book several times, and he exploded with laughter when the centipede yells, "Ass!" to the other characters that are annoying him.  He laughed so hard that he stopped making sound, and then made a whoop as he came back up for air.   It was his favorite part of the book.

The writer looked delighted that I had asked him this meaty question.  He must have pondered this while writing.  In his talk, the writer said Roald Dahl broke several barriers with his children's books -- dead parents in the first page, being one.  (Dickens killed off all of Pip's relatives in Great Expectations, but that wasn't aimed at young children.  I digress.)  I wondered if the Children's Theater would break this barrier.

"We have to consider the audience and where the show is playing when we decide what kind of language to use," the writer said.

The director seemed a bit more alarmed at my question.  The playwright lives in New York.  This play is not opening in his hometown.  The director, on the other hand, is an icon in Seattle.  This theater is considered the best of its kind in the U.S., and much of the organization's success is due to her work over the years.  She has way more to lose.

"What do you mean by swearing?" she asked, eying me skeptically.

"You know," I said, "the centipede is rude and calls the other characters 'ass' and 'nincompoop.'"

"Nincompoop isn't swearing," she replied, annoyed at my inability to tell profane words from gibberish.

"Yeah," I said stalling.  "What about 'ass'?"

"There is no swearing," she said in the same tone of voice as if I asked if there were live animal sacrifices on the stage.  "We have two 'idiots' and three 'stupids,' but in the audience discussion we will talk about how inappropriate those words are.  The aunts use them and we had a hard time not using those words considering the aunts are horrible people."

"Dahl used colorful language and I was wondering if the show would have it," I said, trying to explain myself.

"We are going to have florid language more than profanity," writer said.  "Plus, British swear words have different meanings than American swear words.  'Bloody' is a serious word in England, but over here it doesn't mean anything.  'Ass' in England means donkey or jackass whereas 'asshole'..." He continued on for a few more minutes on the meaning of certain words to the British and Americans.

I was loving this conversation.  The director was not.

"So how do you decide which word to keep and which ones go?" I asked.  The director must think I am demented for wanting to introduce swearing to children.  I imagine her going back to the development office and asking them not to hit us up for a donation next year.

"We didn't want to risk losing the audience with swearing," the writer says.  I can accept that.  You don't want families losing interest in the plot and songs and dance, pulled out of the reverie by one bad word.  Writers have more luxury than actors.  Readers can put the book down for a minute to ponder or laugh.  Actors have a different task to keep people's attention.  Swearing might break that.  Half of the audience might burst into a laughter so deep and profound it stops the show.  The other half might get up a leave the theater.

The director likely has the ability to forecast the disaster that swearing could create that I previously did not.  I imagine she does not want all of the Puget Sound area school districts writing the theater off their field trip docket over a few poorly chosen words.  She also probably does not want angry letters from parents when Billy calls his pal at preschool an ass.  Having been on the receiving end of hate mail from my volunteer job, I know that would be bad.  What may be fine for 80% of the folks is not worth the wrath of the other 20%.

Which brings me to my final point, swearing around children.  I usually reserve my swearing vent my frustration about the absurdities in my day job when I am in a confidential and safe setting with friends.  I also swear when I drive.  I swear when I stub my toe or lose something or burn dinner.  Let's say I swear a lot, just less when my kids are around.  My daughter never swears and says things like "poopersons" when something doesn't work.  My son, on the other hand, picked up my bad habit.   When he was two, we were reading Richard Scary's "Cars and Trucks and Things that Go" for the 14,000th time.  We came to the page near the end with the big crash and he proudly pointed at the picture, smiled and said, "F---!  F---!"  Oh dear, I thought.  I didn't remember using the word in front of him.  Did he remember it from the womb?  Nevertheless, I cut back my swearing.  For me, it was like a two pack a day smoker going down to one cigarette in the morning and one before bed.  (My grandmother had told everyone she had quit smoking, but every night after dinner, she would "take the garbage out" for five minutes.  Everyone knew.)

There was withdrawl.  I know there are more creative ways to express oneself, but sometimes "bullsh-" beats "I disagree with that idea." "Crazy" doesn't have the same emotional punch as the f-word.  I also understand the difference between swearing about a situation and swearing at someone, and I avoid the latter.  (People driving cars don't count.)  I know there is a time and place for swearing, and there are numerous people who are unaware of my foul mouth.  I suppose that is part of the appeal of swearing -- only a select few are privy to my rants.  I tried switching to "poopersons," but I sounded ridiculous when I caught myself saying it in front of a friend while driving.  And I don't want my kids to grow up in a bubble.  And how much is swearing part of our grown-up culture?  I love Macklemore (see previous post) and the Violent Femmes.  Is listening to songs with swear words a rite of passage?

After I got back from the preview at the children's theater, the kids asked me to read aloud from Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh.  Her book is a illustrated memoir with everything from hilarious stories about her dog and childhood to serious discussions about her battle with depression.  As a child, she had a toy parrot that would record her voice.  She made it say "poop" about 400 times.  Poop is the favorite swear word for the under eight crowd.  At what point does "poop" turn to "shit"?  Would we wonder about the 15 year old who says "poop" in an non-ironic way?  When Allie talks of her adult life, she isn't afraid to sprinkle in the f-bombs.  As I was reading aloud, I came across a few of them.  The conversation with the playwright and the children's theater director came back to me.  I thought of the director and just because the writer put those words there didn't mean I had to read them.  I skipped the f-bombs, and my kids noticed.

"Read them," my daughter said.  "You have to read the whole thing."  And I didn't.  Was I afraid of the hate mail I'd get from school if my kids started casually dropping f-bombs?  Does my daughter really swear, but not in front of me?  Or, god forbid, am I growing up?  Am I trying to teach my kids civility? The greater truth lies in the power of control.  I can swear when I want to, and I can choose when I don't.

Footnote:  After I wrote this, I asked my daughter why she doesn't swear.  "It isn't polite," she replied.  I think she doesn't swear as an act of rebellion against me.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Fox Dog's Internal Clock

As you know, we have a new dog, Fox.  We sometimes call him Fox Dog so he is not confused with a regular fox.  My husband thinks it would be funny to have a flock of pets named Fox, followed by their species:  Fox Gerbil, Fox Fish, Fox Hedgehog, etc.

Fox Dog has adapted well to our family, so far.  The first night we had him, we had no idea if he would sleep through the night or wander around the house for hours.  We turned out the lights, and he crawled under our bed to rest.  He made a few scratching noises in the night, but other than that, he woke up when we did.  All was good.

My husband wakes up at 5:40 a.m. or so a few days a week.  He goes into the kitchen, makes coffee and takes care of email.  When my DH woke, so did the dog.  This was fine until it somehow got hardwired into our dog that we wake up at 5:40, including weekends and days when DH doesn't get up at 5:40.  I do not wake up at 5:40.  I sleep as long as I can and set my alarm clock to 7:45.  That is two hours of precious sleep.  And I can't drink coffee.  Sleep is my caffeine.  I need real sleep in order to function during the day.

Why do people and animals have internal clocks?  Why is my dog now an alarm clock?  Should his name be Fox Dog Rooster?  How did this happen evolutionarily?  Does it remind us to milk the cows, feed the chickens, catch the fish?  Seriously, why?  Did something industrialization mess us up when we moved away from the farms with cows and roosters, when we didn't need to rise at dawn?  We set our own schedules, and hence the machines with bells and buzzers to wake us up when we demand.

No one told Fox about industrialization.  He thinks it is his job to wake us at 5:40 with his happy little bounce, jangling tags, and if we our lucky, his little body bounding on our bed.

If I don't reset Fox's clock, I'll be too tired to figure out what I want to do when I grow up.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

What Do I Want to Be When I Grow Up? Or, Leading a Circuitous Life

"We weren't changing the world when we were doing this thing," Stone recalls.  "We were in an office that had rats in the basement, our team was fighting with each other, and everyone thought it was stupid."  

-- on the starting of Twitter from "Two-Hit Wonder," by D. T. Max in the Oct. 21 2013 New Yorker

Some people know when they are twelve what they want to be when they grow up.  My husband was one of those people.  He knew at an early age he wanted to be a doctor, "a profession that demands excellence," as he told the medical school faculty when he was applying.

And he married me, someone with a vague notion that I wanted to do something important.  What that was, I had no idea.  I studied what I thought was interesting and followed my curiosity down a winding stream from math to history to communication.

I have just left a multi-year stint as a full-time volunteer where I learned more than I imagined.  "Pony League Politics," is what a another fellow volunteer called our work. While I am happy to move on, I am now left with figuring out what the next step is.  I am in that uncomfortable place with the rats in the basement, except without the prospect of hitting it big.  It is just me and the rats and a new dog to keep me company.

I also wonder about what I want to "be" when I grow up.  I've "been" for a awhile, perhaps I should reframe the question to "do."  But doctors don't "do" medicine.  They "are" doctors.  When I was a child, I wanted to be a ballerina, a psychologist, a lawyer, and President of the United States.  All of those things people "are."  Clearly, the ship has sailed on three of those four career choices, and I have maybe a decade or two before I officially rule out President, even if it is a quantum leap from being on the sidelines in the local political scene to becoming leader of the free world.

Just as the world needs people who have an internal beacon guiding them along a career path starting in their early years, the world needs flexible people like me, who wander around looking for problems to solve, or letting their creativity or curiosity lead them down a circuitous path.

I wish I had a snappy, tidy little ending to this, but I don't.  Tune in tomorrow.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Rite of Passage

I just returned from dropping my son, the boy, off at the ferry terminal to go to camp for four days with his fifth grade class.  One of the mom's said this was a rite of passage for her as much as for her daughter.  She is right--watching my youngest child go off is probably more traumatic for me than for him.  Thankfully, it was a bright sunny day and my sunglasses covered my eyes in case they leaked.

This trip marks the beginning of the end of elementary school.  Next year, he is off to middle then high school and then life.  It all happens in baby steps, with the occasional milestone marking the journey.  And today is one of those milestones.

My daughter is independent, brave and loves to travel.  She is unflappable so I was unflappable when I sent her off to camp.  My son loves life, has a deep sense of empathy and feels everything.  His joys are high and his lows are crushing.  He has entered a phase where he imagines the "worst case scenario" so he can prepare himself for anything.  The downside is he spends a fair amount of time looking into the belly of the beast, seeing horrors that are likely to never occur.  Those thoughts must have melted in the sunshine, as he laughed and smiled with his friends on the pier as they were waiting for the ferry.

When I woke up this morning, I was thinking of my friend Alice who lives Chicago.  When my son was a few weeks old, Alice visited us in St. Louis.  She asked to bring her new boyfriend (now husband) along and I said yes.  When they arrived, we went to the Science Center.  At one point during the visit, I was off with my three year old daughter.  Alice and her boyfriend took the boy.  The boyfriend was happy to show off his stroller pushing skills, and the two of them played family with the boy in tow.  We were separated for a half an hour.  While I completely trusted Alice, I felt like a piece of me was missing.  Was it a limb, or a small part of my heart?  I couldn't tell, but I didn't feel complete.  I am sure it was part of the bonding process and overflowing hormones that makes new mothers panic when they leave their offspring in a corner.  Something tells them they must go back and tend to the little one.

I was reminded of that feeling this morning.  A little part of me is at Islandwood today.  A friend of mine said it is like they are going to school, but for four days instead of six hours.  I am glad someone helped me to look at this trip in the "best case scenario" and pulled me out of the belly of the beast. Today is a day to pause and ponder my rite of passage.  I miss him, and I suppose that is a good thing.  I have to learn to share the boy with the world, as I shared him before with Alice and her boyfriend years ago.  Nevertheless,  I am glad it is sunny today so I have an excuse to wear sunglassses.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Dream App

I just read in the New Yorker about a man who created a dream journal app that will be launched in December.  It has a gentle alarm that eases people out of sleep so they can remember their dreams.  People then write about their dreams in the app, and the app will then catalogue the data so researchers can figure out what people across the world dream about.  What do rich people dream about?  What do people in California dream about?  How often do people dream about going back to high school or college and having to take an exam for which they didn't take the course?

The theory of relativity came to Einstein in a dream, as did the double helix to James Watson.  Which is fine, but aren't dreams deeply personal?  Didn't Einstein and Watson dream about their life work?  Would their dreams correlate to anyone else's?  I suppose this is what the researchers intend to find out. Yet, I wonder if the researchers would lump Watson's dream into the "ladder" category, and miss the whole point that this redefined what it means to be human compared to a rat or an elephant.

As I kid, I had very vivid dreams.  Over breakfast, I'd tell everyone about my dream from the night before.  My dad would roll his eyes, and remind me that my dreams were not interesting to anyone else but me.  My dreams weren't a good story, they rambled on, and went in random directions.  I understood they were boring to everyone, but they were fascinating to me.  What did they mean, and why?  This fascinating world was like traveling for me, going to strange dimensions of time and space.

As an adult, my dreams changes directions, and I followed.  For a stretch in my twenties, I would dream I was one of the "Friends," except I had no part.  Moral of the story:  Stop watching reruns before you go to bed.  My least favorite recurring dream was when I was in meetings at work.  Seriously, how boring was I that I was dreaming of sitting in a beige corner conference room, staring at one of my six colleagues writing on a whiteboard?  In the dream, the meeting had no content.  Or maybe I didn't remember it.  Message:  Have more fun outside of work so I could have better dreams.  Or get a more interesting job.  Or maybe I was pre-mapping the meeting, subconsciously preparing.  Maybe this was a good thing.  Look at what dreams did for Einstein and Watson.

Will I get this app?  Do I want to share my dreams with the world?  Part of me wants to keep them private.  They are mine, after all,  Should I let strangers have the privilege of peaking in my secret world and psyche? Or should I be part of this big experiment, letting my dreams mix in with dreams around the world?

Thursday, October 24, 2013

The Time I Saved a Woman and her Baby's Life

It was just another sunny spring day, except it was within the week where there were several high profile traffic fatalities in Seattle.  It made me want to drive only after not having a drink for four years.  Seriously.  The city was shaken.  This, however, is a good story for that tragic week.  Another good part of this story was that I kept my cool.

I was driving to pick up my son at school to take him to a doctor's appointment.  This was a regular appointment--his ten year old check up.  I was on NE 50th Street and had just crossed over I-5 when I saw a late model Jeep turn on to 50th a few dozen yards ahead of me.  (If the US were metric or I were Canadian, I would have said about 30 meters in front of me.)  Smoke was coming out the tail pipe in a not so pleasant way.

"That car needs its emissions checked," I thought.

As I got closer, I smelled something burning.  "She needs her oil changed," I thought.  (Not that I have any idea how cars work.  Just a guess here.)

The driver stopped at the traffic light at Latona.  I hung back, not wanting to get too close to this poorly behaving vehicle when I noticed small flames coming out from under her wheel well.  I hung back for about four seconds, thinking I didn't want my car to catch fire.  I also assumed the driver would be getting out, and I wanted to give her room.  After five seconds, I realized the driver didn't know the car was on fire.

I pulled up next to her, rolled down my window and said, "Pardon me.  Your car is on fire."  My voice was about excited as the computerize woman who says, "We're sorry.  The number you have dialed is no longer in service.  Please check the number and try again." Maybe I was even more calm than that.  I was like Siri and the woman on my GPS combined.  The operator is a little snitty when she says, "Please make a note of it," as if she has been sitting there all day live responding to wrong numbers.

"I need to move my car out of the intersection and it won't move," the driver replied while fiddling with her phone.  She looked to be in her mid to late twenties, with curly brown hair.

"Your car is on fire. You need to get out of your car,"  I replied in my automated operator/Siri/GPS voice.

"But my baby is in the car."

"You need to get you and your baby out of the car.  I will pull around the corner and call 911.  You get out of the car."  There is an espresso shop on the corner.  In three tenths of a mile, left turn.   Please try again.  

I pulled on to Latona and got out my phone.  While my voice was even, my hands were not.  I could not type in my passcode to unlock the phone.  I tried twice and then I hit the emergency call button.

I told the 911 dispatcher there was a car fire.  I read a nearby street sign to make sure I did not have a bout of verbal dyslexia and give her the wrong location.

"Are there flames coming out of the car?" the dispatcher asked, in the same tone of voice as "Do you want fries with that?"  I imagine 911 dispatchers are trained to be remote car mechanics and figure which ones are real problems and which cars are overheating.

"There were flames.  I don't see them now.  I see red coals, though, underneath the car." I know it wasn't really coals, but something metal was hot enough to turn red.  "Oh wait, now I see flames again coming out the bottom."

"Is there anyone in the car?" she replied as if she were asking "Can I super-size that?"  I am not bashing this poor woman.  She probably deals with hysterical people all day calling about nonsense.  And then once in a blue moon the real call comes where there is a bona fide emergency.

"Yes, there is a woman and her baby in the car."

"A BABY??!!!"  This was said in the tone of voice of "There is a baby in a burning car???!! What could be worse than a baby in a burning car?"  Not much.  Two babies in a burning car?  "Is the baby still in the car?"

I was around the corner, so I got out of my car to check.  "Nope, not yet."

Silence from the 911 operator.  This was not good if the 911 woman was scared.  If Vegas had odds on who would be cooler in a crisis, a 911 operator or me, they'd be like 100 to 1 with the safe bet on the operator.  I tried to help the operator so I kept talking, giving a running commentary as if I were doing play by play for a football game on the radio where people can't see what is happening on the field.   "The mom is at the door, she is getting the baby out...and the baby is out of the car."

The dispatcher let go of her breath.  I think her heart began to beat again after pausing for a few moments.

"I'll send a fire truck and ambulance right away."

After the call, I walked over to the mom, who was standing about seven feet from the car, or two meters for the Canadians.  I didn't think it was a good idea to stand so close to the car.

"Let's step back," I said, looking at the baby.  The baby was wearing one of those hospital newborn t-shirts with the super wide neck hole.  The baby's face was lumpy and his head bobbled as if the night before he learned how to hold it up.

We all stepped back about twenty feet.  As we did, the hood of the car was engulfed in flames just like a marshmallow in a campfire.  Whooomp.  Then the fire went down.

"Diaper brain," a friend called it, the sense of life blurring by in those first weeks of motherhood.  This is was the mixed up time for this mom when her brain is being re-wired to take care of baby, when down is up and up is down.  Of course she couldn't leave the car.  Her child was in it.  She couldn't take her baby outside on the street.  That would be dangerous.  But she couldn't see the flames.  And I did.

"Do you need to use my phone?" I asked.

"No, my friend is coming," she replied.  "My cell phone had lost its signal, but I reached her."

"Very good," I said.  "Are you sure you don't need anything?"  The baby stared at me with his big brown eyes.

She told me she was fine, as she watched her car smolder.  This was all in the voice of a mother of a newborn who can't believe she is standing on a corner watching her car burn.

I drove off to school get my son for his check-up.  The fire truck raced by as I pulled away.  Unlike the other crashes, this one thankfully had no journalists, no television cameras, no tragic ending to make the town weep.  No story for the Seattle Times--just a story for me, a mom and a baby.