Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Smart Alec


Last weekend JB was at a sleepover, so Charles, BW and I opted to see a movie and then go to dinner at a local Japanese restaurant. As we were finishing our meal and talking about the movie we'd just seen BW noticed that there were a couple of lights that needed to be replaced.

"Mama, the amazing thing about lights is that they provide light and heat, but they don't use energy."

"Ok?..."

"Yeah. I guess that's why PSPs last so long. They have really small light bulbs in their screens so they don't use energy and you don't have to charge them very often at all."

"Hum.  I wonder if they actually do use a little bit of energy, maybe in two forms; the light that we see and the heat that we can feel. Perhaps with PSPs they have found a way to be more efficient so you don't have to charge them as often."

Shaking his head and rolling his eyes, BW replied exasperated "Mama. I really think that you need to go back to school and learn some things."

Charles choked on his drink and stifled a giggle as the conversation continued with BW sharing more detailed thoughts on his theory of how energy worked as we cleaned up our table and prepared to leave.

Walking out the door, BW looked at me and with great sincerity declared "Besides mama, I'm a real Smart Alec. I know LOTS of stuff."



Monday, May 28, 2012

All the Way Up

It has been a very warm spring, so much so that people are already sporting their summer wardrobes. But not BW.

Observing the outfit that he'd chosen for a day expected to be 80 degrees, an appropriately light t-shirt was selected from his closet and given to him to change into.

Seeing the shirt, he flew into a tantrum yelling "No, I am NOT going to wear that shirt! It has no collar or top button! I MUST BE ABLE TO BUTTON IT UP!"

And so it was that the boy attended school wearing a long sleeved polo shirt that was nearly two sizes too small. Because it did have a collar and could button all the way up.

On our way home from school pickup we talked about one of BW's class friends who invited him over for a play date.

When asked what the other boy was like, BW replied "He's a fun guy, but sometimes he just needs to relax."



Saturday, May 26, 2012

Field Day

School is coming to a close and one of the annual traditions is 'Field Day'. The morning is spent with each of the classes participating in various competitions and field related sports. The event is capped off with a typical school lunch styled barbecue and families are invited to attend and join in on the celebration. It's a great time for everyone to catch up and share details about plans for the summer ahead.

This year though, the weather was not cooperative and when the time arrived for lunch, the temperature dropped, winds picked up and so lunch was held in the cafeteria/gym.

Normally each child sits with their own class at a series of tables and as the class finishes as a whole, the kids are dismissed back to their classes. This time however, families and kids of the entire school mingled giving everyone the unusual opportunity to interact with each other.

BW joined us as we sat with JB's class for lunch and as the meal came to an end, he stated clearly and in a voice that could be heard above the chaos "JB - I see why you hate your class. They have NO manners!"

Sadly, those little tables don't easily allow for a parent to slowly slide underneath them in embarrassment.


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Adventure Jar

Breaks from school tend to be painful events. The spring and fall ones seem more bearable since we are required to be full-time companions for only a week or so duration.

Winter break can be somewhat murderous since it is longer and at three weeks virtually every patient fiber of a persons character has been worn thin and the weather is usually not compatible with much needed outdoor time. Thankfully though, the miracle of Christmas provides the minions with new interests that keep them occupied during the extended break.

It was only after I became a mother that I fully understood just what cabin fever was; the torturous bickering and whining of very bored children who are aggravated by the mere presence of each others company. It can drive a mama mad.

There is no vacation that brings about cabin fever faster than summer ones. Reliving those lovely three month spans of time which are mercifully forgotten by the time colder temperatures arrive. By the time the year rolls around and the next summer is approaching, the only living memory of them is that they are long and very painful. So much so that the reflexive response to teachers gleeful expressions of the nearing end of school sends nearly every mother into a state of panic and denial.

In an attempt to combat what all relevant data indicated was to be one ‘hellofa’ hay ride of a spring break, an extremely lucid dream provided us with a solution;

The Adventure Jar

Like a honey-do jar, a lidded glass container was filled tiny folded strips of paper upon which ideas of fun activities the kids wanted to do were neatly written. Also included were simple but much needed tasks such as 'go thru winter clothes', 'find the PSP' that had been lost and so on.

Each day one strip was excitedly removed by mama while BW and JB excitedly danced around, waiting to see what adventure was to ensue. Originally it was thought that BW and JB would take turns selecting the little strips of paper, but that changed after a quick test run one weekend proved that the minions were preferentially selecting ‘their’ activity thus reducing the random nature of the jar and instead inciting riots between BW and JB.

Over the course of the week we had several adventures. We visited a local fro-yo place and the kids brought their books so they could “work and be 'big-jobbers' like adults because we are so grown up”. Wardrobes were selectively pruned, rooms cleaned and organized and the long-lost-PSP was at last found. As a family we went bowling and visited the DQ that had opened for the season and had ice cream for dinner.

By Thursday though, it became apparent that the fun was over.

While running errands, the bickering between BW and JB escalated to the point where intervention was needed or first aid would be required.

"Guys! Please stop bickering, you know how I feel about that, and you know that is not the way we respect each other in this family - keep your hands to yourselves, quit spitting, and stop calling each other stupid!"

The fighting in the back seat stopped momentarily, and a high-pitched voice stated matter of factly "Oh, we aren't fighting mama. We just hate each other."

BW quickly agreed saying "Yeah Mama... D'uh!"

And as if on cue, the two began to laugh at us.

All Charles and I could do at the moment, was sigh and look at each other knowingly.

The long break had just begun.





Sunday, May 20, 2012

Needs Practice

While attending our annual Rockies Baseball game, this year against the Seattle Mariners, the Rockies were not playing in top form. By the seventh inning, they'd only scored four runs off the twelve hits that they'd made.

BW taking it all in wryly stated "Man, the Rockies should take a year off so they can practice."




Sunday, May 13, 2012

Brain Disease

My mother spent much of my childhood in her room, with the shades drawn, noise kept at a level quieter than a whisper, and my siblings and I were left to fend for ourselves.

Even the lightest knock at her door was met with a weeping "What do you want?" and we small children felt a crushing guilt - our mere existence caused our mother such a severe pain that at times she begged for death.

Some of my first memories are of my mother lying upon the couch with a cold compress upon her head as she begged the heavens above for mercy from the migraines from which she suffered.

Eventually she would retreat to her room until relief would wash over her and she would emerge to begin the task of reassembling the household.

As the eldest child I was often left in charge of my two brothers and baby sister and I grew to be resented as we wanted our mom and I was no substitute.

What we didn't know then was that she suffered from the early stages of a debilitating disease by the name of Multiple Sclerosis. As a young child, I recall the day that one of the many doctors she saw explained that people who experienced migraines and vision problems such as hers were likely to develop MS, and that all she could do is 'wait and see what happens'.

Once we returned home, my mother retreated to the safety of her room, and she began to sob. Soulful, lost and hopeless body wrecking sobs. I was not yet four and Gordon was nearly two.

After I'd been married for a few years, other symptoms began to appear and after several visits with the every revolving array of doctors the diagnosis that we'd grown to dread but expect materialized. My mother was now a statistic. She had MS.

Anytime thereafter it she referred to her condition as 'A Brain Disease', and as time passed it grew to become a source of sorrow, frustration and sadly for me, the loss of my mother.

With time, her condition progressed, her body began to fail in one way and then another.

Her dexterity and balance were the first observable difficulties, but it was the loss of the intangibles; her memories, temperament and clarity of thought that signified the devastating loss of my mother.

Until the birth of my daughter, JB, I was a dutiful daughter. Whenever my mother needed assistance with technology, Charles and I were there to help. Post-surgical care on many occasions was provided by me for as long as I was able to break away from work and Charles. AunT, my brother Brady and Charles and I performed marathon cleaning and organization sessions at my parent’s house.

Even after we relocated to River City from the Northwest, I flew home to provide assistance for her, leaving BW with who was not even a year old with Charles to help her with monumental tasks. I did it because I loved her, because I was her daughter and because that's what you do for family.

So it was with the sensation of a sucker punch when vile and hate filled emails by my mother began appearing in 'email Inboxes' in which apparent transgressions against her were laid out with great detail. Conversations taken out of context were twisted and used as 'evidence' of how everyone but Gordon had wronged her.

Phone conversations evolved into verbal assaults and guilt trips, and over time it became too psychically painful to maintain contact since nearly every exchange resulted in increasingly long and painful periods of self-doubt and depression. Many hours were spent in my garden with AunT trying to figure out what we had done and what we could do differently, but to no avail; the emails and phone calls only grew worse with time.

In the last of my conversations with my mother, I would inquire as to characteristics or mannerisms that I had as an infant, in trying to grasp if my own daughter was following my path of development or Charles's, since JB was so very different than BW. It was also a desperate attempt to try and maintain some sort of bond with my mother. It was clear that her remaining memories of her children were solely of AunT, as her recollections were the of the same memories I had of my wiggly sister. It was then that I mourned her passing.

When BW and JB grew old enough to sense my emotional state after conversations with my mother, it  became painfully obvious that it was time to break away. The challenge of being a dutiful daughter meant that I was not able to be the kind, loving and attentive mother that I strove to be and my children began to suffer.

I miss my mother. The mother that once was; the mother that when I was in my late teen years and she was in a good mood, I could spend hours talking on the phone with about nothing at all. I miss the mother I dreamt of having when my babies were tiny and life was overwhelming and I was adrift in the newness and confusion of motherhood.

More than anything though, I miss the mother who was supposed to provide her youngest daughter with comfort when she learned she had a brain tumor and needed surgery or faced certain death. Instead it was I who provided comfort for AunT as she conveyed what would be our mother's last words to her "Now you know what it's like to have a brain disease."

Sadly for my sister and I, that mother that we both needed was lost to us before we grew to become adults ourselves.

I can't imagine the nightmare MS has caused for my mother, and it was once my greatest wish to be there with and for her. Sadly though, I know that in order to be the best mama I can be for BW and JB, to be the best partner to my darling Charles, and to be the healthiest me possible, that is no longer an option.

So, as my little family celebrates Mother's Day each year and the kids shower me with attention, kisses, hugs, gifts and loves, my soul mourns for the mother and grandmother that we were supposed to have, but who has been lost.