Archive for June, 2008
Weekend Fun
5Like most of the other Columbus bloggers I know (and some I don’t know), I spent part of my weekend at Comfest listening to good music, admiring painted breasts, and drinking giant cups of beer. I had a moms-only night on Friday with Dawn and Kristen, and every time a young lady walked by with pair of uncovered breasts that were sitting up high where God put them, without the aid of any industrial-strength materials, the 3 of us couldn’t help but shake our heads and say, “Enjoy them while you can! They won’t always be like that,” and then we’d lament the fact that we didn’t appreciate our bodies back when we were young and perky, and now we’re stuck having to appreciate them for stupid reasons, like creating life and sustaining life and all that bullshit. Bitter.
We also found a perfect spot to sit and eat, and then we just couldn’t bring ourselves to leave the table because it was such a great spot for people watching. It was fun for me to see people that we see at the library, the pool, the grocery store, the farmer’s market, and everywhere else we go around here. It made this big (to me) city feel like such a small town. That might be why I like the Clintonville area of Columbus so much. It has big-city convenience with a small-town feel. A small town where people don’t freak out if you carry your baby in a sling or homeschool or homebirth or breastfeed a toddler. I love that about this place.
On Saturday, we went back to Comfest as a family just in time to see Kristen’s kids do their Grimaldi circus performance for 2 minutes until it got cut short because of the major thunderstorm that was on its way. It wasn’t raining when we took off, but by the time we were about 300 yards away from our van, the downpour was heavy, the wind was pushing us around and we dove for cover in a food tent near the North Market. The wind was rocking that tent back and forth in a very menacing way. I realized then that I only think thunderstorms are cool when I’m safely indoors. I was extremely uncomfortable with the amount of lightening, rain, and wind. My kids and my niece were all scared shitless, but they were playing it cool in front of each other. I was grateful for that because the cherry on top would have been desperate, “I wanna go hooome!” whining and that would have sent me over the edge. Bryan kept saying, “Let’s just run for the van!” But I wasn’t about to listen to him because he drove through Chesaning’s great tornado of ’98 (Or was it ’97?) all the while thinking, “Hm, that’s quite a lot of horizontal rain.” He didn’t know there was a tornado going on, but he was about a mile away from a barn that got destroyed by it. I didn’t think he could get that lucky twice, so we stayed put. Until the short man in the official uniform poked his head in the tent and told us there was now a tornado warning and that we all needed to find a building to get into. At that point, I looked at the kids with an isn’t-this-quite-an-adventure smile plastered across my face and told them, “Don’t worry, the North Market is right there and it’s a huge brick building. We’ll be fine. Isn’t this exciting? RUN!!!!” We ran into the North Market (It’s important to note here that Riley and Liberty almost got backed over by a police cruiser during this run. I had to verbally assault the cop. It’s not like he had his sirens on. I totally would have sued.) So we ran again with Bryan still saying, “I think we should just drive home,” and me saying, “You are a retard and if you keep it up I’m going to get all hysterical in front of the children. I’m trying to act like it’s an adventure, but I’ve already peed my pants from fear. You don’t know that, though, because we’re in the middle of a raining-ass tornado that has washed my pee away so shut up about driving home. We’re never going to get home. We’re all going to die and our home has probably already been destroyed by the tornado anyway!”
We waited inside the North Market for a bit and then people were saying, “I didn’t hear the sirens,” but my niece and I thought we did hear the sirens. I didn’t care one way or another because those stupid sirens were broken last week and they wouldn’t shut off after our tornado warnings were over, so how did I know they weren’t broken and wouldn’t turn on this week? You can’t trust technology! Except when it’s Dawn using her handy-dandy computer to tell us the weather. Yes, it finally occurred to us that we could call Dawn and she would tell us what to do. She told us that Short Guy was lying to us and told us we were safe to get the f*ck out of there, so we did. And then it turned out to be fun. We had our own little community festival with cozy, dry jammies, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, candy, chips, and card games. Best. Comfest. Ever.
Not That Kind
4I’m not the mom that you think I am if you think that post about Lena is the kind of mom I always am. If it were Liberty who had the trade remorse that Lena suffered through the other night, I would not have had the same compassion. Liberty is very susceptible to advertising and slick packaging. Her middle name is “impulse buy” (it’s a family name) and if she would have been in the same situation, I would have said, “That sucks. Go to bed,” because I would have felt like, yes, this is a lesson you needed to learn. Goodbye. By the same token, if Lena missed out on purchasing something because she waited and wondered and waited and wondered so long that it went out of stock, I would say, “That sucks. Go to bed,” because it might be helpful for her to learn that sometimes you just have to jump in and do it.
This is how money works with Liberty: She gets some and she spends it within 5 minutes. Usually she buys Another Effin’ W3bkinz. She always says she wants to save for 2 allowance days in order to get a DS game or something like that, but that would take “4 whole weeeeeeks!” So she, without fail, opts for spending over saving. Last allowance day, she decided she was going to spend some gift money and save her allowance money to pool it with Lena’s so they could buy a used Gamecube together. This was established before we went to the store to spend her gift money. While we were at the store, Liberty decided she didn’t want to pool the rest of her money with Lena. Instead, she wanted to spend every last penny buying several W3bkinz, which meant that Lena wouldn’t have had enough money on her own to get the Gamecube, which we were planning to get that night. We try to not be controlling when it comes to their very own money (as evidenced by the number of Effin’ W3bkinz in this house), but we felt that it was unfair of Liberty to renege on her deal with Lena and we told her so. She responded by very calmly paying for her solitary W3bkinz and then as soon as we walked out into the parking lot, she crumbled into a quivering mess of hysterics and screamed in a pitch that was so painful to hear that it could be used to question suspects at Guantanamo Bay, “IT’S NOT FAIR! YOU’RE MEAN! IT’S MY MONEY!” over and over with a red face and tears and flailing to boot. So I yelled back with my mean mommy tone, “I’ll tell you what’s not fair: promising to pool your money with your sister and then deciding not to and leaving her hanging. I’ll tell you what else isn’t fair: how about if Maya and Lena continue to get allowance money and you get NOTHING? How about that? That sounds fun to me! Yup, let’s do that. Now quit yer cryin’ and suck it up! You made a deal.”
Ahem.
They’re different kids, that’s all. I know it’s confusing, what with them being identical twins and all, but as much as I try to make them the same, it doesn’t work. My different reaction to them all comes down to my different fears for them. I don’t worry about Liberty over-analyzing everything to death and missing out on life. I worry about her leaping before she looks and getting seriously hurt in the process. Writing that, it seems like these girls just can’t win with me and that’s probably true. I am, after all, the mom. There’s just no pleasing the mom. I’m just looking for a bit of middle ground. I don’t constantly harangue Liberty about the fact that she will be bored with her W3bkinz within minutes of getting it home. It’s her money. That’s her lesson to learn and she’s not going to learn it with me rolling my eyes at her every time she buys something. I will step in, though, if her spending habits hurt another person.
Now I have to go because today is allowance day and Liberty is already at the other computer looking at “exclusive items” she can buy on the W3bkinz website. Commercials were made for kids like her.
That Little One is Funny
5Maya was singing, “If you poop, you have to wipe yours butt,” to the tune of the Veggie Tales theme song all day yesterday. And then last night we had major storms and tornado warnings. I don’t think it’s a coincidence. She’s been checking out CDs from the library lately and she must have grabbed a whole stack from the kids’ gospel section because she has the Veggie Tales one and about 3 other kids’ greatest worship and gospel thingies. I thought it was totally random that she pulled CDs from that section, but now I think she checked them out for the sole purpose of making bathroom joke parodies out of the songs. She knows Christians hate that shit. And God punished us with bad storms. God always knows what your filthy little heart is up to.
The title of this post is a shout out to Bryan’s dementia-addled grandmother who lives with my in-laws. A few years ago when she was just starting to go downhill, she would constantly laugh at Maya and say over and over, “That little one is funny! Look at him! There he goes! Look at him! He’s funny!” Maya could be doing something as simple as walking through the living room and Grandma would crack up, which I think means she was seeing into Maya’s soul, and she was trying to tell us that Maya’s very being is funny.
Grandma is still a laugher, but she doesn’t really put words together anymore. When we were visiting there last month, it was really sad to see how far she had deteriorated in less than a year. And, we feel guilty about it, but it was also funny. The deterioration is not funny, but she is a funny, funny lady. She thinks my father-in-law is her husband and she gets jealous when he pays attention to my mother-in-law (her daughter). That’s funny. She can’t get many words out at once, but she managed to call my father-in-law fat when he took food away from her. He is pretty fat. If there is any food within arm’s reach of Grandma, she will put it in her mouth. My father-in-law kind of has the same affliction, so his taking food away from her was a bit hypocritical and I think she knew that, so she called him out on it. That’s funny. She’s just having a little fun with her dementia, that’s all. I think it’s very nice of her to decide to have the funny kind and not the mean kind.
It’s time to get the day going. I think the lightening is all over, but Maya is working on getting the melody to Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus down so I better get out and run before her parody is finished and the lightening starts again.
Lesson Learned
6Lena got out of bed in a screaming panic the other night because she traded a video game to somebody and then decided she wanted it back. This is a child who doesn’t do anything on impulse so I knew she didn’t take this trade lightly and I knew it was going to be that much more painful for her to find out she had to stick with the trade. She is so cautious that I worry that she misses out on things because of the fear of what-if. And because I tend to think in extremes, I think that if she is like this at 9, she’ll be like this at 39 and she might miss lots of really good stuff and her life will be an empty, antiseptic, white room of nothingness in order to stave off regret.
Through her sobs she explained the situation to me and begged me to help her convince the kid to trade back. Basically, she wanted me to use my mom powers for evil. I very gently explained the ethics of playground trading and how it’s not really kosher to demand the game back. This explanation was followed by more tears and louder wailiing, which I encouraged. There was also a significant amount of flailing of various body parts, which I also encouraged from a safe distance. This child is extremely long in the limbs, so when she flailed around in this fit of regret, she looked like one of those giant promotional inflatables in the shape of a guy. The one with arms that don’t inflate, so they just go whipping wildly around. Her elbows and knees can be deadly in this state so I comforted her from across the room.
While Lena worked on getting out her sadness, all I could think about was how this is a kid who did not need to learn the lesson of the impulsive trade. Again, my mind went to the bleakness of a future with no risk. She already misses out on a lot of fun things because of her sense of caution and this wasn’t even an impulsive trade for her. She’d had the game since April and she didn’t like it. It wasn’t fun. She had been sitting on it for 2 months and when the opportunity to trade it with a friend came up, she thought it over and went for it.
After about 45 minutes of there-theres and I-know-it’s-so-hards, she calmed down and I let her sleep in my bed just like the good ol’ days and we talked about how much fun the good ol’ days were and how much fun these right-now days are and she started to talk about selling her fresh trade to the used game store in order to save for a certain Mario Brothers game, and she decided that there was a bright side to her trade after all.
Taking her lead, I decided I would also look on the bright side. Lena definitely did not need to learn to be more cautious, so I am going to cling to the hope that the part of her brain that encourages caution was already all filled up, so that this little experience wouldn’t even register with the be-careful gremlins in there. I’m going to choose to believe that what is really imprinted on her little brain is the fact that when she has regret, nobody that loves her is going to tell her to suck it up and move on. Nobody will ever tell her to lie in her freshly-made bed. I hope she learned to treat the people she loves with the same respect and I hope she learned that she deserves the same from the people in her life. Instead of imagining a risk-free, gain-free life for her, I’m going to imagine that she’ll always be surrounded by people who will support her through her successes and failures. People who will encourage her to fill her white rooom of nothingness type life with color and fun, and people who will teach her that experiencing regret isn’t the scariest thing in life. People who will risk their own soft tissue in order to let her flail her bony elbows all around while she wails. And people who will let her come to the bright side all on her own.
34!
2Happy birthday, Bryan! (See father’s day post for mushy gushy love stuff.) You rock. I’m lucky. Glad you were born, blah, blah, blah. Super glad, I swear. It’s not my fault you were born so close to father’s day and now I can’t think of more good stuff to write so quickly.
Super Cute.


