Tuesday, April 5, 2011

tie one on


A few years ago, I checked out a book from the library and taught myself how to paint on silk. I was making large assemblages at the time, and they were expensive to ship to galleries. I wanted something that was lightweight and also functional to add to my line of creations.

Dharma trading has been a wonderful resource. I order blank, white hemmed silk scarves from them, then stretch the scarves out, like small canvases--pinning them onto frames I rigged up. Then I paint them with silk dyes, and often draw on the scarves with fabric markers. Painting on silk is a lot like watercolor--sometimes the ink has a mind of its own. After the silk dye dries on the fabric, I dip the scarves in a fixative that sets the color and makes it permanent. They can be handwashed in cold water or dry cleaned.

I repeat certain designs as limited editions, but each and every scarf is a one-of-a-kind hand drawn, hand painted original. They measure 15" x 60". I wasn't big on wearing scarves before I started painting them. But since there were some around the house, I started using them and they do have a way of making you feel a put together. You can even tie one on the handle of your purse if you want to add a little color to your outfit, but don't want one around your neck.

This past holiday season, I began dedicating certain motifs to benefit different non-profit agencies, and it brought so much happiness, it is something I will continue: 

A portion of the sales of my whimsical bird designs go to Midland Hospice in Topeka. 
Wheat motifs benefit the Meals on Wheels route that was established in honor of my late friend, Krista Wagner. 
Abstract designs benefit Health Care Access. 
Floral design, "Flowers for June" benefit Red Cross blood mobile, in honor of my late mother--who loved flowers, and always donated blood. 
Dragonfly design benefits the Fugees, helping child victims of war rebuild their lives. 

It's a small way to give back after we have recieved lots of help over the years. It makes me happy, that's for sure.

I'll be showing my spring 2011 line for the first time at Body Boutique this weekend. They are having an open house; you don't have to be a member to stop by. There will be a few other businesses there as well:
Sat., April 7, 8am till 1pm
Sunday, April 8, noon to 5pm

I will also be at Art in the Park, Lawrence, Sunday, May 1st. Hope to see you soon.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Daniel in the lion's den, Betty with beer

Growing up, I attended a charismatic church with my parents. As a teen, I’d sit with my friend Leasa at every service—and we’d giggle so hard, we’d shake the pew.
We’d sit there, hour after hour, trying to decipher the pastor's round-about way of talking. What exactly was his point? It was anyone’s guess. He stressed certain words that did not need emphasis, and used multiple words that meant the same thing. Was it a means of delay, because he’d forgotten his sermon? This was decades ago, so if a lightening bolt was going to pop out of a cloud and zap me for doing this, maybe it would have happened by now. But I’d imitate him later:
“And he BEGAN to DO the thing which GOD asked him to START to PARTAKE along the WAY as he COMMENCED...”     Hunh?
 *******
I graduated at semester of my senior year in high school, then took college classes at Dodge City Community College and St. Mary of the Plains. During that time, I worked for an organization that had group homes for developmentally disabled adults. Mine was a live-in position; I had a private apartment in a large brick house that had, long ago, been a rooming house. Nine women with mild developmental disabilities lived in the home, and most of them worked in a sheltered workshop during the day.
My first day on the job another employee introduced me to all the women. One of the ladies who lived there was Sally. At around 45-50, she was one of the oldest residents there. She was sitting in the living room wearing nicely pressed slacks, one leg crossed over the other, reading the newspaper. Sally’s short dark hair was tightly and neatly curled. As we were introduced, Sally looked up at me warily over her reading glasses. Blue eyes regarded me cautiously for a couple of moments. Then she sat her paper and reading glasses aside, stood up and said, “Hi.” Moving closer and opening her arms to hug me, she said decidedly, “I love ya.”  This completely disarmed me and dispelled the nervousness of my first day on the job.
There was a group home for men about a block away; Sally’s boyfriend lived there. Most of the residents from my house and the men’s house attended church together. It was a small church within walking distance. One Sunday evening was going to be very special; my ladies were responsible for leading the service, and they hoped I would attend their church.
One night at the residence, "lights out" time had long passed, and I still heard someone talking. I went upstairs to check, and was surprised to see the light in Sally’s room on. “Sorry, just practicing!” she said. She was reading her Bible, and was excited about delivering the message at the church service the next evening.
Sunday evening, we walked to the church, along with the men from the group home nearby. When it came time for Sally to deliver the message for this special service, she approached the pulpit and told the story of Daniel in the lion’s den. A few minutes into it, she started to relax. After a few more minutes, Sally looked even more relaxed, and started adding arm movements to stress her point. She was a natural preacher; far better than the one I grew up with at my church.
Wrapping up, she said, “And that was the story of Daniel in the lion’s den." Sally knew she’d done a good job, and she enjoyed being at the pulpit. She didn’t really want to sit down. "  Pause.  "And my grandma taught me that story. And my grandma was a Good Christian Person." Pause. "My grandpa was a Good Christian Person. My mom was a Good Christian Person. And my dad…..my dad…..my….  Well, my dad TRIED to be a Good Christian Person.”
 *******
Around this time, at my own home church, something was unfolding. Our church was small, maybe 100 people. There was a couple there that I didn’t know personally, but had seen around. I’ll call them Gary and Betty. They had two very young sons. One had red hair and looked just like Gary, and one had dark hair and looked like Betty.
And then Gary contracted meningitis, and was sick for a long time. When he recuperated as much as he was going to recuperate, he was developmentally disabled. I was in the church lobby one day, and watched Betty lead her husband – now her dependent—and their two young sons up the aisle. She looked dignified and strong. Later, Gary became involved in the group home for men that was near where I worked. At 19, I thought that when bad things happen, it is because God allows it. And I was saying, “God? What are you, a practical joker?!”
I moved to Lawrence to attend KU soon afterwards. I never had a conversation with Betty, but her image—dignified, strong, steadfast—haunted me through the years. I hoped and prayed for good things for her.
 *****
Years passed, I married and had children. When my children were young, my husband was diagnosed with cancer. My dad died, my husband was going through chemotherapy, and I gave birth to my third child. One friend, not knowing what to say, tried to console me with, “Well, at least it can’t get any worse.” It got much, much worse for a very long time, before it got any better at all.
As I tried to hold everything together, I reminded myself of that image of Betty, and struggled to remain dignified.
*****
After my husband died, I used my art as my therapy. Once, some of my work was in a show at the art center in my hometown. A few weeks after that, I received a phone call from a woman who had purchased one of my pieces.
She called to tell me how much she was enjoying the painting. As we chatted, it came up that she attended the church I had attended as a child and teenager. I inquired as to the well-being of a few people from the church. And I asked about Betty, and said that although I hadn't really known her, she'd been an inspiration to me.
The woman "tisk-tisked" and said Betty wasn't doing all that well. She had incurred the wrath of the church, as well as the woman on the other end of the phone. After their kids were grown, Betty had divorced Gary! Gasp. And she had recently remarried and moved away. The woman on the phone wanted me to weigh in on the situation.
In the course of my life, I've tried a lot of things on for size, including gossiping. And announcing piously that I don't partake in gossip. Neither of those attitudes turned out to be all that becoming on me.
I said, "Oh, wow. Hmm. Well, I just don't think I'm in a position to decide that. Only Betty and God know what she went through and how she reached that decision."
Betty's dark hair might be peppered with white now, making her look even more dignified. I pictured her in a quiet cafe, maybe allowing herself a beer with dinner. And in my heart, I whispered, "Betty. . . have one for me, okay?"





Saturday, April 2, 2011

velvet dresses and wide brown eyes

     Marcel had a hard time admitting he was dying. Looking through some papers a few years afterwards, I found a brochure from the American Cancer Society. Someone in one of the many doctor's offices we visited had given it to us. I leafed through the booklet. One spread listed cancer survival rates. The 6-month survival rate for the type of cancer Marcel had was very low; 20% or less.
     I was shocked to read that after the fact. It wasn't something we ever talked about. Marcel lived with his cancer for about 2-1/2 years after his diagnosis.
     I planned his funeral alone, when he was in hospice, and I felt like a traitor for doing so. We never talked about what kind of service he would have wanted.

     A lot of the funeral itself is a blur to me. It was within a day of Thanksgiving, and within a day of our youngest son's 1st birthday. I remember feeling like I didn't know what to do--play hostess? All of these people had come and I should thank them. I'd only been to two funerals--my grandmothers--one when I was 10, one when I was 18. My father had died a year before Marcel, but his funeral was on my due date for my 3rd son, and I could not make the trip to attend it.

     Marcel had worked at the Lawrence Interdenominational Soup Kitchen for some time. Many people he knew from there attended his funeral, including Mary, a woman who used to eat at the soup kitchen. I stood around all day blinking, blankly wondering what exactly it was that I was supposed to be doing. It came to the part of the service where people formed a line and greeted me. Mary was one of the last, and she told me serenely and very loudly that she hoped it would bring me comfort that all through the services, she had noticed a blue light hovering above my left shoulder. That seemed to have tremendous significance to Mary. While a lot of people looked on, I stammered something about appreciating her telling me. Weeks later, my friend Julie commented on it. She told me that life is way more surreal than we ever expect it to be. But that my life in particular seems to have "spikes of surrealism."

     The funeral home offered a support group for grieving families. We met once a week for about 8 weeks. I met a couple in the group, B. & R., who had lost their college-aged daughter--an honor student and talented musician--in a car wreck. This couple became very good friends for me and my sons. I love them. B & R told me about a native american belief:  a deceased person is actually still alive when there is someone here on earth, telling stories about them. A person is alive until the last person who knew them dies.

     B& R have often invited us to their home for the holidays, along with their extended family. On one such Christmas, we joined them for dinner. My sons were probably about 5, 7 and 9. B. & R.'s house was full of relatives. There was a little niece there, close to two years old, with sparkly blue eyes and a red velvet dress. Her feet never touched the ground--she was happily handed from one relative to the other the entire night. She looked so relaxed and loved. We had a wonderful time there. I gave B. & R. a funny book for Christmas, and some of us sat in a circle and took turns reading it aloud. More than one person laughed so hard, they cried.

     It wasn't always the holidays themselves back then that were so difficult. It was the going home. Alone. To my house where there was not another adult to shoulder the responsibility. Where there was not someone else to talk to at midnight. When the Mocking, Mean Voice slipped in behind me before I could close the door. And in time to my heart beat, it would chant:   "A-Lone. A-Lone. You. Are. A-Lone."

     By the time we arrived home from B & R's house that Christmas, I was nearly in tears. I thought about the niece, with extended family nearby to cherish her at every holiday. My sons had never had that experience--not like that. We were alone, a-lone, a-lone. Not wanting the boys to know I was upset, we came inside and I told them I was going to lie down for a little bit.

   Moms can't lie down without little boys needing something. One of them was at my bedroom door. "Mom? Are you crying?"  They found me out. They all filed into my room and assessed the situation. My oldest son, Frank, remembered that Calvin and Hobbes often made me laugh. He began, calmly and with great comedic timing, acting out a cartoon scene that we'd laughed over together. Freeman left to get kleenex. When he returned, Freeman stationed himself at my left eye. Frederick manned my right eye.

     They had a job to do. They positioned their heads, one on each side of me, their wide brown eyes one inch from mine. "Ah-ha! Kleenex please!" they'd say, when they saw liquid about to spill from my eye duct. And they'd dab it up. "Franklin, more Kleenex, please--stat!"

     I stopped crying, and burst out laughing.

     We never really were alone.

  

  
  

Friday, April 1, 2011

Hope

This post will make a whole lot more sense if you read the posts titled "Still Walking Around" and "Listen up!" before this one......


I communicated with Linda's daughter--I will call her "Ann"--on Facebook. My story about how her mom came to my aid really encouraged her. Ann suggested we exchange numbers! We talked on the phone today! She said that Linda was diagnosed with cancer in 2006.

Ann's story is so incredible, I could hardly sleep last night for thinking about it:


Ann said that Linda was in room 209 at Midland Hospice. I remember that room number well, as that was Marcel’s room at Midland nine years earlier. There were so many visitors to see Linda, her family finally posted visiting hours on her door. A constant stream of people, all the time. I don't doubt that one bit. Linda had a glow about her, and she made a difference in a lot of lives.
When I was first widowed, I was told to really take care of my health, because grief can bring out underlying conditions. Right after losing someone, it is very common to find out about a health condition you didn’t know about earlier.
Ann got very sick after her mother died. She'd never been sick in her life, and suddenly she was diagnosed with kidney problems—renal failure. She went through dialysis, and was eventually told she would need a new kidney. Ann was still busy grieving. One day, she felt God asking her to pray about providing a new kidney.
So Ann prayed about it, and thought about where the kidney would come from. She didn’t want a kidney because someone else died. She didn’t want a kidney from just any person off the street. And, she wanted a kidney from a white person. Ann shared that although that might sound funny, she is Black, and all the people she’d ever seen in dialysis were Black.
She left her prayer thinking she should focus on Hope. And that God was telling her to keep hope in him:  Having Only Positive Expectations.
She wondered why she had to get sick after her mother was gone?! Linda would have nurtured her through something like this. And through prayer, the message Ann received in response to that was, if you had been sick when your mother was here, you could not have taken such loving care of your mother in her last days.
Ann shared her health concerns in an email to her pastor, and the church was praying for a donor match. And then she put it in God’s hands:  “You made the universe, so I know you can get me a kidney if that is what is supposed to happen.”
One day as Ann was about to leave church, a pretty young white woman approached her. The woman said, “Did you know I am going through testing to see if I am a good match to be a kidney donor for you?” They  talked for a moment, and then the young woman moved to shake hands with Ann, offering, “Hi, I’m Hope.”
As it turned out, Hope was the youth pastor's wife, and she was the closest, most perfect match the doctor had ever seen. For any match. Ever. Looking at the lab results alone, he assumed they were sisters. Hope told the doctor, “Well, we are sisters in Christ.”
The day after Ann's last birthday, she received a new kidney from Hope.
Ann attributes the way it worked out of course to God first, but it didn't hurt to have her mom behind the scenes pullling strings, too. I have to say, I don't doubt that one bit.
Just before I (a stranger) wrote to Ann on Facebook introducing myself to share a story about her mom...Ann had prayed and said,"You know, Mom? I'd really like to hear from you...." 

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Sister M.G: Chaplain/Go-getter

     When Marcel was at Midland Hospice in Topeka, the chaplain there was Sister M.G. I believe she is still around. She was accessible, real, kind, direct, and no-nonsense. Very tall--close to my height, and I'm 6 feet. Technically, biologically, she was well into senior citizenship then. But she strode around with strength and purpose, and with the vigor of someone much younger.
     I'm writing this ten years later, and my memory is foggy sometimes. But to the best of my ability, this is how I remember Sister. She told me that she had been in a terrible car wreck. A wreck that killed her friend, and left Sister on a ventilator for months. And after that, she went through her own battle with cancer. It was hard to picture her in bed recuperating. If I was Cancer, or some other Evil Thing, I wouldn't want to mess with Sister, because with one well-aimed swift kick from her, I'd be in the corner whimpering. Down for the count.
     I converted to the Catholic church as an adult, so I am not exactly in the know about all the terminology about what Sisters wear. Sister M.G. didn't wear a big formal black and white habit, but she did wear something that identified her as being a nun. I remember it being more like a khaki skirt, and some kind of headgear. The headgear made her seem even taller. She was so very down-to-earth. Closing my eyes and imagining her leaving her house in the morning, in my mind I'd picture her striding out the door, only to have to hurry back in. "Oh, yeah. Gotta put that thing on my head", I'd imagine her saying, as she plopped it on and ran  back out to help people.
     One day as I was leaving the hospice house, Sister was arriving, and we stood under the shade trees in front and visited. I shared with her a story about not liking the way someone treated me in a particular instance that week. She looked at me blankly for a second, then more sternly. She pointed her index finger at me. "Well, if you are going to tolerate being treated like that...then you're the carpenter of your own cross." And then she strode off, leaving me standing there, probably with my mouth wide open.
    Marcel was fond of Sister M.G. They had regular conversations, and she was a tremendous comfort to him. Around that time, the hospice house got a dog. It was good for morale, and if patients wanted, the dog could come around and visit them. I heard later that Sister and the dog were great friends. And that Sister fed it scraps but she wasn't really supposed to be doing that.
   The night that Marcel died, and after my friend Linda left, Sister sat with me. She told me that out of all the people she'd ministered to in hospice over the years, she found it a challenge to help me. She explained that she thought I was on track, and that I had it together, and there wasn't much she could offer.
     I appreciated her confidence in me. But I have to disagree; I've never really had it together. And actually, she offered me a lot: even a decade later, if I need a smile, all I have to do is think about her.  It makes me happy to think she is Still Walking Around. But in reference to Sister M.G., it seems more accurate to say she is "Still Striding."
 

LISTEN UP!

NOTE!  Read entry for March 30 ("Still Walking Around") before you read this post.

After Marcel died, Linda checked in on me from time to time. That next March, we took my sons to the St. Patrick’s Day parade in downtown Lawrence. One of her grown daughters, R., came along with us. Linda snuggled and fussed over my boys that day, like an affectionate favorite aunt. She talked a lot about her other daughter, A., who lived in Georgia. I have photos of us together that day…somewhere. (I told you, I am unorganized.)
     Linda moved away. She called me once to check in on me. I was so happy to hear from her. She lived in Oklahoma then. She asked if I’d remarried, and I said no. “Yeah, I haven’t either”, she said. I took down her new contact info, planning to stay in touch. I thought of her a lot—like so many people I think about—usually when driving around, and I’d think, “I have to look up Linda and see how she is doing.” I couldn’t find the scrap of paper that I’d scribbled her contact info on.
     A few times, I looked for her online. There are a LOT of people named Linda Bell. As a parent to young kids, I’d get interrupted, and vow to take up the search again soon. Yesterday, writing the entry in my blog about Linda, I vowed to find her before the day was over. If she still lived in Oklahoma…I would visit her, and share my blog entry from yesterday with her. I’d hold her hand, and hug her, and thank her and she could see the boys and how big they have become. Or maybe we wouldn’t have to say much… maybe I could just Be There With Her. Just thinking about it made me feel like springtime.
   Have you ever left the house in a hurry, only to find out it is a lot colder out than you thought it was…and you are not dressed warmly enough?  That first inhale of cold grey air hits your nostrils and you breathe it in and it goes through you and in one instant, it makes the whole of you cold and grey.
     I didn’t find contact info online for Linda yesterday.
     I found her obituary. It was one of those archived articles. You can see the first line, but to read the rest, you have to pay a fee to access it. Insult to injury—bad news, and you have to PAY to read it. Maybe it was some other Linda Bell? I paid the fee and read the notice. It was My Linda Bell.
   I was two years too late. Linda died February 2009.
   Well, if I could not thank Linda personally, I owed it to her family to share my blog post yesterday with them. From Linda’s obituary, I had her daughters names. I found them on Facebook. Their photos were there—beautiful women, who looked very much to me to have substance, and vibrancy and a clear unwavering gaze. Like Linda. I sent them both a message, saying I had known their mom and would like to share a story about her with them.
     I didn’t know if I should expect a response. There are a lot of scam artists online. It wouldn’t be unreasonable for them to be suspicious. And people grieve differently. Some people shut themselves off.  Not everyone wants to talk about it.
     I needn’t have wondered. A very gracious response from A. arrived almost immediately. “It’s always wonderful to hear stories about Mom” she said. After sharing my blog entry with her, she emailed me, telling me that Linda lost her battle to breast cancer at Midland Hospice. The same place where, 9 years earlier, Linda met me after church to help us in our time of need.
     Touchingly, A. had signed her email to me, Still Walking Around.
     I’m disappointed in myself for not taking my search for Linda more seriously sooner. But I’m happy to be in contact with her daughters.
     Note to self:  Don’t wait till the house is clean, or the dishes are done, or “until things calm down around here.” Things are NEVER GOING TO CALM DOWN AROUND HERE. There will always be something nutty going on. And in the midst of that, I still need to listen to that voice and obey it. The one that says to make time, and to reach out, regardless. I hear it. I don't always listen to it. 
     Linda listened.
    
    
    
    
     

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Still Walking Around

   My husband was 42 when he died after a long battle with cancer ten years ago. If CaringBridge (a website to keep friends updated) was around then, I didn't know about it. We didn't use Facebook then, either. So during his illness, people would call--a lot--to ask about Marcel's health. A few people would call frequently, meaning well, but they'd be upset and dramatic and I wasn't always in the mood to be their counselor.
   We had a neighbor who was really distressed about Marcel's illness. Once, when there was an announcement on the radio about a fundraiser that was being held for our family, this particular neighbor panicked and thought she'd heard them announce Marcel's death. She called, and left a long message on our answering machine, about how sorry she was to hear of his passing. I thought Marcel had died, and that I was the last to know of it. This neighbor did the same thing a couple weeks later. It was just as annoying the second time she did it.
   So sometimes when the phone rang, I'd pick it up--already wary and upset. One day, a woman named Linda called. I'd met her a couple of times, because she worked in the office of my husband's general doctor. She started to see claims for Marcel coming through for very serious procedures. She knew we had little kids, and she wanted to help. 
   I was kind of abrupt with her at first. That week, I'd had some experiences with people who said they wanted to help, but it was more about them than about what we actually needed. But Linda--she told me I could call her "LB"-- didn't give up. After talking with her for a few minutes on the phone that day, I realized she was sincere. And she was not creating any kind of drama that I had to sort out. I started listening. Her kids were grown, she lived in Lawrence alone, she wanted to help with the kids if we needed it. We needed it. 
   Around this time, after a 2+ year battle and numerous serious procedures, it became apparent Marcel's health was in a downward spiral. There were no more treatment options. Our sons were about 1, 2 and 5 then. Marcel's cancer had gone to his brain and he was often confused, dizzy, hallucinating. We lived in a townhome with lots of stairs. We didn't have any family in town. I couldn't care for him at home. I arranged for him to be admitted to the only in-patient hospice facility in Kansas at the time, Midland Care in Topeka. 
   As it turned out, although Linda lived in Lawrence, she went to church in Topeka. Often, after church, she'd meet me at the hospice house. She'd help me with the boys. And just Be There With Me. I don't remember so much what we talked about. I do remember that she was beautiful, in a real person kind of way, and she had pretty eyes--honest eyes. Linda was a calm presence. But she had gone through this before. She loved a man, and had a daughter with him. And that man died. And then she loved another man, and had a daughter with him, and that man died. 
   It helped me immensely at the time, to see that after going through all that, here was a vibrant and beautiful woman right in front of me, Still Walking Around. She'd faced tremendous loss, and she wouldn't be the same. But, she was Still Walking Around. And she was willing to wade in with me when I was adrift. Linda made sure I wasn't alone. Just a of couple months earlier, Linda had been almost a complete stranger to me. But she made sure I wasn't alone.
   Marcel spent the last few months of his life, the end of 2000, at Midland. He made friends with the staff, other patients, and high school students who volunteered there. One Saturday in late November, Marcel took a turn for the worse and by the end of the day, he was unresponsive. I arranged for help with the boys at home in Lawrence, and I stayed in Topeka. 
   I was alone there with Marcel when he died that night. We knew it was coming. We'd known for some time. You can prepare, but you are never prepared. I was in shock. After I summoned the nurse, she left me alone to collect my thoughts. 
   And then, amazingly, Linda walked into the room. She glanced at Marcel and said:

"Oh, he's sleeping? I was at church rehearsing, and I thought about coming here to see you. And then I realized it was late, and that you'd be in Lawrence, putting the kids to bed. So I decided not to come. But then it was like my car just drove here, and for some weird reason I ended up here, so I went ahead and came in. 
Why are you here so late?"

   Linda sat with me at length that night. And so it was, for the upteenth time, she made it so I wasn't alone. By being there, being present, in messy times that don't make for pleasant dinner conversation, and listening to that voice that told her to be there, Linda made a vast difference in my life.
   After all the losses--my dad, Marcel, my mom, my friends Krista and Pastor Galloway--I'm different. I won't be the same; things can't go back to the way they were. But, good things have happened, too. There are still blessings to count. At this point in time, today, in this moment, presently, on March 30th, 2011, in Lawrence Kansas. . . I am. . . Still Walking Around.




  

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Fond Memories/Sasquatch Hot Sauce

     More seasoned parents used to tell me how fast little kids grow up. It didn't phase me; my sons would be little forever, and I would be destined to never get a full night's sleep. In reality, that time did go very fast, and I would happily trade a few nights sleep for a chance to snuggle with those silly little boys again.
     Not many years ago, my sons and I were at mass one Sunday morning. Each time we got up to sing or knelt to pray--when it was time to sit down again, two of the boys were constantly fighting over sitting closer to me. I felt impatient and looked haggard. When it was time to offer those around us a sign of peace, I turned to the man behind me, who was with his teenage daughter. He laughed and said, "Oh, yeah--they are fighting over you now. Enjoy it while you can." He motioned comically to his daugther and said, "I can barely get her to stay in the same room with me."
     I didn't really think that would happen in our house, though. . .
     Well, we are in the throes of the stage now, and while I celebrate the fine young men they are becoming, it is still very difficult. It's hard not to feel guilty about all the times I wasn't truly in the moment with them when they were younger. They don't currently fight over who gets to sit by me, but I still have my stories and memories about when they were little. And those will always be mine. Here is one of those stories.


February 2006; Conversation with the boys in the van on the way to school. . .

Freeman asked me if I knew that they had a WHOLE SET of Encyclopedias in his kindergarten classroom (?!) He said they had just had the "B" volume. When Miss Fewins switched some books around, she put the "B" volume away, and the kids got upset. So Miss Fewins put the "B" volume back out, and asked the librarian if they could put out the other volumes in their classroom as well.

So, now they have a WHOLE SET of Encyclopedias, which seemed very exciting to Freeman. Encyclopedias that EVEN have "Abominable Snowman" and "Bigfoot" in them! "Abominable Snowman" is in the "A" book, and "Bigfoot" is in the "B" book.  Antonio thought there were 2 pictures of Bigfoot, but Freeman quickly informed Antonio the difference--one was Bigfoot, one was the Abominable Snowman.

I mentioned that another name for Abominable Snowman is "Yeti" and Franklin said another name for Bigfoot is "Sasquatch."
"What?!!" Freeman demanded. "HOTSAUCE???!!!"
"No, Sasquatch!" sighed Franklin.
Then we decided to invent a brand of hotsauce called "Sasquatch Hotsauce:  Big Hot."

Freeman started to tell us about what he would DO if he saw a Bigfoot or the Abominable Snowman in real life, when Frederick, in True Big Brother Fashion, rolled his eyes and said dryly (in his most mature tone):  
"They're NOT REEEEEAL."  (Sheesh!)

Freeman put his hand horizontally to his forehead, as one does when they are shading their eyes and peering far into the distance. He squinted and said confidently, 
"They're out there, Frederick. They're out there. . . somewhere."

     

Monday, March 28, 2011

Life with boys

Today is my birthday. Spring break is OVER. And that, dear friends, is a gift. I love my kids, and they are good ones. Life with boys can be really intense, though. Oh, the sights and sounds and smells of boys. When my sons were younger, I tried to read a book to prepare myself for parenting boys. I got so freaked out, I couldn't get too far into the book. I stopped at the part where the author began describing  pranks that boys will pull--recounting the story of a boy sneaking a pig snout into school and somehow rigging it onto the water fountain. So when someone pressed the button to get water, water sprayed out of the pig snout. We will cross that bridge when we get there. But I can't read about it beforehand. And having a book like that in the house could be dangerous--these people don't need to get any ideas in their heads about pig snouts and water fountains.

I have been meaning and promising and thinking about Writing for too long. So starting this blog is a gift to myself on my 45th birthday. I'll write about my art and the stories and experiences that inspire it, about trying to forge a new identity after 1) being discarded -- um, I mean laid off--2) selling our house and downsizing and 3) the onset of the boys getting older and not needing me as much.

Undoubtedly, I'll end up writing about grieving, sole parenting, parenting biracial kids, and cooking. Knowing me, once in a while, I will rant, weep and moan, and gnash my teeth. I will ask questions that don't have answers--like, how can everyone in the family eat the same thing, and somehow just the boys will end up with gas so bad it makes your eyes water?  Can they do that on command? Why do they think that is funny? And if no one reads it, that's okay--at least the words swirling around in my head all day will have their own little home.

New sun art

Spring's a' Comin'!
New sun wall hanging (mixed media on salvaged hubcap)

Spring's a' comin'


   When my husband lost his cancer battle in 2000, our sons were 1, 2 and 5 years old. We didn't have any other family nearby. After that, the boys and I got to know a family from our parish, the Hinkels. Troy and Laura Hinkel had five kids of their own, and they would often take my boys along with their kids to the park after church. So I could have some time alone and be my generally cranky self. And probably so my boys could have a break from me.
   My youngest son was famous for a couple of things during this time. Freeman loved hotdogs. He was also prone to vomiting after a particularly spirited twirl on the swingset. I forgot to share these tidbits of information with the Hinkels. They headed to the park with my kids one day after mass. And after lunch.  (Hotdogs).  The last stop at the park before getting back into the van to come home? The tire swing.
   When Laura dropped my sons back off at our house that afternoon, she had a funny look on her face as she pulled up in our driveway. When my oldest son Frank exited their vehicle, Laura offered, “he might want to change . . .”
   All the kids in the van chimed in that Freeman had thrown up on Franklin in the back seat. Laura smiled and said, “Well, the first indication that there was a problem was the smell. And my second clue was when I heard Frank say,

     "Freeman! You really should chew your food better!  
      You’re going to choke someday!
    Look at the size of this piece of hotdog!!”


     Frank’s concerned older brother response that day was, as usual, way beyond his years. How can I adequately explain a kid like that to you? He often filled in with his brothers for me when I was too out of it from anger, grief and exhaustion. Frank is a funny and wise old soul. After his dad died, he’d say to me solemnly, “Mom? I love you…And after I die, my bones will love you.”
     Navigating the holidays after being widowed was a tremendous effort for me. Often, I’d start getting a migraine a day or two beforehand in anticipation. We spent one such holiday at the Hinkels. I sat in the corner with a headache and was a very difficult person to be around.
     Troy and Laura were amazingly patient with me. Laura smilingly told me a story about growing up with her dad. They lived in Colorado and her father worked on the railroad for decades. He had to get up in the wee hours of the morning to go to work—particularly difficult in the dead of winter. But she said that his take on that was that at least spring was always around the corner.

     “Spring’s a comin’ ”  he’d say.

     That’s the good thing about spring, don’t you think? It always returns.