Category: FAMILY

reunions

reunions

grosse point blank is one of those movies i could watch on a loop. the soundtrack kicks; the plot and dialogue is chockabloc with tight, hysterically-wound moments, and of course, john cusack is in it. fortunately for someone like me, who isn’t doing a whole lot these days thanks to my knee, it’s also played practically weekly, so i TIVO’d it and watched it this afternoon.

watching it of made me think about reunions (since, for the two of you out there who probably never saw it — and that includes you, mom — it involves a 10-year high school reunion.) my own high school class had a five-year reunion which i did not attend (i hadn’t gotten over certain people — or myself — at that point in time); subsequent attempts for a reunion have never materialized, though people talk about it wildly on places like classmates.com. my 20th college reunion this year is happening (insert shock and awe here), and i will also pass on that. i keep in solid touch with my good friends from college (including BS, who i see daily); there are only a few curiousities out there who i will likely never see. compounding the issue is the fact that while officially, i affiliated with douglass college (i got into both rutgers and douglass; douglass had guaranteed housing, so i decided to go there), i was most heavily involved with activities and people at rutgers college. so i would sooner attend a rutgers college reunion, not a douglass college reunion (especially since the university is apparently turning my college into essentially a dormitory choice.)

that being said, there are so many people i miss and who i wish i could see again. what i really wish i could do is have a smallish reunion weekend of sorts, renting a hotel, having a dance party on saturday night, that sort of thing. i guess i ought to organize that in my copious free time. but gosh, at least a girls’ weekend with my friends would be amazing — a slumber party of sorts with my friends.

now i’m getting maudlin. perhaps there are funnier things to read out there in the blogosphere. okay. move along. who knows: maybe dooce is talking about bowel movements or her dog, chuck. it just doesn’t get much better than that, you know.

massacre

massacre

there’s simply nothing funny about what happened at VaTech yesterday. i was going to post today about how amazingly well i did in PT yesterday, but to be truthful, we were all riveted to the TV at the PT shop yesterday. it made my pain so miniscule in comparison. one of the PTs has a son at Tech; fortunately, she was in cell phone contact with him.

it made me think about a conversation i had with BC a few weeks ago when her elementary school had a lockdown drill. “tell me about the drill,” i asked her, curious to see how an eight-year-old mind processes such an experience.

“well,” she said, “we put a paper over the door window, and then everyone had to run and find a hiding place in the room. it was kind of fun.”

trying very hard to breathe and not react, i continued: “why do you think you had a lockdown drill?”

very calmly, BC replied, “because if a burglar comes to our school, we might have to hide from him to stay safe.”

there are a few moments in parenthood for which you can never be prepared. for the parents, families, and friends of the victims of yesterday’s horror, i send out my heartfelt condolences.  this is simply too much to bear.

uncle buck and nightly hallucinations

uncle buck and nightly hallucinations

last night, i couldn’t sleep. again. i think it’s the levaquin.

but in my nonsleep, i devised what i thought to be a hysterical idea for a truly subversive children’s book. see, we in this house love subversive books for kids. i *heart* roald dahl, dr. seuss, and lots of others. a recent discovery is lauren child and her clarice bean books (oh, my holy hell, avoid charlie and lola, the confection she cooked up for disney.) i just like books that say to kids, heheheh, the grownups think they know everything. but here’s the truth, and only we young folks know it. and these authors get it.

[note to self: you’ll probably regret this once the kids are teens.]

anywho, i had an idea for a story that really cracked me up at about 11 p.m. it was rather sordid and probably more appropriate for kids who are, oh, i dunno, 40.

BS has pointed out to me that i’ve sort of re-done Uncle Buck.

perhaps i ought to step away from the computer at such hours until i can actually think.

i'm ba'ack (sort of)

i'm ba'ack (sort of)

knee surgery. ah, the fun. it’s astonishing, really, that after a whole day ordeal, i am left with three bandaids. no lie. three. little. bandaids. they had to do general anesthesia on me (a first for me) because they didn’t have an up-to-date platelet count and the gas-passer didn’t want a bleeder on his hands should he have chosen a spinal instead. i woke up poorly from general, very cold and thrashing about. the nurse said she was trying to understand what i was saying; i’m grateful she could not or else they probably would have put some ivory soap in my mouth. i was quite hungry, so i had some crackers and cranberry juice, which now leads me to another first that day: throwing up on my front lawn. thank goodness it was undigested stuff. maybe it will help the plants.

ah, the glamor of being so dependent. i hate it.

i also have the pic-a-nic basket of fun, AKA my magical cooler that keeps my knee from hurting. see, you fill it up with ice and water, wrap the pad around your knee, and VOILA! joy reigneth. skwigg put it best: you feel like a (non)walking aquarium. jools wanted to fill it up with food and toys. that would have been an experience, though while on percocet, i probably wouldn’t have cared. much. (unfortunately, no one checked to see that it was actually ON when they put it on my knee after surgery. i asked BS, “why doesn’t it feel cold?” he said, “well, maybe you’re numb?” three hours later, when they were letting me out, i asked the nurse the same question. she said, “oh, no, it hasn’t been ON?” yep. i missed three hours of chilling goodness post surgery. oh well. spilled milk.

anyway, i can put some weight on my foot now. i am working on bending my knee and not screaming simultaneously. today, i am going to try two very exciting things. one is a shower. (i have not showered since tuesday morning, and, in short, i smell like a bus.) the next thing i’m going to try are STAIRS. yes. i want to see my room, my bathroom, my clean clothes for the first time in days. i can’t wait.

because i believe in maximizing my angst, i visited the hematologist as well as the physical therapist yesterday. my platelets are down a little (185) but not in a scary place. the problem is, now that i need IVIG, they can’t seem to find any. if anyone out there knows where i might start scoring some IVIG, let me know. apparently, area hospitals have none 🙁

the physical therapist is a hoot. she put me in something called GAME READY that essentially squeezed the living shit out of my entire leg while cooling it down. the PT told me that it was a very expensive treatment. i wonder if they have these sorts of things in S&M parlors. i like the fact that there’s a version for horses as well, although it does seem crueler than just shooting the nags. nay.

anyway, thanks for the well wishes, the cookies, the flowers, the fruit, and all the kindness. i appreciate it more than my percocet-addled mind can express.

(and today — i am off percocet. really.)

mom to kettle: you're black

mom to kettle: you're black

the mom calling the kettle black

BC remarked: “mama, do you know the house is all smoky? have you been cooking again? did the smoke alarm go off and i missed it?”

i’m a great baker. i’m a terrible cook. i’m so sorry, farberware stockpot. you deserved better. RIP, old friend.

[note to my brother larry: hey, remember when you got me this for my wedding present? (oh. i didn’t think so. see, mom bought it and slapped your name on the card. really.) well, it’s been 17 years. i need another one. thank you.]

the end of the innocence

the end of the innocence

BC’s friend told her last night at a slumber party that her mother was the tooth fairy. so now, BC has shared with me that she knows i am the tooth fairy.

i knew it wouldn’t last forever, but i’m so bummed.

—postscript—

at about 8:30pm, BC came out and said she couldn’t sleep. she looked over to find BS filling the easter baskets. i walked her back to her room.

“mama,” BC said, “daddy lied to me. he told me he wasn’t the easter bunny.”

i thought for a second. “no, honey,” i said. “daddy didn’t lie. daddy is helping out this year because my knee is messed up. he isn’t usually the easter bunny.

i am.”

mix the dad with the coconut and snort it all up

mix the dad with the coconut and snort it all up

last week, my hero, keith richards, the man who can survive tours with mick jagger, nuclear holocausts, and falls out of tropical foliage, noted that he had snorted his dad’s ashes up with some blow. now, he is noting that this was, in fact a joke: according to his website, he planted his dad’s ashes with a “sturdy oak.”

apparently, keith’s mum is battling cancer and didn’t appreciate the thought of her departed former husband going up her son’s nose.

i find it encouraging that there is at least one person on the planet who might make keith shit himself publicly. but, as sean lennon once said, “when you die, you become a part of everything.”

and i sure as hell still believe that mr. richards senior is probably part of his son’s bloodstream.

in a word, ewww.

what would miss manners do?

what would miss manners do?

as much as i realize people really enjoy reading about fish tacos, i recognize that it is time once again for a yawn-inducing action-packed installment into the mind (or lack thereof) of the slightly-cranky and fully-klutzy person who drives this proverbial train. (that, and people have actually whined at me because i haven’t written in a week. who knew?)

the truth: i’ve been in nj, celebrating my dad’s 75th birthday, running my speed seder with most of my family, enjoying Hellboy’s dance of vomit and constipation (yes, there was about a five-hour period on monday afternoon when i was randomly praising and cursing glycerine suppositories and prune juice, the latter known around this house as the warrior drink) and enjoying the company of my parents, my kids, my brothers, nieces and nephews, and of course, my ever-wonderful aunt barbara. i had to cut the trip short because i knew as a solo parent, i was only going to get so far before my good knee started reaching up and smacking me silly. so sadly, we missed my in-laws and more nieces and nephews.

but it’s hard to know which part was truly the high point of the trip. ah, the indoor pool, crowded with visiting grandchildren and non-grandparents running for cover; the handicapped parking spaces at the senior clubhouse where the senior golfers park with aforementioned handicapped stickers and then play many, many holes of golf; the insane drivers at the stop-and-shop (the nj dmv should put up a stand at the entrance and simply start rescinding licenses on the spot); the single people who are taking up stalls in the family restroom at the chesapeake house on I- 95 while my son nearly bursts a gasket. it’s so hard to choose. i think, though, i can venture a guess.

on tuesday, we took a ride to the nearby jackson outlets (well, a half-hour away via country roads — and yes, virginia, there ARE country roads in central jersey), initially to look for new sneakers for Hellboy, skorts for She Who Grew an Inch Every Day in March, and perhaps a pair of workout pants for moi, the woman who will consider bending my leg a proper workout after my surgery next tuesday. finding the sneakers and the skorts was easy. then, my aunt graciously said that she’d stand outside with the kids and let them ride the little truck ride while my mom and i looked at workout pants. i handed over several quarters (these things are up to .50 a ride these days) and set my watch to about 5 minutes before the kids would be shrieking at me to get out of the store.

miraculously, i found a pair of pants. that. fit. my. enormous. ass. just as i walked out of the dressing room, i saw my kids running up the aisle toward me, my aunt trailing them close behind. time’s up. “mama,” BC yelled at the top of her lungs, “we put our quarters in the truck and they didn’t work!”

“that’s too bad,” i replied, as she puffed, out of breath.

“nononoNO,” she continued. “i pressed the coin return, and ALL THE QUARTERS CAME FLYING OUT!” girlfriend opened up her hand to show me two fists full of quarters.

“eek!” i exclaimed, while a salesperson smiled strangely at me. normally, i’m a big fan of teaching my kids to return things, but to whom exactly do you return quarters in this situation? and it wasn’t like my kids intentionally tried to get said quarters. they just came out like a mini slot machine. what to do, what to do? “maybe there’s another ride out there?” i asked my aunt.

“yes, i’ll take the kids to the other ride,” she replied, and as quickly as they ran in, they ran out.

my mom and i laughed, then walked toward the front of the store to pay for my pants. just before we got to the front of the store, my mom tugged at my sleeve. “look out the door,” she said quietly, through gritted teeth. and there, at the site of the unintentional truck heist, was a man in a security shirt with a segway parked behind him. apparently, the Reebok employee called security, and a gentleman was checking out the truck situation. (tell me, is his hourly wage more than the $5 in quarters that came out?) mom continued, sotto voce, afraid for my tiny, non-discrete jailbirds-in-waiting: “i’ll pay for the pants — why don’t you head off barbara and the kids at the pass?” i nodded and headed out the door, wondering what a decent parent would do in this situation.

my question answered itself. i shushed everyone as i saw them, afraid of what they’d blurt out. “let’s get in the car and you can tell me what you did,” i told them as i hustled them quickly over to the SUV. once inside the car, i said, “so, did you go on any more rides?”

“yes,” announced BC. we only have a dollar left. we spent the rest on the ride!”

in my book, they gave the money back to the company, so my conscience isn’t killing me here. i gave them a dollar initially, so i figure that leftover money’s mine. BC (AKA mama’s little mercenary) insisted she should keep it as the official finder (of finders keepers losers weepers fame), but I pulled rank as the person who provided that money in the first place.

i may not be a perfect parent; and this will probably stick me once again in parental purgatory; but i do have to wonder what sort of person calls security on two little kids who press a coin return to get their money back and end up with about $5.

fish stick tacos

fish stick tacos

on friday, BS was home, as he was feeling a little under the weather. by lunchtime, we thought we would go out to lunch, especially since shortly, my diet will be limited by the joys of passover. we settled on an old standby, santa fe cafe, in rosslyn. of course, we’ve always been there at dinner and never at lunch, so it was a bit of a shock to see that the restaurant is mostly a carry-out operation at that hour. nevertheless, we figured we’d stay and eat. after all, they had fish tacos as a special (something BS adores), and i can get a bean and cheese burrito anywhere.

i sat, waiting for our number to be called. i stared at the military plaques that adorn part of the wall. i didn’t notice them the last time we ate there. we sat under a piece of the flag that apparently flew over the US embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan during Operation Something-Or-Another. wow. i knew they gave out ones that flew over the Capitol; i guess giving official flags away is now a cottage industry for the military. it made me a bit queasy.

finally, our food was ready. i opened the foil up, and my burrito completely came undone. it was literally the same refried beans they serve as a side dish. if there was any cheese on it, i was not aware of any. so i wrestled with this really nondescript bean burrito. meanwhile, i looked up to see my husband’s puzzled face. apparently, a fish taco at santa fe cafe is actually a taco filled with fish sticks, lettuce, tomatoes, a little cheese. oh, and a side of tartar sauce.

maybe they make such fare for the troops in Kabul?

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