Oh My achin' ass
* So the I-Ching tells us
« April 2005 | Main | June 2005 »
* So the I-Ching tells us
Thanks!
Last night it was Tertia who camped out in my brain. Not the real Tertia - I have never met her but I do read Tertia's blog.
In our story Tertia's company was giving her a big going away party because she had decided to quit work and stay home with the babies. I decided to fly to South Africa to go to the party.
This is remarkable in more ways than one. Firstly, I am a party pooper. Unless I am the one giving the party I often won't go. I will not travel for 1/2 an hour to go into San Francisco for a party. Getting to South Africa requires a 23 hour flight. From my party behavior you might conclude that J. D. Salinger and Brigitte Bardot got nothin' up on me in the anti-social department but that would only be if you aren't one of my coffee buddies. I'm really good at going out for coffee and I love my bookgroup - I just don't go to many parties.
Second, Tertia loves her job and needs the money and has no intention of quitting. It might be worth noting that I did a little snooping around and it seems she and I have a similar professional background so that is probably how I ended up having a dream set in a work party for her.
Anyhow, getting back to the dream....I went to Tertia's party and there she was, short hair, medium height, wearing a drab gray business suit, average build. As far as I can tell the real Tertia is tall and thin and has long hair and is gorgeous and divine but in my dreams she was really, really average. The party turnout was spectacular, though. There must have been 100 people there and they got her a sheet cake of remarkable proportions. It was the kind with the nasty lard and confectioners sugar frosting and the big, gloppy flowers and swirly things - the kind I hate. She gave a speech about how sad she was to be leaving and others gave speeches about how fabulous she was to work with and how much they would miss her and when the coffee and champagne came out and the real party started I left (no surprise there).
I went back to Chez Tertia to care for her child - a single 2 year old boy. I'm pretty sure this reflects my inherent belief that even in my dreams I could not handle twins. I adore 2 year old boys, though so there he was. My job was to keep him happy and to keep him from drowning in the pool out back, a job was I not entirely successful at.
Another important personal reference is needed here. I have a swimming pool in my back yard and when my kids were little I was terrified of them drowning. The first thing we did when we moved in to this house was to put a cast iron fence around the immediate perimeter of the pool We kept it padlocked at all times. These are the kind of locks that have a dial where you have to turn once to the right, twice to the left and once to the right, hitting the 3 numbers exactly. We kept our BBQ inside the pool area and I always locked the gate after I lit the fire and then again after I put the chicken on to cook. I knew that if I left the gate unlocked and turned my back that would be the one 32 second interval in which one of the kids would get in there and either incur 3rd degree burns on their precious faces or fall in the pool, inhale water and die instantaneously. On more than one occasion I found myself frantically spinning the lock as a flames shot skyward, consuming my chicken. We learned to enjoy what I dubbed 'pool blackened chicken'. Perhaps that is one of the reasons I'm a vegetarian today.
Anyhow, while I was watching the little boy he decided to start walking on top of the pool cover which was a piece of heavy duty bubble wrap type stuff. It won't really hold any weight but in my dream it did. It held him until he almost got to the edge and then it failed and he went under the water. I wasn't worried, though. I just reached in and was fishing him out - just as Tertia and Marko were returning from the party.
I was chagrined. I had failed as a babysitter which of course meant I was a failure as a parent.
My 16 year old daughter went to the midnight showing of Star Wars last night. She is a wonderful kid - focused on school, sociable, does not drink or use drugs, is not having sex with anyone and will most certainly be a huge success in life. Both my other kids are high school graduates and now college students and doing really well. All 3 of them are notably fine individuals, feedback I get from other adults on a regular basis. But allowing my high school student to go to a midnight movie on a school night is bad parenting, right? Not fatally bad parenting, not even really a problem - just conceptually bad parenting.
And so my friends of young children, be forewarned - you never lose your fear of being a failure as a parent no matter how great your kids are.
I’m about to have my first Motherless Mother’s Day if you don’t count me. That is, I am a mother and as such I will be celebrated by my adoring children but I won’t be able to bestow any honors on my own Mother who died last July. What I feel more than anything is bewildered at my lack of sorrow. I miss my Mom but I’m not feeling all that sad.
Ever since my premier as the Golden Girl of Mother’s Day I have focused on what the day means for me. I don’t think I ever forgot my mother but I know that I often realized with a start on the Saturday before Mother’s Day that I still hadn’t sent a card and that I had best call an FTD florist before there were no more flowers to be found. Buying my mother presents was not all that satisfying as I never knew if she would genuinely appreciate it or it would be met wtih a strained ‘Oh” followed by a perfunctory, “Thank you, dear” delivered with a smile stretched thin as onion skin.
My mother wasn’t a mean or a bad woman – she was just very bruised. Her life was sort of an endless series of disappointments and let downs from her Grandmother refusing to let her cut off the sleeves of her undershirts so they wouldn’t show below the capped sleeves of her little girl dresses to being widowed with 4 children at the age of 35. When it comes to cosmic slights having your 37 year old husband die in his sleep must certainly rank in the top 10. My mother was predisposed to seeing the world and everyone in it as shadowy specters angling to make her miserable and when the powers that be delivered the coup de grâce she knew she was right.
Her response was to self medicate with alcohol and in the process become this frightening, unpredictable terror. Maternal instinct kept her generous and caring most of the time and she took good care of us but boy, could she be ugly. She heaped her own low self-esteem and horrible body image issues on me like a teen-aged boy filling his plate at an all you can eat buffet. She could go from sobbing and telling me I was her favorite child to calling me a fat whore in matter of minutes. Even in adulthood I could not stand to hear her question my judgment about anything without wanting to scream, “I’M NOT AN IDIOT, GODDAMNIT!”
In the end we did okay. For the last 7 or so years of her life she lived near me, widowed once again, and we saw each other once or twice a month. With the exception of an occasioal soggy phone call I almost never experienced her drunk. We had a good relationship. I know she loved me and I loved her, too and on Mother’s Day we would usually get together. My kids were old enough by then to take care of both of us. They took us for picnics in the park some years or my Mom would come over to my house and we would have a little brunch thing. It was nice and it was proper but what I always looked forward to was the kids bringing me a latte and the paper in bed and the kids giving me cards and the kids paying tribute to me. I am looking forward to that as I write this entry. It has really been a me, me, me Hallmark Holiday for the last 22 years.
This year I am feeling a bit of a slow leak in my bubble of anticipation, though. Too bad my Mom can't come over for coffee cake and fruit salad and to do my Sunday Paper crossword puzzles when I finally do get out of bed..... Damn.
When I installed it and first looked at my handy work there was a link just below the 'online' counter that said 'Adult Content' or something like that. ICK! I somehow managed to remove that and just leave the counter.
Then I noticed that all of my previous comments were GONE! Oh horrors - I have so few I couldn't stand that so I went back to the haloscan site and did a little reading and found that they comments were still 'around' but haloscan can't access them unless you get the paid version. Hmmmm... I'm not really into paying for something I can get for free (comments) so I rolled back Haloscan (but somehow kept the counter) and called it good.
I was just over on SBFH and attempted to post a comment when I noticed about 4 or 5 links at the bottom of her comment popup. They all looked suspiciously like the crap that gets swept to my spam folder. Windows XP for $50! Speed Up Windows! and so forth. When I tried to submit my comment I got a 404 as if HaloScan could read my negative thoughts about those ads.
So - Word, people. HaloScan is not precisely free. It does not cost you to use the free version and you get some goodies (trackback, the counter, the popup thing and apparently something called gravatars) but you become the purveyor of links to stuff that most people consider spam.
Just sayin'