12/31/2005

Organized, efficient, and orchidless

This afternoon I cleaned up a bit, and worked on sorting out my newly printed digital pictures—which actually feels like a wonderful party, because I love looking at pictures. I’ve been trying to get my pictures organized enough to start putting them into albums since this summer—ideally one day I’ll develop this thrilling new organization system in which I could add them as I develop/print them! A shocking notion. Will has gotten tall this year, and I think Laura probably has too, given her rate of outgrowing jeans, but the only thing I notice about her in the pictures is how long her hair is getting. Really long.

While I worked at home, I sent poor Chris off with a terrible list of errands, carefully organized for maximum time efficiency. Too bad that this efficiency was on vacation last year when we built the sandbox cover; I bought this very expensive hardware early in the process, put it somewhere I wouldn’t lose it, and promptly—of course—lost it and ended up buying it all over again. But I found it this week! We’ll see if it’s too late to return the first set. But at least I’m all time and money efficient today—because I know perfectly well that if I go to Lowe’s to return the screws, I’ll end up buying an orchid. We’re replacing a broken outside light fixture, I’ve already picked it out, and I’m using a gift card I got for Christmas to buy it, but as sure as I know my name, I know I’d just make a little detour through the nursery. I adore orchids, their thick waxy leaves, the rich colors in the flowers, the way sometimes the leaves are speckled, how the flowers last so long you might even have a chance of getting tired of them. Chris and I used to go these beautiful botanical gardens not far from our house in graduate school, and I could just live in the orchid room, in that damp mossy light. Flowers growing in trees above your head, without one bit of concern about whether you can see them or not. They seemed to live on air. I usually just buy the phalaenopsis orchids from Lowe’s, since they’re generally the least expensive and supposedly the easiest to get to bloom again, although that hasn’t been my experience. But I especially love the much more expensive paphiopedilums, with their one extravagant bloom so stiff and formal and exotic, a purple-striped invitation to insects. Orchids mean January to me, a single bright spray of flowers, a simple clay pot, an antidote to the overexuberant loudness of Christmas trees and lights and presents and poinsettias.

See why I can’t go to Lowe’s?


Ride ‘n’ crash

Hi my name is Laura I’m Lisas guest speaker and daughter. I’ve spoken before but it’s been awhile. I just wanted to tell you how my Christmas has been. I got a lot of electronic things. I got an Idog, TV’s for the car, pillows that music, the new Harry Potter computer game, the list is endless. any way I don’t know if I mentioned this last time but I collect stuffed animals and what was really cool was I got a Build-a-Bear monkey and I named him Prince Fudge. Then three days ago I got another Build-A-Bear that happens to be a wolf that I named Yashi {Yash-e}. Then two days ago I got a new bike for free that my grandpa gave me. It’s purple and has pearls and the words “pretty lady” on it. Here’s the funny part my grandma though she could ride it and she hasn’t ridden a bike in awhile she did Ok…at first after a little while she…crashed into a tree. But she was Ok. Well that’s all I can tell you everything else is classified. {and it hasn’t happened yet…so.}
Well by, Laura

12/30/2005

Death and the Trashman


If I believed that my reply were made
To one who to the world would e'er return,
This flame without more flickering would stand still;

But inasmuch as never from this depth
Did any one return, if I hear true,
Without the fear of infamy I answer. . .

We spent yesterday with my parents, who live a couple of hours away. I sometimes think we see them less frequently now that we’re nearby than when we lived fifteen hours away. Maybe you just make more effort to get together when it involves planning a big trip, instead of just riding over for the day, and both my parents are what we call homebodies. We had a fairly typical visit—my mother was cooking when we got there, we climbed up into the treehouse my father is building (more about which later, when I have some pictures!), we walked around the pond and caught a couple of slow, cold lizards. Will spent the afternoon playing outside, trying to keep me or Mama between him and Ginger, my parents’ sweet lab who only wants to love him. Chris went kayaking while Mama and I took the kids to see my grandmother; during the drive, Laura asked to listen to her new Cheetah Girls cd in the car, while Will wanted the sunroof on the car open.

We also indulged in one of our other most usual activities, reviewing my father’s trash finds. Ever since I can remember, if my family went driving for any length of time, you could count on my father for two things: first, we would never ever stop if you wanted an Icee or to look at a funky antiques stop, and second, we would stop if we passed something interesting in a dump along the way. I couldn’t even begin to make a list here of all the things he’s scavenged over the years, so let’s just say that the man hates to see anything wasted, whether it’s something you think is broken or just paper towels, which I have this memory I think is imagined of him having calculated to the sheet how much each one cost. He exemplifies that old adage, one man’s trash is another man’s treasure. This time he did pretty good: he found a bike for Laura. We’d thought about buying her one for her birthday this year; she’s outgrown her old bike something awful, but because she’s just a tad too short for the next size up, we’d decided to hold off and get her one this summer. But voila, my father has a newly fixed up and polished bike for her, rescued from a friend who was—no lie—going to throw it away after he took off the tires to put on his floating dock. It’s actually about the right size for her, and she loves it; I love not having to buy a new one, and I’m sure I’ll eventually learn not to see the “Pretty Lady” label on the side.

My father actually consulted with us before giving us the bike, like we were grown adults and in charge of Laura, which was a fascinating experience for me, since my parents, with the best of intentions, still say things to us like, don’t you think their bedtime is a little too late? We had some debate about whether we could get the bike in or on the car, given that we had the proverbial load of other stuff in the back and a kayak on top. Finally we got the bike loaded as my father gave Laura what amounted to a little lecture. The only condition under which he gave her this bike is that she not ride it out of our yard without us. She could not fly down the driveway and into the road in front of the house. She couldn’t ride in the neighborhood without her parents. He knew a family who got a four-wheeler for Christmas and accidentally flipped it, killing one of the riders. If she rides in the road, that could be the end of her. Etcetera. Laura managed to refrain from rolling her eyes, since she knows the road/yard rules quite well—we have high school drivers and log trucks barreling past our house regularly, and Will’s not even allowed in the front yard at all unless he’s with Laura or a grownup. She knows the drill. After we piled into the car and had rolled down the window for one last goodbye, he said to her something like this: “Somebody offered me all the money in North America for yall today, and I said no. I wouldn’t take all the money and even the chance to hunt in North Dakota for you all, so you need to be careful riding that bike, and your daddy needs to be careful driving home.” My father is a singularly undemonstrative man, who at times seems to even cringe when you hug him goodbye, so I can’t swear to be reproducing this remarkable statement with any accuracy, since I have never heard anything like it from him before. But you get the gist.

Much later than night, after the drive home, Laura started asking me questions about her other grandfather, Chris’s dad, who has pancreatic cancer and is in the hospital at the moment. The progress of his disease has mystified us all, since he was diagnosed in June 2004—we were told at the time he wouldn’t see Christmas. Two Christmases later, he’s had chemotherapy almost every week since but still recently bought a table saw for some new woodworking projects he’s been interested in. He’s not doing well at the moment, however, hospitalized for over a week with a variety of the kinds of aliments cancer sufferers face. The questions started when Laura asked me if Papa Adrian would be out of the hospital this weekend: we don’t know. Does he feel very bad? Yes, but they’re giving him medicine at the hospital to help him feel better. What’s going to happen to him? We don’t know. He might get a little better and come home from the hospital for a while, but he’s very sick and he will probably die before it’s all over with. What do I think it feels like to die? Do you feel anything, or do you just stop? What do I think heaven is like? Wouldn’t it be interesting if somebody went to heaven and then came back and told us what it was like?

In fact, Laura seems to have discovered recently that we could shuffle off this mortal coil any old time. Her class finished a novel about a little girl separated from her family during the Holocaust recently, which distressed her at times and me too, although the book had, unlike so many real Holocaust stories, a happy reunion at the end. (They’re just starting the Holocaust unit, which may kill me before it’s over—the butterflies from last year! But that’s a post for another day.) The headline of The Observer the other day read “10-YEAR-OLD GIRL DIES IN SHOOTING”; I kept the paper turned face down for most of the morning, but at some point I must’ve forgotten while I was moving things around in the kitchen, and later, I saw Chris and Laura talking about it, although I couldn’t hear and thought it best to let them talk it over. So many movies for kids have missing parents—she got Because of Winn Dixie for Christmas, complete with a run-away mother, and never mind practically ever single Disney movie ever made, but especially Bambi. She’s had lots of reminders lately of the idea of mortality, that a parent or grandparent might be gone, and if I wasn’t sure of that, I’d know it after reading the Christmas card she made me at school:

Merry Christmas Mom. Without you this family would fall apart. Without you the household would be in disaster. I don’t know what I would do without you. In Elvis’s words, “I’ll have a blue Christmas without you.” And I really would if you were gone. Lots of love, Laura.

I used to have these nightmares when Laura was a baby and we lived far from any of our family that some crazed ax-murderer would break into our house and kill me and Chris—or in the less violent versions, we would just somehow simultaneously die—leaving Laura alone and helpless. Worse, this mass parental death would happen on a Friday afternoon, so it wouldn’t be until we didn’t show up for work Monday that anybody made any effort to check on us to find our starved baby girl. Anytime Chris is gone longer than I think he should be, I start imagining in which ditch his lifeless body might be resting, the car still a smoking ruin over his corpse. I certainly understand Laura’s fear of being left, although now I’m a little more confident that no insane person wielding blunt objects is likely to break in, and also that both Laura and Will would somehow survive if something were to happen to me or Chris.

So last night, I told her yes, I do think it would be interesting if somebody could come back and tell us about heaven. Even though by now it was way past her bedtime, I told her I think it might hurt to die, but that medicine can help make you more comfortable, and it probably doesn’t feel like anything after you die, because your soul leaves your body. I told about Spook, the new Mary Roach book I just finished reading, subtitled Science Tackles the Afterlife, a whole book about scientists trying to study what happens to us when we die. What did they find out, she wondered? In a nutshell, we don’t know. That was a lot of words to end up with that answer, wasn’t it? It sure was, but interesting words. I told her just a tiny little bit about Dante’s Inferno. I told her that I believed in something beyond this life, if not a pearly gated heaven, and that I used to imagine Heaven was the place I would find out all the answers in death that I never knew in life, sort of the ultimate reference library, but now that I hoped I’d have more interesting things to do in the afterlife than worry about who built Stonehenge or what happened to my favorite bracelet I lost.

For the first time in one of our long talks, she showed no signs of impatience, although I wondered if perhaps she’d get better answers from a parent who was a somewhat less left-wing wacko liberal. Fortunately or not, though, she’s stuck with me and Chris, so left-wing wacko answers are what she gets—less grounded in the Word than in words. While I know she’s worried about her grandfather, I think she’s translated that idea of death to the less immediate but more fearful notion that she or her parents might die (I’m not sure it’s occurred to her to worry about Will just yet). Chris’s father in the hospital, my father’s warning about the new bike, watching ET with my mother the other day—all these things translate to new awareness in which my daughter begins to ask herself those eternal questions, the ones that survive each of us. I don’t normally hide Observer headlines from her—although talking about a girl being shot accidentally by her brother the day after Christmas wasn’t high on my agenda this week—but sometimes I wish I could. “Small children, small troubles. Big children, big troubles.” And not even troubles so much, just questions I can’t answer for her, and wouldn’t if I could, as she begins to answer them now for herself.

12/27/2005

Christmas aftermath

Getting organized for Christmas is bad enough, but then suddenly the holidays are over, all the leftovers are either eaten or no longer appealing, the Christmas tree droops reproachfully, dropping needles on the empty floor and the maybe one or two sad presents that haven’t been delivered yet. All the digital pictures to sort and print, and kids with no concept of post-holiday lines dying to exchange their duplicate Barbie with Swappable Heads—really rather Borq Queenish—or use their Build-a-Bear gift cards. You need to find space in your house for the cool presents you really wanted, and figure out what on earth to do with the giant homemade Books of the Bible wooden puzzle. A week left til payday, all the December paycheck already spent, time to check that the escrow account paid the property taxes, and will the Alternative Minimum Tax hit us this year? Another afternoon of sorting and purging the year’s files, and washing the footie pajamas you finally managed to pry off of your little Batman. No wonder people can’t take the holidays. Whew.

12/20/2005

Reflections on a newborn

When Will’s cousin Nathan was born, we took him to the hospital for a visit. Will had been preoccupied for quite some time with a photo of himself as a newborn, the most distinguishing characteristic of which is that he was bright red, so for days he kept asking, “Will Baby Nathan be red? Was I red? Why was I red? Did I get pink later?” etc. At the hospital, however, he became more interested in the odd plastic thing attached to that weird belly button. Thank goodness he was so engrossed in the whole navel issue that he didn’t notice the circumcision bandages. Finally, he became interested in how loud Nathan was, for somebody so small. At some point someone in the room asked if he wanted a tiny baby like that at his house, to which he replied, “No, that one makes my ears hurt.”

Laura of course was much more interested in the whole baby thing in general and held Nathan as much as she could, which wasn’t much, since he couldn’t come out of his little Blue Light Special jaundice bed except briefly for feedings and diaper changes. She has, though repetition, taught William phrases like, “look how cute!” and “awww.” She looked positively mini-Madonna, holding that baby—more comfortably than his grandfather, I might add, no doubt from more practice. I haven’t had a chance to take them back for another visit yet, since Laura is STILL in school and the times I’ve gone, I’ve been cooking and whatnot so the new Mom could sleep, but we’ll see the baby again this weekend for Christmas, so it’ll be good to see what they think about him now.

Ship ahoy

Will’s latest ventures in representational art involve ships, bunny cars, and Mr. Tumnus from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Pretty impressive ship, if you ask me.

12/18/2005

Well, silent night anyhow

I brought Laura back a nativity scene from Mexico several years ago, and she and William have Baby Jesus installed on the train table in their room, along with the little artificial Christmas tree we used the year Will was a toddler intent on world destruction. Will came in while I was fixing lunch to tell me that the Christmas tree fell on his head while he was finding his monkey underneath, so we went back to straighten up, and look what we found in Bethlehem.

Chris thinks this must be the lesser known Monster Shepherd, frequently left out of traditional nativity narratives because of his marginalized status as a non-human. I’m thinking maybe we should be going to church after all. Either way, it’s a pretty interesting picture.

The Horse Parade

For the first time since Will was born, I think, we went back to the Dowdy Christmas Parade. We discovered it early after moving to Rolling Hills and went faithfully every year until my mother-in-law starting having her Christmas celebrations the weekend before Christmas. She changed her plans this year, so we made it back for William’s first real Southern parade.

We went to the Rolling Hills Holiday Parade, which I suppose is fairly Southern in itself, now that I think of it, particularly this year with the theme of a colonial Christmas. Three or four floats featured women dressed in long dresses and presumably hoop skirts, but most of them were the usual odd mixture of the mayor and the city council members and the occasional House or Senate candidate or representative riding along in somebody’s convertible, a freezing beauty queen in her sleeveless gown enthroned on a homemade floats, the many church-sponsored nativity reenactments, and what about those fire trucks! And the oompa loompa guys with the fezzes and the tiny cars! Or are they the Rotary Club? My husband’s favorite are the steel drum Hawaiian shirt guys. Not to mention the floats of just ordinary people, as far as anybody can tell, just taking a ride in their trailer, wearing a Santa hat, maybe, sitting in a rocking chair or on a bale of hay. The more I describe this, the odder (and consequently) more Southern it seems. Maybe the Dowdy parade is Will’s first country Southern parade.

I just can’t imagine something like this taking place anywhere but the South. Dowdy is about fifteen minutes south of Rolling Hills, and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen the town proper, as the only times we’ve ever been are for the parade. If I have, it has one building, the community center. The drive there is all cow country, huge expanses of hillside, a stand of long-leaf pines far back from the road lining the fields, a run-down old barn, and many many brown cows, as Will describes them. We have cows of other colors, too, naturally, but the brown cows are his favorites. We’ll be driving along on this back road, with maybe three cars in front of us—quite a lot of traffic for the area—and then suddenly there’s a police car blocking off the road, the officer directing traffic. You just park where you are, get out and start walking.

As far as we’ve ever gone up the parade route, it’s still just a country road, only now with dozens of cars and horse trailers parked alongside it. The only way you know you’ve gotten to the parade route proper is that instead of people milling around riding horses or walking along with one eye on the road, trying not to step in manure, suddenly people will be interspersed between the cars, sitting on those portable camp chairs, or sometimes actually just sitting in the car keeping warm while they wait. The parade route goes into town, I think, although as I say, I’ve never seen it. We always sneak up on the end of the parade, where the horses and tractors are lining up, one row on the road and another alongside it on the wide strip of grass in front of a field. Every year we walk past the entire parade before it ever starts. We usually end up right at the starting point, where somebody official looking, maybe the parade marshal, directs the merging of these two lines into one very long procession of John Deere and Ford and Kubota tractors of all shapes and sizes, riders on horses, horses pulling carriages and wagons, and all manner of old farm equipment that I couldn’t name if my life depended on it, but particularly a lot things for hauling hay. Only now they carry bundled up kids and Labrador retrievers and even the occasional red-ribboned calf.

Dowdy’s population was 203 last year, but it feels like twice that number ride in the parade. Other out-of-towners like us both participate and watch the parade, but still, it’s hard to see how a town this small can turn out these numbers. Maybe that’s counting the horses. The local rodeo has a quite a showing in the parade, as do the Methodist churches and Four-H clubs and the area tractor and horse supply businesses. The obligatory Republican government representative rode in a while horse-drawn carriage, the wheels covered in—well, not to put too fine a point on it, horse shit. But this parade also has quite a showing of independent spirits, just somebody who has a horse and wants to ride in the parade. Sometimes a whole family will ride out, all wearing blue jeans and white shirts, their horses’ manes braided with matching ribbons and jingle bells and even candy canes. We saw quite a lot of elves riding this year, including one woman who looked as if she’d modeled her costume after one of the Elven queens from Lord of the Rings—only incongruously in red velvet. Often it’s just an ordinary person, riding an undecorated horse. Sometimes the horses haven’t even been bathed, which with white horses in our red clay landscape is pretty easy to tell.

For Laura and Will, it’s hard to tell what the real attraction of the parade is The miniature horses pulling the five-year old in her equally tiny wagon? Deciding which horse is more beautiful? (The brown ones.) The little black and white dog with the reindeer antlers and Christmas sweater, or maybe the lab riding with his owner high above the ground in the bucket of a front end loader? All those, of course, but the clear winner is the candy. Probably half the riders in the parade throw candy to the spectators, which I understand is traditional many places, but is certainly something I never saw until we started attending the Dowdy parade. And what a profusion, Smarties and peppermints and candy canes and bubble gum and tootsie rolls, flying everywhere. One farm, with its float adorned with Got Milk? banners—the only commercial ad I’ve ever seen in this parade that wasn’t local—actually threw cartons of chocolate milk. The first year we attended the parade with Laura, we wound up in our odd spot by accident, but we come in from behind by design now; this year we were the nearly the first spectators, and those kids who’ve been cooped up waiting for the parade to start are pitching candy out of those floats by the handfuls. It’s not so much that our kids want or need candy, especially since they still have Halloween treats left over, but they love gathering it up.

The real trick is picking up the candy before another horse steps on it, timing your trip out between floats, but especially keeping the littlest kids from picking up anything that might have just a touch of manure. Generally even the babies won’t pick up the pieces that fall full in a big pile of horse poop. Aside from the unfortunate candy-manure juxtaposition, the candy tossing actually brings out the most unusual aspect of this parade, to my way of thinking—how social an event it is. Every one of those 203 residents seem to be there, along with all their friends. Because the parade progresses slowly, with an occasional pause while somebody wrestles with a saddle strap or a wayward horse, you have plenty of time to have a conversation with the person tossing candy. There you both sit, in broad daylight, just a couple of feet apart with nothing better to do, after all. We have only ever recognized a handful of people we actually know, but we still chat with a lot of people, especially Chris, who tends to like to stand up throughout the parade and who is most likely to recognize a former student. Not talking would be just rude. Our most popular conversational topic this year centered on the huge pile of candy Laura and Will amassed over the course of the hour-long parade; by the end, we were offering, only half-jokingly, to give some candy to the riders to pass out later—because they surely must’ve run out farther down the line. When I carried it wrapped up in our big blanket back to the car, it started to get so heavy I actually weighed it when we got home later: almost three pounds of candy, plenty for decorating any gingerbread house if even half the pieces survived the toss intact.

The Horse Parade is so odd and, at the same time, so charming about, a fascinating “celebration of our rural agricultural heritage,” as our local paper noted this morning under the caption of the obligatory tractor photo. Being Southern has always been a mixed feeling for me, a sheer enjoyment of the oddities of my home—which I see more clearly having lived out the South briefly for a couple of years—and also a sort of bewildered feeling of being both outside and a part of these rituals, standing on the sidelines and participating at the same time. Watching the one band of Confederate reenactors riding past, it’s hard for me to feel any less a part of the parade, at the same time that I know full well I had my own Confederate ancestors and, while my family weren’t really farming people, I can still remember as a child being fascinated by my great-grandparents’ chickens and outhouse—because even then they seemed so foreign. I come from here, but somehow I’m not from here anymore. Every year I can, though, my husband and I bundle up our kids and head out for the parade again. Hoards of people, horses, candy, everybody in a good mood. You really can’t ask for much more, especially if you’re just watching—scoot in, see the show, and then head home for hot chocolate to warm up, because you sure can’t get any Starbucks after the Horse Parade.

12/16/2005

Death by chocolate

Because we are now officially tightwads, instead of buying smallish thoughtful Christmas gifts for the teachers in our kids classes, I now make fudge or some other high calorie unnecessary treat, which actually works out pretty well for us if not the recipient, since Will has two teachers and Laura has three. I used to buy Laura’s teachers gift cards to our local bookstores, but that starts to really add up, and I swear, with the afterschool program teachers, I always had a lingering suspicion that they never used them (although I hate we had to stop, because I know her classroom teachers liked them).

So during the after-Christmas sales last year I bought four lovely Martha Stewart fancy-pants stockings, and last night I made two batches of fudge and two dozen cupcakes for the party Laura’s afterschool class was having today. We had an ice delay this morning, so I got up early, iced the cupcakes, cut up the fudge, and packed it all up into snack bags, and voila, presents for not only the kids’ teachers, but practically everybody! I had really forgotten how much fudge a single batch is.

Laura brought home close to a dozen of the cupcakes, which Will has been begging to eat since we walked in the door. I let him have one little piece of fudge and told him he could have a cupcake after we eat dinner. Mysteriously, trails have appeared in the frosting of almost every single one of the cupcakes, as though someone had dragged his finger through the icing. Hm. At least they weren’t part of the presents, otherwise we might in fact have a case of death by chocolate.

12/14/2005

25 more things about me and books

  1. Sometimes I tell people that we have a book problem at our house, but I don’t really mean it.
  2. We have ten bookcases in our house, the five-shelf tall ones.
  3. Two of them are double shelved, where you have a stacks of small paperbacks pushed to the back, with another row of bigger books, trade paperbacks and hardbacks, shelved in front of them.
  4. One of the first thing people ask me when they come to our house is if we’ve read all those books.
  5. Whenever I’m asked this, I always think how cool it would’ve been to live back when you had to cut the pages of your books as you turned them.
  6. But then it would’ve been awfully easy to tell how many books you never read or finished.
  7. I’ve read all or parts of most of my books.
  8. Well, a whole bunch of them, anyway.
  9. Really.
  10. The books I tend not to read are ones I buy at the $1.00 an inch Friends of the Library fundraisers. Stack up your books, they measure them with a yard stick, and you pay less for ten books than for one.
  11. So then I buy stuff I think I should read, like Atonement by Ian McEwan. Or something by Joyce Carol Oats. And I never read them.
  12. I don’t think their original owners read them either. They’re generally in remarkably good shape.
  13. But I still can’t make myself get rid of them. I’m like Laura whenever I ask her to go through her stuffed animals before Christmas to give some to charity and clear out some space in her room. She’ll pick out four tiny animals, and sometimes they belong to her brother.
  14. I remember every single person I loaned a book to who didn’t return it. Not fondly.
  15. I like to listen to audio books in the car, but only if it’s something I’ve already read. I need to see the words on the page first.
  16. I still love the books I read growing up, like Susan Cooper’s The Dark is Rising series and Lloyd Alexander’s Prydain Chronicles.
  17. Laura is named after Laura Ingalls Wilder. And Caroline was Ma’s name.
  18. Unfortunately, Laura has never been interested in reading Little House on the Prairie.
  19. Having Will was the way I found one of my favorite children’s books, Kevin Henkes’ Julius, The Baby of the World, the most wonderful story about sibling rivalry ever.
  20. I pretend to be a snob about what I read, but I have a whole file cabinet drawer full of Stephen King novels in my attic.
  21. I am woefully American in my reading habits. I confess that I have never read a Russian novel.
  22. But I am actually still fairly well read, if Anglocentric. I faithfully read all the British and American novels required for my comprehensive exams, without resorting to Masterplots like some of my friends.
  23. Well, except for Ulysses.
  24. One of my favorite Christmas presents was a little house paperweight that reads all around its base, “A house without books is like a room without windows.”
  25. One of my favorite quotes is from Isak Dineson’s Out of Africa, “I have been a mental traveler” (or wait! was that just in the film?). I can’t afford real travel and all these books.

12/12/2005

25 things about me and books

  1. I love to read. I used to read novels, and especially science fiction, but now I read more poetry and memoir.
  2. I read every night at bedtime.
  3. I have been keeping a list of every book I buy and read since 1984. No doubt later when I’m famous, my critics will thank me for this.
  4. I only heard the word bibliotherapy recently, but it really works for me. Have a problem? Want to figure out how you feel about something? Read a book about it.
  5. I almost always sit down and read a book straight through in a sitting or two.
  6. I have had to really slow down on reading new books since I had kids.
  7. But I still reread a lot. In fact, I have always loved to reread books. It’s like hanging out with old friends.
  8. For years I read the Lord of the Rings books during final exams, because I could pick them up and put them down since I already knew who died and whatnot.
  9. I still love LOTR, but I can’t believe how long it took me to notice how there were practically no women in that whole universe. And even the few the Fellowship ran into were really annoying.
  10. I want to buy almost every book I see. Only the prospect of being in debt eternally has helped me finally develop the discipline not to do so. But I’m still having lots of trouble with that whole concept.
  11. Sometimes if I’m really good I will force myself not to buy a book I find at the bookstore, but to come home and order it from Amazon for cheaper instead.
  12. Or sometimes I’ll just put it in my shopping cart to buy later.
  13. I have 27 items in my shopping cart. The oldest is Calm, Cool, and Collected by Carolyn Kizer.
  14. That doesn’t include the 23 items in my Amazon wish list (which I’m not linking to, thank you very much, because you aren’t going to buy me anything anyhow, and besides, I’m anonymous).
  15. Only one person in my family buys me stuff from my wish list, and I really love her.
  16. I have such a hard time in bookstores. Often I just can hardly stop myself from buying it right then and there. My husband can tell you that I am not into delayed gratification.
  17. If I do order a book from Amazon that I saw in the bookstore, I feel guilty if it was Joseph Beth or the Happy Bookseller, but not if it’s Barnes and Noble. Stupid chains.
  18. If I’m really really good, and I think I might not read it but once, sometimes I’ll order the book from my campus’s interlibrary loan instead.
  19. The last book I did that with was Spiritual but Not Religious: Understanding Unchurched Religion; I’m glad I didn’t buy it.
  20. Sometimes I’ll order a book from interlibrary loan and have to buy it while I’m reading it. The last two books I did this with were Sue Monk Kidd’s Dance of the Dissident Daughter and Carol Goodman’s The Lake of Dead Languages.
  21. Because I am an English professor, I consider it a professional obligation to read cultural phenomenon books.
  22. So I read the first of the Left Behind books before I left the rest of them behind happily (try C. S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters if you want real apocalyptic religious writing).
  23. And I have been going to every midnight Harry Potter book party I can find since I first ran across a mention of The Sorcerer’s Stone in Newsweek years ago.
  24. I read the fifth Harry Potter book the day it was released. That book was 870 pages. Whew.
  25. I can’t list my favorite books or authors. It would kill me. Right now, though, I’m reading A Wrinkle in Time to my ten-year old, and I love it. We had to read two chapters last night. And then of course there’s Ursula Le Guin!

The FedEx truck just this very minute I swear pulled up in my driveway with one of my Christmas Amazon packages! (And no, I usually use the free SuperSaver shipping and wait for days and days anxiously, but apparently Amazon could sense how painful this was for me during the holidays and they gave me a free two-month membership in their Prime program with FREE TWO DAY SHIPPING!). A book for Will, a book for my mother’s birthday, a little dodad for my husband’s stocking (and one for mine). Christmas is an Amazon box.

Tragic mornings

Mornings at our house lend themselves to a certain trauma that no other time of day does. Will had a very harrowing morning today, all beginning because he didn’t want Daddy to brush his teeth. Then he didn’t want to do them himself. Not Mommy either. Things just always degenerate from that point on, between a persistent irresolution and threats of no television that afternoon, which after all is very very far away. Minutes or hours later, teeth finally brushed, heaving little sobs and still red faced, Will left with Chris for school, giving me a hug on the way out the door. They weren’t gone ten minutes before the phone rang, with Chris on the other line announcing that someone wanted to talk to me. I hear this heavy silence, another sob, then this poor fractured expression of grief that somehow Will did not get to tell me goodbye before he left. Apparently it took that whole time for Chris just to figure out what Will was saying. Whew. I hope things settled down by the time they got to daycare. Poor Chris.

Will doesn’t pitch these fits that often, but he actually had a similar meltdown last week when I took him into school one morning late during my exams. I only had grading to do that day, so we goofed off, not heading into Will’s school until around 10:30, very late for us. I wasn’t in a hurry, so we made a seahorse or two from Play Dough before I kissed him and started to leave. But he just exploded, the teacher finally having to pry him off me as I bolted (unhappily, might I add) out the door. As I came in flying out, the center’s director and assistant director were both zooming in to see who was being massacred. I had to sneak past the window to the classroom, which ended up not doing any good, since Will was standing right next to it crying and watching my car. Thank goodness that was our first Caterpillar window meltdown, and I devotedly hope it’s our last.

The oddest thing, though, was that I stopped briefly to peak around the inside window and see if Will was calming down any, and then started to head back down the hall to the grownup bathroom to wash the Play Dough smell off my hands when the assistant director actually grabbed my arm to stop me. “Where are you going?” she asked, and I realized she thought I was going back into the classroom and intended to stop me. I had this immediate memory back when Laura was a Butterfly in the same school of one of my friends and her husband having terrible trouble leaving her daughter in her classroom. As I recall, it wasn’t that Juliet actually pitched a fit when they left, just that they wouldn’t leave and wouldn’t leave, just wouldn’t. The then-director actually pulled me aside to see if I could help them—their daughter was fine. But of course nothing I could do would help: sometimes it’s just hard to leave. When Pam grabbed my arm, I shook her off. Though I had never had any intention of the world of going back into the lion’s den, and upsetting whatever peace Will would slowly reach with his teacher’s help, I could barely keep myself from marching in that second to reclaim him, just because she was trying to stop me.

Laura’s first days at daycare were so filled with wonders that I never really had qualms about leaving her during the day—they got her on a regular nap schedule! They helped her give up Macy, her horrible pacifier that she kept plugged in her mouth even when she talked! I would have paid those folks any amount of money. But she didn’t start until she was almost two years old, and William was still fresh, only four months old, barely budding out of his newborn blankets. And my last baby. My God, I can still feel how awful it was to leave him and go back to work.

We’ll have another bad bump when he starts kindergarten, I know, but after that things will have smoothed down, and the other transitions, like Laura to middle school next year, will be easier. Or less obviously difficult. So Will’s morning meltdowns will end, and Laura’s begin in a new way. Pimples. Periods. Not wanting to dress out at gym, and who knows what else that I couldn’t ever possibly understand. Like Will, I just think, next year is so far away.

12/08/2005

Almost done

I have one papers left to grade for one very small class. I have been sitting here all afternoon grading with my crackers and easy squeeze cheese (“No Need to Refrigerate!” since absolutely nothing in this can is a natural product from life!) and perhaps consequentially, my soggy brain. How many times did I say that if you don’t turn in the works cited with your research paper, you will get a zero?? Evidently not quite often enough. One paper was optimistically (or perhaps pathetically?) titled “My Final paper that has insightful views on Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” And no, I did not make that up.

I always feel so conflicted about Christmas holidays. Should I sit on the couch for a month? Clean out the attic? Finish that article I’ve been working on? Sort through my photos? Make a quilt? I generally end up barely pulling everything together for Christmas between finishing up the stuff I put off while I graded finals and getting my syllabi organized for my new spring classes. So why I always feel this burning desire to make a quilt or something equally arcane and complicated, I don’t know. But I always do.

One more class first, though.

12/03/2005

Letters to Santa

Dear Santa,
I would really like a kitten this year, and I would also like the new Harry Potter video game. I would also like a fence so we could have a doggie, and some books would be fun. And some Polly Pockets and some My Scene dolls. And I don’t know what else. I hope you enjoy the cookies. Thank you!
Laura

Dear Santa,
I would like a castle and a dragon and a bad guy and Batman fighting bad guys. I would like tigers and elephants and I would like a hammerhead shark and a tiger and polar bear and a lion.
Will

12/01/2005

Will writes



All by himself!