Long time no blog
Wow.
It has been a long time since I posted anything.
I had the best of intentions and then life got in the way. Best laid plans…
Actually, I have two blogs. This one, Merrily Uphill, is my happy blog, the one that gives me joy to write. Merrily Uphill is exactly like me… born to make people smile – or die trying.
I also have a sad blog. It is here Dear Alzheimer’s… It is everything I never wanted to know about Alzheimer’s Disease and snippets from our life and my mother-in-law’s illness. The posts aren’t all terribly sad, it’s just that the subject matter isn’t very uplifting and at times it is just a little painful to read. I’m just keeping it real.
I went through my Facebook wall posts today. There are about three years worth and since I was up way too early without a human to talk to I decided it would be a good time to cut and paste all the poodle posts into one document so I can put them in my happy blog. The puppies are almost 8 months old and I think I am ready to finally put the whole horrific story on paper.
I am also thinking of posting my Christmas poems, from 2000 to the present but I don’t know if anyone would care to read them.
OK, time for one more poll…
I just want to focus on the happy crap for a while. That’s the ticket.
Predictable Me
I have been informed by my children that I am predictable. I always thought that I was a fun, never know what she’s going to say kind of mom but alas, I’m told that I am predictable and I repeat myself. Have I mentioned that I’m predictable? AND I repeat myself?
Recently my daughters prepared a list of things I “always” say. If you aren’t one of my kids, you probably won’t find these even remotely interesting. If you are one of my kids, nyah, nyah… I told you I’d write it.
- When I am faced with a child that is hungry at a non-meal time, rather than say “Too bad.” I try to take their mind off of their hunger and make them laugh. Turns out that I neither redirect their thoughts nor make them laugh. “Mom, I’m hungry.” My response? “Hi, Hungry! I’m Amy.” Well, I laugh.
- Another food related “Mom-ism” is my reply to the picky eaters in my clan, which would be most of them. “Ew. I hate tomatoes!” My reply? “Oh, tomatoes called. They hate you, too.” I have expanded the use of this gem to any time my kids use the word hate. Again, I seldom miss the mark, that is if I’m trying to make myself laugh. My children just roll their eyes.
- When they want something done but bring it to my attention as a problem they have, I’m ready. If you want me to wash your laundry say “Please wash my clothing.” If you say “I don’t have any clean t-shirts.” the response will be “And this is my problem becauuuuuuse…?”
- When a child is complaining about something they find sad but I don’t, because I am older and have seen way sadder stuff, I stroke the back of my thumb with the finger next to it and, with great tragedy in my voice, say “Aw, I’ll play you a teeny tiny sad song on my teeny tiny violin.” This is not received with laughter, either. One of my children, the one you would least expect, will violently grab said teeny tiny violin and attempt to smush it with her teeny tiny baby hands. I think the other two children would like to make use of their own special fingers at me but, thankfully, they were raised better than that.
- If I feel that one of my children could make a more fibrous food choice, I lovingly give them a stern warning “You’ll never poop again.” or the less terrifying “Oh, honey, think of your pooper!” What? I am just a devoted mother who worries about their colon health. Is this not my j0b and my God-given right?
- Sometimes kids make choices that are just plain dangerous. Standing atop a bar stool to reach something on the tippy top shelf of a cupboard is very dangerous. I am not a screamer so my kids will never hear “GET DOWN FROM THERE, YOU’LL FALL.” Instead they will hear a soft “How did your child die, Ma’am?” OK, I admit I don’t exclusively use this when death is imminent. I crack me up when they are doing non-life threatening things, too. Yes, I crack ONLY me up.
- When my eldest was about 12 she was into the computer game, The Sims. Did I say into? I meant obsessed with. She played it constantly. I loved to watch her Sims interact. They spoke in their own language which is mostly jibberish but some words were repeated. I especially liked when they said “Good bye” to each other. They would bend ever so slightly at the hips, like a polite Japanese bow, stiffly wave their right hands sideways at each other, tilt their heads and say “Dag dag.” I frequently respond to “Good night, Mom” or “Good Bye, Mom” with “Dag dag.” It goes without saying that I bend ever so slightly at the hips, well you get the picture. It’s not pretty but it is pretty funny, again, mostly to me.
- Don’t change the radio station if you stumble upon a classic Disco hit if I am in the car. I will loudly proclaim “Disco is NOT dead! Disco is life.” They smile at this, although they will never admit it, I’ve seen them. I wonder, though, if they are smiling more at their nostalgic Disco mama than her Disco mantra but I take it as a positive reinforcement for my Disco line. It stays in my script.
- We visited Florida when the kids were younger and stayed with my parents in their seniors only community. My aunts and uncles lived there, too. We ate dinner with all of them several times and once we even brought Subway home to eat at my parents’ kitchen table with all the aunts and uncles. My absolutely adorable godfather/uncle, who was 83 at the time, had a troublesome slice of green pepper on his sub. When he executed a bite, the green pepper refused to be bitten and slid, all five inches of it, out of the sandwich, dangling from his mouth. It would have gone unnoticed had his wife, my absolutely adorable, hysterically funny godmother/aunt, not admonished him loudly. “George! You look like a bird eating a fish!” Since that wonderful trip, if there is anyone with food hanging from their mouth, I repeat my Aunt’s admonishment, in her voice. I simply can’t not say it. I’ve tried to not say it and this caused me great physical pain.
- The next entry is one I’m barely aware of. They say that I say it all the time. Whatever. If one of my kids says “It’s not.” I am told that I respond “Oh, I thought it was a booger but it’s snot.” I know, funny, right? I don’t think I say it too often but now that it is in this post and I have rediscovered its immense comedic value, I’ll have to make an effort to say it more often.
- I loved the Toy Story movies. The actual story was just another Disney movie but one character made the whole movie for me. I love Mrs. Potato Head. Love her, love her voice, love her clothes, love her lines. She is so wife-like when she is packing her husband’s parts for him and includes his angry eyes. So, children who dare make a cross face at me or one another hear my loudest, most Mrs. Potato Head voice scream “Put away your angry eyes!” Aw, who am I kidding, people four or five houses away probably hear.
- Sneezing is, of course, met with “God bless you!” but when the planets are aligned just right, I put on my best (or worst) Scottish brogue and add “It’s a well known fact that when you sneeze, the stuff comes out of your nose at a hundred miles an hour.” You do this, too, right?
- This brings us to the last entry on the list lovingly prepared by my children, keepers of motherly lines. When I crack a lame joke (90%of them) and my kids roll their eyes (50%), glare (50%) or stare blankly (50%) I solemnly inform them that “That was supposed to make you laugh.” Telling them this doesn’t ever make them laugh but it makes me feel better about their response. If I have to tell them that it was funny, there is a glimmer of hope for me that they just didn’t recognize that it was a joke and that is why they didn’t laugh. The fault is theirs and not mine. For the brief shining moment before they let their second chance to laugh slip away, my joke wasn’t lame but is worthy of laughter, belly jiggling, side splitting, snorting laughter.
Life is too short and not always too much fun. I just try to inject laughter into life. I don’t care if you’re laughing with me or at me, laughter makes the world a better place and I am all about making the world a better place.
If you have read this far and you are not one of my kids, please accept my heartfelt thanks for persevering to the end of this post. Feel free to use any or all of my lines on your own children, they’ll love them, I’m sure. If you are one of my kids, I have one thing more to say to you… “That was supposed to make you laugh.”
Caps and Gowns and Bricks, oh my!
While buzzing around my local Target last week I was surprised, yet again, by how early season themed merchandise is placed on display. It is only March and already the graduation party supplies are on shelves. To be fair, I guess it would take three months to plan a slamming grad party but since I don’t have a kid graduating this year it seems a tad early to me, but I digress…. back to graduation themed merchandise.
Seeing the cap, gown and diploma covered plates, napkins and lawn signs made me reminisce about my own graduation. 1980 was a simpler time. I mostly hated it but it was simpler. I basked in the glow of happy high school memories for six seconds, grabbed a bag of dog food and headed for the checkout, time to pick up a child from dance. Back to reality. I didn’t give it another thought, that is, until yesterday.
Driving home from our co-op, my two younger kids and I were cruising through the XM stations (the subscription was free with the car which goes back Monday so now, after almost a year, I am learning how to use it) and we stopped at “70’s on 7.” I LOVE the 70’s channel. Pink Floyd’s The Wall had just started and, rekindling the six second glow from Target, I said “Stop! That is my class song!”
“Yes, Mom, we know. You tell us that EVERY time it is on.”
“But this time I actually want to listen to it”
As we drove along I really paid attention to the lyrics. Did I mention this was my class song? As in “a whole graduating class of several hundred students voted to use this song to memorialize our graduation” class song? We don’t need no education??? Holy shitballs, how did we manage to pick the worst class song ever?
wtf.
WTF??!!!
Because we have entered graduation season (according to Target) and I am feeling nostalgic, albeit a dystopian nostalgia, I have decided to present, for your reading pleasure, the lyrics to that most hallowed song.
Pink Floyd’s Another Brick in the Wall
We don’t need no education
We don’t need no thought control
Yes. Yes, you do. It’s called a double negative. Avoid using them unless it absolutely isn’t not impossible.
No dark sarcasm in the classroom
Teachers leave them kids alone
For me, the dark sarcasm was just about the best part. Would you leave the thick layer of white goodness out of an Oreo? I think not. Then it would just be a dry, boring, chocolate cookie that makes your poop alarmingly dark if eaten in mass quantities, I mean, I’ve heard.
Hey! Teachers! Leave them kids alone!
Just in case they didn’t hear the first time. Note the exclamation marks. Floyd, in all of his pinkness, is serious now. people.
All in all it’s just another brick in the wall.
All in all you’re just another brick in the wall.
Well, that is just about the most depressing, effed up message with which to send hundreds of teenagers out into the world. “Yay! You’ve finished high school! No matter what you do, for the rest of your life, remember you are insignificant.” It’s like marching orders for the damned.
We don’t need no education
We talked about this, you do.
We don”t need no thought control
OK, but will you at least try an antidepressant? It’s grim out there. Seriously, take two, they’re small.
No dark sarcasm in the classroom
Teachers leave them kids alone
Hey! Teachers! Leave them kids alone!
All in all it’s just another brick in the wall.
All in all you’re just another brick in the wall.
Just to be clear, life sucks and then you die.
But then, just when it seems as if all is lost, the darkness lifts and we are treated to the uplifting part of the song.
“If you don’t eat yer meat, you can’t have any pudding. How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat yer meat?”
The best sound bite ever? Maybe. I love it. I laugh out loud just thinking about this line. When I plan to serve pudding for dessert you can predict with 100% certainty that I will say this a minimum of eight times during dinner. So I have said it hundreds and hundreds of times over the course of my mothering career but what does it mean? Really?
HOLY CRAP… a light bulb just went on over my head! What if, WHAT IF, this line is the real message of the song? You have to work hard and then you can have fun. Can it be? Everything our parents told us is true? Keeping your nose to the grindstone and using elbow grease really are as important as they said?
Nope, false alarm. It’s just a depressing song that the dumb asses with whom I went to school decided would make a good class song. A depressingly awesome class song.
The Chatty Cathy Murders
Isn’t that the best book title, ever? I think I’ll write it. Of course, I will have to live it first. Fortunately for me, I have a Chatty Cathy in my life and I am, indeed, fixing to live it, at least in my head.
Chatty Cathy, to the untrained eye, appears normal… until she begins to speak. You know the type. She is everywhere, the grocery store, the gym, church and in your sub. If you’re really lucky she is in your circle of friends.
At the store she will look in your cart and say “Mmmm, is that high fiber cereal any good? My doctor wants me to eat more fiber since the bowel impaction. He had to reach in and…”
At the gym you’ll hear “I used to have really bad cellulite, too. Is this your first time here? I come here every day and hey, I’ll bet I weigh as much as you, how much do you weigh…”
At church you might hear “If that was my child I would paddle his little bottom and he would behave. Why I remember one time when my kids were small…” You get the idea. Every situation can somehow be tied to her. It is like she is playing her own game of Kevin Bacon.
I get to see her once a week now. yay.
I’m going to these mini classes at my local library. Each week there is a short presentation about yet another facet of human metabolism. I’ve gone four times and three of those four meetings I have found myself sitting next to Chatty Cathy, luck, luck, lucky me. The first time she chose a seat next to me. I’m not to blame because as I mentioned, she looks like everybody else. I was excited to be there and smiled at each new face that entered the room, which I guess is a neon sign that says “Attention all crazy people, sit here for I am eager to befriend you.”
She identified herself immediately by glancing at my phone and passionately telling me why she will never be dumb enough to have a Blackberry. Yes, my phone is a Blackberry. Once our class started, she had a series of lengthy comments for every topic that our instructor introduced.
Last week our discussion was about how muscle tissue is more dense than fat. Of course, to women who are obsessed about weight, this boils down to “muscle weighs more than fat.” Ask any woman that has ever been on any kind of fitness plan and she will tell you “muscle weighs more than fat,” well, every woman except Chatty Cathy, that is.
“No, you are all wrong. A pound of fat weighs exactly the same as a pound of muscle. They both weigh exactly one pound.” Everyone in the room rolls their eyes because this was going to be her I’mnottakingabreathsoyoucan’tinterruptme topic this week. Each week she has a rant, a dead horse she simply won’t stop beating. This week’s was muscle vs. fat.
The teacher softly says “Yes, we know that but what we are saying is that at the scale, if you are losing fat but building muscle, your weight may stay the same or even increase because you have turned fat into muscle.”
A vein pops out of Chatty Cathy’s forehead and she begins pounding on the table and shouting “A POUND OF FAT WEIGHS EXACTLY THE SAME AS A POUND OF MUSCLE. You are wrong, wrong, wrong. And you can’t turn fat into muscle. Fat has to be broken down blahbitty blahb bl…..”
Ding, ding, ding!! Bonus! A double rant week. yay.
In my head I scream “For the love of baby kittens, Chatty Freaking Cathy, shuuuuut up! I don’t want to bludgeon you to death with my water bottle but you are leaving me no choice here.” What I say out loud is exactly what every other woman in the room says. Nothing.
She goes on for several minutes. The teacher can’t get a word in. Oh, she makes a valiant effort, inhaling and opening her mouth several times to indicate that she would like to speak but Chatty Cathy has her eyes closed (rendering everyone invisible) and her volume set at max. She can’t see or hear and isn’t about to let anyone else hear anything either, except of course, her own immense wisdom.
During the tirade I mentally make a list of items to pick up at Kroger on the way home, try to remember if I turned off the coffee pot and wonder if Blue Cross will cover an urgent care visit for a sprained eye ball because I have rolled them so many times in the past 25 minutes I may need a splint or an x-ray.
Because God is merciful and loves us, the speaking finally stops. There is thick white mortar in the corner of her mouth from rant induced dehydration, no doubt. She lifts her water bottle and takes a long drink. I silently thank our loving, merciful God that Chatty Cathy was not endowed with the gift of ventriloquism.
Our teacher takes the class back and shortly dismisses us.
Ten minutes later, as I pull into a parking spot at Kroger, I see Chatty Cathy, power walking into the store. I put my car into reverse. If I do not go into this store, she can live to die another day. Besides the other Kroger has a Starbucks. Win-win.
Home Parties
Every couple of months I host a home party of some sort. I feel it is my obligation to open my home to an evening of economic stimulation. I don’t host so that I can see my girlfriends and get free stuff, no, that would be selfish. I am a fiscally responsible American who is trying to single-handedly turn around our current economy. Martha Washington would be proud of me, heck, she would probably book a party off of mine and increase my hostess bonus. She would drag Betsy Ross with her for a “bring a friend” gift, too.
Patriotism aside, I believe that home parties are just about the most natural thing a person can do. Suspend your suspicion for just a few sentences. Women are hunters and gatherers. So what if we aren’t taking down gazelles or filling our animal skin aprons with berries and wild mushrooms, we are being true to our nature. We hunt for fabulous items at a gathering of girlfriends. Is this not our purpose in life? Yah, my husband isn’t buying this particular load either but he is always wonderful about making it possible for me go to parties or host them. Of course he could be supportive because I spend less at a home party than I do a trip to the mall.
When I go to a home party I nibble, I sip and I spend as much as I think I can. Can, should, whatever. I visit with other women who have nothing better to do on a given week night and I buy items that I can’t buy anywhere else in the world. To me this is bliss. I get to go out for an evening with other women that are happy to be out. I really do enjoy the whole thing.
Hosting a home party is a whole different story. You invite a stranger, a salesperson no less, into your home for one evening to display her wares. You then invite every woman you know to come over and shop, enticing them with the promise of yummy food and free booze. You clean like a fiend for a week or so because although the invitation doesn’t say “Come look in my closets, atop my fridge and under the furniture,” it is implied. Just to be clear, I do not do that when I attend a home party.
Your husband and kids get outta dodge for the evening because their angelic faces will remind guests that their family is at home, sad and alone, without them. Who wants their guests to feel guilty? Guilt = reduced purchase + early departure. Boooooo.
Hosting means you get to show off your culinary prowess. Whether you let the Costco elves do your food prep or you choose to cook, your spread can be big or little, guests are happy to not have to cook! Beverages… yes, please. Open a bottle or four of wine, ice some lite brewskis or prepare a pitcher of a sweet girly drinks that make everybody oooh and aaah. Hydration is of the utmost importance with the amount of talking going on, the jaw must be well lubricated.
Hosting is a little like work but it is worth it when the evening finally arrives and you sit back and enjoy the ride. That said, I have had just about every kind of home party there is. Yes, I am the “easy girl” of the home party world, but that is another post for another day.
Write what you know
I had so many ideas about what to include in my blog posts. I was so excited to get this party started. I was told to “write what you know.” Ok, what do I know? I’m just a housewife, or so society tells me. I’m not very good at listening to society.
- I know about being a wife. I’ve been married for almost 25 years and still have my original spouse. I am pretty sure that my marital longevity has much more to do with the quality of husband and not so much my wife skills. Most anyone who knows us will nod in agreement. Jon is a keeper, I’m a handful.
- I know about being a mother. I’ve done it full time for almost 23 years. If you combine the ages of my children I have 51 years of mothering experience. I’m not even 51 years old, so that right there is some kind of magic juju. Ah, yes, motherhood is a mysterious plane. I have lots of stories but they all have to be run past my censors, er, um family.
- I know about homeschooling. I’ve been at this since 1993, off and on, mostly on. As my friend, Lisa, and I like to say “Been there, done that, got the ugly jumper…”
- I know poodles. I have owned standard poodles, almost non-stop, since 8th grade. Recently I was given the title “Poodle Doula” and let me just say that the horror of helping my dog deliver 10 puppies has changed me forever. Oh, did I say horror… my bad… honor. There will be poodle posts.
- I know Asperger’s Syndrome. I used to hate it but over the years I have not only accepted it but have embraced it. Although it can be challenging to educate a child with this condition, AS kids are honest and brilliant, at least mine is.
- I know Alzheimer’s. I hate Alzheimer’s. I see no possibility of ever finding anything remotely good about this disease. I do consider it a privilege to be the caretaker and “safety” to an angel who is still stuck on earth.
- I know God, in fact, I can say with 100% certainty that I am His favorite. Oh, I went there. Don’t worry, though. Everyone is His absolute favorite.
So I guess I have a few ideas to start with.
Wow, two posts about starting a blog. How long can I keep this going?
Where to start… where to start…
Several times over the past two years I have been told “Amy, you should write a blog.”
This, in my mind, could have only meant one thing. If you had a blog I could choose whether or not I have to watch/listen to/read your almost incessant blabbity, blabbity, blab. This, of course, must be an internet take on what one of my uncles used to say to me when I was a kid: “I wish you were on television, kid, so I could change the channel.”
The last person to say that to me is one of the dearest, kindest people I have ever known. Eeeeerrrrrrkkkk! (mental brake noise) Have I now inspired a nice person to cross to the dark, contemptuous side? I told her my theory about why people say this to me and she laughed and said “See?”
“Well, sure, I see now.” I didn’t. “I think I might just try this blog thing.”
She smiled sweetly. “Good.”
I got a blog.