Wednesday, May 31, 2006

When in doubt, shout....Lake Titicaca
Does your mother-cum-teacher confuse Peru and Nigeria?
Can she tell the Canary Islands from the Galapagos?
Is Lake Titicaca the only lake besides the five Great Lakes that she remembers from grade school? And does she constantly shout that out as an answer when faced with a lake question?* Is that what’s bothering you, bunky?

Well, letting her watch the National Geographic Bee won’t help her self-esteem. Indeed, she is already aware of this weakness in her education. And she’s working on it. Really. What does mom have in common with the Bee winner? Ummmm...we’re both from Illinois.

(*Hey, I’ve resorted to that three times this week. And twice I was right.)
I want you to want to do the dishes...
Though not particularly interested in seeing this movie...this line certainly gets to me.
(Note to Embot: Your father, like fellow LFHS grad Vince Vaughn, delivers the rejoinder flawlessly.)

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

The devil, you say...
In the UK, some expectant mothers whose babies are due on June 6 are so concerned about giving birth on the date marked by the satanic number that they have scheduled caesareans and inductions beforehand. Can’t imagine what their docs must think of that.

Indeed, it is just seven days until our own little Omen’s 24th birthday. (ooo....2+4=6) Yes, she was born on June 6, 1982. (ooo...8-2=6) Luckily, not at 6:00am. And her real mother is not a dog. (Well, not most of the time) What prospective parents would want to deprive their children of a life-long useful conversation starter?

Maybe we’ll have to get her the DVD of the original Omen. (I’m not so sure the remake will measure up.) Then someday she’ll be able to pass along the family legends. Such as why we refer to obnoxious church screamers (including those in our own family) as “Omens.” And why more than few disputes have been settled with the accusation (untrue, so untrue), “You’re real mother’s a dog.” This could explain why I don’t climb on balconies to dust, refuse to allow just any old nanny in to tend my little ones and insist on a proper introduction before we allow strange dogs to move in.

The prophecy is clear. The signs are unmistakable. On the 6th day of the 6th month in the year 2006....we’ll be eating cake!
An alphabet game!

The rules of this game: (Via Julie D, another Happy Catholic!)
1. Comment on this entry and I will give you a letter.
2. Write ten words beginning with that letter in your journal, including an explanation of what the word means to you and why.
3. Pass out letters to those who want to play along.

I received R, which had me totally baffled for about two minutes. Then it all became sooo obvious:

Roman Catholic - Ne plus ultra! Need I say more?

rectory - If I must say more...can’t think of a better place to work. Sort of like “The Office,” for the eccentric, P.O.D. set. I get to work for God and his Church. More fun than being on a reality TV show.

read - To read is to live. To live is to read. OK, so I’m compulsive. I gotta read. One of my greatest regrets as a mother is that not all of my children are voracious readers. All adequate. Some fine. But not all book-crazed. Though I have produced one girl about to receive her MLS - so I guess it hasn’t all been in vain...

redundancy - With six + kids and attendant entourages, I really don’t remember what I said. Or to whom.

roses - Crazy about roses. Big splashy cabbage roses. As an artistic element. Sleep is better under a bower of Wallie roses. Adrift in a cloud of Tea Rose Perfume. So much pink, so little time. Writing this while Louis Armstrong is on the iPod singing "La Vie en Rose." Though not much luck in the horticulture department. Maybe next year.... or the next.

resource - My inadvertent vocation. Why use the dictionary, encyclopedia, the internet or the bazillion books at home when you can call Mom for the answer? I’ve fallen down somewhere as a teacher. My mother (a teacher) said the best thing a teacher can teach once you get past the ABC 123 basics, is “where to go to find information.” Calling Mom is not what she meant.

rest - I know I’ll feel better when I get some quality rest. (Perhaps I’ve just written my epitaph!)

rock ‘n roll - Papa Ratzi doesn’t approve. But he hasn’t spoken ex cathedra yet...

right - I often am. And that’s where I tend to get into trouble.

Richard - husband of almost 28 years.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Due to circumstances beyond our control...
I am still psyched about the Shakespeare pop-up book. Even though it is back-ordered again. When I saw it as a pending charge on my debit card, I was sure it was on its way. Then the money was credited back to my account. Then Rick called to let me know that I had received a (small) envelope from The Metropolitan Museum of Art. I knew it wasn't because they were interested in my recent work....

This has been a very disorganized year. What shall I blame? Em's wedding? Christmas? Easter? Martha's finishing high school? My bad leg? My successful surgery? My basic lack of organization? My failure to rebound with the vigor of a teenager? Any of the above? All of the above?

Baby steps....just baby steps. Today I washed that hideously dusted wine glasss rack in the kitchen. It's been driving me nuts for ages, but this is the first time I've had the energy to do anything about it. When I had the physical therapist coming to the house, I figured it was a good distraction. If she noticed it while we stood at the kitchen counter doing leg lifts, she wouldn't be looking at the truly grotesque ceiling fan. (Note to anyone who left nails, tiny computer screws, unwrapped allergy pills or any other little things on top...they're gone.)

Tomorrow I do one last inspection for rogue Easter decorations and then we take the Easter bin to the basement. And I'm sort of walking without the cane so I can carry things with two hands. In a few weeks I think I'll be ready to kneel again. (Not kneeling has been an odd kind of discipline. I know I shouldn't kneel. God knows I shouldn't kneel. So there is a bit of pride work to be done when we can't kneel or perform a decent genuflection. I went to Mass this morning and forgot the cane - the signal to all around me that I am too 'delicate' to kneel. I felt like a scofflaw. Of course, I probably shouldn't have been thinking about it at all. Which is where there is more work to be done.)

Eeew

And I've been dreading Snakes on a Plane, which, those in the know tell me, is not about geometry. It's about snakes on an airplane!
Robertson Says He Leg-Pressed 2,000 Pounds
And I was feeling smug about my leg progress...

Thursday, May 25, 2006

A certain peculiar symmetry...
defines a lot of the stuff in my life lately. A guy I knew in high school was killed (along with his sixteen year son and another boy) about a week and a half ago. Once I found out, I’ve folowed the funeral arrangements online. He was a parishioner at the Lutheran church of my youth. A church physically unable to hold a funeral to which 800 mourners are expected. (excluding me - I don’t think the van could make the trip...Oh, and my drivers’ license has been suspended. On a technicality.). I am not surprised that the service will take place in one of the town’s Catholic churches. It sort of reminds me of that Frost poem - 'Home is the place where, when you have to go there,
They have to take you in.'
. Where others may see sheer practicality, I see something more subtle. (Perhaps this is a good time - should there be one - to interject my favorite Big Chill line: “You'll never get this many people to come to my funeral. “ “I'll come... and I'll bring a date.” Hmmm. I know a bunch of priests. They can’t even bring ‘dates.’)

Reading the Milwaukee news, I’ve also noticed that the hospital in which Martha was born is closing. (I think I have some sort of bad effect on schools and hospitals. Every school I’ve attended has been turned into a condo. And more than one hospital that has cared for me has been shut down.)
N.B. Martha: the Milwaukee County mental health complex.. That’s....practical. I guess. I wonder what will happen to the glorious statue of St. Michael that was in the lobby. Waiting to be admitted the night Martha was born, I cooled my heels studying its comforting strength. When the day came that I purchased a St. Michael statue for our home, I picked one a lot like it.
Wise up, folks. We're all alone out there and tomorrow we're going out there again.*
A series of unnerving, untimely deaths has left me calling this my Big Chill month. This morning Amy Welborn reports the loss of blogger priest Fr. Todd Reitmeyer. Unreal.

*the good news is we are not alone!
And I know there is a meaning to all of this. I just can’t quite synthesize it at this moment.
Ex-Marine, 78, fights off boy, 14
The way I see it, the kid’s mistake (besides the obvious crime) was in not realizing there really isn’t such a thing as an “EX” Marine. Today is the thirteenth anniversary of my father’s death. So no one has to tell me that Marines are fighters. Be it hoodlums or cancer... Marines don’t go without a fight. Rest in peace, Dad.
Loren Hamilton Smith, USMCR. Semper Fi.

Instant Karmas's gonna get you
Gonna knock you right on the head...

Today, being our first day of the rest of our lives, free of the relative tyrrany of the public school system, was going to be celebrated by sleeping in. I don’t even have to show up at work until noonish, so I decided to get as much sleep as possible. That must be why I was awakened at 6:00am by a the back-up beep-beep-beep of a school bus doing an 18-point turn in the cul-de-sac. Having re-oriented itself, the bus just sat there, idling. Son of a diddly... yeah, I know that the driver lives in the apartment complex next door. And I don’t begrudge her her job (heaven knows I wouldn’t do it!) But must that bus sit there mocking me? Of course, the bus could have driven into the house and our graduate wouldn’t have noticed. So at least she’s enjoying her freedom.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

And she's off...
last day of high school. I don't feel especially sentimental. After all my previous posts about the copious weepies, I am not particularly moved to see Martha leave for her last day of public schooling. (Maybe it is because I didn't really want her at the public high school in the first place, then folded to her demands to "be a regular kid," then had to prod her along the way as she discovered just how cliquish, boring and 'morning oriented' high school can be. ) So we're done. Maybe I will sing "Imagine." Imagine no more high school, it's easy if you try....

And my big words of advice for next year? Afternoon classes. (The scholarship puts the idea of a 'gap' year on the back burner. But I want a 'gap' year. Where's my 'gap' year?)

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Due to circumstances beyond our control....
Shakespeare month drags on. The Shakespeare's Globe : An Interactive Pop-up Theatre that I ordered from the Metropolitan Museum of Art bookstore (in early March) because it was half-price is finally on its way. Of course, the inflatable mummy that I added on to justify the shipping expense arrived within days. I had some ‘splaining to do with that one...
One more day, dear Lord, of thee three things I pray...
Get Martha to school.
Get her home again.
Get us through the senior honors assembly.*
One more day!

With apologies to St. Richard of Chichester. (Who by the way received no attribution in the Godspell credits. Tsk.)

* I’ve just reached my toxic limit of school performances, assemblies, events. If we weren’t homeschooling the boys I’m sure I would have already been removed from a “Winter” concert in a strait-jacket. I would need some sort of sedation to get me through tomorrow night. If anyone sings “Dust in the Wind” or “Imagine” all bets are off and I'll be in next week's Lake Forester under the headline "Overwrought Mother Foams at Mouth During Senior Awards Assembly."
You dont want to die
But the living gets you down
We want you to act like nothings wrong
Even though you heard a sound
And then youre ripped right out of the ground...


I am so unbelievably tired. Plunked down to watch JEOPARDY at 3:30 and woke up at 6:00. I guess we’ll call this a “teacher institute day.” There is so much I need to do and I barely found the strength to do a load of laundry, watch “House” and update the iPod. (Rick has been letting me use his iPod lately. Today he owes me, since my computer has again been de-authorized from the iTunes account. I’m the mother, for crying out loud, why can’t I be the fifth computer? (Throw me a frickin’ bone here. I’m the boss. Need the info! Yes - I need access to those whimsical little movie snippets and theme songs. I have needs, too, you guys. )So I practiced loading up the pod with more earworms - I wouldn’t want to share my whole playlist...it has too much resemblance to the choices of a seventh grade girl having a very hormonal day. Maybe that’s what I’ve reverted to.

The good news? Well, I’m too tired to do too much serious writing tonight. But I realized Clyde ate a huge chunk out of the rocker I was thinking of refinishing this summer. I had great plans for a unique one-of-a-kind funky paint job. That would be a great hedge against serious time at the keyboard, wouldn’t it? When I want to write something I find a craft project instead. We could stand to loose one more piece of sub-standard furniture anyway. I let Fran in on my plan....we’ll drag it to the curb Thursday night. Do I put out and hope that it finds a good home (like the way we found it?) or do we deal it a coup de grace to assure that it will not find its way back in? Oh, the dilemmas.

Time for bed. I feel like I could sleep for a week. I think I’m finally getting quality sleep after months of crap. And maybe I don’t rebound from major physical events like I did when I was fifteen. Or even 35.

You say you don't know
You tell me don't lie
You work at a smile and you go for a ride
You had a bad day
You've seen what you like
And how does it feel for one more time
You had a bad day
You had a bad day
JAMES IS DEAD.

James is dead. Ghostwriting the girls’ on-line condolence/tribute was not easy. “Can’t say we didn’t see this coming” is too true. Not the words of comfort a family would want to read, if they even made it past the internet censor who approves them for content. (Copyrighted material, too, is forbidden. The censor did not realize or care that our heartfelt prayer was cobbled together from some basic Catholic prayers plus good intentions.) Everyone saw it coming. So what point is there in mentioning it.

I have no idea what his family may have used for a nickname. But I respect the way, despite his life’s vagaries, he maintained a dignified name. Would you call it pretense? Or a last of vestige of hope... to be James, and not “Crack Head Bob” or “Sh***er?” Formalities aside, he died an ignominious death. Not the first young person of my daughters’ peer group to meet a tragic end...but this time I feel that my heart has been ripped open. Why so different this time?

Bridget nixed any mention of James “living on in our hearts and memories.” In all honesty, I was thinking of the moments when I saw James as a sweet young man. There weren’t a lot of them. But I didn’t have to try too hard to think of good things to say. Young men who would notice a woman toting a diaper pail down two flights of stairs and offer to help will be remembered. Young men who compliment a woman on a simple quiche Lorraine will be remembered. Those of us who are products of early sixties’ TV might describe this as “Eddie Haskell-like” behavior. So be it. Some days a latter-day June Cleaver needs to hear what Eddie has to say.

But James’ family might think about the time he dragged Bridget across the room by her hair. Or his brass knuckles that Fran was kind enough to hide in her bodice during a chance encounter with law enforcement. Or maybe that last meeting in the county courthouse when James was simultaneously tried in two courtrooms on (1) domestic violence and (2)
whatever the exact charges were for the night when he drove to our house in an intoxicant exacerbated rage and threatened to kill Bridget. That’s a lot of history. Considering he was just a friend of a friend of Fran and the brother of Bridget’s first high school boyfriend.

We spoke of James from time to time. His life was such a bollixed mess that the pall of impending tragedy surrounding him couldn’t keep us from some rueful laughter at this exploits. (Every laugh has its contrapuntal tragic memory. Yes, we laughed when we heard he had been arrested for stealing a rental car. A car that his father rented when visiting him at college. But it’s a cheap laugh when compared with the look of exhaustion, but no surprise, on his mother’s face the day that we found that he had hidden his gym bag in the shrubbery of our back yard. It looked like a gym bag. Inside it looked like something a Fuller Brush man would carry. If he sold ganja, bongs, papers. And carried his dirty sweat socks in his sales kit.)

He went away to school. None too successfully. He came back to the area. Bridget felt a little safer when he was sentenced to several years in prison for holding up a liquor store. Twice. in the same night. Though she no longer dated his brother, he would occasionally show up in our neighborhood.

“Don’t forget to lock the door tonight. I heard James is out of prison.” Maybe he was that much of a loose cannon. Or did Bridget flatter herself that James might still carry a grudge against her for coming between him and the brother whom she no longer saw?

This is the place where we can all interject the verity that James was in prison for a long time. The prison of whatever started him on the road to self medication right through to his probable-overdose death. What a crappy thing for him to do right before Mother’s Day. She probably saw it coming. But a mother doesn’t want to see it coming. A mother’s specialty is hope. As the mother of the-brass-knuckles-in-the-bodice girl, I can attest that not every problem child is a lost cause. Far from it. But until you’re out of the woods...you’re still in the woods. This is the forest primeval. An extremely sinister forest.

Fran, who was so accomodating to help with the brass knuckles - Fran the daughter who too many times to mention looked to be the cause of my eventual derangement or death - is now my friend, defender and earthly salvation. She is the woman I had hoped she would be. And perhaps a bit more. During one of the lowest times of my life she has come to my rescue. Little wonder I should weep. I am blessed. And it is more amazing grace than maternal machination. Mothers try. We do our best. I did my best. James’ mother did her best. And some of the outcomes must only be called mystery.

So I spent an unusual amount of Mother’s Day week-end crying. For James. For his mother. In search of as much seclusion as possible, not wanting to freak out the family with me new lachrymose personna. Recusing myself from comments and sanctimonious questions. There was little I could do at the time but pray. Pray, cry, sleep and offer up the pain I was feeling from ending a 6 month plus narcotic habit. Offer up my pain to mitigate the slightest bit of another mother’s pain. It’s a bitch, but there is a hope in the pain I have. There will be gain from my pain. Just grit my teeth. I knew it wouldn’t be easy. Can’t say we didn’t see this coming.

I entered into my little deal with the devil, the doctor and the pharmacist knowing that the day would come when I would have to pay. Can’t say we didn’t see this coming. I had to do it to keep working until the time would come when I could have my leg fixed. I did what I had to do. I didn’t do it for fun. But it would most insincere to intimate that I didn’t enjoy the warm euphoria that enveloped me. The euphoria that made life bearable. Life with all its anxieties, money worries, petty irritations, resentment for having this drag on so long - all underscored by the constant not-quite-contained pain of bone grating on bone. There was the inkling of the ordeal to come when I had to taper off the drugs so that I could receive effective pain relief after surgery. (And I only got along by finding a way to get enough Tylenol-3 to ease the discomfort of no Norco or Oxycontin. ) The morphine etc. afterward made that worthwhile. Admittedly enjoyable. Go ahead. Cut a 14 inch slice in my leg. Pull out the cruddy bone and hammer in some replacement parts. Catheterize me. Velcro my legs together when I (try to) sleep. March me up and down the hall and have me assume theraputic yet distinctly undignified positions. What do I care? I feel great...

But I knew the price would be paid. Can’t say we didn’t see this coming. It hurts. It hurts. Sonofabitch I hurt. About a week or so of flu-like symptoms. Yeah. Flu-like symptoms that one doesn’t wish to mention to the children. Or too many other people for that matter. (There are maladies that elicit sympathy and support. Opiate habituation in a middle-aged church secretary is not one of them.) And the next person who says they can’t understand why someone would snort/inject/ swallow opiates might just get....well, at least a piece of my mind.

So I’m feeling vulnerable right now. Just a little too empathetic. With James. With his mother. Empathetic. Sympathetic. Pathetic. It hurts. It all just hurts. (And if someone showed up with a syringe filled with relief, would I say no? Sure. Right. Of course. I hope. Pray for me, James.)

And yet, with the pain there is an a joy too intense to articulate. To enumerate accomplishments has the sublety of slapping an honor student bumper sticker on the back of the family car. I think some tears are from a happiness so rarefied as to be perceived as pain. My daughter is good, well and knows love in the finest sense. Dare I rejoice as another mother grieves?

Can I give this a rest? Yes, if I trust in God’s providential love. For James. For Fran. For us all.
Time for work...
let's prep two more volumes of the Britannica for that long, final walk.
....an all-out attempt to get someone, anyone out there, riled.
Madonna concert review: 'Even the bouncers looked scared

The phrase "She is More to be Pitied than Censured” is what comes to mind. A very funny review of an unintentionally funny concert. Offensive yes, but filled with hysterical, egotistical posturing. How sad.

I just wish I could find a way to make megabucks by having public tantrums. I’d have to draw the line at blasphemy and an “unnerving ability to bend (my) leg around the back of (my) head.”
So Flat the Bum of Woman...
I tried to warn her. But the Princess went to see the DVC. Conclusions...boy was that loooong. And, yes, popcorn is really, really bad when you have IBS. But she was trying not to perish from hunger while waiting to be released from the movie. Live and learn. The upside - they enjoyed the trailer for that “Cars” movie that opens in a few weeks.

Monday, May 22, 2006

I do believe....
The state mandated bureaucratic fly in the ointment has been removed. There is a bit of irony in a student winning a scholarship but not being allowed to graduate because she didn’t pass health education . I think it is kind of funny to receive separate letters informing us of the scholarship and the potential failure to graduate on the same day. Pater wasn’t laughing. Then he called me at work, so it could ruin my lunch, too. Surely better health education would discourage this kind of a gastric irritation. Mustn’t have been a mandatory course when our dear father was a student at same high school. But everything is under control now, with Martha claiming a high C in health. Perhaps it was the poignant essay she wrote on being the child of a mother with an overwrought and deteriorating nervous constitution. Or maybe she just made up the msissing assignments. You know, from the days her health was marginal.
Two by two...
or
Dead Books Walking

Like some anti-intellectual Noah, I have finally undertaken my dreaded task of taking the Encyclopaedia Britannica to the trash. Two by two.

It just seems wrong. I remember the thrill of finally appropriating our own set - the hallmark of the thinking, caring family. (albeit our set was a library discard that employee Embot was allowed to bring home after the ad offering it for sale for $100 went unanswered.) It has come to my attention that the Britannica has been collecting a lot of dust. To steal an advertising jingle, “It’s a dust magnet.” It just has not been used much of late. The kids know how to use a print encyclopaedia. Most often we choose not too. The dust has accumlated to an anaphylaxis provoking degree. I should wear a mask just to dust the volumes. We need extra book shelving. And we’re out of floor space.

So I decided to move it along. Funny, nobody else wants a fifteen year old Encyclopaedia Britannica either. My husband operates a charitable foundation which provides technology and education hardware to schools and persons in need. I figured he might know of some group who would want it. Nada. Zip. You can’t give ‘em away. Sort of like that line in The Sound of Music where Maria says she tried to donate her clothes to the poor but the poor didn’t want them.

Then I read The Know-It-All : One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World by A.J. Jacobs. You know, the book about the guy who reads the whole Encyclopaedia Brittanica. Micropedia, macropedia - the whole enchillada. The Know-It-All is an excellent book. One of the best books I’ve read in ages. But, of course, Mr. Jacobs’ reverence for the print edition of the EB filled me with shame for wanting to dispose of my set. All 36 volumes, give or take.

Well, I’m over it now. I’m getting my housekeeping edge back. And I decided it’s time to dust that shelf and can the EB. I fan through each volume for any personal effects (wouldn’t it be nice to find a $20 bill?) and rip out any color plates of educational value or usable in one of my collages. (Don’t worry Embot - the human body transparencies to which some comedienne attached a photo of your face will be saved for posterity.) But two by two, out they go. That’s about all I can carry downstairs. It is probably kinder to the trash man that way, too. I could use a little more help from the family, but I need to retain some control over which volumes go and when. And Rick doesn’t quite get it yet - he saw me walk out the door on my way to a meeting with my spiritual director and couldn’t comprehend what was on the agenda that required two hefty volumes of the EB. As I dropped them into the garbage, I explained again.

I am ashamed. It just seems wrong. So wrong. Like there should be some sort of respectful decommissioning ceremony. Or something. If I ever meet the august A.J. Jacobs I certainly will not tell him my dirty secret...the fact that we both handled all the volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica...he to read each one and me to walk each to the trash.
Re: the graduation ticker...
It may be a week and x number of days until graduation. But the good news is only two more days of attendance left. Two more mornings. I think we'll make it.

The really, really good news is that Martha has won the scholarship to the local "community" college. Not bad for someone who I would have nominated for the Ferris Bueller Scholarship.*

*I think the high school in the town where John Hughes lives should have a Ferris Bueller Scholarship. You know, for the highest performing senior whose attendance is less than exemplary.

[So just for fun, insert Martha for "Ferris" and von Huben wherever it says Bueller:
Ed Rooney: Are you also aware, Mrs. Bueller, that Ferris does not have what we consider to be an exemplary attendance record?
Mrs. Bueller: I don't understand.
Ed Rooney: He has missed an unacceptable number of school days. In the opinion of this educator, Ferris is not taking his academic growth seriously. Now I've spent my morning examining his records. If Ferris thinks that he can just coast through this month and still graduate, he is sorely mistaken. I have no reservations whatsoever about holding him back another year.
Mrs. Bueller: This is all news to me.
Ed Rooney: It usually is. So far this semester he has been absent nine** times.
Mrs. Bueller: Nine times?
Ed Rooney: Nine times.
Mrs. Bueller: I don't remember him being sick nine times.
Ed Rooney: That's probably because he wasn't sick. He was skipping school. Wake up and smell the coffee, Mrs. Bueller. It's a fool's paradise. He is just leading you down the primrose path.
Mrs. Bueller: I can't believe it.... (except that Mrs. von Huben can believe it.)

**Nine times? In my dreams!]
That’s funny...
The New Yorker didn’t think my caption was funny.

OK, look at the cartoon and tell me if “No, I’d go with the bite instead,” is even moderately humorous. On the other hand, don’t . Allow me to delude myself.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Et in Arcadia ego
The past week-end has brought more than a little disillusionment. And now, so much for for the memory of the hometown of my earliest years existing in some sort of idyllic protective bubble.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Maybe I’m Amazed
Amaze. Amazed. Amazing. Perhaps some of the most overworked words in the lexicon. Usually, I pay little attention when someone lavishes those words upon others. “I couldn’t have done it without my amazing friends.” “This -insert award here - really belongs to my dear husband who never fails to amaze.” I’m amazed, simply amazed.”

So what do we say when we really are amazed? How can I express my amazement? And not have it lost in the amazment dross clogging the atmosphere?

It’s been almost four weeks since my dreaded surgery and I’m still pondering my blessings. (The mere fact that I lived to be operated upon is a wonderful testimony to my family’s patience during my months of crankiness and gloom.) So many people have been so good to me.

The kids have been great. One in particular went way beyond the call of filial duty.* Without shortchanging the other five, what else can I say but “Fran is amazing.” This was the child that I once despaired of. We had a rough couple of years, in the late ‘90’s and early ‘00’s. I would have bet good money that she would have been my cause of death rather than my most loving caregiver and trusted companion. And now what can I say? She is amazing. But the word has been devalued.

(*CAUTION: NOT FOR THE SQUEAMISH - ESP. MEN: The night before surgery I was curled up in bed feeling apprehensive,
achy, possessing legs of a Sasquatch. In pain, but with enough life left in me to dread having to have my legs scrutinized by strangers. Fran, unbidden, came into my room and proceeded to shave my legs. I don't know if I would have wanted to do that for my mother. That is love. Just one example of the outrageous, lavish love that was poured out on me. And another reminder that we needn't always go far to find a way to serve our Lord in his 'distressing disguise.')
Something new.... for me.
Back in my high school days, I had a subscription to the late Punch., I would look at their cartoon caption contests and draw a complete blank. Perhaps because I was lacking the requisite British sense of humour.

I now look at The New Yorker’s weekly cartoon caption contest with the same results. But, last Friday, filled with adrenaline, moxie and a renewed sense of ‘purpose,’ I looked at the latest cartoon and came up with what I thought was a killer line. Refined it. Sent it off. Then bounced it off the family.

Well, you know what they say about a joke you have to explain. Big Ed was gracious enough to give it chuckle. Chuck said, yeah, he ‘got’ it, but basically I had succeeded in creating one of those New Yorker cartoons that nobody understands. Better luck this week.*

*There was a finalist from Lake Bluff several months ago, so that skews my chances right there. I know statistics. Sort of.
So now what?
It’s been a while since I watched 7th Heaven with any amount of dedication. But that didn’t stop us from watching last week’s series’ finale. (The cheese fondue that Fran made for dinner was approriate. Talk about gustatorial coincidence.) Ah, the memories. That was a show that didn’t just ‘jump the shark.’ They took it in and made it part of the family. By the end I was so lost and confused. All the chaos. So many twins. The show had tended to remind me of my life, since one needed a flow chart to keep track of the characters. But at some point they lost me. (The Camdens, that is. I still have a a fair grasp on my family. I think.)

Chuck had a better idea. Rev. Camden wakes up to find he is a Catholic priest and it was all just a nightmare. Or Rev. Camden is a priest sitting at his desk contemplating a snow globe containing a tiny non-denominational church and its pastor....

Enough of this TV biz. I think I OD’d during my R&R time. Though I’m vaguely interested in catching the Grey’s Anatomy finale. This has me concerned.

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Hmmm...Did I ever read this? Or is it like Catcher in the Rye? A book that everyone else has read....




You're Watership Down!

by Richard Adams

Though many think of you as a bit young, even childish, you're
actually incredibly deep and complex. You show people the need to rethink their
assumptions, and confront them on everything from how they think to where they
build their houses. You might be one of the greatest people of all time. You'd
be recognized as such if you weren't always talking about talking rabbits.



Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.


Via Happy Catholic.
Oh....and that reminds me that it's about time to send the 3-foot 'chocolate' bunny down to the laundry room. Not the garage attic like last year. Poor Big Ed...getting that forty pound, sand-filled vinyl kitsch masterpiece down was a lovely surprise for me. But a very risky venture for him.
A Multitude of Blessings...
I’m walkin’. Walkin’ and talkin’. Singin’ and dancin’, almost. Praise God - everything has gone so well. Yes, there have been discomforts and minor annoyances, but all in all I can’t imagine how things could be any better. My staples are out and I feel pretty good.

Beautiful day. The garden is doing well, no thanks to me. Fran, on top of helping take care of me, has been knocking herself out working in the yard.

Made it to Mass. An extra treat was that we were visited by Fr. Robert Barron, who is always an extraordinary preacher. (Fr. Barron has a new DVD, too, which I was able to watch during my recent R&R - Conversion: Following the Call of Christ. Get a copy now. Get several. They are something you’ll want to share.)

I was able to go to Target yesterday. Hanging around the house ‘resting’ was making me feel a lot like David Blaine in that wacky water ball. Only my fingers aren’t wrinkled. Haven’t done so much walking since Christmas....what a change. What a relief.

Music. Breakfast with the Beatles. All the stuff I didn’t listen to during Lent. (Giving up music is more arduous than one might think. And this year I felt so crappy that I didn’t have the energy to turn on the radio, CD’s etc on Lenten Sundays. I spent most of those napping and watching any drivel that could be controlled with an index finger on the TV remote.) Rick put a bunch of my favorite music on his iPod so that I could listen in bed during any sleepless spells during my recovery. I have scoffed at iPods so much, and now I think I may have trouble returning this item to its owner. So cool. So small and simple and efficient. And to think it survived that first night....when I came back from a trip to the bathroom to find that it had fallen into the bedside glass of Gatorade.

Back on the computer. Lots of blogs to catch up on. And I have the energy and attention span after being lost in the ozone for so long. Lots and lots to read. And Dylan’s back!

Tomorrow is another step closer to normal. Back to work! And then home again to face another homeschooling year in which, due to circumstances somewhat beyond our control, Shakespeare month has been extended indefinitely. We still haven’t done our children’s Macbeth in the form of a radio play. Enthusiasm is not overwhelming. Perhaps we should have done this when I could have played the pity card. (I have a few pity cards left. But I need those for difficult household chores...)
After all this time...
there is finally something that makes me really envy Oprah. She has a Crayola color named in her honor. That’s a good sign that I’m ready to go back to work. Being on top of Oprah’s latest...and envying her crayon. What would my crayon be named? The possibilities boggle the mind.
Held over...’til May 29th.
Saint Peter and the Vatican: the Legacy of the Popes. If you are anywhere near Milwaukee, check it out. We went at the beginning of April. And I’d go again if it were workable. So much to see. (And the rest of the Milwaukee Public Museum is a lot of fun. But I am partial, since it was a favorite family destination of my youth. My sister’s birthday was last week and I could kick myself now for not having picked up one of the cute “I PRESSED THE SNAKE BUTTON AT THE MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM” T-shirts for her. Snake button? It’s kind of an inside joke among museum regulars. But I won’t say too much. Go check out the Vatican Exhibit. And the snake button is near the spot where the crowd queues up - so you can have it all!)

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

You're probably wondering about the coat hangers. They're to block the satellite that's been spying on me. It can read your electric organizer from space.....Major League Baseball.
I must be getting better. Am finding time to ruminate about my prosthetic hip. Sort of creeps me out. Especially the way I don’t really notice a difference.... except now I can walk.

St. Isidore Foundation



I cannot live under pressures from patrons, let alone paint.
-- Michelangelo, quoted in Vasari's Lives of the Artists


Meet the Family...
Collect the Action Figures





Yes, three jade ribbons. 15 Years!
(not all the same child)
If you need to ask, you may not wish to know.


 
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