The measure of a day

We’re back to walking the dogs three times a day, which gives us the opportunity to soak up the new-morning sun, to bid the neighborhood goodnight, and to wander these cul-de-sacs all afternoon long. Yesterday we were out for an hour, never further than a couple of blocks away from home. We investigated squirrel nests, corralled our hounds when other dogs walked by, tested a dozen different ways to hula-hoop. Anna built a fairy village of sticks and leaves and grasses, with acorns for fairies and seed pods for boats and little beds made out of moss. She narrated an elaborate tale of a fairy mommy and her fairy babies, of unseen monsters chased away with magic and storms roaring outside the fairies’ cozy hole. She leapt and twirled and recited, as the dogs curled in the neighbor’s grass and snoozed.

It was, by any measure, a lovely afternoon. And we get to do this every day.

So I wish I knew why, then, I couldn’t sleep last night for fretting over all I hadn’t done. The neglected second job, the thank-you cards still piled on the counter. None of this should matter.

Hemmed in by chores, finances and the uncertainty of our future, we have every right to essentialize, to tuck in and make the most of that rare commodity we actually have at the moment: time. Time to play. Time to dance. Time to sing and to talk and to make it up as we go. Time to enjoy.

And yet I fretted because I wasn’t cooking from scratch. I thought about the unfolded laundry. I wondered if she’d remember this afternoon, long into her life, when she could have been … learning Spanish, I suppose, or soccer or t-ball or swimming.

I nearly ruined it, this happy memory, and that’s such a shame. How many of us do that? Every day? I do. I do. I do.

It’s so difficult for me to evaluate a day by what went right, and so natural to look for what went wrong. It’s just the two of us and the dogs.

Our shepherd, Tuco, assumes the role of deputy pack leader, patrolling, guarding, keeping us safe. He takes this so seriously that it’s almost comical, but I can’t laugh at him; he’s working so hard. (Of course, should I ever cry or get upset at anything in the house, he slinks into the shower. This does challenge his tough-dog image.) Rosa, the female dog, never quite lets me parent alone; she’s always on hand to help manage the puppy.

Who is managing quite well, thank you very much. When Allan is away, she sleeps in my bed and brushes her teeth in my sink and bathes in my tub. Much of this is sheer practicality; it takes half the time to supervise her if she’s right with me. But I like it, too, if I’m truthful, having her cozy-close, sharing a bath, singing while we dress.

We have as much of that as we want, these few days. What a treasure it is, this thing we have, so precious and so fleeting. I know this, really I do, and I won’t forget.

Published in: on January 27, 2012 at 10:23 PM  Leave a Comment  
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God bless us, every one

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Published in: on January 4, 2012 at 8:32 PM  Leave a Comment  
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…And then again, sometimes the easy thing is the only way to go.

We’ve always taken Anna with us to donate things and to the landfill on garbage/recycling runs, and are glad she’s beginning to form an idea of where things go when she tosses them. There are lots more lessons on recycling and donating and such to be taken advantage of while moving, but I’ve decided to ship her to a friend’s house for the afternoon while I go through her toys.There’s only so much I can take when the pedagogical becomes tinged with the kind of hysterics only a little girl with a one-eyed, bald doll can muster.

Published in: on July 28, 2011 at 12:40 PM  Leave a Comment  
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My backyard

This is my place: the deep hammocks of Florida.

It’s her place, too.

Aren’t we lucky?

Anna, Cocoa Beach, July 2011
Published in: on July 11, 2011 at 4:24 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Anna explains the vehicle donation program at NPR

Anna: Mom, why does that man want a car for his underwear?

Me: Huh? What man?

Anna: That man on the radio. He keeps saying you can donate your undies car to him.

Published in: on June 22, 2011 at 9:07 AM  Leave a Comment  
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When you know each other too well

Me: So, um, I got a parking ticket.

Him: Let me guess: your registration expired because you haven’t gotten the smog check taken care of.

Me: Yes.

Him: Your birthday was three months ago.

Me: Yes.

Him: You’ve lived in California ten years.

Me: Yes.

Him: And you have to get a smog check every other year.

Me: Yes.

Him: But you hate to take your car in because mechanics intimidate you.

Me: Yes.

Him: And when they ask you questions you call your husband because you don’t understand cars and then you feel like a dumb girl.

Me: Yes.

Him: Which is why you’ve never once in 10 years actually taken your car in yourself.

Me: Yes.

Him: This is passive-aggressive.

Me: Yes.

Him: Also, effective.

Me: Yes.

Him: Give me your keys.

Published in: on May 12, 2011 at 10:04 PM  Leave a Comment  

Every day’s a holiday

“We have to get an ice cream cake today.”

“Why?”

“Today is Daddy’s birthday.”

“Mmm-hmm.”

“So let’s get an ice cream cake.”

“Did he tell you that’s what he wants?”

“No. That’s what I want for Daddy’s birthday.”

Published in: on April 27, 2011 at 9:04 PM  Comments (1)  
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When decades collide…

Preschooler AND perimenopause? Now that’s just plain mean.

Published in: on April 20, 2011 at 7:10 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Because living in California ain’t all bad

Cardiff-by-the-Sea, April 2011

Published in: on April 18, 2011 at 7:09 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Now that I have time to hull the strawberries…

My grandmother never ate a strawberry that wasn’t hulled. My grandmother was deeply Southern — president of the Women’s Club for all of Tennessee Southern — but I don’t think that was it. It wasn’t gentility, either: she could have taught Liz Taylor some colorful phrases. I don’t recall her ever demanding hulled berries or anything as ill mannered as that. It was just on those rare occasions when she sat down to whole strawberries, she would take one dainty ‘no thank you’ nibble and leave the rest on her plate.

When I one day found myself in charge of my own kitchen, I turned my back on all that and built my culinary repertoire according to the concepts of “convenience” and “making reservations.”

Now that I’m home, this is slowly righting itself. To not have to squeeze dinner prep into the 17 minutes between getting home and eating completely changes what I put on the table. It makes more sense to keep a basket of fresh fruit in the kitchen now that I know it isn’t sitting alone for nine hours a day. I don’t worry at all about sending Anna to school with enough lunch; if it’s too anemic one day I know I’ll be picking her up half an hour later with a ready snack.

I wonder if the habits of old, hulling strawberries and eating fresher food and so on, were more a function of how people spent their time than of beliefs or limited technology. I doubt it was because transfats and MSG weren’t yet invented. I love my cranky old clothes dryer, for instance, but I really love the smell of sheets and clothes dried in the sun. Our almost-100-year-old California Bungalow is all thick walls and windows, a natural heating and cooling system now that I’m here to open and close the windows. I can go days without touching the microwave.

It seems counterintuitive to say it’s easier to entertain Anna all afternoon TV-free because we actually have all afternoon, but it is. Much. We aren’t locked into the too-much, too-little time yo-yo that our gone-all-day schedules required of us; time flows differently. I do hold regular DVD-and-frozen-pizza evenings, of course; they’re just rare, now, exceptions instead of standard fare.

So this morning I was fixing lunches, listening to the news, and I found myself hulling the strawberries. I have no idea when I started to do this again. I hadn’t thought of a hulled strawberry in ages. But I popped one in my mouth and …mmmmm… remembered again how lovely a hulled strawberry tastes as it melts in your mouth. And I stopped, for just a moment, and savored it all.

Published in: on April 1, 2011 at 12:02 PM  Leave a Comment  
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