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	<title>motherload &#187; Mom</title>
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	<description>diary of a modern-day housewife superhero</description>
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		<title>I&#8217;m a Loser</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:14:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4243</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant. Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant.</p>
<p>Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And Mark handed me a little turquoise box from a brilliantly-branded jewelry store. I think you know the place.</p>
<p>Inside it was a beautiful necklace&#8212;a platinum chain and a diamond solitaire pendant. I absolutely LOVED it.</p>
<p>Mark put it on me, and we sat there on the floor for a while, looking at the new crib and rocking chair and the pile of laundered, twice-rinsed baby clothes, marveling over how much our lives had changed in one year&#8217;s time.</p>
<p>Then Mark had to stand up and grab both my hands in order to pry me up off the floor.</p>
<p>Ah, good times.</p>
<p>A few weeks ago we went to Seattle. We had an amazing weekend with wonderful friends. We ate at great restaurants, got a private tour of <a href="http://www.chihuly.com/" target="_blank">Chihuly</a>&#8216;s studio, went for walks on the beach, and even saw two bald eagles up close and personal.</p>
<p>But somehow in the course of all that fun I lost my diamond necklace. And I&#8217;m just sick about it.</p>
<p>The thing is, I was insanely organized that weekend. Like even <em>more</em> so than usual. Our hosts don&#8217;t have children, so I tried my utmost to keep the sprawl of our stuff controlled. I folded clothes and placed them neatly back in our luggage. I paired shoes closely together and set them at the edge of our beds. I gathered wayward toothbrushes, detangling spray, and princess panties that had been flung around the bathroom and tucked everything away in its place.</p>
<p>So I&#8217;m not sure how that necklace got away.</p>
<p>Damn my recent growth spurt around accessorizing. A couple years ago I wouldn&#8217;t even HAVE another necklace to change into. But recently I&#8217;ve made an effort to mix things up a bit. I&#8217;ve bought some bold, statement-ish jewelry hoping to up my maternal style quotient.</p>
<p>All I know is that beloved diamond necklace went to Seattle and never came back.</p>
<p>This is the WORST feeling. That pit-in-your-stomach, beating yourself up, woulda coulda shoulda feeling.</p>
<p>The thing is I also know what it&#8217;s like to feel this way then to suddenly find the lost item and to snap out of it. To feel awash with sudden relief and renewed love for that once-lost thing. I keep hoping I&#8217;m at the brink of finding the necklace on the bottom of my toiletry kit (even though I&#8217;ve emptied it out and shook it upside down eight times now).</p>
<p>But as the weeks march on and it doesn&#8217;t turn up, I&#8217;m losing hope.</p>
<p>All this would be bad enough on its own, but a couple weeks before Seattle I pulled another regret-laden move. It was a rainy, stormy, low-visibility morning. I was driving to work in a crazy slew of traffic. My 20-minute drive took nearly an hour.</p>
<p>I finally arrived at the parking garage in downtown San Fran. Hurray! I made it in one piece.</p>
<p>But when I pulled into the garage and took a sharp right to get into the row of to-be-parked cars I heard a loud scraping sound. No, it was more like a crunching. I looked up to see that I&#8217;d hit the edge of the doorway&#8212;a wall covered with a black rubber bumper and bright yellow reflective tape.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m such an optimist that I hopped out of the car, hopeful that&#8212;despite the horrific crunch of metal&#8212;the damage wasn&#8217;t too bad. [Let me throw my head back here for some hearty rueful laughter.]  Yeah, well, no luck there. I pretty much took out the front passenger-side door AND the rear passenger-side door. Oh, and I scraped up the edge of the bumper too, just for good measure.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure why I&#8217;m in this self-destructive mode. Maybe my moons are in retrograde? Or my insurance company is controlling my actions like a marionette? Maybe&#8212;despite my age, my marital and maternal status, and my professional standing&#8212;I&#8217;m still that irresponsible, reckless teen who crashed her car into a snow bank, lost her mother&#8217;s pearls, and had her Kelly green rugby shirt stolen because she didn&#8217;t lock her locker.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t <em>feel</em> like that girl any more, but try as I will, maybe I just can&#8217;t shake her.</p>
<p>The other night at dinner Paige asked me to tell her a story about when I was &#8220;a little girl.&#8221; I find these requests both sweet and annoying. The egomaniac in me loves the invitation to hold court on my favorite topic: myself. But the tired old mom in me just wants to clear the dishes off the table and start running the bath water. Haggard Mom thinks summoning up some story to tell takes more energy than she has.</p>
<p>But egomania won out.</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;Okay, so when I was a little girl my mother used to save all the old stale cereal and crackers and bread that we didn&#8217;t eat. She&#8217;d put it in the trunk of her car. And whenever she drove past the golf course or the pond on Poppasquash Road she&#8217;d pull over and feed the old crackers and stuff to the ducks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: [wild-eyed] &#8220;You&#8217;re not supposed to do that!&#8221;</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;Feed bread to ducks! We just learned this on our field trip. If ducks eat bread they get this disease where their wings get stuck like this [holds her arms straight out behind her]. Then they can&#8217;t fly!&#8221;</p>
<p>For some reason in my wrung out, end of the day, slaphappy mode, I found this utterly hilarious. And I started to laugh.</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;No, Mom, it&#8217;s <em>true</em>! Their wings get like this [holds her arms out stiffly again]. It&#8217;s NOT FUNNY.&#8221;</p>
<p>And really, it&#8217;s not funny. But something about my daughter&#8217;s sweet earnestness, and something about how all those years my mother was trying to do something <em>good</em> but was essentially crippling the object of her affection&#8212;gave me a taste of how powerless we can be as we make our ways through the world. Try as we may to do the right thing, sometimes the universe conspires against us.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Unfinished Business</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/unfinished-business/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/unfinished-business/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Aug 2011 06:28:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cancer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sisters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3820</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was one thing my sister Ellen and I both wanted of my mother&#8217;s after she died. It wasn&#8217;t an Oriental carpet or a strand of pearls. It was a little piece of scratch paper Mom had pinned to a bulletin board. In her cramped, scrawly handwriting it said: &#8220;A well kept house is the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was one thing my sister Ellen and I both wanted of my mother&#8217;s after she died. It wasn&#8217;t an Oriental carpet or a strand of pearls. It was a little piece of scratch paper Mom had pinned to a bulletin board. In her cramped, scrawly handwriting it said: &#8220;A well kept house is the sign of a misspent life.&#8221;</p>
<p>This, as it turns out, was my mother&#8217;s credo.</p>
<p>She wasn&#8217;t a total slob, but&#8230; how can I put this? She sometimes prioritized other things over cleaning.</p>
<p>I can imagine her glee stumbling across that quote one day, finding it the perfect validation for the dust bunnies under our beds and our sink full of dishes. Lesser, boring people would have their sink sparkling&#8212;but not her! She had better things to do.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m pretty sure that things like this skip a generation. My mother was an expert procrastinator. I grew up to be a militant project manager. She was a master of disorganization, always puttering around muttering things like, &#8220;I remember thinking I&#8217;d put that in a really <em>good</em> place. But where was it?&#8221; Me? I pride myself on an OCD-level of organization. And in terms of cleanliness and clutter, let&#8217;s put it this way&#8212;before I ever leave the house, I tidy up and wipe everything down as if I&#8217;ll bump into the Queen at Safeway and invite her straight home for a cup of tea.</p>
<p>Yes, I am NOT my mother&#8217;s daughter when it comes to housekeeping. But man, I still wanted that little hand-written note of hers. Precisely because it was so <em>her</em>. (Turns out, my sister kept the original and gave me a xerox copy. Which was just fine by me.)</p>
<p>God knows some of my less stellar parenting moments have erupted in those times of frantic leaving-the-house cleaning. I&#8217;ll have <em>just</em> finished picking up Cinderella playing cards littered all the way down the hall, and will walk into the living room to see that Paige has pulled every DVD off the shelf, opened the boxes, and is flinging the discs around like Frisbees. It&#8217;s that hair-pulling one step forward, two steps back thing. You finally think you&#8217;re ready to leave the house, and the baby poops. It&#8217;s inevitable.</p>
<p>Of course, all these leads me to the conclusion that my girls will grow up to keep towering piles of magazines around like my mother did. It will be their rebellion for having weathered my uptight neat-freakishness.</p>
<p>And really, if that&#8217;s the case it&#8217;d be fine by me. (As long as they let me clean when I go to their houses.) If they come by some bad habits on their own, I&#8217;m fine with that. We&#8217;re all human. But if they&#8217;re bad at something because I am? Well, that&#8217;s a different matter altogether. As a parent I want to try to breed the bad parts of <em>me</em> out of them.</p>
<p>Which is why I&#8217;ve been serving up a lot of Parental Lecture #239 lately. Which is to say, &#8220;Finish what you start.&#8221;</p>
<p>The thing is, I&#8217;ve been finding scores of inch-long, unfinished friendship bracelets all over the house. Someone comes to visit, Kate interrogates them about their favorite colors, and furiously starts knotting and braiding away. But inevitably something else catches her attention. She&#8217;s off with the sidewalk chalk or reading to her dolls in a fort, and that orange, black, and gray bracelet that was our friend Mike&#8217;s personal palette, is left unfinished.</p>
<p>She&#8217;ll start making a birthday card, then wander into the kitchen to find a snack. She&#8217;s excited about a new library book, but after two nights and two chapters, would rather we &#8220;please please <em>pleeeez</em>&#8221; read <em>Ivy &amp; Bean</em> instead.</p>
<p>Now, you may be thinking that the girl is only five years old. (Or perhaps you&#8217;re wondering how old she is. Better yet, you may not give a rat&#8217;s ass.) Whatever the case, she turns six next month. So really, this kind of behavior is pretty typical kid stuff. And I get that. I certainly don&#8217;t want her goose-stepping around the house, finishing each drawing/game/activity with clinical precision, then hitting a stop watch and logging it into a book. But I <em>do</em> want her to understand the benefit of sticking with something. I want her to feel the satisfaction of hard work paying off. And I don&#8217;t want her to grow up to be someone who starts things and never finishes them. Like, uh&#8230; like sometimes<em> I</em> do.</p>
<p>Because, I don&#8217;t know about you, but I have a kinda mental list of all the things I&#8217;ve taken on that somehow never got off the ground. Things that excited me and inspired me and I&#8217;d even told my friends about when they asked me, &#8220;What&#8217;s new?&#8221;</p>
<p>And what&#8217;s funny is, I&#8217;m the last person you&#8217;d think of as a slacker. In the <a href="http://www.enneagraminstitute.com/anneagram.asp" target="_blank">Enneagram</a>&#8212;this interesting personality-mapping system that you should really buy <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Enneagram-Made-Easy-Discover-People/dp/0062510266/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1314595905&amp;sr=1-4" target="_blank">a book</a> about the next time you go to a ski house for a weekend with some friends&#8212;I&#8217;m a #3. <a href="http://www.enneagraminstitute.com/typethree.asp" target="_blank">The Achiever</a>. Still somehow, I house this mild frustration within myself about all the projects I bailed on. And I guess if this is something fixable&#8212;something I can somehow deter my kids from doing&#8212;then, by gum, I&#8217;m going to try.</p>
<p>On New Year&#8217;s Day last year our Oakland posse came over for brunch. And we did this thing where we took the things about the prior year that we wanted to forget, or not carry into the new year, or just <em>get over</em>, and we wrote them on little scraps of paper. (Aren&#8217;t we SO California groovy? You probably just ate egg casserole and drank off your hang-over at <em>your</em> New Year&#8217;s brunch.)  Initially we stuck the papers in a little plastic doll potty I found in one of the girls&#8217; rooms. It seemed like a good metaphor to flush those things away. But later in the day, once we had a fire in the fireplace&#8212;and a few mimosas in our systems&#8212;we started reading them aloud and tossing them into the flames.</p>
<p>It was good therapy. (Though I still sometimes do lose my temper with the kids.)</p>
<p>Anyway I wonder if, in the same vein, I can list the unfinished projects that gnaw at me here. And by virtue of enumerating and accepting them perhaps I can exorcise them from my mind.</p>
<p>Hell, I figure it&#8217;s worth a try.</p>
<p><strong>Things I Started and Never Finished:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Scrapbooking. I spent HUNDREDS of dollars on papers, stickers, scalloped scissors, and flower-shaped hole punchers. I painstakingly produced a few pages&#8211;maybe six&#8212;and found I was psychotically hell-bent on making each one a creative masterpiece worthy of the Scrapbook Hall of Fame (which I think is in Cleveland somewhere near the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame). I got through Kate&#8217;s first five weeks of life then quit, utterly spent. Continuing at that rate would have been a 90-plus hour a week job. And that was before Paige with all <em>her</em> scrap-worthy moments was even born.</li>
<li>Compiling photo albums&#8212;actual book ones with pages you can turn. I can&#8217;t help but think that by the time my kids are adults the internet will be like an 8-track tape. &#8220;Photos of your first birthday? I have them right here! Don&#8217;t you worry, we just need to spark up the old internet to get them. Stand back now! This can get loud&#8212;and smokey!&#8221;</li>
<li>Hell, I&#8217;d be happy to have up-to-date photos on our Fickr account posted. Or even just downloaded onto my computer. Our digital camera is like 20 old rolls of film that have never been dropped off at MotoPhoto.</li>
<li>The marathon I attended an inspirational <a href="http://www.teamintraining.org/" target="_blank">Team in Training</a> meeting for 9 years ago, then gave up on after my knee got jenky after just two training runs.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>The needlepoint of a bunny (what was I thinking?) that I worked on during endless doctor appointments, and chemo and radiation sessions with my mother. I would get SO engrossed in it, that after sitting in a stiff gray waiting room chair for an entire day, my mother would finally be ready to go and I&#8217;d beg, &#8220;Can we just stay a <em>little</em> longer so I can finish all the red flower petals?&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>And that damn needlepoint reminds me of the owl hook rug I started as a kid. I had big plans for that acrylic throw rug. <em>Big</em> plans. I think my mom kept that unfinished masterpiece in the attic for decades after I&#8217;d abandoned it. <em>She</em> apparently had faith in my ability to some day complete that project. The fool.</li>
<li>There&#8217;s that book about the orchid thief, and one about a Parisian piano shop, and many many other books I started and never finished even though I always claim to be someone who &#8220;can&#8217;t start a new book &#8217;til I finish the one I&#8217;m reading, even if I hate it.&#8221; If I ever use that line on you, know that it&#8217;s a lie. (Even though I still like to think it&#8217;s true.)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>And of course, the biggest ugliest most brutal unfinished project&#8212;<em>my</em> book. Yes, my book idea that I was so impassioned and inspired and determined about, the research material for which is now sitting pitifully in a box on our basement floor. I&#8217;m not sure if my energy for it petered out because I stopped believing in my idea, or if I stopped believing in my idea because I never put enough energy into getting it rolling. If I could only get back the money I spent on childcare while trying to finish that damn proposal. It&#8217;d probably amount to the proceeds I&#8217;d have made on the book if I ever got it published.</li>
</ul>
<p>Oh, I&#8217;m sure there are more more more things on this list. I have boxes of fabric and pillow stuffing and yarn&#8212;the vestiges of  creative undertakings that died on the vine. I have vintage buttons I planned to sew on cardigans. Growth charts for both girls devoid of hash marks for each year&#8217;s passage.</p>
<p>Some of this is maybe just life&#8212;you&#8217;re bound to find yourself in the not-yet-completed part of <em>some</em> undertaking. But at times, in the middle of the night, these things can weigh on me. My Achiever personality frets over what I&#8217;ve failed to do, instead of reveling in my accomplishments.</p>
<p>Last summer we vacationed with friends who have four boys. If her offspring wasn&#8217;t time-sucking enough, in her off-mama hours the woman is an E.R. doc. And a triathlete. Her husband commandeers a fairly new, wildly successful craft brewery which struggles to keep pace with the demand for their product. They&#8217;ve got one of those big white boards in their kitchen that outlines everyone&#8217;s schedule for the week. Take it from me, these people are BUSY.</p>
<p>But I was blown away but how thoughtfully they manage their lives on a minute by minute basis. Like how, whenever one of the boys pulls on the mom&#8217;s arm and asks, &#8220;Can you read to me? Can we play Zingo? Do you want to play freeze tag?&#8221; More often than not, her answer is Yes.</p>
<p>It made me realize how often <em>my</em> answer is No. I can&#8217;t read because I&#8217;m cooking dinner. I can&#8217;t pretend I&#8217;m your baby, I&#8217;m sending a work email. No, no no. When really, doing any of these things takes just a few minutes. (Except, of course, a hellishly endless game of Chutes and Ladders.)</p>
<p>But really, will the world fall apart if I play a couple hot rounds of Go Fish, instead of emptying the dishwasher right away?</p>
<p>When the girls want to know some day why they don&#8217;t have baby books&#8212;why I can&#8217;t remember the exact date they took their first steps, or can&#8217;t put my fingers on a photo of their kindergarten play&#8212;I hope I&#8217;ll be able to remind them of that huge hopscotch we drew along the length of our block&#8217;s sidewalk. And I hope that that will somehow be enough.</p>
<p>As for that book proposal? I think I just need to get off my ass.</p>
<p>What have you started that you never finished?</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Opening Windows</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/opening-windows/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/opening-windows/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 2011 14:24:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mama Posse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3658</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Was it just me, or did everyone adore their pediatrician when they were little? I mean, not love love. Not like in any Electra Complex sorta way. It&#8217;s just that for me going to the doctor was always a super happy event. Even when I had to get shots. I&#8217;ll call him Dr. Unger. And [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Was it just me, or did everyone adore their pediatrician when they were little?</p>
<p>I mean, not <em>love</em> love. Not like in any <a href="http://psychology.about.com/od/eindex/g/def_electracomp.htm" target="_blank">Electra Complex</a> sorta way. It&#8217;s just that for me going to the doctor was always a super happy event. Even when I had to get shots.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll call him Dr. Unger. And what I remember about the guy was this: He had pictures of his patients covering one wall of his office. Even though I wasn&#8217;t in any of them (something I never dreamed of&#8212;as a fourth child, photos of me were rare), there was something so free-spirited and fabulous about the collage. To my kid brain, at least. No adult I knew dared to decorate this way.</p>
<p>Of course, as a mother now myself I now know <em>nearly every</em> pediatrician does this, at least at the holidays with photo cards. But at the time it was one more thing that made Dr. Unger so dazzling.</p>
<p>For some reason I always thought he looked like a handsome version of&#8212;get this&#8212;<a href="http://cinemaelectronica.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/imgjerry-lewis4.jpg" target="_blank">Jerry Lewis</a>. <em>Ha!</em> Absurd, right? I&#8217;m not sure <em>where</em> I got that idea, but I remember thinking I was pretty cool for coming up with it. I mean, this was the age of Tab and Fresca people. I&#8217;m no spring chicken. So, along with thinking that shag carpets were an acceptable floor covering and Pacers were cool-looking cars, we we clearly devoid of handsome celebs&#8212;leaving me to have to summon in my youthful imagination what Jerry Lewis mighta looked like if he didn&#8217;t look the way he did.</p>
<p>I know what you&#8217;re thinking: I&#8217;m an over-achiever. And you&#8217;re absolutely right.</p>
<p>Anyway, Dr. Unger had this nurse (or was she a secretary?) who was ancient, and crisp white uniformed, and super old school. She ran that office like a Swiss train. Or a Swiss clock. <em>Something</em> Swiss. (But not cheese.)</p>
<p>She was a mighty force, but her air of authority was never off-putting. She made it clear the place would fall to ruins without her, yet managed to be all smiles and winks. And she had a very chummy, insider-ish way of talking to my mom. As if we were a special family she was truly happy to see.</p>
<p>She probably made everyone feel that way. And good for her, if she did.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh that Dr. Unger,&#8221; my mother would say admiringly, as we walked down the floating staircase (very mod at the time) to the parking lot, and she lit up a brown <a href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3568/3569229364_cd9492a472.jpg" target="_blank">More cigarette</a>. Mom adored Dr. Unger as much as I did. In that &#8220;he&#8217;s SO good at his job&#8221; kinda way. Though, who knows? Maybe she had a thing for Jerry Lewis too.</p>
<p>Whatever the case, there was a real sense of us feeling lucky that he was our doctor. I mean, we&#8217;d drive <em>a half-hour</em> to get to his office. This is halfway &#8216;cross the state when you consider we were in Rhode Island. But mom was resolute that he was &#8220;the best&#8221; so she&#8217;d dress us up for an outing to &#8220;the city&#8221; for every little check-up and sniffle. (Shorts, for your information, were an unacceptable clothing option for the city according to Mom. She stopped just short of making us wear gloves and bonnets.)</p>
<p>Aside from an allergy test where he pricked different parts of my arm with a short four-pronged needle, and aside from getting to pick out a lollipop after getting a shot, for all my admiration for Dr. Unger, I don&#8217;t remember any specific interactions I had with the guy. But I do remember one thing he told my mother once. He said, &#8220;The best thing you can do for a child is to keep their window open when they sleep.&#8221;</p>
<p>And so, all these years later I can&#8217;t help but think of Dr. Unger when I tuck my girls in at night. Unless it&#8217;s super cold out, I try to at least keep one window in their rooms cracked.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s such a little thing, but when I do it I feel like I&#8217;m tapping into some old world wisdom. Like I&#8217;m channeling some simple maternal legacy, since it was something my mother did with us. Because, of course, Dr. Unger&#8217;s word was gospel. Mom wouldn&#8217;t <em>dare</em> go up against doctor&#8217;s orders. And she always prided herself on the fact that my sisters and I never got sick. Something I&#8217;ve gotta admit, I love about my kids too. (Though now that I&#8217;ve said that I&#8217;m sure they&#8217;ll be plagued with an endless stream of sniffles, sore throats, and all-night puking sessions.)</p>
<p>Anyway, more often than not old clashes with new. And this small window thing is no exception.</p>
<p>Because one day, in a stream of chatter about everything and nothing at all (my favorite kind of conversation), my Mama Posse friend Maggie mentioned that she <em>always</em> closes her kids&#8217; bedroom windows at night. And locks them. &#8220;Even,&#8221; she added, &#8220;if it&#8217;s, like, 100 degrees out.&#8221; (Though, blessedly, the Bar Area never gets near that hot.) Ever since the <a href="http://www.pollyklaas.org/about/pollys-story.html" target="_blank">Polly Klaas</a> thing, she said she&#8217;s not taking any chances.</p>
<p>Several weeks later, another member of the Mama Posse (we don&#8217;t have matching tattoos or embroidered satin jackets, I swear) was showing us the new extension they&#8217;d put on her house. Their fab-u-luss new master suite is pretty removed from their kids&#8217; rooms. And so then <em>she</em> mentioned something about locking the kids&#8217; bedroom windows at night.</p>
<p>And so, I took pause. (It&#8217;s such an odd expression, &#8220;took pause,&#8221; but I&#8217;d like to use it here, if y&#8217;all don&#8217;t mind.)</p>
<p>Because my Mama Posse mamas are women I&#8217;ve known since I used the word &#8220;latching&#8221; several times a day, and my C-section scar was still an incision. Back when a wrap-around nursing pillow was a regular accessory on my couch, and I hadn&#8217;t yet mastered breastfeeding while waiting in line at Trader Joe&#8217;s. In other words, I&#8217;ve know them since the infancy of my motherhood.</p>
<p>And we have talked about it ALL, these women and I. If my mama friends had told me that slathering my baby in mayo was an effective cure for colic, or way get her to sleep, or to take a bottle,  I&#8217;d be scooping the stuff out of a jar with my bare hands and lubing that baby right up&#8212;no questions asked&#8212;even though I&#8217;m pretty much phobic about the stuff. <em></em></p>
<p>I seek and trust and respect their opinions on all things motherly above and beyond Dr. Spock even. But above <em>Dr. Unger</em>? And my own Mama?</p>
<p>I was perplexed.</p>
<p>So hearing their stance on window openage got me thinking. Am I acting irresponsibly? Am I playing with fire, all for the sake of some fresh air? Does old school wisdom not translate so well into the modern day?</p>
<p>Our nice neighborhoods aside, the fact is, we live in the fourth most dangerous city in the U.S. At least, that&#8217;s what my sister told me she read on AOL once. It&#8217;s not like we&#8217;re in the little Mayberry-like town that I grew up in.</p>
<p>But somehow, somewhere along the line, the fearful &#8220;someone&#8217;s going to break in and take her&#8221; feeling I had about both my girls when they moved out of our bed-side bassinet and into their own rooms seems to have dissipated. Not that I&#8217;m concerned about their safety any less. But now that they walk and talk and wear friendship bracelets and request &#8220;alone time&#8221; and know the lyrics to Justin Beiber songs, I have a whole new host of concerns that have apparently put kidnapping low on the list.</p>
<p>Or maybe it&#8217;s that I could imagine someone wanting to steal an angelic sleeping baby, but can&#8217;t fathom the desire to make off with a child who has a 20-minute screaming tantrum because I won&#8217;t give her a cookie three minutes after she&#8217;s had an ice cream cone.</p>
<p>Besides, the way our house is set up, our first floor windows are super high up. Definitely un-attainable by even the tallest thief or kidnapper.</p>
<p>And the place is hardly vast. If either girl sneezes in their room, we can pretty much hear it from ours. I always said the baby monitors we used were vanity items.</p>
<p>Last summer my neighbor started letting her third-grader walk the couple blocks to our local library. This seemed kind of wild to me at the time&#8212;who knows what could happen in that short distance, even with the most careful and responsible child? But I&#8217;m coming around to understanding what she allowed it. It&#8217;s no Mayberry here, but it IS a sweet little neighborhood we&#8217;re in. And if we can&#8217;t relax and enjoy it&#8212;if we can&#8217;t give our kids small tastes of independence, bite by bite&#8212;then we&#8217;re just letting the terrorist win. Or someone who we don&#8217;t want to win.</p>
<p>Who knows what I&#8217;ll be allowing my girls to do a few years from now. I hope I have some of that &#8220;let them out of the nest&#8221; courage my friend next door has with her kids. More likely I&#8217;ll be jumping out of the bushes when they&#8217;re in college to walk them across the quad at night.</p>
<p>In the meantime, I&#8217;m taking what feels like a small but valiant stance on the windows. Barring any large-ladder wielding weirdos, I think we&#8217;re safe having them open.</p>
<p>After dredging up all these memories of Dr. Unger, I just Googled the guy. I was half-scared I&#8217;d get an obit. In that clueless kid-like way, I have no idea how old he was when I was his patient. (Though I know <em>I</em> was wedging my college-aged ass into a kiddie chair in his waiting room when I last saw him, and he gently referred me to a grown-up doctor.) Thrillingly, I found a listing for him. He is alive and well&#8212;and still even in practice! Those kids who&#8217;s pics are in the collage on the wall of his office today are lucky little patients.</p>
<p>After more prowling around The Internets I found one of those doctor directory websites, which had this line on him: &#8220;Years since graduating from medical school: 57.&#8221; My math&#8217;s not good, but I think that takes him to a ripe old age.</p>
<p>Good for him. Must be all those nights sleeping with his window open that&#8217;ve kept him going.</p>
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		<title>I Plan to Age and Tell</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/05/i-plan-to-age-and-tell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/05/i-plan-to-age-and-tell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 May 2011 14:51:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Birthdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Manners]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3218</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When my mom was little she was poor as dirt. She was never one to wax nostalgic, but she did tell me a few stories about those days. Just snippets really. And they underscored the fact that&#8212;during The Depression when her dad ditched his wife and their eight (yes, EIGHT) children&#8212;she and her sibs didn&#8217;t [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When my mom was little she was poor as dirt.</p>
<p>She was never one to wax nostalgic, but she did tell me a few stories about those days. Just snippets really. And they underscored the fact that&#8212;during The Depression when her dad ditched his wife and their eight (yes, EIGHT) children&#8212;she and her sibs didn&#8217;t exactly pass the time playing with Barbie Dream Houses, or spiffing up their new Huffy bikes with handle-bar streamers.</p>
<p>No, theirs was much more of a kick-the-can existence.</p>
<p>I got the impression there was also a lot of hanging out on their front porch. (See? <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2009/12/i-love-you-i-love-you-not/" target="_blank">It&#8217;s in my genes</a>.) It was a roost from which they could survey the &#8216;hood. And wait for something exciting to happen.</p>
<p>Mom was the seventh child, but had one younger brother, my Uncle Eddy. The two of them had a little routine they&#8217;d put on for passers-by.</p>
<p>&#8220;What time is it?&#8221; Mom would ask with dramatic flourish.</p>
<p>And looking at his bare wrist Eddy would reply, &#8220;Why, it&#8217;s&#8212;<em>one hundred </em>o&#8217;clock!&#8221;</p>
<p>Yeah, okay. So it&#8217;s not much of a story, right?</p>
<p>To be honest, I&#8217;m not too clear on why she found that so uproarious. Maybe &#8217;cause it showed how kids trying to act cool and grown-up invariably blow their own covers? Perhaps she wanted to console me that I wasn&#8217;t the last child on earth to learn to tell time? (Though I think I was close.)</p>
<p>Whatever the case, Paige has been playing her own numbers game recently. But she&#8217;s hardly grand enough to get even close to the realm of 100. These days for Paigey everything is about five.</p>
<p>Five is Paige&#8217;s exaggeration number. According to a theory of my friend Ruby&#8217;s, everyone has an exaggeration number. It&#8217;s the number they fall back on when they&#8217;re awash in hyperbole. If I remember correctly, Ruby&#8217;s was 52 for a while. Which meant it wouldn&#8217;t be uncommon for her to say something like, &#8220;It took me <em>forever</em> to get out of the grocery store. There were, like, 52 people in line in front of me.&#8221;</p>
<p>I mean, I think her number was 52. Ruby&#8217;s Exaggeration Number Phase was back when she lived in Sausalito, which was about a million years ago.</p>
<p>So Paige and five. If someone asks her how old she is, she&#8217;ll sometimes smirk and say, &#8220;Five.&#8221; Her big sister is five, therefore five is the baddest-ass coolest big girl age you could ever want to be.  (Though I must say, Paige&#8217;s delivery is never terribly convincing. She&#8217;ll have some trouble passing off a fake I.D. some day&#8212;which I&#8217;m thrilled about.)</p>
<p>I often ask the girls, &#8220;Did I tell you how much I love you yet today?&#8221; And with Kate this triggers a response like, &#8220;Yes, and I love <em>you</em> 50 Redwood trees, 100 houses, and a <em>million</em> firetrucks high!&#8221;</p>
<p>Paigey says, &#8220;I love you five.&#8221;</p>
<p>Which just slays me with a tidal wave of mama love.</p>
<p>When I was talking to Paige&#8217;s preschool teacher recently I mentioned how she has this five thing. He&#8217;s one of those child development gurus who always has a nugget of wisdom to share, even when he&#8217;s handing you a plastic bag full of urine-drenched clothing. And he said that for kids Paige&#8217;s age&#8212;which, for the record, is three&#8212;five is the largest number that they can grock. They can <em>say</em> bigger numbers and even count, but I guess their brains can&#8217;t wrangle with anything that&#8217;s more than five.</p>
<p>Who knew?</p>
<p>My brain has similar challenges accepting the greatness of some numbers. Specifically 44. Which happens to be the age that I turned on Tuesday.</p>
<p>44! How the hell did that happen? In my mind my age seems to default somewhere around 32. But somehow a dozen years got slapped onto my brain&#8217;s grasp of my age without me even noticing. <em>Scary</em>.</p>
<p>When I was little I never understood why asking grown-ups their age&#8212;especially women&#8212;was so verboten. At the grocery store shopping for my birthday party once my mother bumped into a friend. The woman leaned over and asked how old I was turning. After telling her I said, &#8220;And how old are <em>you</em>?&#8221; At which point my mama nearly fainted into the nectarine display.</p>
<p>Not asking women their age was a lesson that was beaten into me as a child. And every time I was reminded of this particular point of etiquette I resolved to not become one of those women myself. Clearly they felt some shame about their age, which mystified me.</p>
<p>Who really <em>cares</em> how old you are anyway? I mean, I only asked Mrs. Froncillo that day in the grocery store to be <em>polite</em>. You know, since she&#8217;d asked me.</p>
<p>The fact is, I <em>do</em> feel a bit weird about how old I am now. In the Bay Area I&#8217;m hardly the only 40-something with young kids. But I&#8217;m also not the spring chicken of the PTA. Many of my friends are younger then me. Hell, I&#8217;ve even got four years on my husband.</p>
<p>But that&#8217;s only part of what galls me about this 44 thing. I just <em>feel</em> so much younger than 44 implies. It seems out-of-whack and unfair to have to have that big number as my reality.</p>
<p>Despite all that, there&#8217;s some part of me that feels a strong pull to do right by my childhood self. I vowed in a grocery store produce aisle that I&#8217;d never be one of those vain, self-obsessed grown-ups who feels the need to hide her age. So this is my year to push aside any glimmers of my own anxiety.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m gonna take back my age.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t plan to declare it when I meet you for the first time. I&#8217;m not getting a tattoo of two intertwined fours by my ankle. But if it comes up in conversation, I&#8217;m not shying away from saying, &#8220;I am 44 years old, thankyouverymuch.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve actually had a few chances to test this out over the past few days, and have gotten delightful reactions like, &#8220;No WAY. You look awesome!&#8221; And, &#8220;Rock on, sister.&#8221; And even a &#8220;You&#8217;re 44 years young,&#8221; which kind of indicates to me that I really AM old. But I know they were trying to be kind.</p>
<p>But whatEV. If I keep this up I&#8217;m hoping the mini-stomachache that precedes the announcement of my age will eventually go away. I&#8217;m hoping that I&#8217;ll train myself into coming around to the fact that 44 really <em>is</em> okay.</p>
<p>My friend&#8217;s father turned 75 recently. And the report from the birthday bash they threw him was that at some point in the evening he dropped to the floor and did 75 push ups. To the wild applause of his guests, of course.</p>
<p>How rad is that? Way to show you&#8217;ve still got it.</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s my plan. Every time I feel the sensation of Age Shame coming on, I&#8217;m going to get on the floor and do a bunch of push-ups. If I keep it up I&#8217;ll be able to wow the attendees at my 75th party some day.</p>
<p>Hey, I&#8217;ll be an old woman with a grossly over-developed upper body. I&#8217;ve got that to look forward to.</p>
<p>In the meantime, I can rest assured knowing that however old I am, in Paige&#8217;s eyes right now I&#8217;m only five.</p>
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		<title>The Recipe Box</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/the-recipe-box/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/the-recipe-box/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 2011 20:24:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kate's Friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3051</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I recently discovered granola. Turns out it&#8217;s really good with fruit and yogurt. Who knew? I realize this is not a revolutionary finding. I think others before me have stumbled upon this holy trinity of foods. But what can I say? I&#8217;m a late bloomer. At the holidays some friends brought us homemade granola as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I recently discovered granola. Turns out it&#8217;s really good with fruit and yogurt.</p>
<p>Who knew?</p>
<p>I realize this is not a revolutionary finding. I think others before me have stumbled upon this holy trinity of foods. But what can I say? I&#8217;m a late bloomer.</p>
<p>At the holidays some friends brought us homemade granola as a hostess gift. It sat around for a while until I was desperate for food one day. Then, as these things usually go with me, I became obsessed with it. After devouring it all, I needed to lay in new supplies. And I remembered that my mother used to make her own really really good granola.</p>
<p>Over the years I&#8217;ve found that taste memories have been a weirdly strong way of reconnecting with my bygone Mama&#8212;through her wine biscuits, her chourico and peppers, and especially her <a href="http://www.cooks.com/rec/view/0,1926,147160-249197,00.html" target="_blank">Polish golumpki</a>. So I was especially fired up to unearth this long-forgotten recipe.</p>
<p>And, luckily for me, I have her old recipe box.</p>
<p>I grabbed the black Tupperware thing from my cookbook shelf. It&#8217;s hardly a charming tin box decorated with little red roosters or the word &#8220;recipes&#8221; in some cute script. This thing is a dull dark rubber, awkwardly bigger than your typical 3&#215;5 cards, and hard to wedge into a cupboard alongside anything else. It&#8217;s unapologetic in its homeliness and obtrusiveness. And, like everything in the Mrs. Piggle Wiggle life of my mom&#8217;s, it&#8217;s utterly and thoroughly disorganized.</p>
<p>Of the 200-plus index cards, newspaper clippings, and recipes scrawled on random notepaper (&#8220;Glens Falls Cement Company&#8221; and &#8220;State of Rhode Island House of Representatives&#8221;), there was no way to distinguish entrees from side dishes from desserts. If I wanted my granola taste flashback, it was going to take some digging.</p>
<p>But as I sifted through the recipes, some hilarious in their typification of the Bruno family&#8217;s Americana cuisine&#8212;Seven-Layered Salad, Seafood Newburg, Strawberry Molded Salad, Magic Cookie Bars&#8212;I came across something totally unexpected. Postcards that my sisters and I, along with some other folks, had sent to Mom.</p>
<p>I had my kids late in life (told you I was a later bloomer). I&#8217;ve spent the majority of my existence child-free. But there are times when I feel an especially acute super-saturated dose of mama-ness. And it&#8217;s not when one of the girls runs to me for a hug &#8217;cause she bonked her head, or when one of them screams from the bathroom hallway, &#8220;I had an accident!&#8221; It&#8217;s other weird little times that are harder to put my finger on. But I do know that one of them for sure is when I feel the need to hold onto something that my daughters made for me.</p>
<p>This fall, with Kate just a few weeks into kindergarten, Mark and I went to Back to School night. All the parents were given a little envelope of things their kid had made for them. The one from Kate contained a bunch of different drawings, and a strip of maroon paper that had the words &#8220;My family is ____.&#8221; printed on it. In the space Kate had written in &#8220;SPSHL.&#8221;</p>
<p>I wanted to weep with how sweet it was, and run around the room waving it in the faces of all the other parents. &#8220;Look what my smart Katie did! I didn&#8217;t even <em>know</em> she could sound out and write words! Is this not TO DIE FOR?!&#8221;</p>
<p>If only there were a locket big enough for me to hang that thing from my neck every day. It&#8217;d be like some maternal gang medallion.</p>
<p>If the house ever goes up in flames, I&#8217;m running back in to get that scrap of paper.</p>
<p>So anyway, finding these post cards, wedged into my mom&#8217;s recipe box with the same lack of order everything else was shoved in there, was like unearthing a trove of <em>her</em> my-family-is-SPSHL papers. Things I can imagine she wanted to look back on one day. You know, some day when she was hot on the trail of her Spicy Swedish Meatballs recipe.</p>
<p>One card from 1996 is from my cousin Nancy, who my mom considered to be her fifth daughter. It&#8217;s entitled &#8220;Route 1 to San Francsico&#8221; and pictures the Pacific Coast&#8217;s dramatic cliffs and coastline. &#8220;I have sore, tired feet from traipsing all over this beautiful city,&#8221; Nancy wrote. &#8220;The weather has been pretty weird&#8212;but a nice change from R.I. heat and humidity.&#8221;</p>
<p>One card from London, date-stamped 1998 is in my sister Marie&#8217;s writing. &#8220;Yesterday was the queen&#8217;s birthday and they had a special ceremony at the changing of the guard.&#8221; Turns out they never laid eyes on her Highness, as they were hoping to. On that card my nephew&#8212;now a few years out of college&#8212;signed his full name in a sweet, loopy school-boy script.</p>
<p>And from Venice, in a card without a date, my other nephew reveals, &#8220;Daddy got us lost twice already.&#8221;</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a card from me praising the wonders of the new-fangled heat-resistent spatula, two of which I&#8217;d apparently included with the note. And my friend Amelia sent a save-worthy card, addressed to &#8220;Mrs. B&#8221; as she called her, thanking mom for the meatballs she&#8217;d made her and remarking, &#8220;despite my protestations, I haven&#8217;t taken off the kakhi J. Crew shorts since you kindly passed them along.&#8221;</p>
<p>There was one from my junior semester in Paris, and another from my sister&#8217;s visit to Rome. For all I know more cards will fall out of Mom&#8217;s battered Betty Crocker cook book the next time I haul it out for something.</p>
<p>Did I feel at all voyeuristic reading mail that was addressed to my mom? <em>Nah</em>.</p>
<p>The fact that they were postcards&#8212;generally not the medium one reserves for private or intimate communication&#8212;helped me get past any such thoughts. And with her gone, I can&#8217;t help but feel like any new discoveries about her world are fair game.  In fact, they&#8217;re happy accidents I relish.</p>
<p>Besides, it wasn&#8217;t the contents of the cards that was revelatory. It was finding them in this unlikely spot. Getting a glimmer of insight into what it was my mother held dear. Always one to choose home over travel, I imagine my mother cared less for the places we all went, and more for the fact that her people thought about her when they were away.</p>
<p>Kate&#8217;s class put on a play a couple weeks back. A fabulous rain-forest-themed musical where the kids sang in English and Spanish, signed all the words in <a href="http://www.lifeprint.com/" target="_blank">ASL</a>, helped make their costumes, and painted and built out the dizzying colorful set.</p>
<p>It was a <em>tour de force</em>. The students have come light years from their &#8220;My family is____.&#8221; exercise. And Kate, as Tree Frog #2, was unstoppable.</p>
<p>The day after the play Kate&#8217;s backpack was brimming with artwork as usual. As I sifted through the crumpled papers&#8212;some penned by Katie, other art-gifts drawn by her friends (&#8220;To my frend Kate, Love Emily&#8221;) I came across a yellow envelope that said MOM in red, surrounded by black hearts and stars. Inside it was this letter:</p>
<p><em>Thac you MOM!</em></p>
<p><em>For makeg my costom.</em></p>
<p><em>It was grat. Avre wun wonid to tac picshrs uv me! Thac you for hlpeg me practist my lins.</em></p>
<p><em>Love Kate</em></p>
<p>I had to sit down on the kitchen floor to read it again.</p>
<p>Thank <em>you</em>, my dear Katie. I&#8217;m not sure where I&#8217;ll stow this little gem, but you can bet that this letter is a keeper.</p>
<p>As for the rest of you, if you&#8217;re ever seeking out a recipe for Ratatouille, Tuna Casserole, Green Tomatoe [sic] Relish, Pecan Sandies, or something simply called Bean Bake, I&#8217;m your gal. I&#8217;ve also got one for a little crowd-pleaser called Cut Glass Torte, which involves <em>two</em> different colors of Jell-O, whipped cream, and graham cracker crumbs. Take that, <a href="http://www.chezpanisse.com/about/alice-waters/" target="_blank">Alice Waters</a>!</p>
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		<title>Seeing is Believing</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/01/seeing-is-believing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/01/seeing-is-believing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 04:03:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2649</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I don&#8217;t believe in heaven or the afterlife or reincarnation, but I do believe in old blue Volvos. My mom used to drive one. One of those boxy four-door sedans circa 1980-something. The ancient green one she had before that&#8212;that I learned to drive on&#8212;only had an AM radio. Talk about a character building experience [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I don&#8217;t believe in heaven or the afterlife or reincarnation, but I do believe in old blue Volvos.</p>
<p>My mom used to drive one. One of those boxy four-door sedans circa 1980-something. The ancient green one she had before that&#8212;that I learned to drive on&#8212;only had an AM radio. Talk about a character building experience for a teenager. Name any <a href="http://www.richardandkarencarpenter.com" target="_blank">Carpenters</a>, <a href="http://www.eltonjohn.com" target="_blank">Elton John</a>, or <a href="http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://blogs.citypages.com/gimmenoise/neil%2520sedaka%2520funny.jpg&amp;imgrefurl=http://blogs.citypages.com/gimmenoise/2008/12/neil_sedakas_ch.php&amp;h=512&amp;w=400&amp;sz=85&amp;tbnid=miT0ohfgWQshbM:&amp;tbnh=131&amp;tbnw=102&amp;prev=/images%3Fq%3Dneil%2Bsedaka&amp;zoom=1&amp;q=neil+sedaka&amp;usg=__4dDWvqE9u-UF1CMBjHLkrvKwhSQ=&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=2644Tb24M4y8sQPYo8yiAw&amp;ved=0CEoQ9QEwBg" target="_blank">Neil Sedaka</a> song and I can likely recite each line flawlessly. I was a girl before my time, I tell you.</p>
<p>Or at least, out of step with the times.</p>
<p>Anyway, when I first moved to San Francisco, I was surprised to see so many old cars on the road. Vintage Dodge Darts and ancient Volkswagon Beetles with original paint perfectly intact aren&#8217;t uncommon in these parts. Cars that would&#8217;ve been devoured by the Midwestern or East Coast road salt decades ago just keep chuggin&#8217; along here.</p>
<p>So it&#8217;s not unusual for me to come across old blue Volvos. Ones exactly like the one my mom usedta drive.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll be pushing the double-stroller frantically down the street, late for Kate&#8217;s ballet class, and I&#8217;ll turn a corner and there&#8217;s Mom&#8217;s car. Parked outside some house like she&#8217;s inside having a cup of tea and a game of Scrabble. Or I&#8217;ll come upon a yard sale, pull over, and I&#8217;ll see I&#8217;ve double-parked right behind her. When I open the door for the girls to pile out, I half expect to see Mom&#8217;s gray-haired noggin bent over a stack of used books, or rummaging through a box of <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/12/family-savings/" target="_blank">table linens</a>.</p>
<p>Just this Sunday, Mark and I were coercing the kids to trudge two more blocks to our car. They were fried from a visit to the farmer&#8217;s market. Too much sun and dancing in front of the band. It was like some impossible against-all-odds trek over the Alps to make it 50 more yards to the parking lot. I&#8217;d nearly given up, was about to sit down on the sidewalk and tell Mark, &#8220;Go on ahead without me.&#8221; And then I saw Mom&#8217;s car parked up ahead.</p>
<p>And I kinda smirked. Although Mark had no idea what I was doing, I actually ran up a half-block and took a picture of it with my cell phone. Then I circled back to herd us forward, having tapped into some energy reserves I wasn&#8217;t aware I had.</p>
<p>Have I gone mad? Or, from beyond the grave, is my mother strategically parking her car in places I&#8217;ll pass by? Is this her sly eccentric way of showing me she&#8217;s still somehow around? Still keeping tabs on me?</p>
<p>Because if so, I am TOTALLY picking up on it. Message received, Mom!</p>
<p>This realization is, of course, thrilling and relieving. What I didn&#8217;t mention about the fact that I don&#8217;t think my mom is an angel hanging out on a cloud with her dead sisters and all our past dogs, is that it&#8217;d be <em>so much nicer</em> if I actually<em> </em>DID believe that. I would LOVE to feel confident that she&#8217;s somehow seen my children. That she admired the apple pie I made on Christmas day (her recipe). That she&#8217;s cheering me on when the daily doldrums of mothering set in.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d be frankly kinda psyched if my belief&#8212;that the end of life is really the cold dark end&#8212;isn&#8217;t really altogether true.</p>
<p>Now, lest you think I&#8217;m alone at all this, I have a friend&#8212;a terrifically intelligent and thoughtful woman&#8212;who believes her dead Mama comes to her in the form of a raven. You know, she&#8217;ll see a few birds on her front lawn or gathered on a telephone wire and sometimes get this inkling, this sense, of her mother&#8217;s presence.</p>
<p>Which I think is awesome. (In fact, whenever I see a raven now I think it&#8217;s her mom too.) What can I say? One gal&#8217;s old blue Volvo is another gal&#8217;s big black bird.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s funny is I read this Motherboard story about <a href="http://www.bhg.com/health-family/school/back-to-school/how-to-let-go-as-they-grow/" target="_blank">how to let go of your kids as they grow up</a>&#8212;how not to be a smother mother. I love the concept of giving your kids &#8220;roots and wings.&#8221; Roots so they know where their home is, and wings to set them free in the world. I really hope I can get that balance right with Kate and Paige.</p>
<p>But at the same time here I am&#8212;fully grown with kids of my own&#8212;and thinking that even though my mom&#8217;s not even <em>alive</em>, she&#8217;s still somehow mothering me in some cosmic car parking way. Maybe I could use a little smothering of my own.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve already confessed my fandom of the sappy-excellent show <a href="http://www.nbc.com/parenthood/" target="_blank"><em>Parenthood</em></a>. So in a recent episode the parents of a five-year-old have to tell their daughter that a hurt bird they&#8217;ve been taking care of died. The Mom and Dad strategize about how to break the news, how to gently introduce the hard reality of death to their sweet innocent. When they finally talk to the twerp, the mom caves when she sees her daughter getting sad, and blurts out that the bird &#8220;is in heaven now&#8212;with<em> Grandma</em>!&#8221; Which had <em>not</em> been the plan for their little talk.</p>
<p>I super don&#8217;t like <a href="http://www.nbc.com/parenthood/bios/erika-christensen/index.shtml" target="_blank">that mom character</a> on the show. But on this one topic, man, I can feel her pain.</p>
<p>Because, I&#8217;m truly saddened to report, sweet little Freezey, Room 2&#8242;s pet frog <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/12/kissing-frogs/" target="_blank">who stayed with us during Winter Break</a>, died last week. (Side note: I&#8217;d like to clearly state that this happened when he was back in the classroom. Not on our watch.)</p>
<p>Kate was pretty sad about it, but I was <em>crushed</em>. She laid the news on me on our way to pick up Paige from school. She was all casual&#8212;no warning, no &#8220;Are you sitting down?&#8221; (even though I obviously was, because I was driving).</p>
<p>I was heartbroken. We loved that little damn frog!</p>
<p>I wanted to tell Kate that Freezey was swimming around in a divine froggy pond in the sky. That he was re-united with his former tank-mate Cutie Pie. And that they were happy and free and could eat all the stinky food pellets they wanted. Hell, I wanted to tell MYSELF that. But instead I handed Kate a couple pretzels and made her promise not to tell Paigey.</p>
<p>On Monday, while shopping for stuff for Paige&#8217;s b-day party invites, I wandered over a couple blocks to the pet store. I mean, <a href="http://www.eastbayvivarium.com/" target="_blank">the mother of all snake, frog, and other crawly-creature types store</a>. It&#8217;s where the Room 2 teachers got Freezey. And even though they were clear&#8212;no more classroom pets this year&#8212;I&#8217;d gotten to thinking. Wondering about the viability of a new McClusky family friend.</p>
<p>So this place. It&#8217;s like everyone who works there has face piercings and huge tattoos and is scary knowledgeable about the animals. Like the geeky ultra-smart weirdos that work in the labs on those TV crime shows.</p>
<p>I browsed frogs. Admired cute spotted newts. Got full-body shudders from a sunny-yellow boa that apparently had a big dinner the night before. And finally I screwed up the courage to ask one of the goth-girl employees about what a tank would cost, how much maintenance was needed, yadda, yadda, yadda.</p>
<p>And as I got in the car and drove off I questioned my motives. Buying a pet doesn&#8217;t bring Freezey back. Would the girls groove on having an amphibian sibling? Or would its novelty eventually fade, like some expensive toy that gets shoved to the back of the closet&#8212;an expensive toy whose tank water you have to change, and who you have to feed live worms&#8230;</p>
<p>At a stop sign, I dug around in my purse for my cell phone, and looked down to hit Mark&#8217;s work number. A blast from a car horn made me look up. In my rear view mirror a bearded man waved his arms in a &#8220;you gonna go, or aren&#8217;t you?&#8221; gesture.</p>
<p>He wasn&#8217;t in a blue Volvo, which was a shame, since I was looking for a sign.</p>
<p>Am I gonna go? Well, sir, that remains to be seen.</p>
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		<title>Making a List, Checking it Twice</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/12/making-a-list-checking-it-twice/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/12/making-a-list-checking-it-twice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Dec 2010 20:25:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Misc Neuroses]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scary Stuff]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2499</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I was a little late to the game this year, but last week I finally put in my order for our Christmas cards. All 265 of them. When did I become this person? I mean, how could it be that we send out so many cards? It&#8217;s not like this was something my mother ever [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was a little late to the game this year, but last week I finally put in my order for our Christmas cards. All 265 of them.</p>
<p>When did I become this person?</p>
<p>I mean, how could it be that we send out so many cards? It&#8217;s not like this was something <em>my</em> mother ever did. She had an aging trove of Christmas cards stashed away in the bottom drawer of her roll-top desk. (The same desk I use today.) Cards with cardinals and pine cones on them, and sometimes an old-school dusting of glitter. And she&#8217;d send out maybe nine or so each year, and write personal notes in each one.</p>
<p>She was far from gussying us up in velvet headbands and fair isle sweaters for holiday photo cards. (Like I do&#8212;sometimes at gunpoint&#8212;with my girls.)</p>
<p>And in her crusty New England way, she found it tacky for people to send holiday cards to local folks they see all the time.</p>
<p>Well, clearly she&#8217;s never met my dry cleaner.</p>
<p>Okay, so I only wish I was kidding about sending our dry cleaner a card. It&#8217;s actually the first year they are on Our List. The thing is, they&#8217;re just a few blocks from us&#8212;the sweetest Chinese family you&#8217;d ever want to meet&#8212;and they do that thing where they display all their customers&#8217; cards in the store. It&#8217;s so darn neighborly. For years we&#8217;ve been looking at our friends&#8217; kids pictures under the glass on the counter. Hell, this year we&#8217;re getting in on the action too.</p>
<p>Along with sending a card to our pediatrician who also showcases them, but in a much more taped-to-the-walls shucks-we-love-our-patients kinda way. Every winter when I&#8217;m in the office for some inevitable kiddie illness I scan to see if our card got good placement.</p>
<p>I know. Pathetic, right?</p>
<p>But kinda true. Even though I know some secretary is just taping them all up like a zombie in no particular order, and getting paper cuts and complaining under her breath that it&#8217;s not part of her job description. Still, I want to feel like my kids aren&#8217;t hidden behind a pile of back issues of <a href="http://www.highlights.com/" target="_blank"><em>Highlights</em> magazine</a>.</p>
<p>My from womb-to-tomb friend from home, who I&#8217;ll call Adeline, well, her parents had a hard-core Christmas card system. When I was at their kitchen table once around the holidays I noticed a long list of names. There were check marks by some of them. Turns out that if Adeline&#8217;s parents didn&#8217;t get a card from someone they&#8217;d sent one too, that person got cut from their list next year.</p>
<p>Seemed kinda harsh to me at the time. But really, that might be a good way for me to whittle down <em>my</em> list a bit.</p>
<p>Anyway, about the cards. I insist on sending ones with pics of the girls. I love seeing my far-flung friends&#8217; kids who I rarely get to lay eyes on. And even though Mom would call me gauche, I even send cards to our neighbors who live RIGHT NEXT DOOR. (And yes, I send them through the mail. So sue me.)</p>
<p>I have the good fortune of having <a href="http://marymchenry.com/" target="_blank">an amazingly crazily talented photographer</a> amongst my nearest and dearest amigas. And even though my brain tells me I should not constantly hit her up to take pics of my kids&#8212;even though I know I should respect some sort of separation of church and state in our friendship&#8212;I just. Can&#8217;t. Help. Myself.</p>
<p>So despite how madly busy and in-demand she&#8217;s been, and despite how she even kinda sorta outright told me she wasn&#8217;t doing holiday card shoots this year&#8212;and despite the fact that I know she hadn&#8217;t even had time to take pics of HER OWN KIDS&#8212;despite all that, well, I showed up at her house with the girls. With their hair all neat and combed. And their Christmas dresses. And even a wreath to use in the background in case she didn&#8217;t have any decorations up yet.</p>
<p>When did I become this person?</p>
<p>And if that weren&#8217;t already obnoxious enough, I then had to plead and beg and whine and bribe to get Kate to take off her paint-splattered school clothes and put on the dreamy Christmas-in-Norway dress I bought for her. It was hot, it was itchy, it was miserable, she complained.</p>
<p>But I was blinded by my vision. She would wear that dress, damn it. We would take the picture.</p>
<p>And you know? She did. And Mary, bless her heart, took the picture. And I likely alienated both my daughters and my friend. But damn, did I get a cute photo.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ll see. You&#8217;re probably getting a card from us.</p>
<p>My holiday mania knows no boundaries. Or decorum. Last week, like some lunatic mother hopped up on spiked eggnog, I approached the two kindergarten teachers on the front steps of Kate&#8217;s school. In the swirling chaos of afternoon pick-up I huddled them together and asked, demanded, interrogated them: Why in all that is fun and good and festive, is there no holiday pageant or party or play at the school? No musical medley? No special assembly? No small child wearing a poorly-adhered white cotton-ball beard who charmingly forgets his lines to the delight of all the adults?</p>
<p>The thing is, I think I KNOW why. Though those poor parent-pecked teachers don&#8217;t make the policies, I think the reason no one&#8217;s makin&#8217; merry &#8217;round Kate&#8217;s school is in our Northern Californian politically correct overdrive, there&#8217;s some fierce anxiety about not representing every possible religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, hair color, shoe size, and holiday.</p>
<p>Of course, the nice scared-of-me teachers did not tell me this. While likely beckoning to security to have me dragged away, they kindly informed me that there actually IS an event. A small celebration that no one needs to dress or bake for. Parents don&#8217;t even attend.</p>
<p>And the event is for&#8212;get this&#8212;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Festivus" target="_blank">Festivus</a>! Yes, my child&#8217;s school is borrowing from a time-honored Seinfeldian tradition and celebrating <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbfMmCf5-ds" target="_blank">the for-the-rest-of-us holiday</a>. I wonder if they&#8217;ll be incorporating the traditional Airing of Grievances. Or the Feats of Strength in which the host is wrestled to the ground and the celebration isn&#8217;t over until he&#8217;s successfully been pinned.</p>
<p>Maybe, if the kids are lucky, they&#8217;ll also get to <em>not</em> decorate the Festivus pole. (It&#8217;s traditionally left bare.)</p>
<p>Actually, the teachers explained that in their interpretation of the anti-holiday, the kids will go from classroom to classroom where multiple craft projects will be set up.</p>
<p>Who knows, maybe they&#8217;ll do a Jell-o shot in each room too, like some college dorm party.</p>
<p>Well, what can I do? Is there a small part of me that thinks a school&#8217;s homage to Seinfeld is funny? Sure. I mean, I had a crush on George Costanza just like the next gal. But this Festivus work-around still doesn&#8217;t satisfy my need to gather as a community and get into the spirit. I guess I&#8217;ll just have to loiter around some Catholic school pageants to get my fix of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dfln0gvLyk" target="_blank"><em>Gloria In Excelsis Deo</em></a>.</p>
<p>In other holiday happenings, I have managed to show some restraint. For years I&#8217;ve spearheaded day-long nap-robbing family field trips to scenic far-off Christmas tree farms. We&#8217;d spend $120 to chop down <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2006/12/pygmy-tree-and-more-puking/" target="_blank">runty picked-over trees</a>, buy hot chocolate for the kids even though it was 68 degrees, and inevitably someone would barf on the drive home. But this year I&#8217;ve tossed my Norman Rockwell tree-fetching fantasies aside. On Saturday we went to&#8212;wait for it!&#8212;<em>Home</em> <em>Depot</em> for our tree.</p>
<p>It was close by and convenient. The tree was $35. And it&#8217;s hands-down our biggest and best-looking tree yet.</p>
<p>This was a breakthrough for me.</p>
<p>Mark was thrilled.</p>
<p>And while I&#8217;m on a roll, I might as well brag that I&#8217;m also NOT taking my children to sit on Santa&#8217;s lap. Nope, not this year, or possibly EVER AGAIN. (Unless of course they beg for it.)</p>
<p>I have a friend who lines up wonderful pictures of her kids with Santa along the top of her piano. She&#8217;s had them taken every year, and I&#8217;m so deeply jealous of the freakin&#8217; consistency and tradition and keepsake-ness of it all.</p>
<p>But my kids fear the man in red. One year when Kate was about 14 months, I waited in an endless Santa line with a Mama friend and her son. I&#8217;d just finished telling her how I&#8217;d weaned Kate. And then, when we finally stepped into the tool-shed-like roofed Santa nook, <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2006/12/not-so-much-about-santa/" target="_blank">Kate took one look at Santa, then clutched me in a full-bore panic</a>. She started balling, screaming and pumping her fist open and closed, signing for &#8220;milk.&#8221;</p>
<p>So we detoured to a red velvet-ish settee surrounded by poinsettias, where I caved on the she&#8217;s-finally-weaned thing I&#8217;d just gone on and on to my friend about.</p>
<p>Eventually Kate was willing to have her pic taken, but only if she stayed on MY lap. I kind of held her over towards Santa, and leaned back so they could crop me out. It&#8217;s a wonder my bare boobie wasn&#8217;t in the picture too. (Now THAT would have made a memorable card.)</p>
<p>Anyway, to punish me, Kate puked all over me in the Safeway parking lot later that day. To such an extent that I drove home in my bra.</p>
<p>Good times.</p>
<p>And, undeterred, I actually tried AGAIN the next year. And lo! I got a really cute pic of Kate. And the rental mall Santa even had all his teeth!</p>
<p>But the year after <em>that</em> she lost her Santa shit again. So last year I finally decided to do what mothers are supposed to&#8212;protect their kids from un-due trauma. I laid to rest my dream of a piano lined with darling Santa pics through the years.</p>
<p>In fact, we don&#8217;t even <em>own</em> a piano. So that makes it easier too.</p>
<p>I mean, I can&#8217;t be the only Mama who wrangles with an irrational desire to do up Christmas in all its perfection, can I? Even when it means traumatizing my children, their teachers, and my photographer friends?</p>
<p>How many of <em>you</em> are planning to drag your unwilling kids by their ears to sit on Santa&#8217;s lap? It appears <a href="http://community.parents.com/content/MomsonMotherboard/journal/15674575/Santa-Too-Scary" target="_blank">some other Mamas are discussing this on Motherboard</a>. (God bless the Internets for always proving you&#8217;re not alone.)</p>
<p>I may have cut corners on our tree selection process and visits to Santa. But my Christmas spirit is unwavering. I have every intention of keeping in close contact with that jolly old soul.</p>
<p>And to make sure that happens, I&#8217;ve added Old Saint Nick to my Christmas card list.</p>
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		<title>Hit the Road, Angel of Death</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/11/hit-the-road-angel-of-death/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/11/hit-the-road-angel-of-death/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 2010 20:06:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daddio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Doctors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Earthquakes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Preschool]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Scary Stuff]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sisters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2329</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When I left Paigey&#8217;s preschool one morning a couple weeks ago, I noticed a klatch of women&#8212;other Mamas from the school&#8212;standing on the lawn. They were dabbing at the corners of their eyes with Kleenex. It was clear something happened to someone at the school. And somehow I knew it was about a pregnancy. In [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When I left Paigey&#8217;s preschool one morning a couple weeks ago, I noticed a klatch of women&#8212;other Mamas from the school&#8212;standing on the lawn. They were dabbing at the corners of their eyes with Kleenex.</p>
<p>It was clear something happened to someone at the school. And somehow I knew it was about a pregnancy.</p>
<p>In the crosswalk I caught up with a woman I knew. A mother of one of Paigey&#8217;s classmates. Tugging at her elbow, I implored without greeting her, &#8220;Okay, so what happened?&#8221;</p>
<p>And damn damn damn my intuition. I was right. A mom from the school whose due date was that very day, had a kicking healthy baby just the day before. But when she went to the hospital that morning, she found out that her baby had died.</p>
<p>So sickeningly sad. Someone said later it was strangled by its own umbilical chord. What brutal live-giveth-and-taketh-away irony.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh God, oh God,&#8221; I said, wrapping my arms around my stomach on the sidewalk. &#8220;Do you know her name?&#8221; Because, as it turned out, I know a pregnant woman&#8212;someone I&#8217;ve worked with and like a great deal&#8212;whose son goes to the preschool. From her Facebook posts, I was pretty sure her due date was that day.</p>
<p>It turned out it was NOT my friend. That in that tiny school there were actually two women with the same due date. And although it didn&#8217;t diminish the tragedy of the whole thing, I still felt like I&#8217;d dodged a kind of bullet. If only by association.</p>
<p>Do you ever go through phases where your computer monitor fizzles and goes black, your car&#8217;s transmission gives out, and you drop your cell phone in the toilet? All in the same week? It&#8217;s as if there&#8217;s some mechanical technological curse on you. If you touch it, it will cease to function&#8212;invariably days after its warranty expired.</p>
<p>I feel like I&#8217;m currently in that mode, but with <em>people</em>.</p>
<p>Not long ago my sweet Uncle Adolph (no relation to the Nazi) passed away. It was his time. I mean, he was very old, and had been wrangling with Alzheimer&#8217;s. But those things make it no easier to grapple with the fact that someone who you knew is suddenly just not here any more.</p>
<p>Uncle Adolph was married to one of my mom&#8217;s favorite sisters, Scottie. I think her real name was Sophie, but I never once heard her called that. The two of them were known as &#8220;Scottie and Ade.&#8221; How much does that rock?</p>
<p>They lived in a small house on a big piece of land on the outskirts of mom&#8217;s home town. And what I remember of him is this: Uncle Adolph had a huge garden. In his day job, he was something else. A custodian of some sort, I think. But in his heart, he was a gardener.</p>
<p>We&#8217;d pick things from his garden in the evenings, right before dinnertime. He called cucumbers &#8216;cukes&#8217; which was weird and cool to me. He didn&#8217;t talk much, but he&#8217;d wipe dirt off a big yellow squash or an eggplant or a strawberry and say, &#8220;Now THAT&#8217;S a good one,&#8221; then hand it to me.</p>
<p>We lived two hours away, so I didn&#8217;t see him often or know him very well. But it always felt special being welcomed as an insider into his garden world.</p>
<p>In fact, whenever I conjure a vegetable garden in my mind&#8217;s eye I see Uncle Adolph&#8217;s garden. I think of him most of the time I&#8217;m chopping up cukes too.</p>
<p>Early last week I got a sister-wide email. The four of us mass communicate this way sometimes. But the contents of this one were a bummer. Dad&#8217;s long-time neighbor and best friend Eddie had died. A man in his mid-80s, who you&#8217;d have sworn wasn&#8217;t a day over 65.</p>
<p>Dad and Eddie did projects. Built birdhouses, step-stools for grandchildren, and did all the standard house maintenance stuff. Eddie had a few years on my father, but was vivacious as all get out, and handy as hell. Dad would ask Eddie to help him do something like bring the AC units from the garage to the upstairs bedrooms. And I can&#8217;t say this for sure, but I picture Dad acting in more of a &#8216;supervisory&#8217; role, while Eddie did the actual (and proverbial) heavy lifting. It wouldn&#8217;t be weird to see Eddie dangling from a tree in dad&#8217;s yard, sawing off a rotting branch.</p>
<p>Regardless of who did what, or whose tools they used, there was no score-keeping between those two. They were a good team.</p>
<p>Eddie&#8217;s wife passed away a couple months ago. He was understandably sad, but hanging in. Back to his projects and puttering, and eating occasional dinners at Dad&#8217;s. But then, per my sister&#8217;s email, the lights were on in the house when they shouldn&#8217;t have been, or something like that, which made Dad concerned. Especially when Eddie didn&#8217;t answer the phone.</p>
<p>So Dad let himself in with his key, and found his dear friend sitting slumped over the dinner table. Quietly, suddenly, gone.</p>
<p>Eddie will be sorely missed.</p>
<p>I spent a long time hiding death from Kate. Even if I was doing something like throwing away brown neglected house plants, if she asked me why I was doing it I&#8217;d avoid saying they &#8220;died.&#8221; Silly, I know, but I feared the domino effect of her busy mind. If a plant could die, then couldn&#8217;t a <em>person?</em> And if a person could die, then didn&#8217;t that mean me or her Dad&#8212;or other people she loves&#8212;could? Or even her?</p>
<p>I felt utterly unequipped to navigate those conversations. I hate thinking about all that stuff myself. So why not extend her innocence for as long as possible?</p>
<p>Around that time I came across an old book of mine that Kate nearly-instantly love love <em>loved</em>. Oh, and me too. It&#8217;s called <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Kokos-Kitten-Reading-Rainbow-Book/dp/0590444255" target="_blank"><em>Koko&#8217;s Kitten</em></a>, and it&#8217;s about that gorilla, Koko, who learned to communicate using sign language. And if that wasn&#8217;t cute enough, she also <a href="http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.chocochips.co.uk/koko%27s%2520kitten2.jpg&amp;imgrefurl=http://www.chocochips.co.uk/2009/11/post_206.html&amp;h=700&amp;w=700&amp;sz=114&amp;tbnid=lyImh1J9mwh50M:&amp;tbnh=140&amp;tbnw=140&amp;prev=/images%3Fq%3Dkoko%2527s%2Bkitten&amp;zoom=1&amp;q=koko%27s+kitten&amp;usg=__x7sW11TDkkGG5g10tPNADQkj-ig=&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=11njTIb4OYuisQP52IFn&amp;ved=0CCMQ9QEwAQ">became friends with a kitten</a>.</p>
<p>Big tough gorilla. Wee wittle kitten. Lots of pictures of them snuggling. Name one thing better.</p>
<p>I read the book dozens of times to Kate, always avoiding the part where the kitty cat, All Ball, gets killed. Yes, this amazing story of cross-species friendship takes a sudden tragic turn when All Ball gets offed by a car. A brutal plot twist even for us grown-ups. Thankfully, with a pre-literate toddler it&#8217;s fairly easy to bluff your way through the sad parts.</p>
<p>I guess one of the reasons I hid death from Kate for so long has to do with my own childhood experience of coming to understand death. I remember it so clearly. I was in the car with my mom, driving by Almacs grocery store, and I suddenly pieced together the fact that &#8220;old people die&#8221; and my grandmother (Mom&#8217;s mom) was old.</p>
<p>I was sobbing. Struck with panic over the unfairness of it. Heartbroken by the thought of Bopchi being gone.</p>
<p>My mother, ever the realist, responded to my fearful questions by saying something like, &#8220;Well, yes, she probably <em>will</em> die soon.&#8221;</p>
<p>Note: This did not make me feel better.</p>
<p>This is why, after the devastation in Haiti, when Kate nervously asked if we have earthquakes in San Francisco, I paused for a beat then said, &#8220;<em>Noooooooo</em>. Earthquakes <em>HERE</em>? Never happen.&#8221;</p>
<p>But Kate&#8217;s a world-weary kindergartener now. Today&#8217;s five-year-olds seem like the third-graders of my youth. Which is to say, she&#8217;s hip to death. Our friends&#8217; pets have died. Kate knows my mom died before she was born. And, thanks to my NPR habit, she&#8217;s heard on the car radio about soldiers, bomb victims, and others dying. (Try as I do, turning down the volume <em>after</em> something unsavory is broadcast never seems to work.)</p>
<p>Sometimes weighty news like the death of her great grandpa barely registers with Kate. I&#8217;ve actually <em>wanted</em> her to feel sadder. (Guess I&#8217;ve come a long from the days of throwing out house plants that &#8220;weren&#8217;t happy anymore.&#8221;) Then Kate surprises me by sobbing on her bed and drawing &#8216;I Miss You&#8217; cards for a neighborhood cat we barely knew.</p>
<p>It must be her way of regulating only what she can manage to process. I should have trusted Nature to have built into her something that helps her do that.</p>
<p>As for me, the day of the sad drop-off at Paige&#8217;s school I saw my still-prego friend Margot at afternoon pick-up. I was so thrilled, so very relieved to see her in her healthy baby-filled state, I nearly took a running leap to straddle her belly in a full-body hug.</p>
<p>But I was even happier to hear that nearly two weeks after she was scheduled to make her appearance, her cute-as-the-dickens long-lashed baby girl was born. <em>Hooray!</em> Mother and baby are all aglow and love-drenched and healthy (if not a bit frustrated by all the waiting).</p>
<p>Take <em>that</em>, Angel of Death.</p>
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		<title>Locked and Loaded for Thanksgiving</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/11/locked-and-loaded-for-thanksgiving/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/11/locked-and-loaded-for-thanksgiving/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Nov 2010 20:27:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Housewife Superhero]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sisters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2346</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My mother got headaches on holidays. The kind that required to her to be alone in her darkened bedroom. A room that she entered after shouting, “A little bit of appreciation would be nice!” then slamming her door. Truth be told, I’m not sure this holiday &#8216;tradition&#8217; took place on a truly regular basis, like [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My mother got headaches on holidays. The kind that required to her to be alone in her darkened bedroom. A room that she entered after shouting, “A little bit of appreciation would be nice!” then slamming her door.</p>
<p>Truth be told, I’m not sure this holiday &#8216;tradition&#8217; took place on a truly regular basis, like the arrival of eggnog at grocery stores. But it did go down a few times for sure. Which in my tattered memory qualifies as something.</p>
<p>Of course, back then, my three sisters and I thought she was a drama queen. We rolled our eyes, called her nasty names (under our breath), and phoned friends to bemoan our misery. But now, as a Mama myself, I’m not so sure my mother was the offending party.</p>
<p>When I think of my mom at the holidays, I see her rolling out these Italian fruit cookies she used to make. More often than not, this was a late-night project. It took up all the counter space and the kitchen table. The cookies are super time-intensive and the dough&#8217;s delicate and tricky to work with&#8212;so much so that even now as a graduate of cooking school, I&#8217;ve shied away from ever attempting them.</p>
<p>But us kids loved them. They’d become tradition. So even if it meant finding time to bake at 10PM&#8212;and even though they were her ex-husband&#8217;s family recipe&#8212;Mom made them. Never fail. Every year.</p>
<p>Like many of the things she poured time and energy into&#8212;making pine cone wreaths, going to a farm for real hay for our manger, nurturing Christmas cacti year-round and baking cranberry bread on Christmas morning&#8212;all these things we all just took as traditions. Hardly considering how Mom toiled to maintain them.</p>
<p>What I’d pay now to be a fly on the wall back then. There were four of us girls, one of her. What was it we did to set off her tirades? Lazed about in our <a href="http://www.serenecomfort.com/Lanz-Flannel-Nightgown-Classic-V-Neckline-in-Royal-Blue-Tyrolean-P2947.aspx" target="_blank">Lanz granny gowns</a>, refusing to even let the dog out, when she&#8217;d woken up at 5AM to start the bird? Moaned about going with her to Christmas Mass? Or complained that the cocktail sauce for the shrimp was too spicy&#8212;or worse&#8212;was a new recipe we weren&#8217;t used to?</p>
<p>Embarrassingly entitled behavior, I know. But all totally feasible scenarios.</p>
<p>From where I stand now&#8212;a Mama who’s decorated and baked and shopped and wrapped ‘til all hours of the night&#8212;I can’t help but think that the odds were Mom’s tantrums were legit.</p>
<p>Too bad it’s too late to tell her I feel her pain.</p>
<p>When Paige was in a crappy sleep cycle a while back, waking up sometimes five times a night, I was also dragging my ass up at 6AM for <a href="http://www.oaklandbootcamp.com/" target="_blank">boot camp</a>. <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/?s=boot+camp" target="_blank">I was a zombie</a>. Some days when Paigey napped, I&#8217;d crawl into my own bed. But Kate doesn’t have the ‘constitution’ for naps. (The gal’s natural pace is hopped-up like a speed fiend’s, and I have no one but myself to blame.) So to ensure Katie-Pie was well occupied, I&#8217;d plop her in front of the boob tube. I felt guilty, but I also felt so very very sleepy.</p>
<p>A couple weeks later, Kate and Mark were talking in the kitchen. “You know, Mom’s tired all the time,” Kate reported. “I always watch TV during the day so she can sleep.”</p>
<p>“<em>Whaaaat</em>?!” I cried from the next room, tripping over myself to bust in on their convo and rectify my reputation. “I did that TWICE!” I said to Mark. “Okay, maybe three times&#8230; Back when Paigey kept on waking up at night.”</p>
<p>Then, turning to Kate like we were sisters in a spat, I sneered, “It wasn&#8217;t ALL THE TIME.”</p>
<p>I think Mark knew Kate was stretching the truth to con him into turning on TV. “Hey, it’s cool man! We roll like this all the time when you’re at work!” But maybe, like my memories of my mom’s holiday headaches, Kate saw a small pattern in my behavior and blew it up to be much bigger in her mind.</p>
<p>Whole families can have collective distortions of how things went down. Don&#8217;t you think? Stories are told and retold and embroidered along the way, and before you know it that famous playground scuffle William got into in third grade involved seven other kids and a pit bull. And he stole a police car after to get away.</p>
<p>I wonder if that&#8217;s the case with Mark’s family and their tales of talking politics around the turkey table. From the lore I&#8217;ve heard, there were some holidays that got pretty ugly. Folks fired up with a wee bit o&#8217; holiday cheer duking it out over differing political opinions. I mean, far as I can tell there were never fisticuffs. But maybe a turkey drumstick or two got chucked across the table. At least, it&#8217;s fun for me to imagine that.</p>
<p>Were their political imbroglios ever really THAT bad? I can&#8217;t picture Mark&#8217;s mild-mannered Midwestern family bickering over Hilary&#8217;s foreign policy. I&#8217;m fairly apolitical, so I can&#8217;t even see doing that myself. Just like how I don&#8217;t get how a football team losing can put someone in a bad mood all day.</p>
<p>In my family accusations are flung, people storm around, and doors get slammed. But that&#8217;s just &#8217;cause we&#8217;re Italian. It&#8217;s built into us. Moments later we&#8217;re all back at the table tucking into slabs of pie like nothing happened.</p>
<p>Anyway, all I know is, at some point prior to my indoctrination at Mark&#8217;s family holidays, an edict was set forth to suspend all political discourse. Forevermore.</p>
<p>But, you plug up one hole and eventually water spurts forth from another, right? Try as you will, there&#8217;s no way to ensure that a big extended family&#8212;with differing ages, political views, and opinions on how the stuffing should be cooked&#8212;can gather at the holidays with utter serenity. Even if you cook all your side dishes ahead of time, and avoid dinner-table talk on legalizing marijuana, healthcare reform, and failed family investments, something&#8217;s gotta give, right?</p>
<p>A recent <a href="http://www.familycircle.com/family-fun/thanksgiving/peace-on-earth-at-your-house/?page=1" target="_blank">Motherboard story</a> I read gives the best reality-based holiday advice. Listen, your mother is going to be critical of what you cook no matter what, so just brace for it, honey. And when your brother-in-law acts all tweaky and insecure about something, GIVE INTO HIS SHIT. Toss out some crap that shocks and soothes him with how understanding and supportive you are.</p>
<p>I just LOVE that. Instead of willing it all to go away, step right into it.</p>
<p>Thanksgiving is always with Mark&#8217;s family. It rotates between being at his Mom&#8217;s house and her siblings&#8217;. This year we&#8217;re in North Carolina, which is fab, though frankly we could be in [insert some crappy place here] and it wouldn&#8217;t make a difference. Wherever we are we all end up just hanging out in the house anyway. Totally by choice.</p>
<p>Everyone&#8217;s even got their own foam <a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=coozy&amp;defid=754851" target="_blank">coozy</a> with their name on it. How rad is THAT? The bar&#8217;s open all day and the food don&#8217;t stop coming. This year there are even two&#8212;count &#8216;em TWO&#8212;newborns we can babble at and whose heads we can smell. And I just KNOW the cousins from Kentucky will bring some truly excellent bourbon. [Nudge, nudge.]</p>
<p>What&#8217;s not to love?</p>
<p>The Milller Family Thanksgiving is nothing like the holidays at my house used to be. (They actually watch FOOTBALL. And sometimes even <em>play</em> it!) But ten years in I can&#8217;t imagine spending Turkey Day any other way. Is it too meta to be thankful for Thanksgiving itself?</p>
<p>Well, who cares, damn it. I am.</p>
<p>A few years ago one of Mark&#8217;s relatives made a request to omit the nuts in the <a href="http://www.chex.com/Recipes/RecipeView.aspx?RecipeId=6709&amp;CategoryId=343" target="_blank">Chex party mix</a>. This person lobbied that everyone in the family just picked around them anyway. A year or so later, the little pretzels were also removed. (I <em>know</em>, right? One of the best parts!) I joked&#8212;after a couple bourbon and Cokes, mind you&#8212;that the next year they&#8217;d be setting out empty bowls.</p>
<p>“What are these?” folks&#8217;d ask.</p>
<p>“Oh, the Chex party mix!” the host would reply. “The recipe that everyone likes.”</p>
<p>So, no political banter. And eventually I fear, no Chex mix.</p>
<p>We will get there! We will achieve celebration perfection!</p>
<p>If anyone&#8217;s bound to throw a wrench it in the well-oiled Miller Thanksgiving machine, I fear it&#8217;ll be me, or one of my kids. (Our wild Italian genes can&#8217;t be held down.) So I&#8217;m just bracing for Kate to start lecturing her cousin that daddies should be able to marry daddies. Or ranting about BP&#8217;s management of the oil spill. (Kate LOVED that damn spill and still goes on about how &#8220;some birds died, you know&#8221; and &#8220;Uncle John plugged it up.&#8221;)</p>
<p>At the same time I can picture Paige spitting out a brussel sprout, screaming, &#8220;ME NO YIKE DIS!&#8221; then spilling my red wine all over the white linen tablecloth.</p>
<p>Should this take place, I offer this up to our hostess, Aunt Ann, in advance: Talk a deep breath and a swig of chardonnay and remember that you&#8217;ve got a back-up plan: There&#8217;s a dark bedroom and a headache&#8212;either real or well-acted&#8212;that&#8217;s waiting for you.</p>
<p>Trust me on this. I&#8217;ve learned from the best.</p>
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		<title>Dear Mom</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/09/dear-mom/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/09/dear-mom/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Sep 2010 18:49:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Firsts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Preschool]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2119</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear Mom: So Kate started Kindergarten last week, and Paigey started preschool yesterday. And I&#8217;m dying to talk to you about it. Damn it. Anyway, maybe through the Cyberspheric Alternate Plane Afterlife Postal System (CAPAPS), this letter will make it to you, wherever you are. Not to be harsh, but the truth is that with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Mom:</p>
<p>So Kate started Kindergarten last week, and Paigey started preschool yesterday. And I&#8217;m dying to talk to you about it. Damn it.</p>
<p>Anyway, maybe through the Cyberspheric Alternate Plane Afterlife Postal System (CAPAPS), this letter will make it to you, wherever you are.</p>
<p>Not to be harsh, but the truth is that with you gone for more than five years, I&#8217;ve gotten used to having birthdays, Mother&#8217;s Days&#8212;even Christmases&#8212;without you. A sad fact.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not that I don&#8217;t miss you. It&#8217;s not at ALL that. I&#8217;ve just kinda gotten used to you not being here. Resigned myself to the fact that you never met my girls.</p>
<p>But then one morning last week Mark and I were standing on a playground watching Kate line up with her new classmates, her sparkle-heart backpack nearly the size of her, and I was struck with such a cutting pang of Mamaness. My own Mamaness.</p>
<p>My little baby Kate was suddenly such a big kid. Which made me such a grown-up Mom. Which, in turn, made me want <em>my</em> mommy.</p>
<p>Mark and I were all teary as Kate-o trooped in with her class. She, of course, was smug and confident. Locked and loaded. Ready. She didn&#8217;t look back at us once.</p>
<p>Afterward I was trying to think of what it was that made me well up, because in the steel-willed way I no doubt got from you, I&#8217;ve always secretly looked down on the preschool parking lot criers. The weak women who can&#8217;t deal with their kid going off to school.</p>
<p>Butch up, ladies! Kids grow up. And school is <em>fun</em>.</p>
<p>The closest I got in my emotional deconstruction was the realization that my teariness came from being proud of Kate. How confident and funny and creative and wild and sassy she is. And sure, how much I love her.</p>
<p>But I give myself little credit for her dazzling Kate-ness. It&#8217;s like these kids are born and are already, well, who they are going to be. Did you think that? I mean, you had twice the daughters I do, so your sampling is far more scientifically valid than mine.</p>
<p>Anyway, Kate&#8217;s been LOVING her school. She&#8217;s all algow about it. She sometimes shares parts of her day, but a lot of it she seems to guard as this special thing that she just wants to ruminate on and enjoy herself. (Which obstructs my obsessive smother-mother tendency to want to know. Every. Single. Detail.)</p>
<p>But God, I was kind of a basket case in kindergarten, right? I remember crying and crying for you, and all the other kids were totally chill and happy to be there. Not to make excuses, but I think it sucked knowing that you were right across the street. All the kids who lived further away didn&#8217;t have the ease I did of imagining themselves back home with their mamas. From the playground I could sometimes even see you outside gardening.</p>
<p>How long DID I keep up the tears?</p>
<p>As I sit here now, on my sunny porch (on a white wicker chair you&#8217;d totally approve of), I&#8217;m bracing myself for becoming The Parking Lot Crier next week when Paige&#8217;s preschool really kicks in. Yesterday and today they required that one parent stay with their kid. We all took staggered breaks away (I&#8217;m on one now) so the teachers could see which kids really crater.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m kinda doubting whether it makes sense to have Paige in preschool now. Makes sense for <em>me</em>, that is. I mean, she&#8217;s my dumpling! She&#8217;s my sidekick. She really <em>IS</em> my baby. And aside from the ghastliness of missing her, with her not home I really should be doing something useful with my time. Like weaving our clothes, or spackling the tub, or assembling photo albums for each child starting with their conceptions. Or hey&#8212;here&#8217;s an idea&#8212;making some <em>money</em>!</p>
<p>Right now I could list three-hundred reasons why Paige should wait another year for preschool. But I know she is ready and happy and will love it. And I can&#8217;t let my own shit&#8212;sorry, <em>issues</em>&#8212;get in the way of her good time.</p>
<p>YOU were always so good about not letting your emotions interfere with what we did. You led the Dry-Eyed Mom Brigade at school drop-offs. You didn&#8217;t flinch when I went  to college 14 hours away (12 hours if speeding). And I was the last kid to leave the nest. You never guilted me about coming home when I&#8217;d get the chance to be adopted by rich friend&#8217;s families for fabulous vacations.</p>
<p>So what I&#8217;d really like to know now is, was it that you were really cool with it all? Was the stiff upper lip no act? Or were you just the dutiful Mama bird, nudging me out of the nest &#8217;cause otherwise I&#8217;d never fly?</p>
<p>If you could please send me some sort of sign to indicate the answers to these questions, I&#8217;d really appreciate it.</p>
<p>Anyway, as we pulled up in front of the house yesterday, after Day 1 of preschool, Paige announced, &#8220;Me no need you, Mama. Me big girl now.&#8221;</p>
<p>Did you hear me wail from whatever cloud it is you live on these days? Did you hear my car nearly take out the front shrubs as I tearily tried to park? Did you hear me walk around to Paige&#8217;s car seat and say, &#8220;Now YOU hear ME, Missy. I&#8217;m 43 years old and I still need my Mama!&#8221;?</p>
<p>Then I sat down on the curb and cried.</p>
<p>Anyway, if you could ever swing by for a visit, I&#8217;ve already planned out the day we&#8217;ll have. It just consists of us sitting around my house, drinking tea, and watching Kate and Paige play. And me asking you every two minutes, &#8220;Aren&#8217;t they great? Aren&#8217;t they so cute? Aren&#8217;t they just the best?&#8221;</p>
<p>I might also have you tackle some tough clothing stains I&#8217;ve been wrangling with. So don&#8217;t wear anything fancy.</p>
<p>Love you, Mama.<br />
~kristen</p>
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