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No Place Like Cards for the Holidays

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The most socially acceptable medium for showing off one's kids seems to be the holiday photo card. I mean, it beats the expense, travel, trauma--and let's face it, limited exposure--of the child pageant circuit.

My sister Judy always calls in any feedback she's gotten about our cards, which is nice. She covers off on some of the "what cute kids!" compliments that I might otherwise miss out on.

Judy's best friend Lindelle, who lives on the East Coast, apparently called her last year at 5AM California time squealing about Kate's posed-by-the-fir-tree innocent beauty. (Despite the two plus decades Judy's been out here Lindelle has not yet caught on to--or simply decided to ignore--the time difference.) Good Auntie that Judy is, she was willing to take the call despite the early hour, in order to thoroughly process and discuss all elements of the card. (And that's just one reason why they're from-womb-to-tomb friends.) 

Judy called in her report about this year's card a couple weeks ago. Blah blah blah Kate is pretty. And apparently word on the street is that Paigey's a ringer for our mom. When I shared this with Mark, he claimed he'd been hearing that Paige is a wee version of him.

In either case, both these comments set off my internal awww meter.

But then with further reflection--and a dash of neuroses--it got me wondering. If Paige looks like my mother and Mark, then Mark looks like my mother, right? So does that mean that in some short-circuited Electra-like Complex I married my, uh, mother? And then, did my mother and I give birth to a female baby who looks like my shoulda-been husband?

It's all just too frightening and confusing.

Maybe next year we'll just send out cards with pictures of Santa. 

Mama's Little Girl

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My mother used to make up crap constantly. I mean, it was all in the service of urging one of her four daughters to do something, and as the mother of one child who's turned the unbearable age of three, I can feel her pain. At one point the poor woman had a newborn, an 11-month old, and a 22-month-old. (Then ten years later I happily hit the scene. Surprise!)

Anyway, knowing what I know now, whatever the woman went through to get through the day is totally fine by me.

Her specialty was outlining elaborate reasons why things should be done. Often she'd add some statistics to back-up her argument. And I'm not talking about the classics like "you have to wait at least an hour to swim after eating." She'd bust out much more detailed data. And although she's not around to ask the origins of her plentiful stats, I have every reason to believe that based on how convenient they were to her--and the fact that with re-use the numbers sometimes changed--I'd wager she made them up on the spot.

"95% of household accidents happen from untied shoes!" she'd bellow after me as I ran through the house.

Throughout the winter months I'd hear some variant of:
"If you don't wear a hat you lose 85% of your body heat through your head."

And of course there was:
"70% of kids who sit that close to the TV develop vision problems, you know."

Her: "Do you know how many kids who ride their bikes without helmets get into accidents and turn into vegetables?
Me: "Uh... sixty-five percent?"

Who knows. Maybe in Reader's Digest or whatever women's magazines she was reading at the time they had entire sections devoted to citing maternally-weildible stats like these. Perhaps she really did have primary sources for it all.

She also had an arsenal of other warnings. They were statistic-free but still rife with veiled health threats: "Drinking coffee will stunt your growth" was one of her evergreens, though I don't remember ever wanting so much as a taste of her coffee when she was having a cup. Maybe the sum-total of her maternal sleep deprivation by the time I was born led her to preemptively fend people away from her coffee. And again, who could blame her?

Even later in her life when she was so sick that her body could barely process food, she'd insist we stop at Dunkin' Donuts on the way home from chemotherapy. Something I argued fruitlessly with her about until, requesting the doctor back me up one day, he pulled me outside the exam room to gingerly advise me that if coffee was something she enjoyed "at this point in her life" I should just let her have it.

Hello gut-wrenching reality check.

But anyway, where the hell was I? Mom. Coffee. And most importantly stunted growth--believe it or not, that being the little nugget that I was making my way toward. (Still happy you've come along for the ride?)

The thing is with Paige--the gal I've been trying to get to through all this Mom memory blather--is that she's so utterly delightful, delicious and unbearably baby-like still. It devastates me to think of her growing up. Truly! If only I thought the coffee could stunt her growth, I'd give it a shot. (Then I'd just need to figure out how to administer it, since at the ripe age of 11 months beverage-wise the gal's still exclusively about the boob.)

When Kate was a baby I did one of the smartest things a new mother could do. I got a sitter to come over one day a week--the neighbor's part-time nanny who wanted extra hours. She watched Kate on Friday nights too so Mark and I could go on dates, ultimately talking about how much we adored (and missed) Kate.

I've said it before and no truer words have I spoken: Better to pay for babysitting now than marriage counseling later. (Copyright, 2005-2008 McClusky)

Aaaanyway, it was that nanny, Blanca, who dealt me my first eye-opener about Kate's growth. I was looking through some larger-sized baby clothes and commenting on how darling they'd be once Kate fit into them. And in her sweetest, non-confrontational, most respectful way, Blanca looked me straight in the eye and said, "Uh, Kristen? She'll fit into those now!"

And sure, it turned out that maybe I was infantilizing ole' Kater Tot a wee bit. I realized that maybe we were shimmying her into the 3 to 6 month clothing when really, heck, those 9-month duds weren't exactly big on her. (Or maybe even fit.) It was just...she was my baaaby! If she was fitting into these bigger clothes it meant--absurd as it is to consider when it's a matter of months--she was growing up.

This brought into perspective the crying jag a friend told me about years earlier when her husband assembled their first-born's crib. The baby wasn't even three-months-old, and was just making the move out of the bassinet. As her husband toiled over the assembly directions, Lisa threw herself on their bed for a dramatic "she's growing up sooo fast" bawling sesh.

Today I think this is not crazy-lady behavior at all.

Well, whatever psychological force was holding me back from Kate's move away from babydom seems to only be amplified with Paigey Wig. With Kate, I think it was that she was my first. But with Paige, she's my last! And such a dumpling, that one! A living doll, I tell you!

Isn't it okay for me to still dress her in snap-crotch onesies when she's in high school? And really, what 8-year-old needs treads on their shoes when a soft hand-knitted booty is so much comfier? And say what you will about the independence kids get from walking about on their own. Isn't there something to be said for the cozy warmth and security that a sling could provide a preteen during those often awkward and trying pubescent years?

Of course, taking the worst possible opportunity to do it, when she's pushing herself backwards around her room (her brand of crawling) and sobbing dramatically because she needs a nap, I decided to go through Paige's drawers today and purloin all the obviously outgrown clothes.

Alas, there's no future sib to get another round of wear out of the burgundy Catamini romper, or the brilliant NASA shirt our friend Kenneth gave Paige. Gone for good is the peach cashmere cable knit cardigan that made both Kate and Paige's cheeks look flushed and utterly edible. And even the threadbare but darling Carter's standbys--the now-pilly footy PJs with the lamb and giraffe appliques. I'd think twice about putting them in a thrift store pile based on their condition alone, but can't bear to rid myself of the outfits my sweet girls wore curled up like angels asleep in their cribs. (Sleep has so many rich positive memories for mothers.)

For weeks--maybe months--now, Mark has emerged from dressing Paige remarking that he'd had to "wedge a leg" of hers into a certain pair of pants or had to "stuff her into" her pink hooded coat. (His none-too-subtle cues to me to get the girl some new clothes.) And half-heartedly I'd mumble something to appease him for the moment.

Well Miss Paige, today you've officially made the transition to 18-month-old clothing. (The fact that baby clothes are often sized older than the wee ones themselves is particularly cruel to me and my type.) May your plump little ham hock thighs never strain beneath the pressure of the 0 to 6 month pea green Zutano fleece pants again. And know that even if we don't have the good fortune that you somehow acquire coffee, devise a way to consume it, and it actually results in retarding your growth--even if that never comes to pass, just know that you'll still always be my little girl.    

What the Cat Dragged In

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While our kids were strangling each other on the sidewalk the other day, a neighbor casually mentioned to me that his cat brought a rat into their house the night before.

"A mouse?" I asked weakly, venturing hopefully to correct him.

"No, no. It was a rat alright," he replied. "It was actually pretty big too."

It was one of those things someone tells you nonchalantly, and it's all you can do to repress a full body shudder and exclamation of GAAAHHHH!

Several minutes later, he'd moved onto some other topic or was chatting with the kids or something, as I stood frozen, frantically wondering, "Was it dead? How big was it? Was it half-dead? Eeeeeeeeew!!! What room did it drag it into? Oh God, was it on a carpet? Was there a trail of blood? Did their kid see it? How the hell--and where--did they dispose of the thing?!"

I could barely stand to even think those thoughts, but I also couldn't stop myself. For the remainder of the evening, back inside having dinner and such, any quiet moment would lead my mind back to thoughts of THE RAT, which as the night progressed grew larger, bloodier, and more diseased in my imagination.

Well, hey. What do they expect having cats. One of the first things I told Kate when we brought her home from the hospital as a newborn was, "We're dog people." I mean, it's important for kids to know what their family stands for right out of the gate.

My disdain for cats started out with allergies as a child, then progressed to more of a fear of them (don't laugh) after a couple episodes where I've been clawed at. (Turns out they don't like having their stomachs scratched vigorously or being thumped on the back. Who knew?)

But after this rat story I have a whole new reason to hate.

The thing is, I'm starting to see some cat-like qualities in my own offspring. In Kate. No, I'm not allergic to her, and sure she's scratched me a few times but in minor unintentional scenarios. Thankfully we're not at the rat stages, but Kate is doing her fair share of taking the outdoors inside.

Today I was reaching blindly for a rattle for Paige in the great toy abyss between her and Kate's car seats. Instead I withdrew a plum-sized chunk of concrete. Not exactly the German wooden toy that'll get Paige into Princeton that I was groping for. And clearly Kate's work. God knows how she manages to reach down and pry off a piece of the sidewalk before we snap her into her car seat.

And that's just the car. Inside the house, her play kitchen is a shaman's workbench. The girl has collected acorns, leaves, sticks, fistfuls of grass, dandelions, and other small organic matter. It's wedged into little containers, mixed in small enamel pots with tiny wooden eggplants. I even found a Tupperware in her bureau alongside her basket of barrettes, filled with a cache some sort of random sidewalk nut.

Needless to say, outside is another story altogether. The bucket in the back of her trike is full to overflowing with pebbles, leaves, dessicated kumquats, pieces of straw, prickly chestnut husks, and a thoughtfully curated collection of twigs. Seed pods are especially prized booty, as she employs the multiplicity of innards for a variety of projects, most often as the key ingredient to her specialité, homemade 'soups.'

And I should really just write the hipster architects who live on the corner a check for all the polished gray stones Kate's purloined from their modern front yard-scape. By year's end she'll have denuded the place. And from the small crazy-person piles around our yard and spilling forth from her various front porch bowls and baskets, it's quite clear that she's the perpetrator.

Of course, aside from being creepily cat-like behavior, this all can't help but remind me of my mother. Which is to say, what Kate's got is in the genes. Driving down the road with my mom you'd think she was swerving to avoid an oncoming car, but really she'd careen to the side of the road with break-neck velocity then hop out giddy like a school girl to haul in a branch laden with pine cones. Some women swoon over designer labels, but a piece of driftwood or a fallen bird nest was what'd weaken my mother's knees.

Her pine cone habit was at times out of control. Look for a clear place to sit in her car and you'd re-enact a scene from The Sound of Music. For as much as she gathered, emptying the car of her earthly treasures was a less immediate compulsion. The back seat was typically off limits it was so overburdened with her finds, along with her stash of old bread, crackers, and cereal she fed to wild ducks. (The woman single-handedly changed the dietary needs of the North American Mallard by causing them to grow dependent on stale Ritz Crackers.)

At least the pine cones, chestnuts, shells, and other natural detritus my mother gathered were the raw materials for some backwoods-type Martha Stewart projects. (Though it should be known she found Martha to be "a puke.") She'd gild a bale of nut husks and pair them with some holly sprigs, quahog shells, and maybe a pineapple or two. Slap on some peat moss and rig in a few candles and next thing you know we had a centerpiece worthy of a White House state dinner. As wacky as she was, the end products were always impressive.

As far as I know, none of Mom's roadside finds made their way into her repertoire of soups, though it's hard to really know for sure. Come winter, she did did make a hearty stew.

About Me

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I realized recently that my blog lacks an About Me section.

The problem is, my personal IT support technician/spouse is away on a business trip, so I'm unable to alter the site's, uh, complex architecture singlehandedly. (Besides, it makes Mark feel so needed when I let him do these things for me.)

While I await his return, here's my first take on how I might describe myself:

I'm a mother of two from Oakland, CA who hates mushrooms. My ears aren't pierced. Well, they were once, but those holes closed up decades ago. My mother died of pancreatic cancer. Women who've had natural childbirth are my heroes. I've never seen Star Wars. I've been a VP, toy reviewer, CNN producer, and state park employee. My favorite holiday is July 4th. I love surprises, resist change, and can't tolerate wimpyness. I adore old women. I've had migraines that have put my right eye out of commission for weeks at a time. I once ate a 24-course meal. I've never competed in the Olympics. I went to cooking school to become a pastry chef, then decided against it. I've chatted with Mick Jagger. I loved high school and was unimpressed with college. My father's name is Ferdinand. Altogether I've taken 13 years of French. I've never had a perm. I've lived in Rhode Island, Ohio, Massachusetts, D.C., New York, Georgia, California, France, and England. In a life riddled with happiness, motherhood has brought me supreme contentment. Some people think I have nice hands. I once spent a raucous night out with the White House Secret Service. Sometimes I want to eat my children. I don't know how to follow a football game. My husband spent the better part of his career at Sports Illustrated. If I were President, liking coconut-flavored rum wouldn't be uncool. I pronounce 'aunt' AHHHnt and 'apricot' with a short 'a.' Cats scare me. I have a terrible memory. The greatest compliment I've ever gotten is that my daughter Kate looks like me. I can dish it out but I can't take it. Math Game Day in fourth grade always gave me a stomachache. My father is afraid of heights and peach fuzz. A psychic once told me I was a famous ballerina in a past life. I skipped having a first marriage and got a brilliant trophy husband at age 37. I've never had braces. For a made-for-TV movie I once played a woman who choked while eating in a restaurant. Parades often make me cry with joy. If I had a hammer, I'd hammer in the morning. The love I have for my husband and daughters can best be described as rabid. I'm an obsessive yard saler and recovering packrat. My super powers are the ability to sleep anywhere and parallel parking. I'm the youngest of four girls. I disagree with the way the word 'segue' is spelled. I didn't make a million dollars before turning 30. I look dead in both yellow and light gray. I once stuck a pussy willow up my nose. Seeing a person carrying a box of hot pizza always delights me. I think people who put lines through their sevens are pretentious. If it's not too much to ask, I'd like a high school marching band to play at my funeral. I know how to say the following things in Polish: 'underwear,' 'Grandma,' 'ass,' and 'I'm going to throw up.' I'm a wannabe Jew. If it weren't for house cleaners, I'd get around to changing my sheets about as often as frat boys do. My best piece of financial advice is to pay for babysitting now instead of marriage counseling later. I'm an avid recycler. My greatest life's work has been ridding myself of any trace of a Rhode Island accent. It wasn't until my mother was gone and I had children of my own that I realized I'd inherited her brilliance for tackling tough laundry challenges. I can't be inside on sunny days. I felt betrayed my senior year of college when the hippies cut their hair short to get jobs at investment banks. I'm not even a little bit country. My last meal would include a Del's Lemonade.
 
How much room do they give you in those blog templates for the About Me section anyway?

Well, this will have to do for starters.
For a while now Kate's been all hopped up on hearing me tell stories about when I was a little girl. I've told her about vacations we took, playing in snowstorms, my sailing lessons, and the day we went to see the dog, Tramp, we ended up adopting. But by far of all the stories I've conjured from my past, the one Kate requests the most is the one about when my mother forgot to pick me up from school.

You see, my elementary school was across the street from my house. But my mother would still take me there--help me cross the street in the morning and fetch me at the end of the day because, of course, YOU NEVER CROSS THE STREET WITHOUT HOLDING MOMMY'S HAND. Right?

So, one day my mommy didn't come to get me. All the other mommy's and daddy's came to pick up their kids. (I always include daddies when I tell Kate this story, but really, hell if a single dad performed this duty back then.) So, bereft that my mother had potentially left me and taken off on the Green Tortoise bus to California, or some such, I stood in the corner of the school yard and cried and cried and cried.

(She was likely on the order of four minutes late. But you know, kids and time and all that.)

So here I am crying.

"Then who came, Mommy? Then who came and saw you?"

Then, as I was standing there, a police man pulled up.

"In a police car, Mom?"

Yes, in a police car. And he said, "What's wrong little girl." And I told him about how my mother always picks me up from school but today she didn't come get me. So, the nice police man asked me if I knew where I lived, and if I wanted him to give me a ride home.

"In the POLICE CAR, Mama?"

Yes, in the police car. Of course I felt super cool. So I get into the police car and I'm checking it all out and the police man asked me where I lived. And I pointed to the yellow house right across the street.

"Hahaha [fake laughter], that's funny, Mama, right?" Kate says, not entirely understanding why it's funny but knowing it's supposed to be.

Yes, that is funny, Kate. But the police man didn't laugh. He just asked me if I thought we should just drive around the block a couple times before he took me home. (No, he didn't offer to put on the siren. But I took what I could get.)

Anyway, when we get to my house the police man rings the bell and through the window I saw my mother at the kitchen sink. She sees me and the police man, opens her mouth, looks at the clock over the stove, and runs to open the door while she's drying her hands. She explains with immense embarrassment (as I stand smugly holding the policeman's hand) that she had totally lost track of time and thank you SO MUCH officer, and of course that will never happen again.

Needless to say, my mother would have to endure several lifetimes before I'd ever let her live that one down. 

Anyway, I've managed to pass that old yarn down through a generation. And, like any kid, I could come up with a few other stories of minor maternal slip-ups. None of them truly damaging, neglectful, or malicious, but certainly things that collectively informed some of my "I'll never do that" attitudes about my own mothering.

Like when my friend Steve told me he and his wife were expecting their first child. Nearly immediately after announcing the news he vowed he'd never do that spit on your thumb and clean your kid's face move. So, you know, we all have our issues.

For me the "I won't do thats" are more along the lines of forgotten field trip permission slips. My mother seemed to lack the gene for ever remember getting those in on time, leaving me to hold up more than a few field trips when a teacher flipping through a pile of papers at the front of the bus would mutter in dismay, "Oh wait... We don't have one for Kristen Bruno. Again."

Mom also thought nothing of leaving a sink full of dishes when we'd go see my grandmother for a few days. As for me, I can't go to the bathroom with a dirty dish in the sink.

The other big thing I vowed to never fall prey to was lateness. Four girls, one mother, and one shower--and our collective estrogen level--made it understandably difficult getting out of the house en masse. Late, loud and clumsy arrivals tended to be a Bruno family hallmark. They gave grumpy Father Coffey a legitimate reason to leer over his pulpit, and me a legitimate reason to swear that my own family would assuredly be different some day.

Today, with Grandma Peggy here providing two extra hands, Googled driving directions, and a departure time mapped out that'd give Kate plenty of time to suss out the scene and fluff up her tutu before her first dance class--we set out. Well, I didn't actually print out the directions, just skimmed them. I did write down the address. But before long it was apparent that I had no idea where I was going.

An exit off the highway dumped me into an unfamiliar neighborhood (stress spike), though I managed to quickly get back on in the other direction (manic upswing), to quickly realize it was the totally wrong highway altogether (flop sweat). I fumbled around in the backseat with one hand trying to wrench my phone out of the diaper bag. I considered calling the dance studio for directions, then Mark (for directions and sympathy), then just trying to figure it out on my own.

The clock ticked away minutes closer and closer to the class' 9AM start time. I did a lot of muttering under my breath and a couple seemingly safe u-turns, though my mother-in-law  was gripping the side of the car door white-knuckled. She politely kept offering to "do whatever she could to help"--no doubt ending that sentence in her mind with "just get me there alive."

All the while I lambasted myself over how Kate would miss getting a good start to her new class. Meeting the teacher, hearing the rules, getting oriented with the other kids. Was I remembering all the first classes I got to late? You bet your ass I was.

Did I think about the first bat mitzvah I was invited to? Where my mother drove me to the one synagogue she ever remembered seeing in Providence, where I threw open the doors to an empty temple, then returned to the car--which was of course devoid of the invitation--where we continued to drive around the city asking pedestrians if they knew of any synagogues nearby, until finally, after a teeth-grinding grand tour of no less than five synagogues we found Cheryl's family and friends pouring out onto the sidewalk at the end of her ceremony? (Don't worry, I didn't miss the Blue Jeans Disco Dance at the Marriott after.)

Anyway, as I was driving around hell and gone Oakland with my mother-in-law, and baby, and three-year-old who was asking "Where's my dance class, Mama?" yes, yes, yes, I was thinking about all that.

Eventually my own Guardian Angel Direction-Dispensing Pedestrian pointed us in the direction of MacArthur Boulevard. And despite a long series of palm-sweating steering wheel squeezing red lights, we slowly made progress in the right direction.

Blah blah blah. We eventually got there ten minutes late. Surprisingly, I hadn't blown a neck artery, and Peggy hadn't peed her pants from fear of my driving or my rabid must-get-there-on-time wild-eyed determination.

Peggy pumped money into the meter, holding Paige on one hip, and I grabbed Kate and ran down the sidewalk into the dance studio. When we regrouped after Kate joined the class Peggy kindly made a "we're a little late but no harm done" remark.

Indeed, it didn't appear that Kate's lateness affected her in any long term psyche-scarring way. Though I guess it's too soon to tell. It'll take a few more times of us skidding in after the bell before she makes her own resolve to never do all the things that I do when she has her own family some day.
Nothing makes me feel younger than faking sober for the babysitter at the end of an evening.
 
Back in the day I'd have to pass the gauntlet of my waited-up-for-me mother, who was typically in the kitchen working a crossword puzzle or getting herself a late-night snack. I'd make what I hoped was nonchalant (and non-slurred) small talk until it seemed a reasonable amount of time had passed and I could head up to my room to sleep with one leg dangling off the bed.

Not that this was a frequent occurrence in my youth. I wasn't a booze-hound by any means, but I did have some nights of, uh, experimentation.

Funny how now that I'm a mother myself, I've had to dust this skill off. Except now I'm faking sober for a teenager instead of being one myself. It just seems so uncouth to be the boozy neighborhood mom whose kids you babysit for. I mean, I have a reputation to uphold.

Speaking of responsible winos, our friends Mike and Myra take turns being Designated Driver when they go out. But when it's Myra's turn to drink and she doesn't take full advantage, Mike takes it as a sort of affront to his sense of fairness.

"Here's Myra," he says, winding up for a good rant. "She had one glass of wine--one!--and here I'm holding back because it's my night to drive. I mean if I knew she didn't want to drink anyway, she should have offered to drive! I could have been having a good time!"

Like any good conflict-averse spouse Myra's come up with a way to get Mike off her back on this topic. She confided to me that at the end of some nights when she thinks Mike will feel she hasn't sufficiently filled her role as Designated Drinker, she just plays drunk. You know, laughs extra loud and fumbles around a bit. Maybe slurs a word or two to ensure she's gotten her point across.

How good is that? God, I'd love to see her act. 

Anyway, all this came to mind since it's been a while since Mark and I have gone out on the town, leaving someone else as sentry for the sleeping kids. But today my mother-in-law, Peggy, arrived for a week-long visit. And Friday's Mark and my fourth wedding anniversary. (What's the gift for the fourth again? Tin foil? PVC pipe? Burlap?)

Mark booked us at an incredibly romantic, delicious, beautiful restaurant in the city called Quince. No getting up to re-supply chicken nuggets mid-meal! No 'Please eat two more bites of broccoli' entreaties! No ketchup present at the dinner whatsoever! All that, plus the company of my adorable smart funny husband whose company I remember really enjoying before the exhaustion of two weeks of Olympic-watching drained the life blood out of me. 

Even if we just drive to San Francisco singing songs from the radio together, it's sure to be the best night ever. And if we do whoop it up a little, I'm not feeling any pressure to put on my sober act for Peggy. She probably wouldn't buy it anyway.   

Other People's Mothers

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When I was a kid I was always wishing that one or another of my friend's mothers was my mom. It's terrible to admit, but I'm sure other kids did it too.

Sleeping over at a friend's house one night, her mom brought hot chocolate chip cookies to us where were watching a R-rated movie on cable--a movie she knew we were watching and was totally cool with. On the couch next to Leigh's cute older brother I sat in a state of bliss, marveling at just how good she had it.

In high school another friend's mom used to wake up early to make us lunches to bring to the beach. "Now Kristen, honey," she'd say. "I know you don't like mayo so there's none on your sandwich, and I put the sliced tomatoes in a separate baggy so they wouldn't get the bread soggy." For real she would do this. I mean, that woman provided exceptional service. Of course my friend rolled her eyes through it all, but I was ready to have adoption papers drafted.

Now that I'm a mother myself, the thought that Kate or Paige would ever want to trade me in or upgrade me is loathsome. And the fact that my mother's no longer around for me to take for granted is even worse.

At some point after my mother died I remember going through a sort of panicked phase of feeling like I needed to identify the person who'd act as her Second Runner Up. I wondered whether Mark's mom would suddenly transform from mother-in-law to Mom for me. I mean, she was there being Mark's mom already, so I thought I could just sort of slip in on that action. I considered whether any of my mother's old friends from Rhode Island--or even one of my sisters--would step up and start being my new mother. I even wondered whether my dad would demonstrably start filling the role of both parents. Absurd as it is to admit, I think I expected him to start calling me twice as much to pick up the slack in my parental phone time.

Thinking back I'm not sure exactly what I was looking for this stand-in Mama to do. Maybe just shower me with attention? Be the person who after a conversation where I complained of having a scratchy throat thought to call me the next day to check on how I was feeling? Though, truth be told, I'm not even sure my own mother did that.

As it turned out, no one person presented themselves to me in whatever contrived way my mind envisioned it might happen. And I see now that it would have been absurd for that to have happened anyway. First off, anyone with any emotional sense would not have wanted to step on my mother's proverbial toes. It was more respectful to honor her unreplicatable place in my life. But anyone's attempts to up their maternal juju toward me would likley have come off as artificial anyway. Granted, I may well have lapped it up, but it would've been a rebound relationship borne out of my neediness. And we all know those are short-lived. At least they tend to be.

Once the shock that my mother was gone for good started to wear off--or once I became more accustomed to it--I realized I just had to butch up. I'd been trying to sidestep the whole dismal thing by finding a suitable maternal understudy. And for me, it just didn't work that way. At least not in the form of one person. 

This weekend I got a great dose of Mama glory from my friend Mike's mother, Marilyn. When I first met her ten years ago I remember thinking I needed to get myself to LA as often as possible. I wanted to sit at her feet--she the regal matriarch and me the adoring wanna-be daughter--and soak in all her sassy, brilliant, loving, opinionated, intelligent Mamaness.

In fact, years flew by without seeing her again. My plan to stalk her never came to fruition. And yet reconnecting with her this weekend was all I needed to re-set my eager 'when-can-I-visit-you-next?' agenda. What makes Marilyn especially addictive is, as you find yourself joking, laughing, and linking arms with her and her three sons--wanting nothing more than to be an insider in their scene--she's so down-to-earth, letting you into her home and what she's doing in the easiest most natural way, that you realize part of her feel-good brilliance is her ability to make you feel exactly what you want--like you're part of her family, like you're one of them. How can you not want more more more of that?

And today, I crashed my friend Lisa's weekly visit-with-kids to her parent's house. Her mom hadn't met Paige yet, and with my weird scheduling luck with seemingly all of Lisa's parties, it'd been ages since she'd seen Kate. I can use that as the excuse for the visit, but really I knew I was positioning myself for a hearty dose of Mama-ness. Instead of wallowing in my jealousness that Lisa has fabulous--and local--parents, it seems more productive to just get in on the action. Even when I know I'm engineering myself into the setting, it's still nice to get a hit of it.

As I'm sitting in the back yard there today, seeing Lisa's dad pull Kate through the grass on a wagon as she sips milk like a toddler Cleopatra, then watching Lisa's mom make Play-Doh turtles and pancakes, happily letting Kate mix up the colors and admiring her advanced verbal skills--I realized that my special stealth skill for tapping into other's people's mothers isn't lost on Kate.

Today Kate and Paige were entertained, fed, and admired by two devoted world-class grandparents, if only for the day. Before conking out on the car ride home, Kate sleepily requested that I "call those grandparents to make another play date" soon. For her sake and mine, I certainly will.

Hi Ho Silver, Away!

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When my mother was sick and started losing her hair, my sister Ellen went online to find her some turbany hat-type things. I was home in RI when the package arrived, and since Mom and I didn't know Ellen had ordered them, when we saw the return address--Chemo Savvy--we weren't sure what to expect.

But when you're relegated to spending day after day indoors, a mysterious package like this represents a small adventure. So, sitting on the edge of the bed, I knifed the tape off the box and handed it to my mother to open.

Not one to beat around the bush, when she saw what was inside were hats for her balding head, she rolled her eyes. "Oh God. Look at these," she said, holding one up. Then looking at the label, "Ellen sent them." 

Complaining, especially when she was sick, had become somewhat of an art form for my mother. In fact, she could be ruthless, and many was the time my sisters or I would chase after some kindly nurse or visitor who'd been worn down by my mother's crabbiness, to convince them while standing in the driveway that she didn't mean it, she was really just angry at the cancer not them, and tomorrow would be a better day.

From here now I can see that the complaining, and the brutal sarcasm--which had always been her hallmark--must have been a kind of last-ditch form of empowerment. Making fun of the hats distanced her from the unwelcome reality that was upon her. Made it somehow seem like wearing turbans when your hair falls out from chemo was something other people do, not you. Even if it was just for a moment before having to give into whatever it was, she liked to exercise some resistance.

Thankfully, my mother's sense of humor managed to thrive alongside her grumpy patient persona. So after the initial, "Now why did she buy these?" remark, followed by an approving cluck that they were at least all cotton, she pulled out one of the hats, put it on, and looked at me while intoning, "Chemo Saaavvvy!"

We sat on the bed for God knows how long, both trying on the hats, commenting to each other, "Kemo Sabe? That hat is Chemo Savvy!" and laughing until we cried.

When all else looked bleak, these moments provided enough of a respite to fortify us for the next gut-wrencher lurking around the corner.

This morning Chez McClusky we had some excellent family time piled into Mark and my bed, reading books, playing with Kate's new yard sale doll, and kissing the bejesus out of Paige. Since Paige's favorite alone time activity is clawing at her head, I've started putting her to sleep in those cotton skull caps intended for newborns. And since she's outgrown most of them by now, they don't fold up at the brims like they're supposed to.

When the hat's pulled down low on her eyes, the resulting look is at best like a flapper girl. With her ears sticking out--or more often than not, one ear--she looks slightly Smurfish. Or, if you catch her at just the right angle, as I did today, hat snug around the forehead and loose but crumpled down on top, she looks a little Chemo Savvy.

Oh Miss Paige, who we love so well. You will never know your grandmother, I'm sorry to say. But take it from me, she had a wicked sense of humor. And I just know that if she saw you this morning, she'd be calling you her little Kemo Sabi.

Something I Vowed I'd Never Do

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So here I am yesterday explaining all the end of the year school stuff that's coming up to Kate. Her preschool closes for a few weeks in August, probably so the teachers can get electric shock therapy and be refreshed for a new school year in September. And really, who can blame them.

Anyway, there are all these little events happening like a pot luck (blech) and one of those useless-for-any-reason-other-than-parental-nostalgia "graduations"--she's not even off to Kindergarten next year, just more preschool. And as I'm in the process of telling her about all these items on her social agenda, I realize that after her three-week break she'll be going back to a different classroom, a different set of teachers--the same school but a whole new scene. She'll no longer be a Duckling, but a Wood Duck. Or is it a Gosling? The classrooms there are as confusing as their non-parallel naming structure.

This was a dramatic realization for me, since Kate is blindly devoted to and some would argue co-dependent with one of her teachers. Had I realized sooner that this change was upcoming I'd have started an elaborate debriefing process to ready her for A) not being in that teacher's classroom and, B) having to deal with some other woman who will no doubt be nurturing and kind, but whom Kate will eventually reject like some disfunctional kidney.

I mean, I for one am not a fan of change. Or maybe I just don't even get why anyone would ever want to change anything, never mind actually welcome it. Call me the gal who grew up in the same house, went to the same school for nine years with the same  40 other kids, and has worn her hair the same way since it grew out from my newborn crew cut. Be it nature, or nurture, in all things other than, say, fresh underwear, my default switch is set to No Change, Thank You.

So, not only did I need to wrangle with my sudden realization about Kate's imminent new classroom, and the fact that I'd been remiss in bracing her for the change, I also had to come to terms with the fact that I was doing exactly what I'd vow I'd never do as a parent. Since, it was what my mother did to me. Or rather, didn't.

It all goes back to my own elementary school experience, at the hallowed halls of The Rockwell School in fair Bristol, Rhode Island. On the playground the different classes lined up in military-like rows after recess to file into our classrooms. For some reason on our first day back at school the fall after Kindergarten, we all had to line up this way when we first arrived in the morning. But when I went to stand in the line my Kindergarten teacher was heading up, she laughed and told to go stand in another line with the First Grade teacher. To which I thought, "Wait, what?"

Although this Childhood Traumatic Incident (TM) seems fairly 'lite' it somehow threw me for a loop. I guess I was just more confused than anything. The thing was, my mother hadn't thought to tell me I'd be going into a different classroom, a different grade. And, when you're a kid, if no one tells you stuff, then you often don't know it.

I know that sounds like a basic premise, but I have other Mama friends who clearly weren't neglected this way by their parents when they were kids, and are just realizing this now. My friend Becca recently posted in her blog about reading a library book about bees to her son. As she read it--stuff about hives, honey, yadda yadda--she was shocked by how fascinated and blown away her son was. It dawned on her that he didn't know anything about bees. And she thought, "Well, why should he? We haven't told him any of this stuff."

And here's the thing: The kid is 16! Well, not really, but my point being, I feel like I've been pretty good about trying to put myself in Kate's shoes and explain to her things she has no background on. I'm not saying I'm a better parent than Becca--okay so maybe I am a little--but really, since I realized at a tender age that parents need to tell kids about the obvious-to-us-adults things or else they may find themselves trying to convince the teachers at school that, really, they are supposed to still be in Kindergarten, and could they just let them come back into the same classroom again, and please let's not make a scene here.

I mean, I'm grateful those teachers found a way to get through to me back then or God knows how many classes I would have held myself back in over the course of my academic career.

So here I am. Tragically I've somehow managed to almost stumble into the same parental snake pit that is perhaps my legacy. Though Kate will likely outshine all her Mama's childhood foibles and sashay into the Gosling?/Wood Duck?/Mallard? room in September all cool and easy and down with the different teachers and the whole new scene.

For her sake, and mine, I hope that's the case.
Peggy and Gary, Mark's mom and stepfather, left today after a great visit packed with NorCal sightseeing, eating and drinking, and excessive granddaughter adoration. One of those visits that make you wonder why we all live so damn far away. I wasn't at the airport this morning for the final farewell, so I don't know exactly what took place. But even before Kate and Paige were on the scene, Peggy was known for getting teary-eyed at goodbyes, especially when she didn't know when she'd see Mark next.

If my memory serves me, my mother and I used to cap off most visits with a rousing argument. It made parting so much easier. Even without a separation anxiety spat, my mom was hardly the crying type.

There's actually a famous story in Mark's family about when his mom and sister dropped him off at college for the first time. When they left to head home, Peggy was crying so hard she somehow managed to drive off the road into a corn field. (Mind you, they were in rural Minnesota where such fields are abundant, not Manhattan.)

Needless to say, Mark and Lori will never let Peggy live that down. But now that I'm a Mama myself, I can totally empathize. How in God's name do you deposit your beloved sweet baby at college--off in another state or even a different time zone--to not see them again until Thanksgiving, if you're lucky? I'm hoping by the time Kate turns 18 homeschooling will be a popular collegiate option. Or that she'll insist on living at home and attending a nice local costmetology school so she can be near her Mama.

Even though the kiddies are still so young I'm finding I'm already nostalgic about things. At the park the other day there was a three week old baby I was mesmerized by. "A baby!" I thought to myself, as if it were such a novel thought--an unattainable object of desire. All this while I'm holding my own four-month-old. But, you know, Paige seems so big already. And the thought that she's probably the last of the little McCluskys makes it that much harder to watch her mini milestones pass by.

Mark, on the other hand, doesn't seem to share my sentimental streak. Nor does he share my on-again off-again yearning for another baby. In fact, after a long evening of bouncing Paige on the big blue yoga ball--our favorite method for getting our fussy babies to sleep--he turned to me and said, "God I'll be happy when I never have to do this again." And despite how my own lower back was crying out for an end to non-stop bouncing, my mind was aghast at the thought.

When that ball goes away, that means Paige will have grown up a bit. She won't be a teeny newborn who needs the motion of her Mama's movements replicated to soothe her. She'll nearly be independent!

And another thing. When that ball goes away after Paige, it's retiring. It will never be called to serve again--at least for anything other than yoga. And still for Mark there's no looking back. I think he mentioned something about gleefully taking an ax to it...

Well, unbeknownst to him, the other day as I was vacuuming the house I lamented that that huge ball, wedged under the lip of the TV stand, was taking up too much space in our small living room. And really, we hadn't had to use it for weeks. So I figured I'd stick it down in the basement where we could always grab it if we needed to.

The impulse to stow crap in the basement comes up often, so it wasn't until I was walking up the stairs that I thought, "My God. We are now officially finished with the baby-bouncing segment of our lives." May the big blue ball rest in peace.

No, no. I didn't cry. But hey, it's on to a new phase and goodbye (forever) to an old one.

Another thing that Mark doesn't know--not that I've actively been hiding it from him--is as Paige has been outgrowing clothes I haven't had the heart to give them away quite yet. For now I'm taking some comfort in just putting them back in the age-labeled plastic bins on the shelves downstairs. (See? The basement is my enemy and my best friend.) How can I let go of the soft froggy jacket with the satin bow that Lindelle got for Kate? Or the brown cable knit sweater-suit Mark got at his office shower?

In part, there's just so much cute stuff. I can't just give it to Salvation Army. But there's also the thought that there won't be another baby here to wear it some day--a thought I clearly haven't gotten my head around.

And for the record, I'm not planning to do some soap opera poke-a-hole-in-the-condom move for a third child. In my rational, non-emotional moments I truly agree with all the reasons why we're better off as a family of four. It's just--babies are so sweet!

Is this how my brother-in-law's parents ended up with 15 kids? Perhaps.

Maybe I just need to reflect more on my neighbor's deadbeat 37-year-old son who's just moved back home. Oy! Imagine finally being back in the swing of what life was like without kids, then being tossed into telling your grown son to pick his socks up off the floor. Even for a crazy love-addicted Mama like me, that just seems wrong.

I'll have to remember that when I'm veering off into a corn field 16 years from now.

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