Blood Friday

No, I am not bleeding. But monkeypants shares her story of first blood here as inspired by this hilarious post by supersecretvault.

(I don’t know her so I don’t feel comfortable calling her by her first name, lest I risk a smackdown.

Hey you never know.)

I have no blood story to share because I am pressed for time and blood is a distant memory that I would need a few minutes to recollect. However I will share my favourite line from one of my favourite songs of late:

“…Ay, yo bust it, ain’t no need to discuss it
Just take this job and shove it, right between your buttocks”

…in honour of today, which marks just two weeks ’till my last day of work.

Posted in blood, funny, music | 2 Comments

Dear This Year; Love, Last Year

(The gift of good humour is enclosed.)

First, last year’s post, which includes the following paragraph:

“…Some people are born to be accountants and some people CAN do it but prefer not to and some people can learn just enough to get by. Now I know how to use Excel and it seems a shame not to use that skill. I can see how some people would think that way about childbearing. You’ve got the skill, you’ve got the knowledge, you’ve got the crap in your storage locker already. What’s the big deal?”

Second, one photo from March, 2007. I miss the angles in my face. My face looks like a moon pie right now. But at least my baby mole turned into a real kid, eventually.

Posted in bloggity!, the parenthood, trombone | 5 Comments

In Sunnier News

I am drinking an organic ginger ale. Actually I am done drinking it and now I have the distinct flavour of bandaids (TM) in my mouth. Not that I have ever licked a bandaid but that flavour is at the back of my throat, where it would be if I had sniffed a bandaid.

Are there common ingredients in bandaids and ginger ale?

I think I grossed out new-girl Jojo by asking her that question. But hey, she’s sitting here all day, she should know by now that I’m a little crazy.

Also, it’s Sarah’s birthday AND she posted something AND she has a sore throat. Maybe I will mail her some bandaid-flavoured ginger ale. I could put it in her Christmas parcel. Laziness has its advantages.

Posted in drink, food | Comments Off on In Sunnier News

Critical Mass

Back in the day I read the horoscopes of Tim Stephens with a fine-toothed comb every week. “He is the BEST,” I swore up and down. “He KNOWS THINGS.” But for the past 6 months, every time I think to check, I read something like this (for the coming week):

Your money picture remains good – try to increase your earnings through March 19. Even after this, to early April, financial rewards and small money opportunities will come. Soon, you’ll be able to purchase a luxury item. Work grows hectic, fast-paced through May 9. Through it all, remember that 2008 is your best spiritual and healing year in a long, long time. This is a great time to meditate, deal with counselors, “fix” your tax picture, or interface with charities and government agencies. CUSO, UNESCO, or the Peace Corps (?) await some!

Uh huh. Would my small luxury item be an infant seat for my pending child? Because I got that the other day. I hope the infant enjoys it. It claims to feature some kind of luxury foam to cushion the infant’s delicate skin and bones. Other than compulsively hitting every thrift store within sniffing radius in search of plain, wooden dining room chairs, I am so not shopping, luxury items or otherwise. Especially now that I’ve lost another hour of my day.

I was USING that hour.

I woke up this morning, it was dark, raining, four-fucking-thirty in real-time and I had spent an hour awake in the middle of the night, listening to the hippo knock itself unconscious against my internal organs. I wandered, zombie like a cloud through downtown, heading to work, sort of, but mostly just hoping not to bang into anything. If not for my many co-workers who also had shitty nights, I would have wept into my keyboard on arrival at work, but instead, I went the other way. I put that face on; the one where I get sharp and quick, my words like box cutters. My mouth is smiling but my eyes are watching carefully to make sure you got that, a barb, a quick jab. Defending myself keeps me alive. Don’t fight back, I’ll fall, deflated.

I bruised myself trying to get off the bus tonight. Goddamn people and their goddamn backpacks, excuse me, I said, barreled past them, them perhaps wondering why there was so much of me when from the neck up I do look to be a normal size, perhaps not seeing the immense belly but certainly feeling it as I thumped my way to the back door.

Five university-aged girls at the back door, guarding it fiercely, blocking my way, excuse me, I said; sorry, one said, but she didn’t move, just flattened herself against the door a bit more well thank you so much sweet thing but I am 198.5 lbs and it’s all out front you see and when I was 12 weeks pregnant I forgave you for being a space hog and when I was 20 weeks pregnant I didn’t care that you didn’t notice how tired I looked and when I was 30 weeks pregnant I preferred to stand up because it was more comfortable than sitting but now? I am done. Now? I am 34 fucking weeks pregnant and you, yes, YOU with the adorable glasses and the nice backpack and the pinkforthecure ipod have to get the fuck out of my fucking way or I will kick you with my feet and smack you with my bag and bump you with my belly to get off this bus. My baby is protected. You are all skin and bones and I will destroy you without a backwards glance.

See? I need my hour back. But since I won’t be getting it, hopefully Rob Brezsny has something good to say this week or I’m going to hide behind the couch until July, umbilical cord be damned.

Posted in babby, public transit, whiny | 1 Comment

Regular Dispatch From Behind Closed Eyes

A friend mentioned yesterday that it was always interesting when I posted during my last maternity leave. I think that this is likely an exaggeration on his part, as it was not always interesting to be me in that year but on the other hand I did a lot of baby-development-sum-uppage; sum-uppage which has, ironically, fallen by the wayside now that Trombone is actually doing things.

Not that rolling over isn’t “doing things” but it’s not really as interesting as “sings happy birthday in tune.” Or maybe it’s just that I have perspective. If he rolled over now, I’d not be as impressed. If he sang in tune at 6 months, I’d stop the presses.

OK. Anyway.

What was interesting to me about him as a little baby was how the growth and development went hand-in-hand with The Crazy. Baby’s crying all day for no reason? Oh look, a new skill. This has continued into toddlerhood, except now it’s louder. This week, Saint Aardvark and I have been completely flibbertygibbeted by our son’s ability to a) do cool stuff and b) lose his shit in a truly spectacular fashion.

Wednesday. I picked Trombone up from daycare (where he is adjusting beautifully, whether because his dad now drops him off on the dreaded Tuesday or because he just became resigned to the reality of the situation) and we came home. All the way home he chattered from the backseat about what he did all day (Down an’ Up. Down an’ Up. Whee! Eee Donut! Play water!) and when we arrived home, I allowed a viewing of his favourite movie, Neighbourhood Animals by Baby Einstein. He watched it happily, repeating all the words and predicting the next scene (mo’ horses! littttttle wabbits! run!) and when it was over, he bid it bye-bye, instructed me to turn it off and started running around the living room.

All perfectly normal.

I prepared some strawberries and yogurt for his dinner, put it in a bowl with a spoon on the table, where he sits to eat.

He began to scream.

“Do you want the strawberries?” I asked.
“UHHHH HUHHHHHHH!” he screamed.
“Well, here, let me help you…”
“NO NOPE NO NOPE NO NOPE NO NOPE!!!!!” he screamed. (note: yes, isn’t it a very cute way of indicating negative feelings? But only the first few times and more so when he is not hysterical)
“You don’t want to sit at the table,” I said.
“NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!” He pointed at the island in our kitchen.
“DERE! EAT!”
“Well,” I explained, “we don’t eat at the island. Because the chairs are not high enough. That’s why we have your chair at THIS table.”
“DERE! EAT!” Crying as though stuck with porcupine quills.
“Would you like to sit at the coffee table?”

Pause. Sniff.

“Uh huh.”
“Can you say ‘yes’?”
“Yes. Peeez.”

So I set him up sitting on his foot stool at the coffee table and he happily ate his food, face red and swollen with tears and snot and anger and I sat on the staircase and watched him and thought, wow, he is batshit crazy. And so will I be in another 6 months if this keeps up.

About an hour later, he had the same reaction to his bath.

The bath thing sort of makes sense because he had a terrible diaper rash last week that made it very painful to sit in the bath. But it sort of doesn’t make sense because he got over the worst of the pain in one day; the rash was on Thursday, he was back in the bath on Friday and has suffered no ill since.

But on Wednesday, the bath became the screaming, hellfire waters of Satan lapping at Trombone’s little toes. So Saint Aardvark dug out his earplugs and we performed a spongebath on the bathroom floor.

By last night, Trombone allowed as being bathed in the bathroom SINK was not nearly as bad.

And this morning he consented to eating at the kitchen table again.

It’s just odd, with a kid so verbal and communicative, to get the screaming and pointing and non-verbal communication that I associate with children who don’t have any words yet. I mean, he comes into the bathroom when I’m peeing, takes toilet paper from the roll, hands it to me and says, “Wipe-a-bum, mama.” (I have managed to convince him that he doesn’t need to go in and try to wipe my bum for me. At this point I can barely find my own bum.) He can undo his own overalls. If I had the time to commit to it, he would probably be potty-trained right now. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not bragging. I don’t credit myself with any of this. I just find myself wanting to connect the dots, to figure out why there’s this sudden seeming disconnect.

Maybe his communication just hasn’t caught up to his ideas yet. I have to give him the benefit of the doubt; if he didn’t want to eat at the middle-sized table, there was probably a reason he just couldn’t express. Maybe strawberries don’t go with middle-sized tables; only large or small ones.

Like when he was an infant, I have no way of knowing. I have no scientific method to determine what I can do differently next time. I have only the tools available to me; humour, compassion, ear plugs, Saint Aardvark. Eventually, wine. And the knowledge that it is all for the good, that as my child struggles with frustration and anger, he is learning and developing normally. That his little brain is doing the best it can. As am I.

Posted in the parenthood, trombone | 1 Comment