Can’t…Talk…Duck….Racing

Last week sometime I had the brightest idea. “I will take a day off,” I thought. “I deserve a day off. Hell, I deserve two days off. MAKE IT THREE!” Luckily I have 21 days of holidays saved up, plus a boss who believes in recreation, that is, vacation, not doing things over and over and over, and so here I am on the eve of a 6 day long weekend. See, cause it’s a long weekend and plus I’m taking three days off beforehand and so.

Hee!

I think I might actually be 4 years old. All I could do today, other than clean up enough of my work stuff so that the person sort of covering me doesn’t get mired in poop for the whole time was natter on to anyone who would listen: “I am going to the PNE and I am going to eat cotton candy and I am going to see ducks racing and I am going to look at the MIRACLE SHAMMY! but not buy one because who buys the miracle shammy?”

Occasionally, the silly co-workers would ask questions like, “So. Looking forward to your vacation?”

“MMMMM HMMMMMM!!”
“Whatcha gonna do?”
“GET A HAIRCUT! SLEEP! EAT!”
“Uh, cool?”
“DUCKS RACE and THERE IS POPCORN and HOT DOGS!”
“Yeah, cool, gotta go do something now…”
“FIRE IN THE NIGHT! FERRIS WHEEL! CANDY APPLES!”

Dispatches from the Great Pacific National Exhibition sure to follow.

Posted in outside | 8 Comments

Your Belly Button

I wrote this back in June with the intention of editing it as a birthday post for Trombone, whose birthday, of course, was July 1st. And then I forgot all about it.

But it’s all still true. So I’m posting it now. Turn it up / Bring the sap!

********************************************

You can now find your belly button with your own two hands.

At first, it was this oozy mess I had to fold your diapers down around. We used the newborn-sized disposable diapers because the cloth diaper covers were too big and were keeping your belly button too moist. We would dab around it with a Q-tip. I worried about it; was the stump taking too long to fall off? Was that blood around the edge? Would it get infected? But I guess I got distracted by something and forgot to obsess about your belly button for a while.

One day when I paid attention again, there it was, healed and clean and a perfect pink swirl. Someone described a baby’s belly button as looking like a cinnamon bun and I wish I could credit that person but I don’t remember where I read it.

You and I were connected at your belly button. I tell you that sometimes when you are poking my belly button with your fat finger. Your finger gets lost in my belly button and you delight in its disappearance and reappearance. You and I were connected at your belly button for a long time, I say. Then, one day, you came out into the world and we cut the cord that connected me and you. And you were a separate person. You were free.

You don’t have much patience for this story – there are no ducks in it – but I like telling it.

I cut the cord, I say. The midwife who helped you be born guided my hand with the scissors in it and I cut through this tough, weird rope and separated us, after all that time together. It didn’t hurt, I say. And then you floated free from me, I say. Like a balloon cut from its string. Filled with air, alive.

You’ve been busy becoming you.

I have tried to attach you to a cuddly toy or blanket but the only thing that soothes you is a book. [ETA: of late, you are also keen on sleeping with a large plastic travel mug.] If I am too late fetching you from a nap and you are despairing that I have abandoned you, the only way to calm you is to pick out one of your favourite books and go through it several times. Then, when the book is done, you let go of my waist and crawl off my knee to explore the room.

Your dad’s family will tell you this behavior is like his when he was small. As legacies go, it’s not bad and if you were to grow up to be exactly like your dad, you would be a fantastic person indeed.

Let me tell you a little about your dad over this first year of your life.

He didn’t want to cut the umbilical cord. He announced your sex instead and I cut the cord. I got the feeling the midwife and the nurses thought it was a little funny that he didn’t want to cut the cord. Maybe they thought he was squeamish or wimpy. I don’t know, I didn’t really give it too much thought until after you were born and had nursed for the first time and then they moved you over to the baby warmer to put a diaper on you and so I could be stitched and tidied.

“Come over and put a diaper on your son, dad,” said one of the nurses. And your dad went right over and leaned into the bassinet and put his face close to your face and talked to you. You know what he said better than I do. He touched your body all over and put the tiny diaper on your bum and spoke softly and told you it was all OK. I could see him out of the corner of my eye.

Your dad doesn’t hang back when it comes to you. He has changed as many diapers as I have, he has rocked you to sleep as much as I did, he has been teaching you important things like Linux and penguins and the world outside our door and how to say “november” and how to turn out the lights. He also has worked almost every weekday you’ve been alive and then come home and played with you and helped me put you to bed and listened to me vent and cry and held me and brought me wine and pretty much been the best damn father, partner and human being who ever existed.

Seriously.

Not that I’m surprised. But I am grateful.

The first anniversary of your birth is not so important to you right now. The actual day of your birth, your becoming into the world, your breathing of air; it is nothing to you. It is not even what happened because I don’t think you consciously remember. But the first anniversary of your birth is very important to those of us who remember before, who remember when you weren’t here. It is important because you and I and your dad all survived our first year together as a family. It is important because we all three of us became new versions of who we were a year ago.

You are cautious and deliberate. You watch and evaluate. You practised going up and down the three bottom stairs before you would climb any higher. I can see the gears turning in your head sometimes, when you evaluate a new situation and figure out how you’ll approach it. You are not one of those kids, yet, anyway, who takes a big step off a tall bridge without first examining the water for crocodiles.

You have a very healthy appetite. But you don’t like carrots and you don’t like noodles with butter and cheese. [ETA: the only food that you like consistently is squash.] I do not pretend to understand this last dislike. Would you forsake your Italian heritage so easily?

You have four teeth. One of the top two came through last week and the other two weeks before that.

You have a lot of hair. Sometimes, in the wind, it blows against its grain and you look startlingly like Donald Trump. Maybe I shouldn’t have watched The Apprentice when I was pregnant.

I still call you my baby but you haven’t been a baby for quite some time. You are much smarter than we give you credit for. The first time I asked you to do something and you followed my instructions without me having to demonstrate – my mind was blown. You weren’t mimicking anymore. You were listening, understanding and making your hands and brain coordinate to do what I had asked. Today, at a restaurant, you handed me a creamer for my coffee when I asked you to. A long, beautiful relationship of you handing me liquid refreshments is ahead of us.

Just think: a year ago you were still floating in what was left of your leaky swimming pool, bumping up against the edges but quite content to wait patiently until something changed. Now that I know you a little better, I imagine you were staring at the exit, trying to develop a strategy to get out but wondering how the hell you were supposed to work with so few resources.

Just think: a year ago today I had never seen your face.

Just think: a year ago today.

And now you can find your belly button with both hands.

Posted in trombone | 15 Comments

We Need More Chins!

I typed a “w” into the title box of this post and a drop-down list of previous titles I’ve typed appeared. I recognized a few but this one, “We Need More Chins!” I have no recollection of it. Why did I type it? What was the entry going to be about? No clue.

Maybe it was a picture of me bending my head forward so that I had several chins. There are a lot of those kinds of pictures. This paragraph from The Evil Gremlins Conspire to Convince Parents to Have A Second Child states, in part, in Chapter 12 that:

…the parents shall photograph the first baby to the exclusion of everything else including themselves. This ensures that no photographic evidence will exist of the parents in the first year, further ensuring that they will have no recollection of their sad, droopy, baggy-eyed, sallow-skinned, desperately-bright-eyed selves and will assume, erroneously, that their current state of happiness with X-aged first child (where X is greater than 10 months) is the state of being of all people with any age of child – an assumption which furthers our cause nicely indeed.

On Friday I’m getting a haircut. My daycare provider recommended a woman in the neighbourhood. Allegedly, this woman is an Expert Curly Hair Cutter, which is good because I have some curly hair. Poking through my photo library the other day I saw the photos from my last haircut, in November,(apologies for the terrible formatting in that post) and I miss that haircut. Since November, the new things my hair have done include:

-skydiving
-growing a brand new layer of hair all the way around my head which is about 2 inches long now and sometimes curls endearingly and sometimes looks like I shaved a goat and taped it to my head
– growing about 7 inches everywhere else but not in any uniform fashion
– become very grey
– become somewhat orange in places despite my NO HAIRDYE POLICY (informal, 2006)

I don’t mind the grey or the orange. But I might consult with the stylist about colouring. What can she possibly do about the “mom hairs” though – the fringe around my head? I’ve read enough ‘blogs and talked to enough people to know that this is a post-partum thing. Do we cut everything to the length of the little hairs? Or do we slick them back with pomade? (I am joking. My pomade days are done.)

I was talking to somebody yesterday about Trombone and told the person that Trombone still only has 4 teeth, at 13.5 months old. (lazy kid!) Then I realized actually he has closer to 6 teeth, possibly even 7 by now. The eye-teeth have been coming in for the last couple of weeks. Once I realized that, I was shocked to note that I didn’t update all you people in ‘blog land when the 3rd and 4th teeth came in. For all you know, he might still only have the two on the bottom! Saints alive.

He is also chattering non-stop with inflection that shows he actually is having a conversation, shows a great love of feeding and watering his baby doll with its own fake sippy cup (complete with thirst-quenching sound effect “ahhhhhhh” which his dad taught him) and is about a week away from walking on his own, which is handy because I have several pairs of shoes-in-waiting. I would show you pictures but I have to go get my work on. Yesterday I wore my bartender face but today I think I might wear rock and roll.

Posted in bloggity!, more about me! | 8 Comments

A Stream Of Consciousness Fishing Pole Caught this Awesome Salmon!

I was peeing just now and I thought I should post something and in my head it was all listy and clever 10 things I learned about myself this week or a collection of blue items I own but now that I’m sitting back down on the couch I’m thinking maybe not.

We went to four (4) stores today to look at hardwood flooring. Five (5) if you include The Home Depot where mostly we ate our weight in burgers and poutine – not as bad as A&W’s poutine but not as good as the Elgin St. Diner’s. And drank Pepsicola. And marveled at the Bugaboo strollers. We were at the Home Depot in Vancouver, you see. The thing about big box stores is once you’re inside, you could be in Markham for all you know. So we assumed we were still in The Mizzle. I could not understand why there was so much fleh (meaning: hipstertrendo) at The Home Depot and then SA reminded me we were in Vancouver and very close to Yaletown and at the only Home Depot inside city limits thus people would make a point of going there so as not to have to go to the suburbs.

One time, a long time ago, I applied for a job at that very Home Depot, before it had opened. I had to walk there from the Main Street skytrain station, along Terminal Ave: a long, dusty walk. It was a hot summer day and I was wearing my only clean job-hunting pants. They were beige. And I was walking along, sweating and I tripped over something and fell on my ass. The pants got dirty. Then when I got inside I filled out an application and they made me write a surprise math test. Dirty fuckers.

That was the summer I instead got the job at The Mediterranean Grill down at Canada Place. I worked with several men named Mo and at least got free coffee. That job lasted one month. The music in the food fair at Canada Place was “St Elmo’s Fire” (the love theme) all day every day. All day every day. All day. Every day.

We laughed
until we had to cry
and we loved
until our last goodbye

Shopping for flooring is exhausting because you can’t do it online. You have to go and touch the wood and talk to people about it. And you have to pick from 3 pieces of wood after you’ve narrowed down that you want engineered, floating, ethical wood harvested by blue pixies for less then $10 a square foot including underlay. Oh here. We have a few splintery planks for you. Why don’t you just take them and get out of my store.

SA went to a store last week called Golden Trim.

Thankfully I did not have to go to that one because I would have dribbled my tears of laughter on the precious wood.

I realized this week – this was the start of the 10 things I learned about myself except I only really learned one – that I absolutely hate being told things in an imperative style.

Example conversation.

Me: Hello?
Girl on telephone: Yes I work in the office near you and you sent me back a package of paperwork the other day?
Me: Yes
Girl: There was an x-ray in the package
Me: OK
Girl: It’s not there now
Me: OK
Girl: You HAVE to find it!
Me: I didn’t take anything out of the package. I just got the document on top signed, put it back in the envelope and sent it back to you
Girl: It was here. Now it’s gone. YOU HAVE TO FIND IT.

No one likes being told what to do, I know that. I am not unique. But it actually makes my blood boil and my skin flush to be faced with a statement so absurd as “You lost X. You have to find it.” If I knew where it was, I would give it to you. If I don’t know where it is, I don’t have it. Thus: commanding me to give it back to you makes me not even want to call you back in half an hour and pretend I looked.

The implication that bothers me most about this sort of insistence, I think, is that I am either lying or incompetent.

My fuming (internal and ex) went like this: Do you think I am lying because I stole the x-ray? Why would I do that? Am I insane? Alternately, why are you assuming that I am lying? You don’t even know me. (if you knew me, you’d know that I only lie for very good reasons.) Or if you don’t think I am a liar you must think I am an idiot. Why are you assuming that I am an idiot? Don’t you think I would notice an x-ray sitting on my desk? I don’t work in a dentist’s or doctor’s office. I’m a goddamn admin assistant. I have no need for x-rays.

The next clue came in the form of another work phone call.

Me: Hello
Her: I need to talk to so-n-so. I am very Important.
Me: Oh dear, you just missed him. He started his vacation yesterday.
Her: I need to talk to him.
Me: Well, you can talk to X. Or Y. Or Z.
Her: I am Very Important? And I NEED to talk to so-n-so.
Me: …
Her: Hello?
Me: How can I help you?
Her: I NEED TO TALK TO

…you get the idea.

Yes, I felt like saying. Since you are obviously really truly in need of talking to him, let me get him out from under my desk where I hide him on Wednesdays. No, it’s not convenient for anyone but it’s what we do.

By the time I talked to number 3 fuckwit yesterday afternoon (three phone messages in one hour, the last one saying “You HAVE TO CALL ME BACK. It’s CRUCIAL.” followed by me calling her and getting a busy signal for 45 minutes) I had developed an emotional management technique that I have just named “singing myself down.” Much preferable to my old technique of shouting “motherfucking bitch what the hell do you want?” across the silent, office prairie.

“I am calling you back,” I sang jauntily as I dialed, “and you’re not there/I don’t know why / you said it was so crucial / I am calling you back / I want to care / but you are awful cru-el.”

“You’re still not there / mrs crucial-pants,” I continued a few minutes later, “I just don’t know what your problem is / if I was in such an all-fired hurry / I wouldn’t even take that urgent whizzzzzz.” (tremolo on whiz, natch)

“Well this is three / how can it be / I’ve dialed your number thricely / and if I get you / on the line / you’d best be behaving / nicely.”

See, by the end, I was really getting into it. The tune was great, too. I don’t know how to explain it to you. It was great. I am a musical improv genius.

Plus, it perfectly compliments my “be the craziest one around” strategy. Lesson: the woman in the corner who is currently performing “My Day: The Musical!” is best avoided.

Go watch some Christopher Guest-directed commercials. One and two. (that’s not an order, mind, just a suggestion). I think I am going to ask him to direct my life.

Posted in funny, idiots, more about me!, outside | 5 Comments

It Worked for the Windows

When I first returned to work I wrote a wee poem about keeping the skytrain windows shut in warm weather. The NEXT DAY I noticed the windows were shut and they stayed so for a couple of weeks at least. Yesterday, before we had to evacuate our train due to a drunk or high teenager vomiting on it, I noticed that the windows are now printed with “AIR CONDITIONED CAR. OPEN ONLY FOR EMERGENCY VENTILATION.” The air conditioned car part is new. (unsure as to whether teenager vomit warrants emergency ventilation.)

Screw democratic process: it appears I can influence public policy with my psychic powers!

*********************************************

Sirs.
Your genitals are on the outside of your body,
I know
you have fierce natures that require you protect them from the world,
I know
you want, perhaps, to perpetuate your species
that is to say
continue
that is to say
keep screwing the ladies
[and the men]
with your very
important
genitals
I know.

the seats on this bus are not big enough
for your package!
yes, yes, you are too big
so big
wonderfully big
TOO BIG
for this two-seat to allow
you
your genitals
and me
equal space

I respectfully suggest – unless your genitals pay their own fare –
you keep your legs together
you know
the way they suggest we ladies do
so that I may rest my entire buttock
upon this seat, rather than perching upon one
and bruising my tailbone
and compromising my own reproductive ability
to boot.

yes. my genitals are on the inside.
but they still matter!

sirs.
if you are overweight, I forgive you.
if you are disabled, it’s all right.
if you are 15 and masturbating in those giant pants
well
what can I do about that
but as for the rest of you
who seem intent on taking more than your fair share
you who probably steal the covers
and who probably pass on the right on the highway (another poem, another day)
step one
close your goddamn legs
step two
lose the aftershave
step three
you’re not as important as you think.

Posted in public transit | 7 Comments