All I Can Say is This

As many of you know, any crowing of a parental nature is not to be done on the Internet because then the thing you’re crowing about stops happening.

So I offer this completely impartial report LIVE! from SLEEP TEACH 2007! where there is BEER! and some KLEENEX ™ and a couple of DOUGHNUTS!

Trombone took 50 minutes to go to sleep on Friday night and then slept all night. We said Yay. He napped yesterday morning, after 50 minutes. We said Yay! But yesterday afternoon’s nap didn’t happen; he just cried, on and off, for an hour. We said Boo. At bedtime, he yelped once and fell into a dead sleep until 6:30 this morning. We said Yay!! But this morning’s nap didn’t happen; another hour of crying. We said Boo!

All bets are off for this afternoon’s nap; he was falling asleep in the stroller on the way home from getting groceries but he seems to have found some new energy to holler with and 15 minutes later shows no sign of flagging.

Friday night, I was fine. Yesterday morning, I was fine. I cleaned the kitchen within an inch of its life to distract myself, but I was fine. But yesterday afternoon when I began interpreting it as NO LONGER WORKING, it became torture. Our poor, exhausted little bear.

I feel like I’m trying to break, not guide, someone’s spirit.

In my head, yes, I know what we’re doing and it makes sense.

But in my heart, oh it hurts.

PS: In the time it took me to finish writing this and take out all the swear words, the crying has ceased. I offer this information completely impartially and without either pride or despair.

Posted in trombone | 3 Comments

Meditation

I hold your head in the crook of my arm while your body stretches across my stomach and your feet rest against my hip. Your hand clenches a wad of my t-shirt. Your mouth is still twitching around the soother. This is the second-to-last time we will sit this way; you sleeping against my warm body, me typing one-handed, forced to sit still, my feet on the coffee table, my neck tense from holding the same position too long. The phone is turned off, my water glass is within reach, there is one cushion behind my back and one supporting my arm, the one that supports your head. Sometimes a fire truck will roar by our window and I lean into you, whisper shhhhhh in your ear and your eyelids flicker but stay closed.

This nap is long. Somtimes you are restless and only sleep 40 minutes before startling awake to stare at me, confused and angry at having woken. Sometimes you sleep 90 minutes and go from complete stillness to rolling over in my arms, your soft face creased by my sleeve marks and then a brilliant smile.

Until today we have accommodated this. We have tried a handful of times to teach you to sleep in your crib during the day the way you do at night but something always happens: teething. Separation anxiety. Developmental spurt. Or, we would try for a couple of days until you became so hysterical at the sight of your crib we would back off, not wanting to spoil everything.

Your eyelids are purple with veins. Your skin has a few more spots where you’ve bumped into tables, walls, chair legs. Your hair is growing straight down your forehead like the flap of an envelope and curly at the back like a pig’s tail. Your hands are still dimpled where your knuckles should be. You furrow your eyebrows while you dream. I touch the crevice between my own eyebrows, carved by 33 years of furrowing. It connects me to you.

41 weeks you slept in my body. 41 weeks you have slept outside my body but still with it; your fingers dug into my flesh lest I drop you, your head sensitive to any attempted movement, your body slack with trust and comfort and love.

I love that you sleep on me because it connects us through our breath; yours against my breast, mine ruffling your hair. It connects us through our skin; your cheek against my arm, your belly to mine. It is the next best thing to being pregnant with you; it is as safe as I ever hope to keep you now that you are apart from me and can move away.

Your face, in sleep, is human, not baby. This sleeping face is one which will greet a lover in the morning light. The view of your soft cheek will belong to someone else one day, some man or woman will watch you sleep and resist stroking your cheek that you may rest a few more minutes, selfish, that she may watch you a few more minutes.

41 weeks in; 41 weeks out. I have to believe that the symmetry is magic and when we put you in your bed tonight to fall asleep on your own for the first time you will feel that magic and understand. I have to believe that we have spent so many hours with your head on our chests so that you know, deep in your heart, that we are always here for your head to rest upon and can now rest alone, rest assured in that knowledge.

Rest, sleep, dream. And when you wake; play, learn, grow. This is what I wish for you.

Posted in trombone | 7 Comments

To all my Bloggies

This is a broadcast message to those of you with Blogger blogs, to let you know that I support you and am still reading about your lives closely, almost obsessively, however due to a bug in either Blogger or Firefox, maybe? I am unable to comment because the visual verification box with the annoying code is INVISIBLE. I know that I am not blind because I can read the rest of the Internet, and books too, just not Blogger blog verification codes. And also I have tried clicking the little dude in the wheelchair for non-visual assistance and I get bupkiss. Bupkiz? Bupkus? ANYway.

It’s not you; it’s me.

Posted in bloggity! | 5 Comments

Vanity

Yesterday we went to our local video store & rented two DVDs. For the first time in my life, it was easy to choose a movie because we have seen 1 (one) movie in the past 12 (twelve) months and it was Snakes on a Plane.

Me: Did you know there was a movie called Babel?
SA: Uh –
Me: Oooh! Almodovar!
SA: Oooh! Dukes of Hazzard prequel!

(Doncha wish your friends were as cool as us? Doncha?)

Anyway, as we prepared for the walk to the store, I got dressed as follows:

– Red tank top over polka-dot (black and white) nursing bra. Tank top covers tummy if tugged but is a pre-pregnancy item that also shrank in the dryer so much commitment to tugging is required. If you guessed the world gets to see a lot of my tummy, you guessed right.
– A grey zippered warm-up jacket.
– Black, baggy, drawstring cropped pants. My first post-pregnancy pants purchase. Covered in white splotches.
– Pink, grey and yellow striped ankle socks.
– Navy blue Holey Soles. Yes. Over socks.

(Thanks to Shelley, whose Holey Soles I tried on last spring, spurring an obsessive search for a pair of my own. Best Pregnant Shoes Ever. My sole (sole! har!) regret is that the fuschia ones didn’t fit & the only colour of the rainbow available to my pies gigantes was navy blue. Drat.)

I gave myself the once-over in the full-length mirror and part of me did recoil in horror, as you might expect, but the other part, the part that rules motivation, said “Pah! Who cares?” and we moved on without a backwards glance.

This sentence arrived fully formed in my head as I walked away from the mirror: Obviously I have fulfilled my biological imperative to reproduce if I am going out in public dressed like this.

My grasp on dressing appropriately has always been tenuous (see: 1986 – 1998). Unique, yes. Creative, definitely. Step-away-from-the-bargain-rack, for sure. But I have never been careless. In the past, if my bra strap or my tummy or my hairy knee was showing, it was on purpose; sort of like wearing a button that read Have questions about my belief system? Ask me! You might want to buy me a beer, too! But since motherhood, (not since pregnancy – during pregnancy I still cared what I looked like except for that last week) it seems I have become nonchalant about my appearance while simultaneously hitting upon a hidden cache of self-worth.

I can narrow it to the following statements: If the world wants to ignore me, it will, regardless of my attire. If anything has ever sparkled and been attractive about me, it’s not been my fashion sense. If I need someone’s attention, I can ask for it.

It’s very freeing. I like not caring.

Now, I still bought new shoes last week and the bloodlust that accompanied shoe-shopping for the first time in over a year was sufficiently blinding that I actually tried on a pair that cost $179 and then tried to convince myself that it was a good investment.

Me: They’ll go with everything
Saleswoman: These ones over here, though? Are half the price and more practical.

You know if the saleswoman is DOWNSELLING you that the shoes are a bad idea.

But oh! they are so dreamy-ballerina-beautiful. And they came in a size 11. And it was so comfortable.

beautiful shoe

Picture this shoe in silver leather with blue trim and elastic. I searched in vain for a lower-cost knock-off and purchased instead two pairs of Chinese slippers from Commercial drive for $7 apiece.

Buuuuut – well, way off track now and can’t find the caboose.

Me = less concerned with my own appearance but still appreciative of beauty in all its forms.

And now, my child is trying to climb the stairs using only his teeth so I have to go put his straitjacket on.

Posted in movies, outside, shoes, trombone | 6 Comments

Next Up: Toenail Paint

I waved as they left the porch, the baby’s eyes betraying his astonishment that I was staying behind. I never stay behind.

“Bye!” I chirped, “Be good! Bye! See you later!”

It’s been a big day. I think I have the flu; it was feeling like a cold but this afternoon I’ve started to get that achy, shivery feeling. Trombone woke up special early today just to bitch at us for letting him get up so early and it wasn’t even Christmas. Maybe he’s getting the flu too but I suspect he’s the one who gave it to me. He’s the one who’s been snuffling for a week.

Saint Aardvark went out this morning and bought a very shiny barbeque, along with everyone else in the suburbs. (Because yesterday it was warm and sunny.) Har har today it’s cloudy again but we don’t care. We have patio furniture and we have a barbeque and we have gin.

On Thursday I thought gin and tonics might be nice. I was right! They were. And then yesterday I skipped the tonic because very cold gin feels very nice on a sore throat. And today, because it’s a long weekend and it feels like spring and also because Saint Aardvark and Trombone have gone out to buy meat for the grilling, I am having something I call a Sloe Gin Float.

Ready?

1 scoop lemon sorbet
1 healthy jigger gin
1 healthy splash tonic

I have approximately one hour to enjoy my cool, refreshing beverage while the meat is procured. I also have the new ROKU which SA says is pronounced “ROCK-YOU” but which I peevishly insist on referring to as the “ROE-COO.” I’m so obstinate that way.

I had a job once. It was a good job in that I worked with a cool person named Michael and that the store was located in a great neighbourhood in the West End of Vancouver so the clientele was almost always: in drag, a little crazy or a criminal. Sometimes, yes, all three. Plus, I got to play with a colour photocopier all day. (Counterfeiting money is harder than you’d think) We had another co-worker, a sarcastic Malaysian woman who liked who she liked and didn’t have any time for anyone else. Thankfully, she liked us both.

We also, necessarily, had a boss. He was our age and a pretty OK guy most of the time. But he was a Normal and he liked classic rock. He REALLY liked Pink Floyd and Eric Clapton. He read The Province (our local tabloid-style newspaper) FOR SERIOUS. He was the kind of guy who honestly didn’t understand why everyone didn’t just put the homeless people in rehab – that way they’d get clean and so would the streets!

OK anyway, our boss, whom we called Jefe because it means “boss,” insisted that where CD players were concerned, the bigger the better. (Are you surprised? He also drove a red sports car.) He had the shop wired for sound and he had a big ‘ol Bertha of a 200-disc changer in the back room where we sorted the mail. And he had 200 discs in it, too. I think the one Pink Floyd album is 4 discs all by itself! Sometimes, Michael and I would bring in our own CDs but it proved to be a hardship trying to remember where we’d put them in the vast carousel. And unless you wrote down which slot your disc was in and then stuck it on “repeat,” you’d never hear it because the “random” function on the thing was fucked. I heard the same Allman Brothers song every day. It was called Mountain Jam, it was instrumental and it was 33.41 minutes of guitar solos. Every day. The game soon became to run into the back and hit the CD player again and again until it moved past its unhealthy obsession with jams.

Here’s my take-home: If your CD player is so big you forget what’s in it and can’t find anything except Pink Floyd, your CD player is too big to be useful. Also, the thing was constantly breaking, so we spent a lot of time tuning in the radio anyway. (Obviously classic rock versus ANYTHING ELSE was how that game went.)

Then the shop got broken into and the CD player stolen, its 200 or so discs nestled safely inside. Whoops. It worked out well because there was insurance but what did Jefe go and buy to replace it?

(Actually, Michael, what did he go and buy? Because I know it was stupid but I can’t remember if it was another 200 disc changer or a 500. I suspect the 500. Or 1,000?)

A 500-disc changer, let’s say. Something big enough to make plain that our Jefe had not learned his lesson.

And – then – Michael left to make his own way; a string of amusing but horribly ineffective employees were brought in to replace him and finally, the business was sold and I was laid off which was actually my greatest dream come true. As for the CD player, all I know is that when I worked for a couple of weeks with the new owners, they brought in two (2!) CDs of Korean Christian rock and generally played them once or twice in the morning before switching to the local easy listening station.

We decided to buy the ROE-COO because it 1. is cheaper (and easier to find) than a cd player 2. plays internet radio 3. accesses our cds assuming we’ve ripped them to our computers and yup, we have, which leads to 4. once all our CDs are ripped and on the network, we can put the jewel cases and CDs in boxes and not worry about our kid cutting himself open on them or selling them for crack plus 5. we’ll have all that extra space where they used to be. Also, 6. the ROE-COO takes up 8 inches of space and we can put it up high enough so that Trombone doesn’t try to climb it. Oh, he’ll climb anything. He’ll climb ice cream. He’s not picky and just a little focused.

As I was saying, I have one hour to enjoy my beverage and my tunes and my empty house. Currently, Sufjan Stevens.

I wish the same to all of you who need it. ROE-COO-ON!

Posted in , food, music, trombone | 3 Comments