Maybe You Had to Be There

I was a choir kid. Not show choir. Not Glee (really not Glee) – but boring, standing on risers choir. Sopranos and altos choir. I was a soprano until I was an alto. Who says girls’ voices don’t change. I will kick that person hard.

We sang a lot of songs. One of the songs I remember singing, I think this was elementary school, was The Rose.

This is how I remember it:

Some say love. It is a river. That drowns. The tender reed.
Some say love. It is a something else. That never. Learns. To Bleed.
Some say love. It is a fever? An endless. Aching. Need.
I say love. It is a flower. And you. Its only seed.

IT’S THE HEART AFRAID OF BREAKING THAT NEVER TAKES A CHANCE
IT’S THE KNEES AFRAID OF ACHING THAT NEVER LEARN TO DANCE
IT’S THE Oh I don’t remember this part at all but it is sung very loudly.

and then quiet:

Just remember. In the winter. Far beneath. The bitter snows
lies the bloom
that with the sun’s love
in the spring
becomes
THE ROSE

Didn’t we have fun?

(Real lyrics here, on The Rose’s own webpage)

Anyway, today I took Fresco to the Formerly Most Depressing Mall, henceforth to be known as That Happening Spot! – holy cats were there a lot of people in that place. He wanted a ride on the merry go round so I stuck him on there and made pretend merry go round noises and it didn’t work this time, my magic is gone. And then he wanted to, and I quote, “go see some other things interesting” so we walked a bit and looked at the shoe store where the size 11 clearance section was full of shoes that were SIZE 9 – you know, it’s not enough that I have these feet but you have to insult me by getting my hopes up with a cute, $10 boot and then it’s oh, sorry, that’s actually a size 9. You know, for the AVERAGE SIZED FOOT. Which you do not have.

Fuck you Shoe Warehouse. Fuck you and your bad shoe displaying skills.

Just past the shoe store, I heard it. The strains of a pan flute. No! Could it be?

When I worked at Granville Island, back in the early ’90s, there was a band of Peruvians. A band that played Peruvian music, made up of Peruvian people. They played every day at about noon on Granville Island. Then I noticed that they also played on the street in downtown Vancouver, at every public market or Quay in the city and sometimes on the beach. I have also seen them in Calgary, Chicago, and Saskatoon.

Don’t ask me how they do it. I guess if enough panflute fans pray hard enough, miracles can happen.

Anyway, I have heard them play El Condor Pasa about 17billiontytimes but I have never, until today, heard them play:

The Rose.

And I had this sort of horrible, gorge-choking impulse to raise my hands to the ceiling and wail along, harmoniously,

WHEN THE ROAD HAS BEEN TOO LONELY
AND THE NIGHT HAS BEEN TOO LONG
AND YOU THINK
THAT LOVE IS ONLY
FOR THE LUCKY
AND THE STRONG

(hey, that‘s the middle part!)

luckily I was holding the hand of a small child and it frightens him when I sing.

Instead I started to laugh. Because what the hell is the Band of Peruvian Pan Flutery doing playing The Rose?

And then I laughed harder. Because where is the line, exactly, that cannot be crossed, where cheezy love ballads, suburban malls and Peruvian Pan Flutery is concerned?

And how do I know about that line? Hint: there is no line!

I couldn’t stop laughing. (I might need more sleep.) The old folks at their tables in the food fair looked at me and then looked back at their blueberry muffins and their cups of coffee. Fresco and I walked on, to find some things interesting.

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In Which I am Magic AND Dull, Surprising No One

I was at the mall with Fresco yesterday. He wanted a ride on the Cars car so I said, sure, go ahead, ride it.
He said, but but but but but but but but (this is a new thing. It is quite irritating) MOMMY. I need a loonie.
(that’s a dollar for all you non-Canadians)
I said, well, I don’t have a loonie. Present company excepted. Har. Har.
He said, Oh MOMMMMMY.
I said, oh look here, I have found a pretend loonie.

I pretended to put the pretend coin in the slot. I pressed the button. I said, vroom! Vroom!

And the ride started for real!

Virtual internet HIGH FIVE I am the best parent on the PLANET.

Speaking of which, does anyone else ever just want to get the kids buckled into their car seats and then walk away? Not *far* away, just…across the parking garage of our building, maybe. To check the mail.

Getting into our car goes like this, please add your own echo because we are underground:

Scream scream scream
yell yell yell
shove push yell shove push yell
scream cry cry cry scream
buckle
buckle
door slam
door slam

silence.

I am not the only one, I know I’m not. Sometimes when SA and I get the kids in the car, we close the doors and have lovely, normal-voiced conversations across the roof while the children’s mouths squawk and wail. Sometimes we don’t even talk, we just stand there. Because we can.

I went to the Vancouver International Writers Festival at Granville Island on Sunday. I spent the whole day there. I went to a workshop in the morning with Lynda Barry of Ernie Pook’s Comeek fame and she taught us fun writing techniques. She was hilarious and adorable and I was reminded of the first time I saw Ani DiFranco play; it was the same sort of irrepressible, squeezable energy.

Then I had lunch and then spent an hour and a half listening to short story writers talk about short stories. It was quite an awesome day. I only talked to two people the entire time. Wait, three. But I smiled a lot.

People didn’t really smile back because it was raining and rain makes people on Granville Island sad. It makes them wince and run for shelter. I felt vindicated because I had worn boots and a raincoat, anticipating rain and then when I was on my way there the sun started to come out and I was all, really? I am wearing rain clothes and the sun is coming out? So when the rain started to pour from the sky like some kind of movie special effect I just put up my hood and splashed in the puddles and smiled more.

You know one thing about staying at home with kids that had never occurred to me until Sunday? My shoes are rarely on for longer than two hours at a time. Ever. I was on the bus coming back and suddenly I realized I had been wearing my boots for 8 hours. My feet hurt. I wanted to take my boots off. But you shouldn’t take your boots off on the bus.

One of the questions asked of the short story panel was something like “where do you get your ideas” and the writers all said “we eavesdrop and notice things” which I didn’t find particularly revelatory but then – I did, actually, find it revelatory because I realized that if someone was asking the question that meant there were people in the world who *didn’t* eavesdrop and notice things.

KeanuWoah.

Really. Not everyone is inspecting everyone else for minute details. Not everyone is storing seemingly meaningless information like squirrels hide nuts.

I mean, of course. Everyone is different, processes information differently, takes in what they consider to be relevant, and so on. It is how we survive, otherwise our brains would go ka-boom!

What this means is: 90% of the people on the bus didn’t even know I was there, let alone notice that I was tall and had sore feet and wore a simple wedding band but no other jewelry except the skull ring on my right hand and I had kind of bad hair and a rain jacket that was very practical and that I carried an old, frumpy metallic purse with a red spiral-bound notebook in it, in which I was writing things, probably things about the guy across from me.

Lots of people are not writers and they just don’t give a damn. There are also, probably, writers who don’t give a damn. It is much easier to assume that no one gives a damn than to assume, as I have been doing, that everyone does.

Next time I am taking my shoes off on the bus. That’ll give you something for your spiral notebook, weird scribbling lady.

Oh, wait.
Nevermind.

(psst. Stop talking.)

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Two Months. Two Kids. (Two Years Later)

I was just looking through my drafts folder for this blog and I found this tiny attempt at a post, which I started on June 21, 2008. Trombone was just shy of 2 years old and Fresco was 2 months (duh):

“I’ve been searching for the right simile. Taking care of two children is like running a marathon. Taking care of two children is like scaling a tall mountain. Taking care of two children is like

…being interrupted every five minutes.

I’m struggling because there’s nothing to compare it to. It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done so the best similes I can come up with are”

That’s it.

I guess I fell asleep.

***

Taking care of two children can be horrifying. When everyone wakes up “in a mood” on the same day. When everybody poops at the same time. When there’s only one piece of bread left and everyone wants toast and the person who is allowed to use a knife in the house is still elbow deep in the poop from sentence two, above.

It can also be splendid. You are never lonely if you are willing to lower your standards for intelligent conversation. You can make small children laugh and forget they were begging for chocolate by putting on a clown nose and talking in a funny voice. They say the darndest things.

Lately, SA has been taking the children out of the house on Saturday mornings. I think this has benefited my mental health greatly. I didn’t notice until today, when I yelled, that I hadn’t yelled for a long time.

I had a dream last week that I was changing Michael Jackson’s diaper. He was an adult Michael Jackson. An incontinent, adult Michael Jackson, who did not want his diaper changed.

My daytime mental health is good. My nighttime mental health is picking up the slack.

Taking care of two small children is like: walking a non-stop tightrope. One foot in front of the other and you can’t get off till you get to the other side. You’re doing something amazing even though it just feels like walking. Everyone is looking at you. Focus. Just put one foot in front of the other. Don’t get fancy. Don’t look down. Don’t forget to smile. You can rest when you get to the other side.

(Chicken Soup for the OverDramatic Mother of Two’s Soul, here I come!)

It’s like: life, man.

It’s like: being cuddled to death by verbose koalas.

Yeesh. Here, clown face. That’s what it’s like, for me, anyway.

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To My Son, on His Fourth Halloween

Dear Trombone,

You may not realize this, but I bring a lot to the table as a mom. I am funny, loving, kind and fair. I feed you, water you, hug you and bathe you. I gave you a brother to play with and even though you don’t always appreciate this, I know you will thank me someday when I am doddering and annoying (yes, even more than now) and you have someone with whom to go for beers and talk smack about me.

Not all moms would let you go out without a coat when it’s cold. Not all moms would forget to make you eat vegetables. Not all moms would play your favourite song 300 times in a row so you can learn all the words. I am SPECIAL.

However, I am not a crafty mom. I do not craft. Crafts are when people glue things to other things and they look good. Do you remember the last time we glued some things to other things and then we dropped them on the floor and they got covered with cereal and cat hair because our ‘craft’ table is also our ‘eating’ table? Yeah.

I am down with crayons and paper, I am down with scissors, I am down with stickers and – if it’s a very special occasion – glitter, because who doesn’t love glitter? I tried to branch out and iron some autumn leaves between sheets of waxed paper but you guys didn’t care. And I was fine with that. At least I tried.

Now it is the time of year when the crafty moms – all of whom I admire greatly because well-done crafts are fantastic! – get super crafty. It is Halloween. You are 4 years old so all you know is:

1. People ask you what you’re going to be for Halloween.
2. You tell them.
3. A costume appears.
4. You wear it.
5. Candy!

Yes, it is a simple, wondrous existence you lead.

Listen, I have something to tell you. I can not make you a Buzz Lightyear costume. I just can’t. I don’t know how, I don’t want to puzzle it out, I don’t sew, I don’t want to sew and I don’t have the time or money to go to fifteen different stores buying 25 pieces of things that I will then have to connect to one another so that you can look sort of like a fictional character for an hour.

Yes, you are going to have to be “something made of stuff from around the house” for Halloween for the rest of your childhood. You are that kid with the mom who is creative but not crafty.

It is better this way, trust me. If I tried to make you a Buzz Lightyear costume, no one would know what you were and you’d have to explain it over and over again and the kids in your preschool class would say, “That’s not what Buzz Lightyear looks like,” – not because they are mean, but because they are 4 years old, like you, so they know EVERYTHING and aren’t afraid to tell you about it – a quality I admire, actually, and one I wish you could hold onto throughout your life; the confidence inherent is inspiring, truly – and then you’d argue with them and then their moms would look at me with pitying glances and slip me some coupons from Michaels, the craft emporium where anyone can be creative – anyone! – and I would have to say, “Thanks but I feel like I’m in a giant scrapbook when I walk in there,” only more politely because your friends are important to you.

You wanted to be a ghost for three weeks and I gave myself mental high-fives because ghost is EASY. Ghost is Slacker, Non-Crafting Mom’s Halloween dream come true. I was quite prepared to massacre a pillow case for you and then – and then! – at the pumpkin patch event on the weekend, you saw a small child in a Buzz Lightyear costume and you changed your mind. You changed your mind!

What you don’t realize, Trombone, is that I talked to that small child’s grandmother and she told me she has been watching Craigslist for a Buzz Lightyear costume for WEEKS and none appeared. Then she went to a rummage sale, that very day that we saw them, and she found the costume there and lo! she snatched it up! That is why that child looked so smug and self-satisfied, because he got what he wanted most in the world – to be a real Buzz Lightyear for Halloween.

You? You will not get this. The next few years will be fraught with tension, I fear, because you have your opinions and my, “Hey wear your Superman pyjamas! Now you’re Superman!” ideas will not sit well with you – not to mention your opinionated little brother – but I’m sorry. I don’t have the time or inclination to get craftier. And I’m not paying $30 for the flammable plastic “Doom Pirate of Doom” outfit.

Or $5 for the ripped, stained, used costumes at Value Village. Given the context, that stain is *probably* chocolate, but you’re my first born – why take a chance.

Hoping you can console yourself with the short list of things that make me awesome at the top of this page as well as consider my idea of “Rock Star” for Halloween costume, I mean after all we have FIVE guitars in the house,

I remain,
yr everloving mother
non craftium

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Buy Stamps

It’s been on my list of things to do for a week. Buy Stamps. I wrote a cheque (yes, a cheque, how quaint!) to the property management company for our gas bill. We pay a gas bill all year long for the fireplace. Even though we haven’t used it since 2008, I think, because last year was balmy, we still get a bill. The cheque is in an envelope on the fridge and on my list it says BUY STAMPS. Every day. Every day I don’t buy stamps. Who wants to go to the post office with children, show of hands? That’s what I thought.

Next item on the list: bank card. Last week I went to the bank machine and my card didn’t work. I don’t use my bank card very much because we take out cash once a week and then I spend it and then if I’m out of cash, well, suck it, Friday’s just a day away. Luckily I was with SA last week when my bank card didn’t work because his card did and we still got our money and the children still got their Ritz Crackers…

(before I had children I think I bought maybe one box of crackers every three years. Those were the days.)

…but I still had this bum card in my wallet. Which doesn’t impact me much, as I said, because I don’t use it, but still. BANK CARD.

On my inside-the-head list was written Use Free Coffee Coupon. A few weeks ago I ended up at Starbucks and when I bought a coffee, the cashier asked me if I wanted a receipt so I said yes because it is always nice to hand something to Fresco so that he won’t steal the Michael Buble CDs or the breath mints or whatever is at the height of his grabby little hand. On the receipt was a code to do an online survey and I was prepared to disregard it but the cashier pointed out that if I did it, I could bring the receipt back to get a free coffee.

FREE!

I diligently held onto the receipt, brought it home, went online, did the survey (“My tall dark roast coffee was tall, dark, and coffee. Nobody peed in it. Thank you.”) got the code, wrote it on the receipt and have been carrying it around with me ever since. Except I don’t go to Starbucks very often so I was worried I would forget and lose the free coffee option. Is there anything worse than losing something that is free?

Today, while we waited for the bank to open, Fresco and I went to Starbucks and I ordered a coffee with my dirty, wrinkled receipt and the cashier at this Starbucks said,
“What kind of drink do you want?”
so I said, “Coffee”
and she said, “You can have anything you want!”
so I said, “Gin!”
and she laughed but in a sort of pained way.
And said, “Anything!”
so I said, “OK a pumpkin spice latte”
and she said, “Atta girl, treat yourself!”

except the thing is, the pumpkin spice latte has an ounce of coffee in it and a cup of coffee has 10 ounces of coffee in it and what I needed was more coffee, not a cup of milk but – they are tasty. They taste of sweet and vaguely of pumpkin and mostly of milk.

The first pumpkin spice latte I ever had was when I worked for the government and we were on strike and I was picketing and it was this time of year and my co-worker bought me a pumpkin spice latte. It sort of helped to ease the pain of picketing and listening to our far more irate co-workers scream with the hey hey ho ho’ing.

Fresco had a muffin. And licked most of the whipped cream off my drink.

Then we went to the bank and the nice man took my card and asked me for my password which I barely remembered because I never ever ever go to the bank and it’s a verbal password and we opened the account before I had children. They should totally ask you to change your password after you have children because remembering what word combination I would have thought was clever when I still had all my brain cells is HARD. That’s not a clue or anything. I am just saying. HARD.

Anyway, then he took my card away and looked at a different computer and came back and said,
“We’ll give you another card,”
so I said, “What’s wrong with it? Is it de-magnetized?” because that’s the thing I know about that can happen to cards. In fact I expected the first thing he would have done was swipe it and see if it worked. Of course I am not a bank teller / associate / barista /whatever.
He said, “Oh it might have been deactivated, have you used it recently?”
and I said, “Maybe not for a couple of months, at the most, but sometimes, yes, I use it.”
and he said, “The bank did a sweep of people’s accounts recently where they deactivated cards that hadn’t been used for 18 months…”
and I said, “No I have definitely used it in the past 18 months,”
and he shrugged and gave me a new card.

Only an hour later did it occur to me that shouldn’t my bank know what they did to my bank card? If they deactivated it, shouldn’t there be a note on my file? Or maybe they could send me an email? They just go through the hundreds of thousands of cards and deactivate some of them without letting their owners know?

Strange days indeed.

After the bank we went to London Drugs for something, what was it, I forget, Oh Look Batteries. Fresco loves batteries. Then there were DVDs. Fresco found Toy Story and carried it around for half an hour while I wandered around thinking, what. What. What do I need? Face cream? Nope. Deodorant? Nope. Hair dye? Maybe, but nope. A margarita machine? They sell a lot of strange stuff at London Drugs.

Finally I picked up two boxes of crackers on sale and a birthday gift for my mother-in-law, and headed for the 18 person lineup. Twice, people walked past the 18 person lineup and said, out loud, “ONLY ONE CHECKOUT OPEN HMMMMMMM,” as though maybe there was another cashier hiding in the Halloween display who would then totally want to open another checkout just to serve the pissy people. Yeah, that’s likely. Try again, douchecanoes.

While we waited in line, I noted the sign above the till. “Postage Stamps Available at Checkout” it said. Aha! Stamps!

The cashier was chatty. I’ve had her before. She likes to talk about the thing you’re buying. She chatted with the woman ahead of me about her purchase (an insulated lunch bag) and her Air Miles card. Then it was my turn.

“Oh these are good crackers,” she said.
“Yep,” I said, wrestling the debit card machine out of Fresco’s hand.
“Oh this is a nice [item details redacted because it is a gift*]”
“Certainly looks to be,” I said, wrestling my wallet out of Fresco’s hand.
“Oh, how old is he,” she said.
“Two and a half,” I said, while I swiped my newly functioning bank card and paid.
“My boy is the same age,” she said, “it’s such a fun age.”
“Yeah,” I said, as Fresco grabbed the receipt from me, “Have a nice day.”

So yes, in case you’re wondering, I am tattooing the words “STAMPS MOTHERFUCKER” on my forehead. Backwards, so I’ll see it every time I go to the bathroom.

* no, SA’s mom, the gift is not a margarita machine. Sorry.

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