Upping the Estrogen

When I was a kid I used to take pictures of my stuffed animals. Like, family portrait style. I would gather them all up on the couch and pose them and then whip out my little rectangular camera and click away. Rolls of film of inanimate objects. I had a lot of stuffed animals. I was an only child. Have I mentioned that recently?

In fact a lot of the stuffed animals that my kids have used to be mine, most of which as an adult. I came to this parenthood thing complete with three duck puppets, one hedgehog and several teddy bears. Now the kids have appropriated them but only I know how to make the ducks talk.

The new stuffed toys in our house are the dolls. When Trombone was about a year old, we got him a baby. I don’t think we ever named her. He did like her for a long time and then she fell out of favour. Then came Fresco, a kid who talks animatedly to anything with a face. He did this hilarious thing with the doll at my mom’s house; yelled at it, grabbed its hair and smashed its face into the floor.

Well, we thought it was funny. We suspect it’s a pecking order thing.

For Christmas, Fresco got a doll of his own, a soft one with long hair. We named her Dave because at the time, Fresco was calling everything Dave.

Last week Trombone decided he was Dave’s caretaker so he played with her, gave her lunch, put her down for a nap. It was very sweet. When I was at Value Village on the weekend and I saw a doll for only $5 with red yarn hair and eyes that open and close (a rarity) I brought her home. Her name is Maggie and I told Trombone she is a friend for Dave. Of course now that Maggie and Dave are hanging out so much, old baby doll from last year wanted in on the action too. Today found all three dolls face down on our couch, having naps. I had to be quiet. Then they ate lunch. They almost went potty but I stopped them in time.

But it afforded me the opportunity to take pictures. Pictures remarkably like those I took when I was a kid, except, you know, with live models.

(left to right: Dave, Baby, Maggie)

Posted in | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Present

Balance. The nature of “three” is imbalance. I try and fail to picture a triangular see-saw. The thing I am finding hardest about parenting two children is achieving balance and helping meet everyone’s needs, not just the clean bum, full tummy needs but everything after; fun and exercise and engaged parent types of needs. The quality of life stuff.

It is so simple when there is one child. Eventually that child must sleep and when he does, I get my needs met. I get my list-making time, my internet surfing time, my ice cream eating time. I can make phone calls, thaw meat, make chili. Do laundry, bag maternity clothes, sweep the floor for the hundredth time. Write fiction, write blog posts, write email.

When the child wakes up, I am happy to see him. I have what I need and I am full of Everything For Him. He won’t leave my side? It is OK! He won’t sit down but must walk around the house holding my hands? Not a problem! He wants to climb all the stairs to the top of our townhouse? You get the idea!

Obviously I have had a taste of this recently or I would not be able to wax so eloquently. Trombone was at his grandparents’ house overnight Sunday and Monday morning I remembered what it is to have all the needs met at once. Trombone’s because he was subjected to full attention from two people he loves (and who have The Good Yogurt in their fridge). Saint Aardvark’s because he could spend Sunday evening bottling his beer and then have a leisurely morning before work. Mine because I got an embarrassment of time (like, two hours!) to just putter. Fresco’s because my needs had been met so I was delighted to watch him pet the cat for 45 minutes. Even the cat – long the lowest life form in the house, now the proud recipient of Fresco’s unabashed love – had his needs met.

I miss that.

It is well and good to talk of being In the Moment and Here & Now, but I realized, later, that to be fully present for my kids, to be paying attention while they play and talk and learn all day, I need to have spent enough time on me. Otherwise I am resentful of the time I must spend on them, always looking for a shortcut, a sneaky way to get my time and have them think they are getting their time as well. Long walks with them strapped in the buggy, for example: for me, not really for them.

I know it is necessary that I do that sometimes, that I take what is important to me so I can be mentally healthy enough to look after others. I do know the old saw about the oxygen mask.

This morning I practiced. I sat on the floor and I saw the dirt around me that I ought to have been sweeping and way beyond like a mountain range I could see the kitchen counter overflowing with dishes and half-eaten bowls of applesauce from breakfast and I thought briefly about getting up to check my email or read just one blog or make one phone call to cross one more thing off my list for the week but I chose to ignore my mind’s chatter for a few minutes and just look at Fresco singing and dancing along to the radio, shaking his baby bottom, grinning at me, just past nine months old. I talked with Trombone about the noodles he swore he could feel when he squeezed my belly.

There it was; fleeting but smiling. Balance.

Posted in | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

My Worst Job, or, Grace in Big Things

I meant to mention yesterday that I will not be posting a daily list of grace in small things here, at this weblog. Occasionally I might cross-post but if you want to know what little things I am grateful for on a given day over the next year, follow the link on the badge on the left sidebar and presto! you will know.

The year 1996 was no picnic. I kicked it off by breaking off my fledgling relationship with Saint Aardvark, claiming the usual “not you, me,” the day before the last day of 1995 so we ended up together but apart at the same New Year’s party. Ouchy. Don’t worry, it all turned out all right in the end.

Our landlord raised our rent so Sarah and I had to move to a basement suite with two windows, one purple bathroom and a lot of mushrooms. The fungal kind, not the magic kind.

Sarah and I each lost our jobs.

UBC told me I couldn’t graduate after all because I needed one more course. Even though they had already put my graduation photo up on the wall of the Political Science hallway under the Class of ’96 banner. Random trivia if I am ever famous: I am actually part of the class of ’97.

I got a job making falafel sandwiches at a deli in the basement of the Vancouver Trade and Convention Centre, working for a pervert named Mo and his best buddy, also named Mo. Though I got free coffee and all the falafel I could eat, I also got free ass pats, lewd conversation and a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach each time I watched Mo hire on the spot another girl who looked like she was 15 minutes from an overdose in an alley only to spend all day propositioning her while she tried to keep the grease from the deep fryer out of her hair. So I quit, even though I had no money at all and neither did Sarah.

Then the guy I was Not Formally Dating went away for the summer and decided to Not Formally Date someone else all summer long. He didn’t tell me about it until September when he came back with her and announced her as his girlfriend. This was Not Formally Cheating but it still felt sort of like a poke in the eye with a sharp stick.

In September, I was out job-hunting and saw a sign in the window of a store called U-San Gifts near the corner of Broadway and Granville. It was one of those stores where you can’t walk for shelves full of incense, potpourri, angel figurines, place mats, candles and mugs that say things like “I’m not over the hill; I’m buried under it!” Big, cheap rugs everywhere. Bamboo blinds. Music boxes (one of which, I soon learned, played Stairway to Heaven) and dolphins. Lots of dolphins. I walked in and handed the woman behind the desk my resume. I thought, hey, pop music is playing on the radio, how bad could it be. She asked if I could start the next day. I said a silent fucking A and went home to share my good news with Sarah and our cats, Stella and Frank. Or, if you prefer, Frank and Stella.

(Oh and then later that fall, our cat Stella got out one of the windows, got pregnant [Frank moved out because he wasn’t the father] and suddenly we had 6 kittens in our basement apartment)

(but they all found homes.)

(and they were really cute.)

Unfortunately, what I had thought was the radio had been a CD. A Celine Dion’s Greatest Hits CD. The other CD that the owners of U-San Gifts played every day was Whitney Houston’s Greatest Hits. That was it, just the two. Except at Christmas, when they switched to The Smurfs Christmas Album and the Nana Mouskouri Christmas Album.

That job was the single most horrendous thing that has ever happened to me, including the time I sliced part of my finger off at my old deli job.

The owners of U-San Gifts were from Burma. They hated white people. They hated me. They were pretty clear about this. I was to: organize their stock room, polish their shelves full of knick knacks (take knick knacks from shelves. place on floor. clean shelf. put knick knacks back EXACTLY WHERE THEY WERE) and look after their two small children, aged 5 and 2, who lived behind the counter in a playpen except when they were allowed to wander freely through the store scaring the customers. Oh and I wasn’t to talk to the customers. Certainly not allowed to take their money at the counter. Obviously I could not be trusted with a cash register.

I had to do their window displays too, but they had to be exactly the way they wanted. Mostly this involved spending half a day in the stock room choking on dust looking for a specific “50% OFF TODAY ONLY!” sign and then spending the other half in the front window, in full view of all the people waiting for the bus, hanging 8×10 Persian rug knock-offs using fishing wire while the children frolicked at my feet wrecking everything I put in place.

The children were obsessed with Sailor Moon. They named me Sailor Pluto. I just remembered that.

The money I earned did not adequately cover my expenses and so I ate a lot of rice, with tabasco for flavour. I walked to work (about 45 minutes each way) to save bus fare. I spent the day humping boxes of stock, sweating in the front window underneath $14.99 throws with suns and moons on them, chasing the younger of the two children to stop her from destroying precious china dolphins and listening to “I’m Every Woman” and the love theme from “Titanic.” 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, for some months.

I take back what I said about the owners. They didn’t hate white people; they distrusted white people. They knew for a fact that everyone who was not from their part of the world was going to steal, cheat and lie. They criticized everything I did, they peered around corners while I worked, hoping, it seemed, to catch me in the act of something. They called on me to follow around the store people they suspected of shoplifting. One time I saw a guy steal something and I didn’t say anything. I guess I proved them right.

Day in, day out, being treated like dirt, having the worst believed about you, it breaks you down. I think I only worked there 7 or 8 months but I was so depressed I often cried my entire walk home. It wasn’t that I was doing grunt work – I had done that before – but that I was being treated like less than human.

(And yes, it did occur to me that many people of colour live with some degree of this degradation from the moment they are born until they die, every day, in every area of their lives. They don’t get to just walk out the door and go out on the town and drink it all away. It’s at the bar too, for them. It’s on the bus, at the bank, at the grocery store, for them.)

In the spring, Sarah’s boyfriend Crazy Dave told me about his best friend whose friend was married to a guy who owned a small business. That guy gave me a job in his shop downtown. My world began the climb to luck and love and general good humour again the day in June, I think it was, that I first walked in to that shop and started sorting the mail.

The other day I was thinking about my life. I’m pinched, licked, bitten, screamed at, kept from sleeping, often kept from eating, lately forced to “show my work” after I have been to the toilet (oh the joy of potty training) and frequently refused free time or regular breaks. At best, my days are balanced between my needs and those of my young charges. At worst, I am on my feet for 12 hours and the children time their sleep so that I am not free of both of them until their father gets home. But even on my worst day parenting, I have never felt as degraded, as worthless, as down-and-out LOW as I did at U-San Gifts. This job is harder, yes, it taxes me from my head to my toes, yes, but it is far, far from the worst job I have ever had.

For that, I am truly grateful.

Posted in | Tagged , , | 10 Comments

Grace in Small Things – 1st of 365

I heard about Grace in Small Things through Schmutzie and I decided to participate. Lately I feel an irrepressible urge to find, grasp in my hot fists and examine closely anything resembling a bright side. If you do too, check out Grace in Small Things here.

1. One extra hour of sleep last night.

2. The baby’s hot breath against my neck as we dozed in the rocking chair.

3. My perfect, knee-high, argyle socks. So that everyone may admire them, I am tempted to roll my pants to mid-calf and wear sandals to the store.

4. Having shorter hair means the shower spray now hits directly on that place on the back of my neck.

5. Warm in bed, reading a great novel, eating chips, with a partner who loves to do the same.

Posted in | Tagged | 2 Comments

I Knew I Forgot Something

After yesterday’s post, I knew I had one more bit of random stuff but I couldn’t remember it. Luckily I have a lot of time in the dark to think these days so it came back to me tonight.

The Wiggles. Parents of currently young children, you know what I’m talking about. The Wiggles. They are Australian children’s entertainers. There are four of them; they sing and dance and they wear coloured shirts to differentiate between them.

Blue Wiggle (the Wiggle in the blue shirt) is Anthony. He is the one I like best because he has nice eyebrows. Also, he seems to be having the most fun. The first Wiggles episodes I saw featured what I came to call the New Wiggles because one day I saw an episode that had DIFFERENT Wiggles in the same coloured shirts. Blue and Yellow had different faces! And the production value of the show was such that I could tell these Wiggles were, well, older.

Then Saint Aardvark came home and the conversation went:

Me: Did you know there are New Wiggles and Old Wiggles?
SA: Why would I know that?
Me: Yeah, because …
SA: Maybe I was too subtle. I don’t *want* to know that.
Me: But there are two different Anthonys! And they’re both called Anthony but they’re different! False ANTHONY!
SA: The earplugs are going in…

Trombone went off the Wiggles for a while, which was OK because really the only episode I like is the one with Leo Sayer where they do this amazing version of You Make Me Feel Like Dancing and we had that one on the PVR so we could watch it whenever we wanted. But still the PVR would record the Wiggles, whether it was New or Old and sometimes I would see the Old ones and cringe. Pleated trousers! Fake smiles! FALSE ANTHONY!

We took out “Wiggly Safari” (guest star Steve Irwin!) from the library last week and on the cover it looked like Old Wiggles but then I looked closer at Anthony (Blue Wiggle) in the actual movie and he sort of looked like a cross between Old and New Anthony. Like, I could see how he might be either. Was he Transitioning Anthony?

Quick! To the googlesphere! Where we learned, maddeningly, that there has only ever been ONE Anthony Wiggle (AKA Anthony Field) and he was a founding member; in other words, New and Old Anthony are the SAME PERSON and I am on The Big Crack!

So now I am going crazy trying to figure out why they look so different. I have narrowed it down to a nose job and teeth whitening (plus he gained some weight and shaved his sideburns) but does anyone know? Is there dirt on Blue Wiggle Anthony that I am not turning up? Australian reader Jacqueline, you have seen them in concert, right? Anybody? What’s up with Anthony?

Behold: new Anthony:

and Old Anthony:

Posted in | Tagged , , , | 43 Comments