Wednesday, December 30, 2009

An Ode to Benadryl

This is one of my poems with which I am most pleased. The rhyming pattern was really difficult to work with, so it took a lot of effort. I wrote it a couple of years ago and I'm not sure why I'm posting it tonight of all nights.

Let me explain the strange subject matter: I often suffer from insomnia, so when I discovered that Benadryl can help with that, my nights were revolutionized.

Benadryl (aka diphenhydramine) is a very beautiful thing, thus I chose to celebrate it in the following manner:



An Ode to Benadryl
or
The Pursuit of a Minor Death of Consciousness



A serotonin dearth will drive
Me stumbling off to raid a hive
Of plastic placed above the sink.
Its swarm is silent, still and pink.

The dissolution of the dose
Prescribed could leave me comatose.
I’ll halve the ration prudently
To clinch my round trip ticketry.

The subway token vial yawns
Above my palm. A new night dawns
As to my hand, the beauties fall.
I pinch just one, but cherish all.

Beloved diphenhydramine!
You tiny, legal, potent bean!
Lethean drops solidified,
Safe opiates, freshly descried.

A slip of matter, barely sensed
Between my thumb and finger, tensed.
Though dryly dropped, it plumbs my throat.
I board the bus, embark the boat.

The pill is popped, the plea is prayed.
I’m biding now to be conveyed
To where one third of life is meant
To be in unawareness spent.

In faith, I sprawl out, prone again
As drowsing syrup dribbles in.
The thickened ooze coats my inside.
Thus slowly, starts the carpet ride.

With faculties in dull retreat
My smile is stupid and replete.
I hum a selfish lullaby.
The monkeys chatter as we fly.

An undulating, gentle sway
Grows stronger as my musings fray.
The thousand summoned servants lift
My litter high…I cross the rift.





A little practical advice if you're thinking this news about diphenhydramine is an answer to your sleep deprived prayers: The full dose (two pills) will likely knock you out for way longer than you want, so just take one pill or even half of one. Also, drink plenty of water with it since it's an antihistamine. (You don't want to wake up from your nice long sleep with a urinary tract infection, now do you?) Oh, one last thing, if you're one of those "I use TylenolPM to help me sleep" types, switch over to my stuff 'cause your stuff is nothing more than Tylenol with diphenhydramine added to it and a bottle of generic Benadryl is way cheaper than a measly 20 pack of TylenolPM.

This isn't a fail-safe method to get to sleep. When I was in Romania for nine days, I took the whole dose every night and I was still too keyed up to conk out. Still, for the most part, diphenhydramine is my very good friend.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Confession

Was anyone inspired by my pep talk post of yesterday?

Yeah, me neither.

Monday, December 28, 2009

It's Time...

Okay, everybody, it's time to throw out all of those leftover Christmas saboteurs...um, I mean goodies.

Go on...

Fling that fudge!



Toss that toffee!



Crumble those cookies!




Crush that candy!



(Uh oh, that sounds like a bunch of ice cream toppings, doesn't it?)

And no, eating it all today so that it's not around tomorrow does NOT count as getting rid of it. Trust me, it will still be there, just around your waist instead of on the kitchen counter.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Martha Stewart Would Shudder

Some people are very particular about the decorations on their Christmas tree.

Not me...in fact, I learned today that my standards are below those of my children. (Well, in some cases.) As we broke open the box o' baubles and such, Tobias suggested we nominate certain ornaments to be tossed in the trash instead of onto the tree.

My one request was that when an item was nominated, it needed to be done so carefully and kindly since many of the ornaments were hand-crafted by others who were presently in the room. (Yes, yes, I know it's impossible to kindly declare that someone's handiwork should be treated as refuse, but I was striving for civility, okay?)

One of the first decorations to go was this one, described by Tobias as looking like a confused clown who is using his drum as a receptacle for bodily waste instead of as a percussion instrument:

(Yes, in case you're wondering, Tobias does have eyeballs.)

There were some ornaments that were quite aesthetically challenged, but they somehow wormed their way into our hearts over the years and we couldn't bear to face a Christmas without them, regardless of their freakishness or hideousness.

Take this shrinky dink "Santa's elf" for example:


Tobias made a whole bunch of these little gems when he was six and handed them out as gifts to all of our relatives. Miraculously, everyone managed to squeeze out a "thank you" when they unwrapped them. There was nary a scream nor a snort of laughter, though I can't recall ever seeing one hang on a tree except for ours in the ensuing years. Hmm...I wonder why...maybe because they look as if they're possessed and about to go postal in Santa's workshop?


(See what I mean?)

(Emergency update!!! Vindication of the grandparents: My father-in-law read this post and let me know that Tobias's "demonized elf" has been hung with care on their tree every year since it's presentation. Sorry if you felt maligned, my dear in-laws. :( )

This year, just as a few decorations were voted out, some things were voted in. Notice I said "things", not "ornaments". These are some of the objects which are presently decking our evergreen boughs to the delight of our truly odd children:



(The last one's a skeleton's forearm.)

Whatever.

It all looks positively festive if you take a blurry photo from ten feet away:


Happy Jesus' birthday everyone!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Don't Be Jealous...

...of my very spiritual kids.

Picture this: It's early morning. My two precious children and I are sitting at the kitchen table. As they are nourishing their growing bodies with bowls of Honey Bunches of Oats, I am nourishing their tender souls with a verse from the Bible. (I've learned to keep it about three verses or fewer in order to stave off that glassy-eyed look which lets me know they're no longer "checked in". Hey, it's better short and sweet than long and ignored, right?)

On this particular morning, I read, "Whoever guards his mouth and tongue, keeps his soul from troubles." (Prov. 21:23)

Putting down the Bible, I ask, "Can you think of a time when you said something and shortly afterward wished you had just kept your mouth shut?"

"Oh, yeah," Delaney says, her eyes rolling for emphasis.

So pleased that my daughter could quickly identify the truth in the biblical passage and immediately see it's application in her own life, I smile and ask, "When was that, Delaney?"

What, dear readers, do you think her inspiring, uplifting response was?

Well, read on...

"Every time I ask Dad something about the Bible! I ask one little question and he goes on and on and on..."

Hmmm...not exactly what I was going for...

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

The Shunned Ground Beef and Other Questionable Good Deeds

I went to the bank yesterday. Just as I climbed out of my car, I noticed a homeless guy next to the bank's door.

He wasn't standing, looking as if he was about to walk away. He was sitting there, leaning up against a pillar looking about as comfortable as a person can when their back is pressed up against bumpy stucco.

Hoping I looked unstartled and natural, I walked toward the grocery store in the same lot although I originally had no plans of going there.

I've encountered this particular man before. He asked for money then. I bought him an ice cream instead.

Sitting outside of a bank is a pretty good idea if money is what you want. You know that people either have money when they're going in or they're going to when they come out.

Jeff and I decided long ago that we wouldn't hand out money to people who ask for it since we don't want to fund anyone's drug or drink addiction. However, we usually offer food to them since we hate the idea of a person's basic needs not being met.

We've bought a lot of hamburgers over the years.

Years ago, when I was in college, Jeff and I emerged from the grocery store to be accosted by a man who asked us for cash. He launched into a story about how his kids were hungry and he needed just enough money to buy some ground beef for their dinner.

It just so happened that the market was having a sale on ground beef that day and I had bought three individual packets of it. Reaching into one of my bags, I pulled one out and handed it to the man.

The look on his face was priceless. It was clear that he wouldn't be using the hungry kids/ground beef story again. I practically had to force it on him.

Amused, Jeff said, "You'd better get home and cook that up before it goes bad on you." (Hey, we don't normally laugh at those who are less fortunate than us, but when we catch them in their own lie, it's kind of hard not to.)

A few months ago, I was coming out of a grocery store that I don't usually shop at and I was approached by a young man who actually asked for food instead of money. I told him to meet me over at Jack in the Box on the corner and I'd get him something. He ran off to "tell his brother" and I continued toward my car with my bags of groceries.

Once I got to my car, another guy shuffled up to me and asked for some money. He was a lot older and scraggly looking. I told him that I'd buy him a burger and to meet me over at Jack in the Box. Then I quickly got into my car, wondering how many more people were eyeing me from around the parking lot.

(Here's where I must tell you that although I am genuinely glad to feed a hungry person, I'm quite intimidated by panhandlers. They're usually men and even though they may have missed a few meals and slept poorly the night before, they could probably still floor me with one blow. I really hate it when I take out my wallet to pay for their meal and they can see a couple of twenties peeking out. For all I know, they're just scoping me out so that they can grab my bag later. Therefore, I do try to be wise about 'helping' them and not compromise my own safety.)

So...as I drove my car over to JITB, I decided to just go through the drive-through and hand them their bags of food out of my car window. Once I ordered the food, I was told to pull around to the parking lot and that it'd be brought out to me when it was ready. From where I parked, I could see Old-Timer inside the restaurant, waiting for me to show up. He waited several minutes and then erupted out the front door, loudly complaining, '"That #$@&* said she was gonna buy me a burger!"

Just as he finished spewing that forth, he looked up and saw me, sitting there with my window down. His face fell.

I'd like to say that my response was, "It's on it's way, Sir" complete with a sweet smile, but...

...I'm not a liar.

What I actually said was something like, "I'm the #$@&* who said she'd buy you a burger and if you stick around, you just might get it."

(Yes, well, not one of my finer moments...)

I instantly regretted it.

Poor guy. He looked so embarrassed by his actions and my reaction.

I understand that he was grossly disappointed. He had been told he was getting some lunch that day and then after waiting several fruitless minutes, he assumed he'd been lied to and that his stomach would remain empty.

When the food finally came, he humbly thanked me several times. In the meantime, the original food-wanter showed up with his brother and burgers were had by all as I drove away cringing and repenting.

By far, the weirdest panhandling experience I had was at the dentist's office. Sitting in the waiting room while one of my kids was getting worked on, I noticed a girl, about 12, come in and sit down. She didn't check in at the desk and she wasn't with an adult, all of which struck me as odd. Well, it was about to get very strange, indeed.

After a couple of moments, she made her way over to the seat next to me and sat down. Looking at me, she began to whisper.

"What?" I asked.

She whispered again.

"If you want me to hear you, you'll have to speak up."

A third time she began to speak to me, still very quietly. "Will you give me some money so that I can go to Radio Shack and buy something?"

Who was this girl, why was she at the dentist office and where were her parents???

Totally confused, I said something like, "No, if you were hungry, I'd get you something to eat, but I'm not going to give you money."

Understanding dawned on her face. "Well...I am hungry."

Right...

Not wanting to make a liar out of myself, I walked with her over to Jack in the Box (yep, the very same one) and bought her (you guessed it!) a hamburger. She said she wanted a soda, too, but my motherly sensibilities kicked in and I told her she could have milk or OJ if she was thirsty.

Looking back, I see how poorly I handled that whole situation. I taught a neglected girl that if she goes begging for money at a dentist office, she'll end up getting a free meal. Who knows how many creeps would take advantage of her odd, needy behavior. Yuck. (I found out later that she lived in an apartment right next to the dental office.)

All of this takes me back to the guy out in front of the bank yesterday. He was gone once I returned from my impromptu shopping trip.

When I told Jeff about what had happened, he said, "Why didn't you just buy him a sandwich at the market and then when you went into the bank and he asked for money, you could have pulled it out and said, 'Here you go!'?"

Hmmm...somehow that didn't occur to me. My brain seems to flip over and play dead whenever I'm getting hit up for money.

All of this is to say what exactly?

I'm not sure. I'm just thinking about needy people and what my response to them should be. I want to be helpful, but I also don't want to give them opportunity to harm me or themselves. I want to be kind but sometimes I end up fouling my normally hygenic mouth. I want to care for an odd preteen girl and afterward I fear that I've taught her to be too trusting of strangers.

It all makes me so thankful for God's grace and it's sufficiency. (2 Corinthians 12:9)

If I was trying to make my way to heaven through my own goodness, I might end up at Jack in the Box.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Soda Wanna Know Where We Was At?

Jeff was recently intrigued by a video he saw on YouTube about a store called the...

He decided we needed to make a pilgrimage there.

Here's the star of the YouTube video, a genuinely nice guy named John who cheerfully stood still long enough for me to snap a photo of him with my kids:


This place carries a vast selection of hard to find sodas. Regard the highly impressed look on Jeff's face:


We were there for probably an hour, perusing the sundry types of bubbly drinks.

While there, we overheard two other people tell John that they had seen his YouTube video, so apparently we weren't the only computer potatoes there. (There's such assurance in that realization.)

When Jeff finally wheeled our cart over to the cash register, I purposely stepped away, not wanting to know what the resultant cha-ching would prove to be. (Jeff bought most of it with his own "fun money".)

The final haul:

Here it is, artfully displayed on our fridge's top shelf:


This vast array of beverages inspired us to hold "The Soda Olympics". Some of the more interesting contenders were: Cucumber, Double Cola, Rose, Sarsaparilla, Mabi (made from a tree root extract), Mango, Coffee, Curiosity Cola, Pomegranate/Raspberry, Rhubarb, Peach and Blueberry. (Yes, really.)

Here, Jeff carefully pours a mint flavored soda into the crystal goblet of each judge:


Tobias scrutinizes the delicate bouquet of an orange cream:


Pinkies out. (Now that's fancy!)


Delaney clears her palate with some popcorn:


Then, after a particularly nasty sample (the Moxie, perhaps) she clears her palate by rubbing her tongue with a napkin:


We all kept tabs on the competitors by rating them 1 to 10 on index cards:

The Olympics stretched out over many days so that we could truly appreciate each discriminatory swallow.

Tobias's favorite was the "Lenin"ade. It's bottle touts, "A party in every bottle!" and "A taste worth standing in line for!" and finally, "Drink comrade! Drink! It's this or the gulag!" We're not sure what makes this lemonade soviet-style, but it amused us, nonetheless. I searched the bottle to find where it was actually bottled, but that information was suspiciously absent. Maybe we should get the KGB involved.

When the results were all tallied, it was determined that the collective winners were:

bronze...Mint Julep

silver...Orangina

and gold...


...Ironbeer, the only beverage we bought which happened to come in a can instead of a bottle. Ironically, it was also the least expensive of the entire haul. (Don't worry, Ironbeer is non-alcoholic.)

The ultimate loser was the Bitter Lemon which tasted like a porta-potty smells...yuck!!!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

He Often Makes Me Happy...

...and sometimes he makes me really happy!

(I'm talking about this guy here:

Pretty cute, huh?)

Six and a half years ago, we moved into our present home. Our last house had a broken jacuzzi when we bought it, so we were rather pleased to see that this house had a jacuzzi. Well, as soon as we put our suits on and went out back to celebrate our home purchase we discovered our tendency to buy houses with broken hot tubs.

Ho hum...

Anyway, to make a long story short, we always had something better to spend money on than a jacuzzi repair bill and eventually the whole thing started falling apart and looking super trashy.

It's not much fun having a dilapidated behemoth in your back yard when friends come over to play croquet. In fact, it's downright embarrassing, especially once the wood paneling starts to peel off and the "leather" cover splits open to reveal the lovely foam pieces within.

The neighbors said that our home's former owner had rented a crane to install the beast by lifting it over the house into the backyard, so it was not going to be an easy task to get it out.

You may have guessed where this is all going...

...yesterday, Jeff, Tobias and our friend, Jake, slayed the mortifying monster, armed with sledgehammers, Sawsalls and that good old fashioned stuff known as a male's love for destruction. (I think that if they could have involved guns, martial arts movies and beef jerky it would have been a completely satisfying day for them.)

Just look at those smiles:



Behold the power of a Sawsall:





Yep, it'll fit in the truck now:


Get Tobias to toss the remaining rubble into a few garbage bags...


...and suddenly, you've got an empty cement pad where a hideous broken hot tub used to be:



It's so satisfying to know that there's a little less evidence of our slothdom on display.

Ah, yes...it's more soothing than a soak in a hot tub...

Family Tree

It has always fascinated me that for any of us to be here today, every single one of our ancestors had to be conceived exactly when they were. This is my take on that fact:



Family Tree

An egg that burst forth from its berth
Had docked with patience till
Its personal predestined pop-
A mittelschmertzic spill-
Then met the very salmon that
Swam up the stream and won
The convoluted river race
Which millions had begun

When only once this act occurs
“A miracle!” some say
But much precision was required
For me to be today-
Each couples’ copulative act
Conveniently transpired
Exactly when it must have done
For me to have been sired--
The wonder then is magnified
Thus exponentially
That all the random jointures could
Have somehow fashioned me

The slurry of the elements
Concocted by the glands
Was the exact mélange required
Of all those “greats” and “grands”

Had just one headache been declared
By a reluctant dame
The chromosomes o’er centuries
Would not have paired the same

Each man possessed a sack of seeds
And tool with which to sow--
Each woman’s furrow fertile was
With room for fruit to grow--
Some may have loved each other well
Though others lusted just--

I breathe because they seized the day
Before they fell to dust





BTW, "mittelschmirtz" is the pain that a woman can feel at the moment of ovulation (and yes, such an odd word is obviously German).

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Just a Touch of Housecleaning

Yesterday as I was dusting my bedroom, I was inspired. (No, not inspired to dust every other room in my house. *Ahem*) The following is the result:



Dust


Rays illuminate
The remnants and residue
Of kingdoms, which shift

In air, adrift on
Inhabited space, a dry
mist, till they settle

On this day's matter.
Redolent of musty Man
Is material

Unmeshed that will rise,
Then succumb to its scant weight
And sully a cloth.






Okay, that's out of my system. I wonder what I'll come up with if I go scrub the toilets...

Thursday, November 5, 2009

What Would Lady Gaga Do?


Delaney delighted us all this year by carving a pumpkin all by herself! All I did was give her a couple tips like, "Cut the lid at an angle so it won't fall into the pumpkin's cavity once you're all done" and "Don't use the butcher knife for that cut; the samurai sword would work better".

(*Hee hee hee*)

I'm actually surprised that this is the first year she's done this. The child is infamous for her creative independence. (I learned years ago to not make suggestions whenever she's creating something because even if she likes the idea, she won't use it simply because it wasn't hatched in her own brain.)

Anyways, you can see that she did a fabulous job.


She said she left the stringy strands in his mouth because it looked "...cool, like he's drooling."

(Okay, my fear of her future boyfriends just went up a notch.)

"What," you may be wondering, "did this imaginative child dress herself as to traipse around the neighborhood to beg for candy?"

Why as a "balloon seller", of course!

Last year she was a "sign twirler". (You know, the people who entertain you at intersections while you sit, waiting for the light to turn green.)


I love her ideas because they are so highly visible: big signs...a dozen balloons...

Tobias, opted this year to be...Count Nippula.

What, no pictures?

No, it never really materialized...thank goodness.

His plan was to wear a black cape with no shirt on underneath and, of course, instead of going door to door to collect candy, he wanted to go door to door to dole out candy.

I assured him that no one would accept candy from a half dressed, cape wearing freak, even if he was standing next to an adorable balloon seller and his embarrassed parents were only a few feet away in whatever shadows were available.

Sorry if you find the whole Nippula thing offensive, but what else do you expect? The costumes of fourteen year olds are inherently squeamishness-inducing, right? I mean, what else would be the point of a teen donning a costume?

Wow! I wonder what Lady Gaga wore as a fourteen year old?? (Thus, this post's title.)

Now for a couple of post trick-or-treating tips to help you not eat all of your kids' collected candy:

1. Tape a picture of yourself in a bathing suit onto the bowl of candy.

2. Ask a taller person than yourself to place the bowl of candy somewhere out of your reach. The space between the top of your cabinets and the kitchen ceiling works nicely. This way, you don't just walk past the counter and dip into the bowl before thinking about what sabotage you're wreaking on your figure. You actually have to go get a chair, drag it over to where the candy is stashed, climb up on it and feel around in some cobwebs and dust for the bowl. Usually when you're about halfway across the kitchen floor, dragging a chair behind you, you begin to feel quite ridiculous and will shame-facedly return the chair to its place at the table. Voila! Less candy consumed!

Uh-oh! It looks like the bowl of Dove's Promises didn't make it up there with the trick-or-treat bowl:

Okay, if you insist.

Monday, October 26, 2009

So Thankful For...

A couple of weeks ago, my phantastic photog phriend, Veronica, took my family out into the woods and shot us over 400 times (in a pleasant way).

Here are some of the results:



Isn't she absolutely beautiful? (...and sweet and smart and funny and kind and...)


I asked Ronni to get a few shots of Tobias's signature hair swoosh. (It just grows that way and only on the right side.)


Beforehand, I thought about our family's uniqueness so we could take pictures that reflect us.

We like to play croquet.

I love the lighting of this one:


(No, none of these mallets is the one Tobias used to dispatch the rogue rat's "soul".)


(That's a top hat in Tobias's hand, in case you're wondering. Yes, the boy who carries a briefcase to school often wears a top hat...)


Yay, I got it through the wicket!

This is the look I often have on my face while playing croquet (or anything else that requires any athletic skill):

Jeff wanted to incorporate paper airplanes.


I'm so glad he thought of it, 'cause some of those shots turned out really cool, like this one:


Of course, we had to take some that captured our essence of goofiness.


Here we are imitating jack-o'-lanterns:



...and, as a parting shot: Beware the coming zombie invasion!!!:


(You've been warned.)

One Haiku

I'm going to subject you all to another poem, but this is just a little, tiny one.



Conceptions and Death

Present, I was, at
Some souls' packaging, but at
Nary a sloughing




You have to love the simplicity of a haiku.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Love and Loss

Not a very original title, I know.

I have no specific plans for what I'll write as I begin typing this, so it's bound to be disjointed in the end. Sorry...

Just last month, we visited Grandma on her birthday in her little apartment at the assisted living home where she lived. We asked her all sorts of questions about her life.

When she was about three, her younger sister was born there in the family home. Grandma saw her aunt standing in the kitchen, holding a little baby and she thought her aunt had just taken the baby out of the oven like a loaf of bread.

She remembered when World War I ended! Yes, that's WWI, not WWII! She was just a little kid and she stepped out into the street in front of her house. All the neighbors were outside, happily yelling, "The Kaiser's dead! The Kaiser's dead!"

Her father suffered a horrible bout of the Spanish Flu that killed millions of people around the world back around 1918. He lived for another three years, but he never recovered, so a subsequent illness ended his life. Grandma remembered going into the room where he was lying in bed and talking to him. He must have known he was soon leaving Earth when he told her he wanted her to be a good girl. She said that for years after that, she thought that he was the one watching her from heaven instead of God.

Her mother made her and her sister wear sunbonnets on the two mile walk to school. However, her mother never knew that there was a certain tree a couple of blocks from the house where they would stash the bonnets until the afternoon walk home.

At thirteen, she claimed to believe in Santa Claus because she feared she wouldn't get her stocking filled if she fessed up.

A few years ago, I wondered if Grandma had struggled with her body image as most girls/women are prone to do, so I asked her, "Grandma, when you were a teenager, did you feel attractive?"

The little embarrassed smile I'm so familiar with crept onto her face. "Yes," she said.

Delightfully surprised, I said, "Really? What about you made you feel attractive?"

The shy smile continued to grace her face as she responded, "My shape."

Ha! I was so amazed to hear a former teenager say that they liked their body as a teen. I unabashedly asked if I could see pictures of her as a young woman, expecting to see a Marilyn Monroe look-alike with my grandma's head.

Looking at the pictures that she brought out, I saw that she had been a well padded teen, about 25 pounds overweight by today's standards. How wonderful to feel attractive and still be able to eat. :) Good for her.

Boys did indeed find her attractive. She said, once a young man came to visit and when he was about to leave, he went around kissing the entire family goodbye and she suspected it was all so he could kiss her as well.

She dated a bit and one night she kissed a fellow goodnight when he walked her to the door. Entering the house, her disapproving mother said, "When I was a girl, we only kissed a man goodnight if we were engaged to him."

"Well, Mother," she responded, "I guess I'm engaged to half the boys in town."

(Poor Great-Grandma May! I wouldn't enjoy hearing Delaney say that!)

There are so many questions I wish I had asked.

Last month, Grandma went to the hospital with breathing problems. They drained two liters of fluid out of her left lung. We looked at the nasty fluid in the bottles that the nurse had not yet taken away and she was right when she said, "That looks like something out of a spittoon."

That spawned another story. She said that when she was about 8, she would visit a neighbor lady. They'd sit out on the porch and talk while the lady chewed tobacco. The lady had positioned a spittoon several feet from her chair and she would amaze Grandma by accurately spitting into the spittoon every time. Grandma said she loved visiting that woman! (I wonder what her teeth looked like. :( )

Anyway, Grandma was in the hospital for a few days. A week after she was discharged, I took her to see her doctor for what I thought was a post-hospital check up. I didn't realize that he was going to make an announcement of such magnitude.

He told us that some testing had been done on the fluid taken from her lungs and that cancerous cells were found. Their presence in the fluid meant that it was stage four. He said that he could refer her to an oncologist, but he wouldn't recommend it because any subsequent treatment would probably end her life more quickly than the cancer itself. She agreed that she didn't want treatment.

After he left, I asked, "How do you feel about that, Grandma?"

As cheerfully as ever, she answered, "He didn't say anything that bothered me a bit. I've had a wonderful, long life and when it's my time to go, it's my time to go."

This pleasant response gave me the courage to ask her a few days later, "How would you like your memorial service to be?"

I took notes as she thought things through. She chose the place, the officiating pastor, the songs to be sung and she said she didn't want her casket to be there and she didn't want anyone to be sad. She emphasized this by declaring, "I don't want it to be called a memorial service. I want it to be a celebration service."

I'm glad that I asked her for input when I did, because soon after that she began to decline rapidly. My dad and I went to make plans for her burial and I had questions for her about how she'd like her gravestone to be, but when we got to her place, we could both see that it wasn't the time to bother her with such matters.

(A few days later, I picked out her gravemarker: black granite with a flowered border and her full name with "Loved by All" at the top. What a strange task, to choose the most substantial physical signifier that a person had lived at all. I felt deeply honored yet equally saddened.)

By last Friday, she was in a hospital-type bed in her bedroom. Seeing her there and how frail she looked, I thought that she would never leave there again. She was still determined to get things done though her physical limitations were immense and her mental limitations were growing.

I saw that on her lamp table, she had put together a bunch of cards and letters. Most were sealed, addressed and return addressed. In the stamp corner, she had written the date when she wanted that particular card to be sent. The final one is dated 12/30. She was thinking of others even at that point! She wanted to make sure that all of her grandkids and great-grandkids received a birthday and/or anniversary greeting from her in 2009. So thoughtful. That precious stack of cards is now in my house and I will send them out at the proper times.

At one point on Friday, she told me to bring her her checkbook. I felt a little odd doing so, but whatever she told me to do, I did. By this time, she couldn't see much nor write clearly, so she said I needed to help her sign some checks. My heart sank. I didn't want to tell her "no", but how weird of a situation is that?

She was as stubborn as ever and kept asking me, "What letter of my name do I need to write now? Is my pen in the right place?" I humored her by answering her questions as I saw a childish scrawl appear on the check. No one is ever going to cash that, I thought.

She clumsily flipped to the next check and started in on that one. Oh, no! Not another one!

Imagine my horror when a caregiver came into the room to give Grandma some medicine. There I was, hunched over a dying woman who hardly had the strength to wield a pen, talking her through each loop of her handwritten name on a blank check. Honestly, you guys, that's not how I roll...

The caregiver stood right next to us, ready to give Grandma the meds the second Grandma was done with the task at hand. I took advantage of having her full attention by asking Grandma, "What are these for, Grandma?"

"Give them to your dad," she responded.

"What do you want him to do with them?" I asked.

"Tell him to pay my expenses."

Whew! At least it was clear that the whole check-signing business was not my idea!

I stayed with her a few hours on Friday, but didn't return on Saturday, knowing that my dad and his wife would be there for at least a while and thinking that the hospice care she signed up for would be in full swing.

Oh, how I regret that. With hindsight, I will do things very differently if I ever have to go through hospice with a loved one again. Please take note: Find out what care exactly your loved one will be receiving so that you can make up for any lack. There are different levels of hospice care and when Grandma was evaluated on Friday she didn't need the most intensive care, but she went downhill very quickly over the next day. Although, she was being cared for, she would have been much more comfortable, I believe if she had gotten more attention.

On Sunday, I returned. Grandma was agitated which is quite unusual for her.

At first, she said that six different church groups had come in to meet with her. One was a Catholic priest who had offered her her last rites. (Grandma was never Catholic.) This story seemed strange yet plausible, but as she went on I realized she'd been hallucinating. She's always been a calm woman who has never been prone to exaggeration.

"Aimee, you need to go to the front desk and tell them that I'm still here. They think I died last Tuesday and they haven't brought me any food or medicine since."

Oh, God, help me...This was almost the lowest point of this entire experience. I had been there many times for long periods since Tuesday and had seen the care that she was being given. How do you convince a hallucinating person that what their brain is telling them is true is not true? Even if I somehow convinced her that it wasn't reality, who knows what her brain would tell her next. Also, how sad if one of her final interactions with her granddaughter was one in which her loved one didn't believe her.

I hurried off to the front desk so that her brain would see that I was trying to do something about her upset.

After that, I spent several hours with her, watching her sleep, feeding her little tiny bits of strawberries, bringing her water which she drank with a straw, seeing that her caregivers were coming and going to tend to her.

Monday morning was the absolute worst.

After dropping Delaney off at school, I went straight over to be with Grandma. When I came in, she was sleeping fitfully. When I smoothed her blanket out to make her more comfortable, she awoke with a start and frantically tried to tell me something. Her speech was very slurred at this point and I couldn't understand what she desperately wanted to tell me.

"Bring me paper," I figured out she was trying to tell me.

I did and she began to trace letters with her finger on the blank sheet. I wrote each one down as she went, but about four letters in, I realized it was hopeless and began to cry.

"Grandma, I'm sorry, but I can't understand you. " I wept and touched her hand.

She wasn't finished though. She wanted a pen, so I gave her one.

By this time, one of her caregivers was there and she and I watched together as Grandma carefully wrote one letter at a time. It took quite a while, but I eventually discerned that she was trying to write, "Been here since Saturday..."

Oh, God, help...she still thought she had been abandoned for days at a time, even though I had been there for hours the previous day and Dad and Donna had been there after I left.

I just cried and tried to reassure her that people knew she was here and we were all caring for her.

After her message was conveyed, she calmed quite a bit and began to sleep. I wasn't going anywhere. Every time she woke up, I wanted her to see me planted right next to her. At one point, she did wake up, hollering, "Pain!" This is a woman who has been on pain meds for years for her bad legs, but had never complained in my presence about actual pain.

Things settled somewhat after the hospice nurse came to evaluate her. She said Grandma was ready to be put on 24 hour care and that she would start on morphine immediately to ease her pain.

Everything was much better after that. Grandma was still in some pain up until the end, but I could see that she was sleeping much more soundly and she no longer seemed to feel desperate to communicate.

One powerful example of what kind of woman Grandma was involved her introduction of me to others. Ever since she moved in to her assisted living home, if a caregiver came into her room while I was there, Grandma would always introduce us to each other. She didn't look at the workers as servants to meet her needs, but as people to relate to and interact with. Therefore, I met a number of the people who helped Grandma with laundry, meals and transportation. She treated them all with respect and kindness, and she wanted me to know them as she did.

Even in her final days when she could barely speak, if there was a caregiver on one side of her bed and I was on the other, she would say to the woman, "This is my granddaughter," and to me, "This is Pam."

Here she was, dying, and yet she was still thinking about others and wanting to make them comfortable. If there was ever a time that it was allowable for someone to be focused on their own self, it would be then, and yet she wasn't. Amazing...

One of the most touching moments on Tuesday was when the ladies from her meal table came in to say goodbye. She had sat with the same group of women for meals over the past few years at the assisted living home so they grew to be quite close.

All very elderly themselves, they crowded around her bed, each approaching her one at a time. Grandma could barely open her eyes, but she nodded and smiled as each woman grabbed her hand and told her who they were. They said some things to which she responded, though unclearly.

When I walked them out to the hallway, I saw that all three of them had parked their walkers in a row along the wall. That helped me to smile through my tears.

Another thing that was very "Grandma Hazelish" was the fact that she had had a pedicure in the few days before her drastic deterioration. (She was always careful about her appearance, not in an uptight, don't-touch-me-because-you-might-smudge-my-make-up-sort-of-a-way, but rather because she simply enjoyed being pretty.) So the last week of her life, freshly painted red toenails peeked out from under the sheet at the foot of her bed. She knew she was leaving and she wanted to look good while doing so. Several people who came to see her noticed and smiled about it.

Tuesday and Wednesday, she mostly spent sleeping. Her only communication methods were barely perceptible nods or shakes of the head, raising of eyebrows and an occasional moan.

I held her hand, stroked her face and softly sang praise songs, hoping that the gentle interactions would be reassuring to her.

It actually reminded me very much of when my children were newborns. It was a sweet, quiet time in which very little happened for hours and hours aside from me trying to convey to a helpless person through touch and gentle sounds that they were deeply loved.

There was nothing else I would rather be doing for those many hours on those two days. I'm so thankful that I was able to be there and love her in whatever practical opportunity presented itself.

I left on Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 to pick my kids up from school, planning to return the next morning as soon as I could.

My dad called at 8:00 that night to tell me that Grandma had passed away fifteen minutes earlier. It was such a relief to know that she was no longer in intense pain and her brain was no longer telling her that she had been abandoned. She was now with her Creator Whom she had worshiped for decades.

This has been a painful and amazing week. I saw death in a new way. I feel like someone pulled back a curtain and gave me a view to a part of life that I'd never seen before.

I loved my grandmother so much and am so thankful for all the time I was able to spend with her.


Pretty Hazel
1911-2009

Thursday, October 15, 2009

A Poetic Purging

Alright. I'm finally doing it.

This last week I posted a bunch of my poems on an online poetry site since no poetry journals will publish them. (What? Me...bitter? No, no. Certainly not.)

Therefore, I am posting them here, too. I figure it's a safeguard for me to publish them online in two different places.

I realize that most of you have little or no interest in poetry. (Actually, I often don't like reading other people's stuff, either. Isn't that horribly self centered of me?) So, please just bear with me and pass over the subsequent poems like any other moldy cheese. :)

Okay, here we go...

A Glimpse at the Possible

A Glimpse at the Possible


He stopped offensive spiders from dancing-
Squashing their clockworks into bitter juice--
Such smears on walls and floors gave me no pause

But a statue, I was, at a mallet
Arching through his universe at a rat

This was not Alice’s birded croquet
(The reality of pests is darker)

His target had trespassed, pilfered kibble,
Awoken us with squeaks, scratches and thumps--
Damage to wiring was unknown, but feared

The rodent’s eviction was imminent-
By death or by capture, we would quit it

Our traps collected no creature’s carcass-
Our wall pounding just bruised our futile fists-
Poisons placed like a molester’s candies
Brought not ruin to the marauding sprite

Our deliverance was its bludgeoning-
Our gangly champion, a son, aged ten

As some brutish bile was loosed in his blood-
An ancient switch flipped--the berserk occurred--
His synapses fired a cacophony-
Savage voices urging in a new tongue--
Wild blows were meted out by meatless arms

The furry vermin twitched its last spasm

The boy who eats spinach at my command
Insisted that death inhabit the corpse

In motherly arms, even Vikings cooed--



When Tobias was 10, we had a rat living in our walls and garage. It was destroying things and we were determined to kill it. The successful attempt involved Jeff stunning it by shooting it with a paintball gun and then Tobias hammering it with a croquet mallet. (Don't tell your PETA friends.) I watched this horrific display from outside, through the garage window. I just remember seeing my cute little boy turn into a crazed killing machine, wildly swinging a game's mallet down on a furry bit of vermin. It astounded me that he could become such a primal creature right before my eyes. Anyway, now that you are all completely disturbed by my family...

A Mole's Removal

A Mole’s Removal

The nub of pinky fingertip
Proportion earned its end.
Its obscene jutting out from flesh,
Our senses, did offend.
A merciful syringe of drug
By Doctor’s hand dispensed
Desensitized the evictee
Though muscles all were tensed.
Then pinched between phalanges two
And pulled out awkwardly
With hacks and sawings, scalpel dealt,
Was felled the fleshy tree.
A liquid, red contingent rushed
To well up in the void.
To keep those troops within their bounds
A bandage was employed.
The bit of ugly tissue was
Precisely exorcized
And ostracized from components
Of which Jeff is comprised.


December 3, 2007




Years ago, Jeff had a huge mole removed from his back and I watched the entire disgusting process. He still has a big scar that he'll show you if you give him 50 cents. (Just kidding.)

Hemicorpectomy

Hemicorpectomy

The amputation of a half-
Historically wooed-
Enacts a full dismemberment

As is sought solitude--
Content no longer with the pledge
Told when one once was wed-

Omit each other legally--
Flee to a frigid bed--

Dull hacksaws drip with vital gore
Insisting one be two--
Void’s wanted where a lover was-
Obituaric view--
Removal of a living mass
Can not be precise--
Excision’s cutlery is lax



November 14, 2008



Do you see the hidden message? By the way, "hemicorpectomy" means to cut a body in half.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

This Present Sadness

I'm sad.

I introduced you to my grandma in this post and this post.

Recently, this dear sweet lady, "Pretty Hazel", was put on hospice.

She has lived an astonishing 98 years.

Her attitude is amazing. After the doctor told her that she had stage four cancer, I asked her, "How do you feel about what he said, Grandma?"

"He didn't say anything that bothered me a bit," she responded, cheerfully. "I've had a wonderful, long life and when it's my time to go, then it's my time to go."

This cheerful perspective gave me the courage to sit down with her a few days later and ask her if she had any specific desires in regards to her memorial service. She had all sorts of ideas! We figured out where it'd be, who'd do what, and what songs would be sung. (Actually, she figured it out. I just took notes.)

"I don't want there to be any sadness and I want it to be called a "celebration service", not a "memorial service"," she said.

I responded that I didn't know how well we could deliver on the first part of that request, but that we would call it a celebration service.

Now for more practicalities like caskets and morticians.

I'm so thankful I'm able to be helpful by doing some of the detail work, but I confess I feel quite inadequate to do so.

Friends, please pray for me as I deal with that which must be dealt with. Pray for wisdom for me in this unfamiliar funerary world and that I would be able to honor God and my grandmother throughout this entire process. May God be glorified in Grandma's death just as He has been in her life.

Hmmm...I'm sad, but that sadness is tinged with thankfulness and hope.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

A Four-Legged Clover

This is Clover.


He lived in a tank on top of our pink toilet.


(Don't worry. He assured me that he always closed his eyes at the appropriate times.)

He lived with us for over two years. Shortly after we bought him, someone informed us that our ownership of him was probably illegal because he was such a little guy.

"No way!" I said. "We bought him in Chinatown. He was right there next to the ninja stars and the fireworks and the butterfly knives and the...oh...uh...um...nevermind..."

Since then, he has grown into quite a lovely specimen of God's design. However, he was outgrowing his tank, as you can see in the second picture.

A couple of months ago, Delaney was becoming very concerned about him. Just getting a larger tank wasn't an option because his water needs to be changed every day and it would simply be too heavy to lift.

She worried about his physical needs being met and his general happiness as a turtle...

...living in a small tank...

...on the back of a toilet.

We thought through multiple options of what to do with him, but all of them were either implausible or unacceptable.

"Dumping" pets in the wilderness can cause ecological disasters by upsetting the delicate balance of the present eco-system. None of our friends wanted to take on a half grown turtle and all the responsibility that came with it. (In fact, during that time, one of our friends called and asked if we wanted their turtle!) Jeff suggested that we fill up our backyard's broken jacuzzi and just let him live back there. Delaney was determined to keep him from that fate.

She kept talking about the dilemma of Clover and fretting so I could tell that she was really bothered by it.

Normally, when I face a puzzling situation, I pray and ask God to provide a solution and I've taught my kids to do that, as well.

Well, I was hesitant to pray with Delaney about the turtle issue because...

(Okay, this is the part where I have to be transparent with you all and give you a peek at what a lame-o I truly am.)

...I was hesitant because I couldn't see any way for God to answer that prayer and I didn't want Delaney to be sad/mad/confused with God if He didn't provide an answer.

(Ick, I don't like the way that looks now that I've typed it, but that's my faithless little heart for all of you to see.)

For a couple of days, I struggled with this.

We always pray about problems we have...

But how can He possibly fix this?

Well...He's God.


My little mustard seed of faith won out and I finally prayed with my daughter something like this, "Father, please provide a good, safe, legal place for Clover to live where Delaney will feel good about leaving him."

Shortly after this hard-pressed little prayer, we had lunch with our friends, Scott and Carolyn. They are always great about engaging our kids in conversation and somehow Clover and his dismal situation came up.

I don't recall exactly how it all went down, but by the end of lunch, it was determined that Scott's workplace had a turtle pond where Clover would be allowed to live out his days as the turtle that God intended him to be.

Yesterday, we took Clover for what would be his final ride in the car:


We met up with Scott and Carolyn at their house and drove over to the pond so Delaney could check it out. Well, any reluctance she may have felt at rehousing Clover at this particular pond vanished the moment she saw it.

It was a veritable pond-dwellers Shangri-La.


The pond is well tended and there are plenty of other creatures to keep him company.


All the turtles were hiding, we think because it was an overcast day, but do you see the little tan frog in the pic below?


(If I swam all day and ate bugs, I'd want to live there.)

Parting is such sweet sorrow.

The final lifting from the tank:


It was a good thing that I had my camera ready, because a second after Delaney put Clover down on the rock, he ran and jumped into the water. (Okay, maybe he didn't actually jump, but he did run. I have witnesses.)


Upon entering the water, he promptly disappeared, probably determined that no human hands would ever seize upon him again. (He never did seem to like us very much, not that I blame him due to the fact that we housed him in a tiny tank on the back of our toilet. Such treatment is bound to result in ill-will.)

We left Scott's workplace with thankful hearts and exceedingly happy for Clover.

(My only anxiety is wondering how the other turtles will accept him. He may lack proper turtle social skills due to his former lifestyle.

Have you seen the new guy?

Yeah...what a weirdo...)

In case you missed it, the moral to this turtle parable is: Don't hesitate to pray about things you don't automatically see an answer for. (Yeah, yeah, that's kind of the whole point of prayer.)

Have patience with me; I'm still learning.

"(He) is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think..." Ephesians 3:20a.