Archive for July, 2010


…And in this Corner – Jane Austen!

So I have begun my journey to revisit the works of Ms. Jane Austen. Recently, I gathered my chil’ens and off we went to the bookstore where I purchased new copies of Sense and Sensibility, Pride And Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, and Persuasion. How delightful! If you could only see me, you would most certainly laugh as I am clapping my hands together with merriment at the thought of reading all of these tomes…

Although she is my favorite author, the last time I stepped into the literary world of Ms. Austen was probably 30 years ago. Sure, I’ve seen the various theatrical productions as she has gone in and out of favor with Hollywood but there is nothing quite like giving yourself over to her words. She had a biting wit, a way with sarcasm, great comic timing, and a sense of the absurdities and inequities of the world. What a joy! I encourage anyone looking for an amazing read to pick up one of her novels.

Soon after my purchases, I stumbled upon (pun intended) the most fantastical video, Jane Austen’s Fight Club (oops, I just broke the first rule of Fight Club). I kinda think that Ms. Austen would get a charge out of this video. I was laughing so hard I almost rolled right off my chair. And how ironic that I would see this video just when I was pondering how relevant Jane Austen might be to the current state of things?! Life can just be so damn fanfuckingtastic!

My first read on this journey is Pride and Prejudice and I am currently in the midst of the lives of Mr. Darcy, the Bennetts, and the Bingleys. I have to say that I’m certain that Elizabeth Bennett would have loved to send a nice roundhouse to Caroline Bingley’s beautifully rouged cheek! As I have been reading, I can’t help but flash to the video, and sometimes I just have to stop and laugh.

Anyway, there will be much to come re: our fair Ms. Austen but for now I just wanted to share. I hope the novels as well as the video will tickle your funniest funny bone…

Some People’s Kids: Amusing. Relevant. Irreverent.

Gramps the Bootlegger

Oh my gosh, so yesterday just got away from me. I agreed to be the support system for my daughter, the younger, while she became festooned with art for the body. Her newest (she has eight tattoos) is a cityscape, from the ’40s, of two New York City hotels. Tres magnifique! I hope you will forgive my absence from the blogosphere.

Well it is Sunday and here we are again at the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane. Another installment of the story of my incredibly crazy family. It seems that around every corner there is some quirky tidbit.

When last we met, Grams had lost her senses and her ability to walk (probably due to a stroke). Life for her became about finding creative ways to do all of the assorted chores she had done before as well as just plain getting around. Mostly she used a chair. Yep, she pushed a chair around in front of her while she cooked, cleaned, and washed the clothes. It would be quite some time before she would use crutches.

As you might imagine, my Grams was a determined lady who came from hardy stock. She was one of nineteen children (OMG!!!), ten of whom lived to adulthood. Her father and his two brothers were handsome Germans who, after being orphaned, were raised by Hispanics. Rumor has it that the parents were killed in an Indian raid but who really knows.

When my Gramps first came sniffing around the family it was with thoughts of riches in his head. But he was disappointed because though Greatgramps was land rich he was pretty much cash poor. So after Gramps and Grams got married, and before Grams lost her senses and her legs, he had other ideas for quick money.

He dabbled in gambling (quick won, even quicker lost) and farming (not quick at all) but, thanks to the Eighteenth Amendment, the real money was in bootlegging! It was Prohibition so he and a small circle of Spaniards began making their own booze and they quickly developed a reputation for having the very best product.

Those Spanish boys were quite innovative and although the revenuers had their suspicions they were never able to catch them with much in the way of incriminating evidence! Gramps and his family lived on a pig farm and whenever there was a hint of revenuers in the area they buried the jugs in the pens! After all, who would choose to look there?! In addition they had created an elaborate system in the basement of the house. A false wall was constructed with a bookcase for a door behind which most of the stash rested. In addition the support columns were hollowed out and with the help of a swivel hinge, gallon jugs could be stored safely.

It was in this very basement that the most amusing story from the period took place. The revenuers had come to the house thinking they had finally caught Gramps with his pants down. They somehow knew about the hollowed out posts but could only come up with one jug. My Grams was sweating bullets because her youngest (my mother), who was just four at the time, knew all of the best hiding places. Grams was just waiting for the wee one to point out the magic bookcase. However, she needn’t have worried because as the government agents prepared to escort Gramps to jail, the youngster picked up a fly swatter and, with her big brown eyes blazing, she began wailing on them. “Leave my daddy alone, leave my daddy alone,” were the only words she uttered at the top of her very tiny lungs each time the fly swatter came down on the men. It just may have been my mother’s proudest moment: the day she beat up the revenuers!

So…Gramps spent a couple of days in jail and paid his fine. Most of southern Colorado continued to get their bootlegged booze from the Spaniards. But alas…Gramps was no Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., thus the proceeds were not parlayed into great wealth or a political dynasty. And though they did make a very good living during this time all of the funds were managed by my Gramps and eventually it was all gambled away. So sad…

See you next Sunday…

Some People’s Kids: Bootleggers. Irresponsible. No good.

Random Friday Thoughts

What is it about women that we make bad choices over and over? Even when we know that the choices are unhealthy we still go back to the well.

This gene pool includes me. I allowed cheating and violence in my life and I went back for more over and over again. Why? No clue. Sure, I can point to losing my dad as a baby but that doesn’t really explain it. And the thing is, I’m not the only woman with this tendency.

As a women with daughters, shouldn’t I have set a better example? Definitely. My dream is for them to have healthy stable relationships that fulfill and nourish them however both have struggled with their relationship choices. Books, movies, music all tell us that we should be strong and not put up with any shit and yet other books, movies, and music let us know that we are failing miserably.

And what about the men? What do they think as they raise their hand in violence or step out on the women they love? Yeah, yeah, I know it’s not just men but I can only speak to the experience that I have had. And the violence isn’t just against women. I’m talking about bar brawls, tussles between friends (usually after one too many), football, wrestling, hockey…

Wow, the light bulb goes off as it occurs to me that, on the whole, women don’t participate in violent sports. I don’t know why I haven’t thought of that before but all of a sudden it just stands out. Interesting. Is that part of why we’re drawn to the bad boy, because we don’t have that kind of outlet? Hmmm…curiouser and curiouser.

I know that I certainly have my anger issues. And let me tell you there is only so much that a good turn of the vacuum can do to let off steam. A good cry really doesn’t do it either. On those occasions when I have broken something or slammed a door, I have felt more shame than satisfaction.

When a man punches someone, makes a tackle, slams someone to the ground, is there a sense of satisfaction. Does it feel like a release? Are we back again to the whole “we’re just wired differently” thing? Maybe…

Some Peoples Kids: Self-damaging. Repressed. Pressure cooked. Ripe to explode.

So my girls are back and we are making up for lost time and missing each other! We had a little breakfast, a little shopping, and watched a little “So You Think You Can Dance.” Another week another injury. Three great dancers down. This spate of injuries is a first for the show and there is confusion as to why. Really? Well, let’s look at what’s changed. The format, that’s what! There is no luxury of a top twenty within which to build skills and stamina. A group of 10 young dancers go from 0 to 100 working full out on skills outside of their skill set with professionals working mostly within theirs. I just think that’s a recipe for injury. After all, about 65% of dance injuries are from overuse and an overwhelming 90% of injuries occur when a dancer is fatigued.

The elder daughter was a dancer for nigh on upon a gazillion years (ok, 13 years). I watched her body change to enable her to do more and more. However this growth was over years not days or weeks. The younger was a gymnast and again tricks and complexity were added as her body and mind were ready to tackle them.

And I guess I wonder why the format change anyway? Ratings? Seems to be since I can’t see how it really benefits the dancers. Sure, it’s great to dance with the all-stars and clearly they push the younger dancers, however they wind up with less time to learn as well as to strengthen their minds and bodies.

It’s important for any athlete (yes, dancers are athletes) to constantly assess where they are and how their body is handling what’s being asked of it. For instance how many hours are being danced each week? How many new styles of dance are being introduced to each dancer for which they don’t really have the technical expertise? Are they being provided sufficient warm up before rehearsals and/or performances? Do the dancers know how to warm up properly for the workload they are experiencing? Is there appropriate conditioning activities provided other than dance such as swimming, yoga, Pilates, gym aerobics? I know that there are limited hours in a week but if there isn’t enough time to make sure the dancers are safe then maybe ratings should take a bit of a back seat.

Given the injury waterfall, I think the SYTYCD producers owe it to the dancers as well as the public to evaluate the entire process. After all I’m not thinking that the public would have sent Alex or Ashley home.
Anyway, it’s just kind of troubling to me. Most of the time mucking with a TV show just impacts the quality of the show and though it may lead to a cancellation the actors are still able to go on to other projects. But if you muck with the format of a dance show, you just might be mucking with safety. Just a thought…

Some People’s Kids: Hard working. Talented. Young. Competitive.

Shirley Sherrod. Honest. Heroine

Oh…the end of worry is near! My girls are getting in tonight and I have missed them like crazy!! I have had the requisite conversation with my long dead dad and he has his marching orders to keep their plane in the air and land them safely. It’s amazing how I immediately feel some semblance of power once they are in my sphere of influence even though I have no more power than when they are away. Mind games, ain’t they swell?!!

Had a girlie day today. Got the old hair and nails done. Don’t know why, not going anywhere but I guess I just needed to feel pretty. Being under the weather for several weeks can do that to a girl. Before the elder daughter left she let me know that the skunk look wasn’t really cuttin’ it and I had to agree so didn’t really want her to come back to the “bride of Frankenstein”…

Here’s something really random for you…What about that Shirley Sherrod case? It just goes to show that anything we say at any time in our life can be taken out of context and used to further an agenda. A three minute snippet of a twenty-seven minute speech was used to portray Ms. Sherrod as a racist. And on the basis of a YouTube airing of this snippet, she was forced to resign her position as the Georgia Director of the USDA.

Don’t be fooled by what you see on that three minute piece! This is propaganda of the worst kind and the best evidence I know of how important it is to get your information from more than one source and make sure you have the whole story before you make judgments. After all, our perspectives are the result of lives lived and as such we think they have a solid foundation. However, some of our experiences lead us to make assumptions and oftentimes those assumptions are just plain wrong. And I guess I would suggest that anytime we allow our assumptions to lead us to snap judgments, then that should be the red flag that says, “take a minute (or twenty-seven) to rethink.”

Now, the full twenty-seven minutes of Ms. Sherrod’s speech takes the audience on a journey that paints a complex picture about the role of not only race but also poverty in American culture. It presents a woman honestly airing her prejudices as well as the epiphany that showed her the error of her position. Oh, that the rest of us could be so honest! Because if we can’t face our shortcomings how will we ever grow and be a agent of change?

What did she get for her courage? Lambasted! Verbally tarred and feathered! Undercut by the very people who should have gotten their information from more that one source, who should have taken twenty-seven minutes before making a judgment! I am disappointed in the NAACP, I am disappointed in the Obama administration, I am disappointed in knee-jerk liberals who were so concerned with appearing to take the high road that they wound up in the gutter. I am disappointed in anyone who painted her a racist before knowing her. Isn’t that what every important civil rights leader in the last half century has asked. Get to know me, him, her, whoever…before judging.

Shirley Sherrod is about as far from a racist as she can get. Because one thing I know about a racist, they don’t question their belief system. They don’t recognize that they might be wrong. They don’t admit that they are behaving badly. And they certainly don’t encourage the choir to sing a different tune. I admire Shirley Sherrod’s willingness to use her life lesson to plant the notes of a different song in the hearts of her choir…

Thanks Shirley!

Some People’s Kids: Courageous. Honest. Deserving of much better treatment…

Jane Austen: A Timeless Philosopher?

So it’s four in the morning, my partner is snoring (that word doesn’t really describe the intensity of the experience), the dog is taking up most of my pillow, and sleep is not going to be forthcoming in the near future. As I lay in bed I found myself thinking about life and the “never ceases to amaze me” way that people live that life. Somehow those thoughts led to Jane Austen (my very favorite author) and how succinctly she chronicled life as she experienced it. I began to wonder what would happen if I read her works again but with a different eye. There was just this nagging feeling that I might find that the basic “human experience” hasn’t really changed. That her insights are just as relevant to life in 2010. After all, there is a reason she remains so popular today.

I was bothered by my post yesterday. It seemed so lifeless and flat! Sure, I do sometimes (ok, so most times) find myself boggled and disappointed by the ignorance and absurdities that I see around me. However I think it is important not to take myself too seriously and I failed miserably on that point. Let’s see if I can make sure that I don’t do that again.

Sometimes a change of perspective can open the world in a way that we can see things that weren’t clear before. Hell, isn’t that the whole concept behind prescription eye wear? Seriously, solutions are often simple and can apply to basic as well as complex life philosophies.

Anyhoo, I’ve decided to see what Jane can do for me at this point in my life. Time to re-read and get my scrawny little hands on everything that I haven’t read. We live in such crazy times let’s see what Jane can do for my perspective.

Next time you can’t sleep, get up and put words to screen. It worked for me…I’m off to the land of nod…

Some People’s Kids: Tired. Tired. Too tired to think…

The State of the Nation Just Makes Me Tired

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines Socialism as…
1 : any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods
2 a : a system of society or group living in which there is no private property b : a system or condition of society in which the means of production are owned and controlled by the state
3 : a stage of society in Marxist theory transitional between capitalism and communism and distinguished by unequal distribution of goods and pay according to work done

I really can’t mesh the definition above with the reality of life in 21st century United States. How exactly is Obama moving us towards socialism? According to a recent poll by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research shows that 55% of likely voters believe that the word “socialist” describes President Obama and his policies as “well” or “very well.”

If this is so, then why didn’t he just create a national bank instead of administering a bail out that allowed our banking system to not only continue doing business but also enabled a number of companies to grow even bigger? Why didn’t he have the government take over GM, Ford, and all of the other auto manufacturers that were failing instead of helping many of them to survive? Wouldn’t it have been better for them to go under and then have the government step in to save the workers?

I mean really…look at the definition, “collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods” not helping companies to continue to function independent of the government.

Is it Obama’s commitment to healthcare for all US citizens that makes him a socialist? If this is a socialist idea then your grandma and mine better be ready to give up their Medicare. And I hope you, your siblings, parents, and friends have great retirement benefits because social security will not be an acceptable option for any of us.

What is so scary about making sure that we all have access to affordable healthcare? How are we disadvantaged by making sure that preexisting conditions are covered? Where does it say that the availability of safe medications will undermine the democratic process? Someone please explain the problem because I just don’t get it.

As a nation we are just full of contradictions. We think the Democrats are better suited to run the country but we want to kick the bums out. We like Obama but we hate his policies. A new Time poll paints a schizophrenic picture of the electorate and frankly I’m just feeling tired of it all and a wee bit depressed. It’s not enough that we have to deal with the “party of no” killing any chance for bipartinsanism but we can’t even count on the voters to stick it to the real bums…

Some People’s Kids: Schizophrenic. Ignorant. Wouldn’t know a socialist from a hole in the ground…

Beyond Dysfunction: A Family Story

So…since this is Sunday, I thought it might be an interesting weekly practice to spend it visiting the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane. My family! Both sides of the aisle are filled with “B” movie scenarios that have been equal parts chuckles and tears for me.

Let’s start with the most colorful character in the family and I don’t really mean that in any way that is positive, my grandfather. He was born in Santander, a port city on a bay in the northern part of Spain and he smoked and drank his way through life until his death at eighty-two.

Gramps came from a wealthy Spanish family. They accumulated their fortune through fishing and then canning. Eventually they lost their fortune to Franco!

As was typical in wealthy Spanish Catholic families, someone had to become a priest. So in their collective wisdom the family determined Gramps to be the ONE! Understand now, he had no calling to this vocation and he wasn’t particularly devout, he was just the second son and not the heir to the fortune…so it made sense. Ha! At the time no one knew what a joke that was. Ironically, it was the heir who had the calling, so surprise of all surprises…no one was going to be happy.

So on to Seminary Gramps went. I can’t imagine his road was any too smooth as he always had the spirit of a rabble-rouser. He was incredibly smart and not much got by him so when he realized that the priests were doing more than praying with the nuns (hmmm, some foreshadowing there), he said “adios” to the seminary. The family was furious but this opened up the opportunity for the brother to do what he had felt called to do all along.

While the family fumed, the brother became a highly regarded priest who traveled through rural villages spreading the word. Of course, as I later came to learn, the world can be a dark and sad place where bad things happen. The brother, while visiting his congregation in inclement weather, contracted pneumonia and died. Let me tell you, the family immediately assigned the responsibility for this travesty on ol’ Gramps. This, in addition to his profound personal feelings of guilt, led him to hop a freighter to the US.

Upon his arrival to Ellis Island, he adopted the requisite misspelling of his surname and began his journey in the new world. As with most immigrants, he knew where to find his compadres, and southern Colorado called. He planned to ingratiate himself with the local Spaniards and identify a wealthy landowner with available daughters. In case you haven’t noticed he could be calculating and manipulative.

When the prettier, more desirable sister married another, he courted and married my shy, very inexperienced grandmother. Not that I’m knocking it, after all I might not be here if they hadn’t contributed to the gene pool. But I’m pretty sure she was woefully unprepared for what was to come.

I don’t know much about those first years I can only hope there was some measure of happiness. There were children, the first a boy, the second a girl with bright green eyes, and the third another girl who came early, very early, on a farm, with no doctor. She was so small and my dear old Gramps suggested that my grandmother was crazy to get too attached since the baby would die anyway. Yep, definitely a warm, sensitive, loving guy. But Grams was strong and smart and she put the baby in a drawer and surrounded her with milk bottles filled with warm water to keep her alive. Kind of a rustic incubator and voila, she survived!!! I am sooo grateful to my Grams as that baby was my mother. As always I’m completely in favor of the propagation of the family tree.

My grandfather ran the family like a boot camp with calisthenics in the yard, a vegetarian diet and only water for the kids and Grams (of course Gramps ate meat and drank whatever he wanted). My mother said he was like the the father in the original “Cheaper by the Dozen” but without any of the humor.

He made his impact felt in many ways over the years. When my mother was three, Grams went on a fast. She got the idea from a pamphlet espousing cleansing the body of toxins that Gramps had brought home. I guess she was just ahead of her time given the trend toward all kinds of cleansing we see today. Anyway, hers lasted for two months. Uh huh, you got it, that’s what the family says, two months without food.

The end of the fast came when she went into a coma (no real surprise there!). The story, depending on who tells it, is that either she became delirious with hunger and found some peanuts and ate them (Gramps” side) or Gramps tried to kill her by giving her peanuts (guess who’s side?). Whatever happened, she probably suffered an electrolyte imbalance maybe resulting in a stroke. She wound up in a coma and when she came out of it she had aphasia, meaning she would think one thing and say something else. In her case she called everyone by a number instead of their name. My mother was “44.” Crazy!

Gramps didn’t believe in doctors so he cared for her himself. When she developed terrible bed sores (one so bad you could see the bone), he built a sun porch on the back of the house and carried her up there everyday to dry them out. Unfortunately, because he didn’t know as much as he thought he did, as the sores healed, the tendons and muscles shrank and as a result her leg was shortened by several inches. Without medical care or physical therapy, she never walked again on her own. She was thirty-seven…

To come…death…and bootlegging… and deportation…oh my!

Some People’s Kids: Heartless. Arrogant. Too smart for their own good. Not suited for families…

Dream…Dream, Dream, Dream…Think Everly Brothers

INCEPTION

Oh! My! God, Becky!!!…what a wild ride!

Christopher Nolan wrote and directed this masterpiece with the skill of a surgeon and the soul of an artist all rolled into one. Most of the effects are real life and not green screen and CGI and let me tell you, it makes a difference. I think with all of the computer generated effects we’ve come to expect, we’ve forgotten how brick and mortar stunts can pull the audience into the scene with the actors.

Nolan’s pacing is stellar, making every moment count. It’s slow and fast, it builds, ebbs, and then takes the action to crescendo upon crescendo, all in a way that makes sense. He has a penchant for surrounding himself with wicked talent as well. The cinematography is breathtaking, costumes on point, and the score with hues of hope, despair, guilt, anger, fear, pretty much every emotion imaginable, envelopes the audience. As I said – a masterpiece!

Ok, so here’s the quick and dirty. Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) is an extractor who makes his living by inserting himself into shared dreams in order to steal ideas. He is hired however by Saito (Ken Watanabe, AMAZING) who wants him to insert an idea into the mind of Robert Fischer, Jr., a multimillion dollar oil company heir (Cillian Murphy), this process is inception. Cobb puts together a team to help him with the task: Arthur – the Researcher who gathers all possible info on the target (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and man has he grown up!), Ariadne – the Architect who builds the shared dream (Ellen Page), Eames – the Forger who can imitate anyone (Tom Hardy ) and Yusuf – the Chemist who concocts the sedative that keeps everyone asleep (Dileep Rao). They proceed to take the subject into a dream within a dream within a dream…at least that’s how it seems. The question is, “What is really real?”

Don’t worry there won’t be any spoilers here because I simply don’t know. Actually, I’m not completely sure what I experienced. First, I think, ” Ok…it’s that!” Then I blink and I’m like, “Oh, no, wait it’s this!!!” What I do know is this movie is SICK! That’s what. Mind blowing bending altering SICK!!!!! Yeah, I know, way too many exclamation points! And enough with the capitalization already! But I just can’t help myself. Frankly, I don’t know how to get across how fucktasmagorically amazing this movie is. I believe it is not out of the realm of possibility that it is absolutely the best movie I have seen in a very long time.

Every second of the 148 minutes is a roller coaster ride of thought provoking twists, turns, action, and fun, and I don’t even like roller coasters! I actually found myself holding my breath.

Leo DiCaprio. Can I just say it? One of the most underrated actors of our time! Yeah…I’m gushing but I just can’t help myself. He grounds the movie while pushing the limits of reality. Ellen Page. Engaging, mature, thoughtful…WOW (pay attention Lindsay Lohan, this is how to be a young star in Hollywood). And Tom Berenger. Finally, reaches that tricky summit of “aging gracefully.” Gordon-Levitt. Well, he just pulses with quiet strength. Great cast…

And the concept. Who hasn’t had a wild and wooley dream? Think about it, what if someone was sharing your dreams with you? Crazy! And what if that someone could steal your ideas by manipulating your dreams? Take it a step further and what if the real goal was to insert an idea in your head by manipulating those dreams? Terrifying? And what if the really real goal was to…what?!…I don’t know…what could possibly come next? All I can say is “HOLY SHIT!” That would be one paranoia-inducing world and with the “straight out of the nuthouse” dreams I’ve been having lately…I’m starting to wonder…

Can’t wait to see it again and again and again and…

Some People’s Kids: Deceitful. Manipulative. Dangerous. Not as they seem…

Parenthood? Beware…

For all of you out there contemplating parenthood…or…maybe thinking sex is soooo much better without the hassle of protection – be forewarned – parenthood truly never ends! Not at eighteen, twenty-one, thirty, not ever. Mind you, I’m not complaining, I love my two chicas more than life itself…really and truly!

It’s just that you never stop worrying. They get older, you know…somewhere in the neighborhood of two, and you just no longer have any control. Not that you ever did.

Hmmm…kids…as soon they pop out they begin that quest for independence! Whatever you think is control is really just them choosing to cooperate. For instance, my youngest still responds to counting when I want her to do something…and…she’s twenty-two!

My oldest is thirty-two. Yep, we were on the 10 year plan. She is an amazing woman: smart, funny, kind, beautiful. Knowing these things has always been a struggle for her. On a regular basis I want to wave my magic wand, the one I can never seem to find, and whoosh!…make her feel in the center of her soul, all of the specialness that I see. But you can’t really do that for someone else and therein lies the problem.

Life is for your kids to live and for us parents to often times stand by feeling impotent. Both of my babies (hush…they will always be my babies!) are visiting their dad in another state. Whenever this happens, usually once a year, I worry. I worry about their flight. I worry about them riding in cars driven by others. I worry about whether they’re having fun. I worry that they will have more fun with their dad than they’ve ever had with me. Basically, I worry about everything. Sure, when they’re here I worry as well but my worry seems slightly more neurotic when they’re away, but only slightly.

Don’t get me wrong I’m an equal opportunity worrier. I worry when I’m away as well. I worry what will happen to them if my planes crashes, my car wrecks, my heart stops. OF COURSE, I know they are grown! I gave birth to them, didn’t I? Changed their diapers, didn’t I? Wiped their tears and grounded them, DIDN’T I??? Do you really think you have to remind me that they are grown?!

I think it is completely reasonable to worry that they will be inordinately traumatized if I am no longer in their life. After all, they need my sage advice. Who will tell them to drive safely on a daily basis? Is there anyone else in their life who will ask them to think about what they might do in a natural disaster? Is there?! Someone else might not think to get a height, weight, hair and eye color, place of employment, Social Security number of the new guy they’re going to see. Well, I might be kidding about the Social Security number.

Anyway, my point is that I know that the world can be a dark and scary place where anything can happen. I learned this very important lesson at ten months when my dad rocked me to sleep and laid me in my crib one night never to be seen again. Sorry. I digress. That is definitely a story for another time. Anyway, it just makes sense that they need me around to worry, advise, and hover…just a little.

Unfortunately, I’m not always there when the dark and scaries hit. Last night was very dark and scary for both of my precious female offspring. The elder fainted and the younger witnessed!

Have I mentioned that these sisters, ten years apart, are closer than close and bestest of best friends? Well, they are, and seeing her sister crash to the floor was the scariest of the scaries for the younger.

As I listened the story first from the point of view of the elder, I was sick that I wasn’t there to catch her and then take care of her. When the younger put presented her perspective, I wished with all of my heart that I could have shielded her from that moment of terror. And yet, I was sooo grateful that, if I couldn’t be there, they had each other. And…I realized that even when the inevitable happens and my physical self no longer resides on this planet, they will have each other. And…here’s the real kicker…the bits and pieces of me that reside within their souls means they will always have me with them as well…

I love you, girlies…

Some Peoples Kids: Shine. Love. Care For Each Other. Teach An Old Gal A New Trick…

Powered by WordPress | Theme: Motion by 85ideas.