Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Driving Mrs. Crazy
Transportation seems to play a big role in our family these days. Planes, trains and automobiles seem to be regular elements that touch the three of us. Hubby flies on a fairly regular basis to luxurious places like Boise and Omaha for work. I have the daily schlep to take the kid to school, run errands, etc. For our vacation in July, we tagged along with hubby to DC where we rode the subway daily.
Since September, son has added a new dimension to transportation because he received his learner’s permit. I have been surreptitiously giving him driving lessons for a couple of years on the Civic but now he is actually legal to drive so his territory for travel has expanded from the orchard and our country road to anywhere either hubby or I will let him take the wheel. The learner’s permit is one in several rites of passage ending, in my opinion, with becoming a parent several years down the road. Once you become a parent, you are truly an adult and for some mysterious reason your ability to stay up late, drink lots of alcohol, and see small print starts to disappear.
With the learner’s permit the perpetual “why?” of the three year old is now replaced with the perpetual “Can I drive?” of the fifteen year old. I have to give son credit – he’s a fairly good driver for a raw newbie. Of course, he’s never taken a driving lesson from his dad which I think has a lot to do with it. I’ve considered it MY job since fifth grade to teach this kid how to drive simply to do my level best to make sure he’s around to take care of me in my senile retirement. Allowing hubby to teach him how to drive would result in a minimum of one totaled vehicle within the first six months.
There was actually unspoken consensus that hubby would not be teaching son how to drive. Hubby has no patience and a lead foot. He also makes the monthly car payment when he pays the bills so it scrapes on his nerves when the kid gets behind the wheel of the new vehicle. He’s not worried about son’s life or the life of innocent bystanders but about whether the car will remain unscathed. Well, that might be a bit of an exaggeration but it’s definitely an element of concern.
Truth be told, I’d rather ride with my son behind the wheel than my husband. Son is still petrified of screwing up or putting a scratch on the car so he is extremely careful and follows directions. He acquiesces to the rule of no radio on while driving and doesn’t say a word when I say “Watch your speed”. On the other hand, if I even glance at the speedometer when hubby is driving he gets defensive and starts telling me to chill out. Hubby drives with his knees while dialing his cell phone or eating a burrito. Son cannot even open a bottle of Mountain Dew while driving so he keeps both hands at ten and two on the wheel and only takes a sip while stopped at a red light. I feel much safer riding with son.
Maybe part of my terror of riding with my husband is simply the fact that I’m getting older. I know the older my mother became, the more tense she was riding with someone else. I find myself gripping the door handle with the same white knuckles that she did and bracing my feet against the floorboard when brake lights ahead start coming on. I’ve discovered that I look further down the road than my husband. I can see cars starting to slow down long before he does. He sees nothing wrong with slamming on the brakes and swerving to the right to avoid ramming the car stopped ahead whereas I would have been braking a half mile earlier. His logic is that he’s never hit someone in the rear yet; there’s a fault in that thinking somewhere but I’m usually in such a state of terror that I can’t think of how to counter such a stupid statement.
Mapquest has had a huge impact on our family’s transportation. Usually, if we are going somewhere new, we Mapquest our destination prior to departure. Sometimes, though, we forget to run the search and end up a bit lost en route. In those instances, hubby pulls out the cell phone GPS service. When the cell phone appears, son and I know we are about to go from turned around to completely lost for hours. The cell phone is NEVER accurate in its directions but hubby puts his complete faith in the Phone. It doesn’t matter if the big huge signs all say turn right, if the Phone says turn left, hubby turns left.
Hubby’s undying belief in the Phone has led us to interesting discoveries of the swamps of South Carolina and small forgotten ghost towns in Florida. Son and I secretly call it the “Deliverance Phone” because we swear we hear banjo music in the background behind the voice on the Phone. We’ve discovered that one way signs can be ignored if the Phone says traveling the opposite way is the correct route. It must have some sort of traffic law-suspension powers. We have traversed the same stretch of road in both directions several times over because the Phone gets stuck in a “Recalculating route. Make a u-turn as soon as it is safely possible.” Of course, hubby gets uptight when son or I cautiously point out that we’ve now passed Larry’s Lounge and Bait Shop three times in the last ten minutes. Hubby simply contends that Larry must be franchised to multiple locations.
Hubby always wanted to be a jet pilot but he’s too tall. The Air Force would have required him to cut his legs off at the knees to be able to fly their planes. I think he secretly fantasizes he is flying a jet when he drives. I’m sure he is convinced a Honda Civic can achieve Mach 1 and heavy traffic conditions are just an opportunity to practice close formation flying. Like a Thunderbird pilot, hubby feels traveling 300 mph 7 inches from your wing man is a great accomplishment. I should note that Thunderbird pilots fly without anyone else in the cockpit. If they did, that person would be gripping the door handle and bracing his feet against the floorboard, too. I’m also pretty sure Thunderbirds have better navigation systems than the Deliverance Phone.
If we are going to be traveling far with hubby at the wheel, I’ve learned to double up on my beta blocker for my heart condition and add a dose of my anxiety medication to my normal dosage. I’m thoroughly convinced that if I WERE to start having a panic attack or heart palpitations, it would only cause hubby to drive faster; his logic would be that he sooner we reached our destination, the better.
Planes, trains and automobiles are definitely part of our family theme this year. I’m sure at some point “Throw Momma from the Train” has also arisen in some of the male minds in the household. Quite frankly, I think we are closest to “Crash” part of the time but most of the time it’s just “Driving Mrs. Crazy”.
Friday, August 1, 2008
No Binney and Smith
As a child, shopping for Back to School was exciting. My dad would take me to TG&Y (this was before Walmart hit town) or to Redford’s Ten Cent Store and buy my tablets, pencils, and best of all – a 64-count box of Crayola crayons with the sharpener on the back. I loved the new book bag, paste, and pencils, but I LOVED that new box of crayons.
I was a prolific colorer as a child. I could plow through a coloring book in no time. Back in the 70’s, every grocery store had a twirly stand by the checkout with comic books and coloring books. I anxiously awaited the newest editions of coloring books, especially ones that featured animals or holiday designs. I would go through crayons like crazy and they always had to be Crayola. Off-brand ones just didn’t color right – they’d smear or not cover well.
This morning, I stole a couple of hours away from work to head to Target to pick up a few things on my son’s high school supply list. I was appalled that crayons aren’t on the list for freshmen. It had to be a mistake. Surely, ninth graders need to color something – maps maybe or something for a science project? What about the periodic table? That would look good done in crayon. You would have to use some colors twice because there are more than 64 elements but you could do the noble gases all one color and then all the radioactive ones one color. Surely, there was a need for crayons in high school.
Alas, no matter how hard I looked, no crayons were listed for high school – not for sophomores, juniors or even seniors. Gelatin, a slinky, latex gloves, and disinfectant were (I don’t even want to know what FOR), but no crayons. The closest things were colored pencils and we still have about 3 sets of those left over from sixth grade.
No, I had no written justification for purchasing the big 64 count box of Crayola crayons. So I decided to sneak a box. I'd shred the receipt so no one would know. Besides, I would just write in a different color every day in my Day-Timer for the next 64 days. Oh the smell! It’s better than chocolate chip cookies! That smell takes away all the stress of being a grown up and catapults me back to the days of knee-high socks, Stretch Armstrong, and bicycle banana seats. One whiff and I’m free of worries about bills, college tuition, the rising price of gas, and the gray hairs that are starting to make me look like a skunk. Some candle company needs to make candles that smell like school supplies – crayons, mimeograph ink, paste, pencil shavings, chalk dust, and the smell of a newly varnished gym floor. They’d make a fortune.
I smuggled my crayons home with all the other stuff I purchased and saved that bag to empty until last. Furtively, I snuck them into my office and opened the flip-top lid (you have to do it just right so it doesn’t tear). I was so excited about my non-toxic purchase! I started looking for my old favorite colors – midnight blue, cornflower, and sienna. As I was pulling colors out, I noticed that some of them were different – they had gray wrappers instead of wrappers that matched the color of the crayon itself. What’s up with this? I pulled out a neon pink one and read the name – “famous”. WHAT? Where did that come from? Famous what? The neon orange one right beside it read “fun in the sun”. These are color names? Whose idiotic idea was this?
I glanced back at the front of the box. Right there in the corner it read “8 New Kids’ Choice Colors – By Kids – About Kids”. I was appalled. They had changed the 64-count box! If they had added 8 colors, that means they had to remove 8 colors. It’s not a 72-count box so something had to be missing! Oh horrors! Threads of panic started to set in and I thought briefly of the nitroglycerine tablets I carry in my purse.
I started reading the names of the new colors. In addition to “famous” and “fun in the sun”, there were “best friends”, “awesome”, “super happy”, “happy ever after”, “giving tree” and “bear hug”. Who in the hell came up with those stupid names? Don’t the people at Crayola know that the only hope for boys to ever understand the difference between the color peach and the color apricot is through the 64-count box of Crayola crayons?? They are handicapping an entire male generation! At some point in the future, some poor woman is going to say “I think we should paint the garage gray” and her husband will say, “Gray? What’s that? Is that like ‘bear hug’?”
To make it an even bigger shock – Crayola is now printing the color names in three languages – English, Spanish, and French. Spanish I tolerate because everything caters to our illegal alien population these days but FRENCH? Now don’t get me wrong. I took two years of French in high school, lived in Europe for three years, minored in Spanish in college, taught beginning Spanish in middle school and have piddled with Russian. Some of the first things you learn in a new language are the names of colors. If we want non-English speaking children to learn our language in our schools, would it not make sense to put the names of the crayon colors in just ENGLISH?
By that time, I’d also discovered that light green is now “granny smith apple” (without capitalization, mind you) and I just couldn’t take it. I needed to write to Binney & Smith and set them straight. I hunted around on the box for the address, noting with relief that they are still made in USA, only to find that Crayola is no longer owned by Binney & Smith but by – get this – Hallmark. The genesis of those sappy color names became crystal clear. Hallmark is in on it and they've made gay colors.
As I was sitting staring despondently at my brand new 64-count box of Crayola crayons, my son walked into the office. He saw my forlorn look and asked me what was wrong. Tearfully, I moan “They’ve changed the colors in the box!” Being the true loving son he is, he came over, gave me a hug and said, “Gee mom, I’m sorry. Growing up is hard, isn’t it. Want me to get you a glass of wine?”
Sunday, July 6, 2008
Happy Fourth of July
I like the Fourth of July. Believe it or not, it was always my favorite holiday as a kid, even better than Christmas, I think. The Fourth was usually a big to-do with my family and any kind of to-do with my family was unusual just because of the rarity of such. We didn’t do a lot of big get-togethers so I usually enjoyed those that actually occurred. Christmas was nice but the Fourth had two things that I really liked – homemade, hand-cranked ice cream and the danger of losing body parts in an explosion.
The ice-cream is self-explanatory only it wasn’t until I grew up that I figured out the physics of how the cranking and the cold actually made ice-cream. I just figured the cranking bit was something to keep us kids busy (which it probably was) and the ice was something to make the cranking harder to do.
See, my dad never bought crushed ice for the ice-cream maker. Shoot, I don’t think they even sold the stuff in our county. No, we had to make it with the regular kind of ice that was the size of rocks from a gravel road. Those things inevitably got stuck under the cylinder thing in the ice-cream maker and required a lot of reversals, banging, and poking with a long, flat-head screwdriver to get unstuck. It made an interminable process even longer.
The result was always worth it. Mom never made regular ice cream with eggs and cream. If it had to be cooked, Mom didn’t make it which was also the reason I spent most of my childhood eating out in restaurants. No, Mom made ice cream with regular milk, vanilla, and sugar. The result was very similar to snow cream and was fantastic. Of course, since we only got it once a year that made it even more special.
My other favorite thing about the Fourth is the threat to life and limb. There were two major ways to hurt yourself on the Fourth. The first was if you went to the Kiwanis fireworks show at the high school stadium and fell down the bleachers. I’ve done that – more than once. The risk of that happening went up if there was a sudden, unexpected lightning storm in the middle of the show that caused the entire population of the county to start running for their cars in a torrential downpour.
One of my most vivid Fourth of July memories is one of seeing my mom running in a torrential downpour in front of me headed for the car holding a program over her beehive hairdo. Lightning was snapping everywhere and Daddy had a death grip on my hand. We had made it to the back of the concession stand and were crossing the grass when Mom tripped headlong, face first into a water-filled ditch. Dad and I forgot the storm and doubled over laughing. Mom didn’t see the humor. I have to give her credit though – she saved the ‘do. The rest of her was a muddy polyester mess but that ‘do made it through. I suspect it was the build-up of Aqua-Net that made the difference.
Thereafter every Fourth, we always talked about the lightning storm when Mom fell in the ditch. It became a family legend. We have many family legends that revolve around the Fourth, mainly because my older brother has a condition that makes for an exciting experience – he loves home fireworks and he’s blind as a bat in the dark.
Brother is thirteen years older than I and has always worn Coke-bottle glasses. He can barely see in the daylight but in any dim light, he’s completely night-blind. He’s never seen a star. He has to be led into and out of the movie theater. When he was in the Navy, he was not allowed on the ship’s deck after twilight for fear he would walk off the side. He is completely and totally blind in the dark. That didn’t stop either him or my dad from putting on a massive fireworks display on our street every year. In fact, it added to the excitement!
The day before the Fourth, Dad, Brother and I would head down to the fireworks stand and load up two large grocery sacks (they were the paper kind back then) with all kinds of fireworks. It was cool because they usually let me pick everything out being the spoiled rotten baby girl I was. Of course, I’d get the girly stuff like sparklers and lady fingers but we’d also get Roman candles, showers-of-sparks, bottle rockets, regular Black Cats, chasers and whistlers. Cherry bombs, smoke bombs, and stink bombs were my brother’s favorites because they could be shot off before dark. M-80’s were Dad’s favorites and he had a stock-pile of them for years after they were made illegal. All total, Dad probably spent a hundred bucks on fireworks every year and that was when you could get a box of sparklers for a quarter and a gross of bottle rockets for two bucks. You can imagine the massive amount of firepower we had.
When I was ten or so, Brother was in on leave from the Navy for the holiday. We were just getting started and the lightning bugs were just starting to come up out of the grass. For those of you who live in the South, you’ll realize that means there was still some light, at least enough to see fuses without flashlights. Or so we thought.
Brother was attempting to light a mortar shot and had just gotten the fuse going when, being blind, he tripped and knocked the mortar over. Dad yelled out “Incoming!” and bolted. Ice tea cups flew and lawn chairs tumbled as family and neighbors evacuated the area. My best friend Laura and I took cover in a ditch. Mom passed us doing about 35 with her cigarette clamped between her lips in an attempt to get around the side of the house to safety. We’d never seen grownups move so fast in our entire lives. Brother stood stock-still while the entire neighborhood made for cover around him. He later said he figured his odds of not getting shot were better than his odds of not running into a tree so he just froze. Turns out the only casualty was the neighbor’s cat who got a singed tail and lost three lives out of sheer terror when the mortar round missed its ass by millimeters. I swear that cat flew like Superman.
Brother always had close calls with fireworks but it didn’t deter him and it made for great entertainment for the rest of us. One year he lit a Roman candle and was holding it out in front of him like all the safety experts tell you not to do. The fact that he was holding it out in front of him turned out not to be the problem. The problem was he had it turned around backwards and shot himself in the stomach. After two shots, he got a clue and dropped it. Burned a hole straight through his shirt and made a big red mark on his belly. When he dropped it, it shot off toward Mom who again passed us doing 30 (she was older that year) trying to get around the corner of the house.
The Fourth before his wedding, Brother had his fiancée Susan to our house for the holiday. Susan, bless her sweet Baptist heart, hates fireworks; she is absolutely terrified of them. But, in her attempt to be a part of the family, she compromised that year and decided to sit in the car in the driveway while we shot off the annual display. She settled herself into her yellow Datsun and felt safe with the windows rolled up and the doors all locked. All was going well and the display was good, if a tad boring. Susan, feeling a bit comforted, not to mention sweaty walled up in an enclosed Datsun in July in
That chaser did the absolute impossible and flew a beeline directly through that one-inch gap in that window and got in the car with Susan. I couldn’t see her face but I could see the chaser going round and round inside that car and the screams that emanated from the interior were those of someone in free fall without a parachute. She couldn’t get out because she had locked the doors. She couldn’t get away and she couldn’t hide in a two-door subcompact of the seventies. Those of us watching could just see fire bouncing off walls and windows, and see the Datsun rocking as she tried to fight the thing off.
Of course, none of us were any help. We couldn’t even stand up because we were laughing so hard. When the chaser finally burned out and she was able to unlock the door, that sweet Baptist girl emerged cussing like a sailor. Her denim skirt was burned in multiple places and her perfectly hot-rollered hair was smoking in several quadrants. For twenty years thereafter, Susan spent the Fourth of July locked in the window-less bathroom at our house from 4:00 pm onward.
After he was married and had children of his own, Brother was still fun on the Fourth. I was with him and his kids one year in an undeveloped cul-de-sac of their neighborhood as they were putting on their own homegrown display. Brother had just lit a chaser and was backing away when he disappeared altogether. We all ran over to see what had happened to him to discover he had backed away too far in the dark and had fallen into a six-foot ditch flat of his back. Lucky for him, it was full of muddy water or he could have been hurt.
You know, now that I think about it, the Fourth of July and ditches seem to have some sort of weird connection for our family. I bet Susan wishes she had taken the ditch instead of the Datsun. At least she could have run for her life like Mom did.
The fireworks bug has been genetically passed to my son but unfortunately, due to circumstances, we have yet been able to spend a Fourth with my brother since my son has been old enough to get involved in the annual fireworks display. Maybe next year.
I saw on the news this afternoon that 37 people were hurt nationwide by fireworks this year. Heck, that’s not bad. I don’t see what gets safety people into such a tizzy about fireworks. I survived 42 years of near proximity to a blind man with a punk in his hand surrounded by explosives. If I made it through unscathed, the odds are good that most other people will. Unless of course, you are stuck in a yellow Datsun with the doors locked.
Monday, February 18, 2008
Final Instructions
First of all, I have to back up a few years to about 1999 (I think). We were living in Texas and my grandmother passed away. My mother was an only child and she and my grandmother did NOT get along. My grandmother had been taken care of by my brother and I for several years, but my brother took over when we moved to Austin. My mother did not have much involvement with Mommo (what we called my grandma) but when Mommo died, it was up to Mom to take care of the final arrangements because she was the direct next of kin.
My grandmother had always loved a good funeral. We called her a professional funeral-goer. She'd often go to funerals of people she had never met but were friends of friends. She just loved the socializing they offered. When my grandfather died, she made sure that the traditions were followed and she was in high cotton because at that funeral, she was the center of attention. She made the most of it, too. She could be a bit of a drama queen and a good Southern funeral was just the stage she needed.
Needless to say, my mother had little patience with all that. She considered it a waste of time and good money (Mom was cheap). Therefore, when my grandmother died, my mother didn't do the whole funeral thing but rather just had Mommo cremated (because it was cheaper), gave away her few possessions, and was done with it. When the remains (funeral professionals call them "cremains", I've discovered) were returned to Mom, she simply put the box in the trunk of her car. And that is where they stayed until last month. That's nine years, people. For nine years, my mother rode around with my grandmother in the trunk of her car.
Mom's original intention was to take the ashes to Alexander City, Alabama and have them buried next to my granddad but somehow she just never got around to making the trip. So Mommo rode around in the trunk of Mom's car for years. She even got transferred from one trunk to another when Mom bought a NEW car. It got to be a bit of a family joke, really. I always told Mom that if she was ever in an accident she would have a hard time explaining when the police asked her what was in the box - "Uh, well officer, that would be my mother".
In a way, it was rather appropriate (remember, I said you have to know my family) because my grandmother was a big traveler. She was always on the go and moved a LOT. Once she even moved from one side of a duplex to the other side - just because. We kind of figured she was having a good time sitting there next to the spare tire. I told Mom "what goes around, comes around" and that I had every intention of riding her around in the trunk when she died. Mom thought that was pretty funny.
Well, on January 5th Mom passed away. Her written directions were to be cremated. So now I was stuck with both Mommo in a box and Mom in a box. When we went to pick up Mom's "cremains" Scott carried the box out to the car for me. As we were nearing the Honda, he said, "Do you want me to put her in the backseat?" and I said "Nope. She goes in the trunk. I always told her I was going to ride her around like she did Mommo and I'm keeping my promise." And by golly I did - at least for a few hours. I brought her in the house at the end of the day and sat her box on top of Mommo's box on the floor under my desk with strict instructions to the two of them "No fighting, you two. I've had enough of your antics already."
A week after Mom died, we held a memorial service. Cremation is a relatively new thing for Southerners. We are accustomed to the traditional funeral process. You know - the visitation, the open casket, the service at the funeral home, the graveside service, and then the big dinner spread afterwards. People flood the family with casseroles and cakes. Everyone talks about how "good" the dead person looks, discusses the choice of flower blanket and casket, etc. It's a good gossip fest.
All Southern women can put on a funeral with little to no problem because we know the routine. Southern funerals are big occasions to see long-lost family, catch up with friends, eat big, and generally give the deceased a good send-off. When you have someone cremated, you can't really do that. What do you do? Put the box on the table at the front of the church? Remark how "good" it looks? The whole process is odd. I mean, really, I wrote a check for cremation services and they handed me my mother in a box in return. How weird is that?
I wasn't about to hang on to both Mom and Mommo for another nine years with both of them sitting under my desk. In my normal fashion, I was going to take care of disposal of "cremains" as soon as possible and move on. (How can people put their family members in an urn on the mantel? I just don't get it.) The day after the memorial service, my brother, my nephew, my son and I took both boxes and rode up into the Smoky Mountains where I knew of a good mountain stream that was easily accessible from the road. I figured this was as good a place as any to "bury" them both. Mommo could travel all the way to the Gulf of Mexico eventually and Mom had always enjoyed camping in the mountains in her younger days.
It was a very cold January day - clear, with temperatures in the teens. When we got to the spot, I was elected to do the honors. We decided we would start with Mommo first since she had been dead the longest. (We're making this up as we go along because we've never done anything like this before.) When I went to open the cardboard box she was in, I discovered to my dismay that Mom had taped her in. And I mean she had done a REALLY good job - she was being absolutely positive Mommo wasn't getting out. My goodness, she could have passed FedEx standards! I had to get my son's pocket knife to cut through the packing tape and once inside, I discovered she'd done the same to the plastic box on the inside! It took me fifteen minutes of hacking with a Swiss army knife to get in to the "cremains".
Okay, morbid curiosity abounds and I know you are wondering what it looked like. We did too. Basically, it looked like what you would expect it to look like - gray powder. I held the plastic bag out over the river and dumped it in. My son and nephew threw flowers in after. And the cloudy water just sat there. Without thinking about it, we had selected a spot where the current wasn't very strong so when dumped in, a big cloudy area resulted. Ahh, crap.
Learning as we went along on this, we decided it would be best to dump Mom a little further upstream and out a little further in the current. That meant me, the elected one, had to walk out on these slippery rocks over the sub-freezing temp water coming down from the mountains. I was saying a prayer - "please don't let me fall in" and then "please don't let me fall in after I dump Mom because that would just be too icky". Forget anything appropriate like the Lord's Prayer or the 23rd Psalm. I was concerned about myself at this point.
I made it to the appropriate place and opened the box. To our amazement, Mom didn't look like Mommo. Mom looked more like black volcanic sand. I commented "You don't think they gave us the wrong person do you?" but then I decided it was irrelevant at this point. I'm balancing my big ol' butt on a tiny, slippery rock over rushing freezing water and I was anxious to get this done and back to shore safely. We were going to dump SOMEONE even if it wasn't Mom.
I go through the same process and my son and nephew throw in flowers. I make it safely back to the bank and we stand there watching the stream. Now, this entire thing has been surreal from the start but here's where it gets really weird. As "Mom" and "Mommo" start mixing together in the stream, whirlpools start to form and the floating flowers actually start floating UPSTREAM. The three of us look at each other with eyes like saucers and we all exclaim at once "They're fighting again!"
Rapidly we backed up the bank out of the way and watch as the water seems to boil and churn and the flowers are going every which way but downstream. We are afraid we've created an EPA supersite or some sort of space/time wormhole by letting these two mix together.
We stood and watched for about 20 minutes, our noses turning blue and our breath freezing in the air until finally, finally, the flowers move on downstream and the waters smooth out. Not a word has been spoken. My son bends down and with a stick writes in the mud beside the stream "NO SWIMMING". I get the car keys out and say "Anyone up for Sonic? I could use some ice cream."
By the way, in case anyone needs to know, I've left written instructions for my burial. I want to be buried, in a casket, in jeans and a t-shirt, and I want chicken and dumplings served for dinner. And banana pudding. Just want to make that clear.