Friday, April 22, 2011

I am so out of here.



How can I have so little time when I hardly “work” at all? My official work tally is about 14.5 hours a week.

Drive Ramona here, drive my mom there. (Oh man, how I miss living in a walkable place). Clean up my mess in the living room. Laundry, Lesson Plan (arg the internet is out again!). Pick-up Ramona. Clean up my roommate’s mess.  Tend the garden. Play with my daughter. Appointments. Clean her preschool. Dinner? Or you’re hungry?  It’s time for “work” after a full day of mother/daughter/roommate duty. The anxiety rides high.  I remember during finals in college, I used to pop a Vicoden so I could calm down enough to think, to be a student.  Now I have to be a teacher.  Put on some strange "work" clothes to try to impress others.  Ramona still has some left-over Tylenol with Codeine from her bone surgery.  My bones ache, my muscles ache, my mind is in a whirl.  It would be okay right? A swig to get me through work?

Drive Ramona to my mom’s, drive me to work for 3 hours, Drive to mom’s, drive home…At home my roommate tells me she is leaving for the weekend, the kids are at their dad’s.  Well at least this time (once I clean up their mess) the kitchen will stay clean until at least Monday.  I just can’t sit in that craziness. Where can I make dinner if every counter in covered in dried food and dirty dishes?  Don’t they care that they leave huge messes for other to tread around in (or more likely with me...clean up)? I check craigslist to see if there are any potential places for me to live.  I can’t move again for a month at least, but I look.  Nothing really.  I silently pray for the perfect place to pop up…

I can hardly breathe, let alone make Art.
I can hardly spit out a cohesive thought, let alone organize.

I dream that I am bragging about how my teeth are white because I stopped drinking coffee.  Maybe they really are turning white.  And maybe my wrinkles really will stop their onslaught… green tea is supposed to do that, right?

Morning again.  I race to get my work done before Ramona wakes up.  I try because the other day she was playing make-believe.  She was a little girl who didn’t have a mom.  Her mom didn’t want her anymore.  Her mom had taken her from her real mom a while ago.  Her real mom didn’t work and played with her all the time.  Her new mom took her away and was always working, and didn’t want her anymore.  Ramona’s tears were not for pretend. 

I remember when I was a child, I could cry on demand.  Everyone thought it was a cool trick.  It really wasn’t though.  I would just think about my life and the tears ran out.

Done.  I am done with the protestant work ethic crap.  My daughter is growing up. I love her more than anything. I can always "work" another time.  I can’t always be with her.  Her and I.  Me and her. It really is that simple if I let it be.  


Pining for summer to come. I have a plan. More to come...

*note: I use "" for work, since I work a lot...but like I said, I officially work 14.5 hours a week.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

My Biggie Tadpole

Well i can't seem to complete a complete idea in my writing which lead to lack of posting, but frog updates are easy!

I do think I need to share my tadpoles though.  12 hatched.  I gave 3 away. Then Ramona's fish died when she was in the hospital, so it conveniently freed up an aquarium so now they all have space.  The biggest one is really growing up! I actually saw it's tongue pop out of it's mouth today!  So cute and unexpected. 

double trouble

I spent hours researching tadpoles online. In all the posts I read about how to take care of tadpoles (which were many many many), it wasn't until I read about tadpoles from a university site from the biology department that I actually got an understanding of the little things.  Lots of sites told me to feed them frozen or boiled lettuce or spinach and to clean their water often. Lots of sharing of info with no real sharing of knowledge. Ahh, the Information Age..
my biggie tadpole
The university site told me about how tadpoles actually get most of their nutrition not from the plant, but the bacteria that decomposes the stuff...basically it is better if it is rotting. They also said that tadpoles eat their poop.  It also told me that tadpoles release a chemical that stunts the growth of other tadpoles, so it is good to partially change the water a lot so the little tadpoles can keep up growing, but not to remove the poop or clean the bottom, or flora or fauna.  Those other information  sites had said to only feed as much as they could eat in a short time...not good advice since they love the rot.  Some sites told me to completely clean out the cage every couple weeks (more bad advice). Unfortunately, anyone can make a site, or get paid for writing a "how to" page.  The internet is getting so full of empty and mediocre information, it's getting harder and harder to learn anything.  But I guess as the internet gets more mediocre, we can learn new ways to locate, process and understand info.

Anyhow, looks like we got some Sierran Tree tadpoles.

old piece of spinach, new perspective

Monday, April 04, 2011

Broken Bones


I was going to write about our trip to Southern California except that my wiggly energetic daughter Ramona fell out of her chair at dinner and broke her elbow.  We had to go to Emergency, then we were transferred to Oakland Children’s Hospital.  Ramona ended up needing surgery.  Not open surgery.  They pushed the bone back together through her flesh and then with a tiny surgical drill they made three little holes to insert wires to hold her bone together.  She doesn’t know the wires are in there.  They will be pulling them out when the cast comes off.  That was a week ago.

At times like these that I feel overwhelming gratitude towards modern medicine.  I almost considered being making a career change. The suffering and permanent damage that it can relieve are irreplaceable.  I don’t like suffering. I just wish we could get all the benefits of western medicine while skipping the Invasive/Medical Industrial Complex/We Control Your Body part.  Of course, it isn’t the medicine itself.  It is the way that power and society use it.  As a weapon of power, like everything else.  That could be a dissertation.  It probably already is. Well Ivan Illich has written a lot about it… 

She will be in the cast for a month.  It’s hard to see a four-year-old body and spirit go through it.  Besides the pain, I feel like I have gotten the smallest glimpse of what it might be like to have a special needs kid; a physical disadvantage.  We do everything with two hands!  To open things we use two hands.  To balance we need two hands.  We hold items with one hand and manipulate them with another.  It is only in having one hand that we can truly appreciate two!  No more dressing up dolls, dressing herself.  Even going to the bathroom takes a lot more work and thought when a giant cast is dangling from one’s arm.  She has, however, become very ingenious in adapting and finding other ways to do things.  R’s best friend came over the third day, while she was still on pain meds and hadn’t ventured out of bed much.  After about 45 minutes, everything fell apart.  They didn’t know how to play together with her disability. 

But the next day she stopped taking her pain meds mostly and ventured about. Four days later she went to a birthday party (yesterday), one of the only two girls there.  She was the fragile one.  She had to stay out of the jumpy house, only six days after her surgery.  She couldn’t go into the rolly-ball, or even play in the sand box. She ate snacks and collected candy from the broken piƱata she didn’t hit, but her spirit was visibly dampened.  

At the end of the party, when she saw that there was only one girl in the jumpy house, her face lit up.  She excitedly and nervously asked me if she could go in, that she promised not to jump high or run into anyone.  Of course I had to against the doctor’s advice.  It paid off.  For the first time in a week she was herself - free from all the things she couldn’t do.  The girl left and a couple boys came and she got to play pirates for over an hour in the jumpy house, sword-fighting with her plastic skeleton.  That girl is always the last to leave a party…

I guess broken bones are a “cool” handicap, at least from what I remember in school.  Alas, we just get to experience it for a several weeks and then we are free of it.  Like the college student who goes to visit a third-world country for the summer to experience poverty.

 I get to watch my child grow “normally.”  Whatever that means.   

Monday, March 14, 2011

We don't value "things" at all...


I had a hard time falling asleep.  I thought I would have welcomed sleep, as I have been sickish lately, but it didn’t happen.  Maybe it was all that nutritional yeast on my popcorn, or maybe I am really upset.  I was lying there thinking about our discovery today, wondering why I just couldn’t seem to let it go.  Ramona went outside to make her potion in the little playhouse, and found her potions had been emptied from her bottles.  She saw one of the carrots – the ones she made of air-dry clay and paint and little green plastic things that look like carrot tops – cracked and with the carrot top yanked out.  She showed them to me, very discouragedly. The dishes and bottles we had neatly arranged in the playhouse after scrubbing it down were strewn around the patio and a few things on the lawn.  The second carrot she had made was missing as well as the tops to the nice glass bottles my mother had recently given her for potion making.  The other day I saw my roommate’s daughter and a friend playing crazy-wild outside with the hose and hula hoops and some pans, but I didn’t pay much attention. I wish I had.  My roommate is out of town a couple days, so no way to deal with it now…  I keep telling myself that it is just a thing that kids do, it is just a little thing, but it keeps nagging at me.  It is upsetting to me.  It feels like a personal violation.  It feels mean.

I also keep telling myself not to care so much, they are just things…we are too attached to our things in this culture, right? But really we, in this culture, aren’t attached to our things at all.  We are attached to “having” things.  We might be attached to some vague sentimental memories that specific things bring back to us, but really Americans are mostly attached to having things and consuming things, not the things themselves.  New things, not old things.  We are so overwhelmed with things, cheap things, junky things, made to break things, that it actually takes some thought when it comes to valuing things.  Many people react by trying to get rid of things, and feel better for it.  A good Mexican friend of mine used to berate me now and again, about how we Americans don’t have a clue about value.  I since have slowly been opening my eyes to exactly what he means.  In the USA value is attached to costs (which rarely actually reflect any other sort of value), or the prestige or envy that our shiny possessions generate.   If we truly valued our new set of pots and pans, wouldn’t we use them gently and for decades? Wouldn't our garbage dumps be a little smaller? I proudly use the pan my mother gave me that she has been using for 21 years.  But at the same time I feel a tinge of embarrassment when I look around at all the shiny new pots in the houses of my peers (are they really my peers?). What happens to those useful “old” pots anyway? They get tossed so that we can buy something new and shiny.. Or is everything made so poorly now, and then washed so many times in the destructive dishwasher that 20 years is now a dream for a pot?  I miss the depressed rural economy in which I was born…houses full of gently used old things. Garages made into music and art spaces (not full of things that are only there for the purpose of "having.")

Did I get off track?  Yes, I feel a little violated.  Ramona looks up to her friend.  Again I return to the mind changing idea one of my professors once related, “The question is not what it is, but what does it do?”   What does this do?  Something that Ramona feels is important (making potion in her special bottles, using her hand made items for play) has been totally disregarded and decimated.  Something that she valued has been brutally unvalued by someone she admires.  I wonder what that does. 

And I wonder what to say when my roommate comes home. 

Maybe this is our All-American lesson in not valuing "things", but rather "having things".  I can just BUY new ones, right?

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Frog Babies

We are anxiously awaiting baby frogs. I pulled some frogspawn out of a field that had flooded, near a creek, near my house. They have turned into little squiggles. They are about to hatch. Funny thing is that I seem to be more excited than Ramona. Of course Ramona can’t be in charge. That’s what she wants. Well, she could be in charge, but I won’t let her for the safety of the frogs. She would love to pick-up the frogspawn and play with it.

But we are both still having a great time. Having a daughter is the best thing I have ever done. I realize how much she is healing me, inspiring me to be more. It surprises me how much my childhood has come back with her. I realize it is because I shut down as a child and stopped letting certain parts of me thrive or express themselves. It is the Tragic Saga that played out in my own
little personal life. Can a child give to gift of a second chance? I want her to thrive in ways wish I could have. This song I saw today touched me. I am not the only one who has been renewed by a child.

My Little Girl
My little girl, teach me to laugh again
Run in the wind and tumble in the grass again
When you’re so alive and running by my side
Then you teach me to laugh little girl

My little girl, teach me to cry again
To feel my pain and stop and wonder why again
When you bow your head from something I have said
Then you teach me to cry, little girl

My little girl, teach me to love again
Put your arms around me and teach me to hug again
When you know I am sad and you touch me with your hand
Then you teach me to love little girl

My little girl, teach me to live again
Let me be near you and teach me how to give again
Life is fresh and new in everything you do
When you teach me to live, little girl

-Mary Dart

I don’t care if it is hokey. I am letting myself shamelessly love hokey.

Sunday, March 06, 2011

Interruptions

I have noticed this strange phenomenon lately. It is children who interrupt conversations, resulting in their parents giving them all their attention. It strikes me as rather odd. Or is it wrong to expect a child to say excuse me or wait until an adult is finished speaking. When I need someones attention, I say their name or excuse me and wait until they can give me their attention. To me it is upsetting when someone walks up while I am in mid sentence, or listening to ones story and just starts talking, adult or child. I wonder then thinking behind this.

So I ask you...Are parents afraid that their child won't feel important if they don't respond to them instantly? Is it perfectly acceptable to interrupt?

Or am I just so boring that any interruption is a breath of fresh air?