Teaching kids to work

Deep down we all know the real reason people have children: free child labor.

When we had our first child I knew we were in for a good ten years of crazy before things started to settle down and we could cash in on our investment. We’re nearly nine years into this parenting gig and our three oldest children (8,6,4) are fully enrolled in Learn to Work 101.

Basically that means that I clean everything twice.

I routinely feel like I’m training Curious George. They’re willingish and both my boys have hands and thumbs, but I’ve learned that there are certain things that are better left un-kid-cleaned. Like windows. I’ll take a few greasy finger and lip prints over the sticky swirly mess that my kids happily come up with. They don’t seem to realize that we’re not going for “opaque.”

I’ve decided that one of Harrison’s (8) Saturday chores is cleaning and detailing the car. If you’ve ever seen a vehicle transport that taxi’s small children around you know that all it takes is one 30 minute ride and the car is a crumb coated, plastic wrappered, school papered, hidden sippy cupped mess. And somehow the “no food” rule doesn’t seem to cover the existence of crumbs. I’m pretty sure they load up their pockets and sprinkle remnants of pop tarts and toast around the car just in case we get lost on the way home.

When you teach a kid to clean any large area you have to do it in stages, and the stages have to be stupid simple. When I send Harrison down to the car it’s on a step-by-step basis and he has to get each step cleared before moving on. For instance:

1. Open car doors

2. Climb inside car

3. Remove car seats etc.

Last week I had Harrison working on the car and had just reached step seven, remove rugs from car. “Harrison!” I called, “Are you ready for me to come check?” He threw back an extremely put out, overly grumpy “Yeah,” and I started to head down.

Then I thought, there’s no reason I should get to have all the fun around here, so I turned to Mr. Honeydo himself. One thing about my husband that warrants keeping his last name on my social security card is his rocking personal work ethic. It’s like being married to a bald Martha Stewart, he always gets the job done and usually does it well (unless it’s laundry which he hates).

“Hey Sweetheart,” I said, using our favorite now-I’m-going-to-ask-you-something-you-really-don’t-want-to-hear term of endearment, “Why don’t you go down and check on Harrison and the car, just give him the next step.”

He shrugged and set aside the large stack of cardboard boxes he was collapsing (because he rocks) then tromped down to the garage.

Five minutes later I walked into the office and found Harrison playing computer games.

“What?! Why are you here? There’s no way you finished that car already!”

“Oh,” he said, “Dad said I didn’t have to.” He smiled and I stomped down to the garage in a huff.

“Jason! What are you doing down here?” I yelled over the roar of the vacuum.

“Oh,” he said turning it off, “I’m just detailing the car.”

“But that’s Harrison’s job!”

“I know, but he’s horrible at it. I figured it would just be faster if I did it myself,” he said, flipping the switch back on and promptly ignoring me.

I almost pulled the plug and threw a fit, but we all know that the only thing harder than teaching your kids something is teaching your husband. When it comes down to it, I guess I don’t care how the car gets cleaned as long as long as I’m not the one who has to do it.

Talking to my kid about s-e-x (I am so asking for trouble with this topic)

Harrison is eight. This is the age that discussion about having The Discussion is a regular topic of conversation among mothers and fathers.

It’s funny how differently people view having the sex talk with a kid. The when, the how, the if, I’m pretty sure it’s a major case of stress for any parent who considers virtue and wholesomeness highly credible attributes in young children. Sex is both the most virtuous and the least virtuous topic out there, depending upon your situation and how you decide to approach it.

Personally, I was raised on a farm. If I ever ventured into questions about creation in general my parents always suggested I take a walk in the field and observe the cattle. It wasn’t the worst way to learn about the birds and the bees, but I was practically 24 before I realized that humans did it too. A little more up front would have been helpful.

Lately one of my besties has been heavily debating the when and how to tell her daughter. She went with one of the How To Break it to Your Kid books and did the whole Special Secret, Special Hug, Special Naked bit that’s so highly suggested.

I think that method is great and wholly support parents who implement it. At the same time, I believe there is no single right way to talk to a kid about sex, and in fact I’d propose that the method should fit the child. Harrison is of an age where some kids are ready to hear a more mature description of the what-why-and-how, but both Jason and I feel like it’s not his season.

But there’s nothing like peer pressure to light a fire under a parent, if you know what I mean.

A few weeks ago I decided that perhaps it’s time to open the channels, if you will. Not fire hose the kid down, but just see if there’s any water pressure. Isn’t it funny how once we mentally entertain an idea, especially if you don’t force the issue, a moment will present itself that’s custom ordered.

Harry and I were cleaning one of the many messy rooms in my house not long after this and I had the thought that I should just casually ask him what he knows/thinks/has heard about s-e-x.

Being the total wuss that I apparently am, I dismissed it and continued on with my chore, choosing instead to probe his mind on what makes Super Mario so super.

An hour later the thought came to me again. Since I’m not completely dim witted I went ahead and casually blurted out, “So Harrison, have you heard anything about sex?” Yeah, I’m super sneaky and all kinds of prepared.

“What?!” he said, blushing scarlet. “No!” He quickly turned away and made himself busy arranging toys.

“No problem,” I said, “But just so you know, you can always just ask Dad or me if you’ve ever got any questions, or if someone says something that makes you uncomfortable. We know everything.” The room was opressively silent and I kind of wondered if I had just destroyed his innocence in one fell swoop.

“Actually,” he finally said, “There is a kid on the bus who’s always talking about…things.” Can I get a phew? This led to an awesome conversation about appropriate topics and how to handle situations where kids are being rude and crude. Options included moving, reading a book, listening to an ipod or some other music source, and always saying “please don’t talk about that,” even if they ignore your request.

Two days later Harrison came home from the bus really upset. “Buddy,” I said, “What’s up with you? Did something happen on the bus?”

“Yes!” he said and walked over to whisper in a super secret way, “Benjamin was talking on the bus…about…this (insert rapidly waving hand in front of chest)….and this (more rapid hand waving in front of zipper)….!”

I was so glad we had opened the channels of communication, and I’m glad that we didn’t tell him more than he needs to know. After asking a few carefully selected questions, I realized that he doesn’t want to know about sex, he wants to avoid having to listen to kids discuss it.

We’ve decided to periodically ask him where he’s at with his understanding and not rush into it. This would include learning right now the importance of never looking when someone with a cell phone says, “Hey, look at this picture!” or tries to show him something that might be the wrong kind of surprise. If he learns to guard what he sees right now it could really save him in a year or two when some kid tries to flash a picture of some girls you-know-what’s in his sweet little face.

I know I’m probably opening a can by writing about this, but we can’t be the only parents dealing with this topic right now, and I think it’s important to hear different methods and different ways.

My point is that just because something works for one kid doesn’t mean it will work for another, and like my sister says, what’s so wrong with baby steps? I’m more concerned with him knowing how to handle situations where kids talk about it inappropriately than making sure he knows everything about sex.

For us, he just needs to know that when he’s got questions or feels uncomfortable, we’re a safe, open place to go. Right now that’s enough.

Just give the baby a coke and get on with your day

 

Let’s talk about this picture for a moment, shall we?

That is my baby. In her bottle is a two-day old leftover can of flat Diet Dr. Pepper 10.

I am sure that there are dozens of highly trained mothers out there with 1, 2, even 3 children who would never in a million years consider this kind of behavior acceptable in any setting. I know because I, too, was once that mother. A wonderful, thoughtful, conscientious mama who gave my children whole foods and routinely snubbed the evils of carbonation, sugar substitutes, and Heaven forbid McDonald’s.

I can remember when Harrison was a baby and my Father in law (one of my favorite humans ever) gave him a few drops of Diet Coke from the end of his straw. I literally thought I might rip his head from his shoulders for tainting my child with poison (I wasn’t a big pop drinker back in the day). A few weeks later when Harrison got an ear infection I was pretty sure it was from the Diet Coke.

But let me tell you, I have learned a few things about survival. Take yesterday, for instance. After nearly five hours of dragging this poor child from one government office to another trying to get an official gas card for my rental (don’t even think you can just swing in and gas up around here), running from base to base to get a copy of my stolen vehicle registration, plus having to try and find a new car one the side, this baby was DONE.

Even with a weak nap she spent the afternoon in tears. Part of this is her missing father; we stopped by his office to fax a paper and I’m pretty sure she wet herself from excitement at finally seeing Daddy again. He wasn’t there. She cried when we left without him.

And I wanted to stop at the local market and get milk, but what do you do when your exhausted baby is fast asleep in the backseat and you need to go in? You skip it (unless we all think I should have just left her unattended in a foreign country so I could go get milk and avoid ruining her metabolism for-e-ever).

So forgive me if, upon her rather abrupt and overly weepy awakening, I resorted to the only thing I could find in the house that wasn’t water (which she had violently thrown across the room).

After the week I’ve had it can’t get much worse (did I mention the strep throat? No? Well let me tell you, that was fun).

The death of my Singer

I have decided that things crash in three’s: within a few short weeks I’ve lost my car, my Mac and my sewing machine.

I do not complain about my sewing machine.

She’s an ugly old girl. I got swindled on Craig’s List three years ago in an attempt to save my dearly beloved some money. Instead of getting something new and cheap, I bought myself an old Singer, circa 1983-ish. Despite my intense and immediate buyer’s remorse (why do I feel obligated to to pay top dollar for other people’s crap just to make them feel good about themselves?), I knew the only way to save face with the man was to suck it up and sew already.

And oh how I’ve sewn.

For the past three years I’ve sewn pillows and costumes and Christmas pajamas, ball gowns and pin cushions and curtains. I’ve made purses and aprons and banners, stitched up dozens of wounded stuffed animals (Rex’s animals require at least one surgical procedure a week), mended pants and crafted skirts and ran the needles until they were dull as doorknobs.

Thanks to my in house sewing station I’ve been a regular little DIY princess who routinely avoids the children so I can learn to be a “homemaker.”

And I’ve done it all on the world’s stupidest sewing machine.

Three project packed years. Talk about ploughing through, I’ve put more miles and needles and stitches on that baby than I ever expected. And not once, not once have I even allowed myself to dream of it’s death. I’ve taken great care to hone the fine art of practicality and thrift in this department. The shoe department is a different animal, but as far as sewing machines go I get an A+.

A month ago I started taking a sewing class with my girlfriends. Apparently I’ve been stuck in the 60’s with my sewing mentality; my machine isn’t the only thing that’s holding me back. Despite being three decades behind in all things mechanical I’ve allowed myself very little machine envy during class, even when my lawnmower and I have had to listen to the purr of the new computerized Singer Curvy that sits next to us.

Imagine hauling a 1986 personal computer into a college class while everyone else is using laptops. A PC that your kids have lovingly decorated with permanent pens. So not cool. And for whatever reason, I really don’t care. It gets me from stitch A to stitch B, so no complaints here.

Yesterday while working on my sewing homework my routinely loud and obnoxious machine started making a rather uncomfortable grinding noise, kind of like a chain saw. But hey, the thing was still stitching so I decided to just press through. It’s not like I can take it into my local Singer stationmaster.

And as I punched in the back button at the end of the row it gave a little hiss and slight stench and presto: nothing but a death hum.

Apparently I’m being blessed for not caring that I don’t have the coolest or the smartest or the quietest or the newest or the most convenient machine. Either that or someone dropped my machine off a balcony without telling me (why did I not think of that before?).

For once in my marriage there was absolutely no argument when I called Jason and told him that my machine was dead and I would have to buy a new one pronto. He knows, he’s seen, I’ve done my time. This isn’t a passing fancy and I have earned a grown up girl machine.

According to Amazon it shipped this morning. As Rex would say, I sure hope the Seven Little Postmen hurry.

 

Let’s wrap this baby up.

This is the last thing I want to say about the crash. Thank you for letting me work through this in my own coincidentally public way, my blog is where I bare my heart and soul and it’s not always pretty. But writing my way through this has brought me closure, one step at a time.

Today I saw the corpse. Honestly, seeing my car sitting there all dead and crushed in the wrecking yard was big. I needed to see that car, I needed to look at what she did and how she helped save my family.

Here are a few photos for you to glimpse through while I talk. I’m also including a picture of Rex in his self-induced coma. Such a kill. Also kind of freaky.

 

 

I need you to notice a few things. First, the fact that the semi truck literally ripped the guts out of my car and splattered them all over the road. Second, the fact that there is a very deliberate and beautiful line of demarkation: From the exact point where Harrison sat in the front seat and beyond our car was pristine. Not a scratch.

Looking at my little Mazda 5, I can’t understand why the windshield didn’t shatter. And considering the angle and the speed with which we smashed into the stupid semi, we should have rolled clear to Bulgaria.

We didn’t just survive this thing, we walked away completely unscathed. All those mornings of family prayer, and the mornings where we added another prayer for safety in the car, it’s like they’ve been building up in some sort of Safety Account just waiting for us to cash it in. Looks like we had prayers to spare.

My kids are all dealing with their shock and grief in different ways. This morning I woke up with Harrison stuck to the side of me like some kind of industrial velcro. Evenings and mornings are the hardest for him, he had a bad dream this morning and had to puke his anxiety out in the toilet. Very hard for me to watch.

The hardest part of all this is having my captain on the other side of the world. My boy Jason single-handedly keeps my world turning. Really, I’m just a glorified child who gets a really awesome allowance. He’s the responsible party and I’m…well, I’m just the party. When things go wrong, Jason handles the paper work and I rent the movie. I’m also very good at home made bread.

I hate having him gone. I need him, I need his arms and his voice and his fax machine know-how. The aftermath alone is stretching me in ways I would rather not be stretched. I can do it, but I hate it.

On the night of the accident, right before I left the hospital, our Bishop and one of my neighbors took me aside and sat me down for a priesthood blessing. The moment they anointed my head I felt power flow through my body like a live current of electricity. It literally took my breath away.

The blessing was beautiful, especially when it promised me that I would be in tune with my children and their individual needs this next week, that I’d know how to comfort and help them in their moments of fear and grief and anxiety.

Laying in bed that night I realized that during almost every moment of our ordeal, up until the kids were tucked safely in their beds, there was a priesthood holder within arm’s reach. In Germany, that’s a miracle of it’s own. When we pulled into the hospital, it was no surprise to find our home teacher just happened to be delivering a baby upstairs and was to there to see us within no time.

I’ve had dozens of calls, multiple dinners, people who stopped by to whisk my kids away or help me put them to bed. In three days I’ve felt more love and support and strength than I can comprehend. I love everyone who has cared enough to call and comment and thank God on our behalf that we were so beautifully spared.

And hey, we even made the German newspaper. They didn’t know our names but the accident was considered a local miracle. Love those Germans, they know Heavenly intervention when they see it.

So this is me wrapping the nightmare up. I guess I shouldn’t call it that. If there’s one thing I’ve decided, it’s that if I ever get in another accident I hope it’s exactly like this one.

 

Into the Ambulance

Today I dug into my shoe basket and pulled out a forgotten pair of flats. Heels just sounded way too risky.

When they piled the kids and I into the ambulance after the crash last night (30-45 minutes later? An hour?) my oldest three sat huddled in a group, clinging and crying and all wanting to sit on my lap/shoulders/head, anything to feel better (Gigi was fine as long as she could sit in her stroller). The neighbor kid got a little white so they took him to one of the waiting ambulances.

Finally the German doc leaned in and anxiously told me that we would have to split all the children up, there was no way we could move out in that condition. They did quick evaluations starting with June. It will come as no surprise that my little spit fire was the first calm one of the bunch.

“June,” I said as the doctor finished checking her, “do you think you can go with that nice German man right there and ride in another ambulance? Are you brave?” She smiled at me, gave me a big hug and kiss and hopped into his arms with a little happy wave goodbye.

It about killed me. Not that I didn’t have enough to worry about with the boys, they were sobbing next to me on the bed like a couple of girl scouts. I sat between them trying to think of how I could convince Harrison to leave my side.

With Jason gone my kids and I have implemented the Team Valentine (we use my real last name but I try to avoid using it publicly as much as possible–it’s about the only thing I keep private) to help us when Daddy’s away. It means that we all pitch in to pick up the slack; that could be a hug, or helping Mom with chores, or reading a book to someone. We have a jar that we’re filling with fuzzy balls in order to earn a totally awesome Saturday out with Mommy next week.

I looked at my beautiful terrified eight-year-old crying his heart out next to me. “Harrison,” I said, “Can you look at me?” He turned his big green eyes up at my face and I smiled. “Buddy, I need your help. We can’t leave until we’re all in different ambulances,” I said as he started to cry harder and burried his sweet face in my chest. “Harry, I need you to do something for me: Dad isn’t here to help, but do you think you can be brave and ride alone so Rex can stay with me? Team Valentine, Buddy, can you do it?”

I wish I could describe watching him take that last big sniff, blow it out and wipe his eyes. He looked up at me, pressed his lips together and gave a solid nod of the head. Then he hugged me and jumped off the gurney to go with the strange Germans waiting to take him away. My little boy, such a wonderful man in the making. He didn’t shed another tear the rest of the night, and in fact was totally into the neck brace and gurney scene by the time we pulled up to the ER.

But oh, my little Rexy. Sobbing, certain that we were all going to die and just waiting for the last big bang. The doctor did a quick physical check and found that Rex had hit his head on the side of the car, a nice bump was already blooming. Side bumps are something to watch, so it won’t come as a shock that when Rex started to pass out in his seat I about peed my pants.

Of all my kids, the only one I’m afraid is too good for this Earth is Rex. June? She’ll live forever, but Rex I routinely worry is too guileless and kind for his own good.

“Hey!” I said to the doctor (they had two full-on physicians there) “Is he okay? He’s passing out!” They rushed to him and checked his vitals, laying him on the bed like a little limp rag doll. Within a few minutes they stood back and looked at me.

“Um,” said the doctor, “We think he’s asleep. Does he do this when he’s frightened?”

Then I remembered, it’s exactly what he does when he gets sick, goes to bed and sleeps until he’s well. Still, I felt slightly anxious that there could be more to it. I glanced out of the ambulance and saw Brother Ford standing there, waiting through the entire ordeal and making rounds on the other kids. I motioned him in and asked if he would give my Rex a blessing.

Let me tell you right now, having him stand next to me and lay his hands on Rex’s head was the most powerful, comforting experience I had had. My husband might be on the other side of the world, but Heavenly Father surrounded us that night with worthy, priesthood holding men, ready to step in and bless my children at a moment’s notice.

After the blessing and a little more reassurance from the medics that Rex was perfectly fine, I couldn’t help admiring the kid. When the docs would periodically pry his little eye lids open to check his pupils they’d snap shut again like taught little rubber bands. He slept through the next four hours of procedures, including a CAT scan. In fact, the tech was all prepped to put him under until they realized he was self-medicating. They said Rex was an absolute dream to work with.

I have more to say, but again I am emotionally spent. I can’t sleep and I’m totally exhausted. Regurgitating my experience in print seems to be the most effective method I’ve found of moving through the whole thing. More later, forgive me for spilling it out so coarsely.

 

Am I going to fail him?

Today I feel like I just might be a colossal failure.

Due to my inflated ego and obnoxiously overconfident attitude about almost everything, I don’t think about failure much. Fear in general isn’t part of my chemical makeup and I’m not used to dealing with it.

But for the first time in my life I lay in bed at night and silently quake at the thought that not only am I possibly going to fail at something really big, but the people who will suffer most from my failure aren’t me. Me I can handle, it’s the thought of failing my child and how deeply that will affect his life that is so devastating.

I have four kids. Of my four kids three of them are demanding enough to ensure that they receive whatever it is they need most from me. Harrison (8) is constantly after hugs and lengthy conversations about the fine characteristics of Mario and why plumbers have the best jobs ever, June (4) forces me to take her with me any time I leave the house for “girls only” trips, and Georgia (1) spends all day on my lap/hip/bed begging me to read her a “booh.”

And then there’s Rex.

In case you don’t know about Rex, he’s six and is currently enrolled in the German schule here in our village. This has been…overwhelming. For all of us.

Rex is there and continues to remain there because when I ask God what to do about Rex’s schooling He repeatedly thumps me on the head and tells me to stop asking and give this time and attention.

The time bit I’m handling. But as far as extra attention, Rex comes home and slips right through the cracks. He’s so happy to be back with all his toys and animal friends and sisters and brother that I don’t have the heart to rip him away from his comfort zone and tutor him.

I am also lazy.

Put the two together and you get a kid who isn’t learning anything from his loser mother. How is he ever going to learn to read and write English if I don’t teach it to him? How is he supposed to move ahead and start speaking German (nothing yet, it’s been six months) if he’s not getting extra one on one help at home? He is almost seven and doesn’t even know any sight words. What am I doing???

Last night I spent the 30 minute car ride to the adult session of Stake Conference talking to our good friend and brilliant pediatrician, Eric. Eric usually takes a few minutes with Rex when he gets the chance to do quick spot evaulations and observations and then keeps us updated on his thoughts.

It was brutal.

In talking to him and assessing where Rex is at with school, it’s pretty clear that he has a bit of a language problem and not just with German. He spoke very late, his conversation and use of English is a year or two behind (as is his maturity level), and according to the professional he needs to be bombarded with language, both English and German, on a structured daily basis.

This means I have to nail his butt to the table and structure some kind of program for him. I’ve avoided it because he’s so tired after eight hours of German a day, but I think Eric is absolutely right. I’ve got to dig in my heels and get it done.

Sitting in Stake Conference last night was an emotional experience. Every talk seemed to enforce the thought that I was failing in the home, not doing enough for my children, being a passive member of the household. It’s great that I stay home and sew and cook, but homemade skirts and three (okay six) meals a day never got a kid through the German school system.

Finally toward the end of the meeting I put my head between my knees. You know when you feel too lame to pray so instead you kind of send your worthless thoughts up to Heaven, hoping that maybe they’ll be heard but not really willing to force the issue? I thought to myself, what am I doing? I suck at this job. I’m lazy and weak and not up to being the kind of mother my children need. I can’t do this, I’m not even worthy of it…

Those are the words that ran through my mind. And as I said them, the speaker (who I wasn’t really listening to at that point) read this quote from Elder Packer: “We need everyone. The tired or worn out or lazy and even those who are bound down with guilt…”

I felt like Heaven was speaking back to me and couldn’t help laughing through my tears, that Father in Heaven would be so generous and quick to answer my sorry little plea for help and strength. And as the speaker closed we sang “How Firm a Foundation,” and the third verse rang through my soul like some kind Heavenly balm:

“Fear not, I am with thee, oh be not dismayed

For I am thy God and will still give thee aid

I’ll strengthen thee, help thee and cause thee to stand

Upheld by my righteous omnipotent hand.”

The word omnipotent is what really stuck. He knows. He knows how this can work, how it should work, how it will work. I don’t have to do this alone, help is out there and I’m going to find it.

Sarah Howard

Remember a few weeks ago when I had to do that big Heritage project with/for Harrison? One of the things his teacher wanted was some kind of family artifact.

I don’t know about you but I’m not good at artifacts; what I’m good at is giving things to the Salvation Army. You wouldn’t think it was a problem unless you were married to me and periodically wanted to know things like where that box of 80’s CD’s you had in high school went (I swear, Sweetheart, I didn’t know).

But somewhere along the way someone in my family who is probably related to my father (you don’t even want to know how many rotten tires he’s got out in the barn) realized that some things do, in fact, have value.

Hence our Letters from Sarah.

Recently my father and sister got their hands on about 15 letters written by my Great Great Grandmother Sarah Howard and my GG Grandfather (who’s name I can’t recall and am too lazy to look up) during the Civil War. These letters are kind of awesome.

Sarah and granddaddy moved their family from the East Coast to Missiouri in the 1800’s to settle on a little farm and make a life. Then the Civil War hit and Missouri was a super hot spot. They lived in a teensy one room cabin with eight kids (it had a loft which was way less charming than the ones you see on HGTV), and the only reason they didn’t move out of it into something more comfortable was because Sarah didn’t want the Rebels to think they had pushed them off their land.

I love this woman.

We know a lot about Sarah because of the letters they wrote back and forth with their Pennsylvania family members. Reading about her struggles and worries and life or death moments makes me feel like I’m reading about a relative or something; there are so many strong personality traits that dominate our gene pool.

For example, the war was a scary time but her family was determined to hunker down and hold their ground. One particular day the fighting had surrounded them all day long, cannons and guns close enough to set your teeth on edge as they huddled together in their little piece of shelter. Talk about cabin fever. The power in my house went off for an hour yesterday afternoon and I found myself microwave/TV free with hungry grumpy children. That was irritating enough, I’m sure adding cannons and half a dozen more kids with nothing to do but poke each other and whittle from dawn till dusk and you’d find one seriously on edge mother.

Finally in the afternoon Sarah looked out the window and saw a group of armed soldiers approaching the house. As they neared the gate my grandmother stormed out the front door, marched right to the edge of her yard, and yelled, “If you boys are Rebels you can just turn around and get on out of here!” Luckilly for her and her pulse they were Union boys.

Frankly, after the kind of day she’d experienced she was probably half hoping someone would just shoot her and put her out of her misery already. There are days when I’d take a group of Rebel soldiers over my rebel children with pleasure.

*This week I got an email from a buddy asking me to check out a new program they’re working on for FamilySearch.org. FamilySearch is kind of the family history buff’s favorite tool, but for those of us who aren’t good at or particularly interested in name hunting it can be overwhelming. On the plus side, FamilySearch is completely free, has always been free, will always be free. Ancestry.com and some of the other impressive family history sites are awesome, but you can only do so much before they want a credit card number.

So FamilySearch recently got smart and is now developing a brand new kind of free family history experience for people like me called Kinfolio. Instead of diving in to collect names, this branch simply starts with you. It’s set up to give you prompts and to recognize and suggest people who might be related to you. But the best part is that it’s not all about the dead guys. From what I understand it’s like a living family history vault (no really, FamilySearch has a big huge granite vault buried in some mountain somewhere that the nukes can’t get to so it will keep all your information safe after 12/2012 when the world ends).

Or if you’re into the dead guys and have some really cool Civil War letters, it gives you a safe place to store or print them for future generations.

They are still in the design phases but are looking for people interested in a place to store and print and save pictures and memorabilia and oh yes, even blogs. I like to think that four generations from now (if December goes well) some GG granddaughter of mine will be able to find my blog on a site like Kinfolio (stored for free, so cool) and see that yes, we are related because she sometimes wants to kick her husband in the knee caps too.

If you’ve got a second and this is at all interesting to you, check them out and punch in your email. Trust me, some day when blogger goes down and the internet crashes we’ll be glad we didn’t put all our eggs in facebook.

*FYI, this is not an advertisement, I just think it’s a really cool idea.

Waiting with Ashley

My sweet girlfriend’s husband has been deployed for the past year.

Ashley is 23. She’s only been married for a few years and her man has been gone for a big percentage of them. They moved here to Germany last winter and he deployed almost immediately; we’ve never actually met him.

For the past year she’s been waiting and doing and being and trying to keep his side of the bed warm all by her little old self.

By far the most painful part of his absence has been the not knowing his return date. The troops have been coming home in droves, bus after bus of fathers and husbands and boys back from really long deployments. She’s known he was coming “soon” for weeks now. I’ve decided the word “soon” is a new four letter word, the waiting has been so miserable.

Today she finally got The Call. His is the very last troop coming in to return from deployment at their base.

Standing on the top bleacher with her tonight waiting for the orange doors to open and send her life back to her was beyond intense. All I could think about was Peggy Lee singing, “Waiting for the train to come in…waiting for my man to come home…” She sings that song way too calmly.

“Wow,” Ashley said, “I don’t even think I’m going to cry. I feel so…numb.” Um, yeah, that’s what happens when your entire nervous system finally shuts down because it can’t handle all the adrenaline.

I sat on the bleachers with my family and watched all the wives and mothers waiting for their husbands. They were beautiful. Each had taken great pains to look however it was their man wanted them to look, and no two outfits were even remotely the same. I saw women dressed for prom, women dressed office classy, retro-40’s with super cleavage (cleavage was the one constant in the group), and sassy mall getup. Every head had been hit hard with the straightener, curling iron, and aerosol, and the shoes were fabulous straight across the board.

The moment the orange doors opened and the microphone went hot it was like being at an eighth grade dance and knowing Justin Beiber was about to make an entrance. Talk about heart pounding.

And then the soldiers flooded through. 324 of them and Ashley was so scared and excited and nervous and terrified that not only did she lose complete use of her hands (we had to hold her “We Love Lt. Wall” sign for her), but she couldn’t find him. Anywhere. I personally haven’t met him, plus watching all the children pointing out daddys was kind of making me bawl my head off so I was mostly worthless.

The anthems played, the prayer was given, and with less than ten words the men were dismissed.

And she still couldn’t find him.

After all these months and last few weeks of waiting and worrying and anxiously wondering if it was ever going to happen, those moments were eternal and excruciating for all of us. She stood there frantic, tears pouring down her cheeks, “I don’t see him, I can’t find him, is he here? Why didn’t I wear my glasses?!”

And then as the soldiers started to move the sea of tan parted and there he was.

I don’t think her feet even touched the bleachers she flew down those steps so fast, high heels and all. Into his arms, faces buried together, they stood on the gym floor and I’m pretty sure the world went invisible for a moment.

We stood back and let them meld. Because that’s what it’s like when you’ve been apart for any serious space in time. You have to regain a sense of independence and self-reliance. You start to wonder, can we be a couple again? Will we work the same? What if we’ve both changed?

And if you’re lucky, the answer is yes you can, yes you will, and yes you have. Absence doesn’t always break you, it can make you stronger where you need it. Ashley grew in leaps and bounds this year and I’m sure her man did as well. And seeing them tonight, I have no doubt that their growth, in the long run, is going to make their little family unit stronger and brighter and better.

 

 

The Ball

 

I am a closet sewing freak. Any time I fall off the radar and I’m not on vacation you can guess that I’m up to my clavicle bone in a sewing project.

Also I don’t always know what I’m doing.

So my girlfriend told me two months ago about the Military Daddy Daughter Princess Ball scheduled for February. It’s an insanely expensive excuse for little girls to dress up in their finest, and not something Jason would approve on any level whatsoever. But June? June spends at least 10 hours a day in princess attire. How could I not sign her up?

I might or might not have been living vicariously through her as well while making this decision.

Instead of calling Jason for permission I decided to exercise my financial agency, took the bull by the horns, and bought them a ticket. I kind of also got on ebay and ordered Jason a tuxedo (don’t judge, he’s needed one the past few years and it was only $70…okay you can judge a little).

Then I had to decide what to do about the dress.

I got online and found some great little princess dresses (all of June’s are thoroughly loved, not a one is rip and stain free) but the price was up there. Besides, my sewing machine was calling to me.

When I saw this one I knew it had to happen.

So I did what any financially responsible and routinely delusional adult would do and decided I could make it cheaper (HAHAHAHA). I enlisted my amazing sister-in-law who has only boys and loves to sew, gave her a very loose idea of what I needed for the project, and just over a week later the box arrived in the mail. Thank you, Lindsey.

And then I had to do something with it. No pattern, just me and yard after yard of really slippery fabric.

Just about this time Jason saw the charge for the tux on our debit account. I’ll be honest, my whole surprise-him-and-he’ll-be-happy pipe dream wasn’t exactly spot on. He was kind of furious. Yes he loves June, and yes he’s willing to do memory building activities with her, but the bottom line just about sunk my ship and for sure my grocery budget.

Save yourself some money so your husband isn’t furious with you with these great Target coupons available for your arts and crafts projects, including sewing.

I am now going to save you three weeks of arguing and sewing mishaps and jump to the finished result.

The day of the dance I was very possibly the most overworked, under deodorized fairy godmother you’ve ever seen in your life. Why? Because I didn’t just make one Cinderella dress, I made two. My girlfriend’s daughter needed one desperately and they couldn’t find one in time. As luck would have it I found four yards of pink satin stashed in the bottom of one of my bins.

The night before the dance was horrible. Jason’s tux still hadn’t come in the mail, the dresses were unfinished and none of the accessories were made. And then in my eleventh hour June got strep throat and scarlet fever, so we spent the night in the ER hoping they could get her well enough for the Princess Ball (she’d asked every day for three weeks if this was “the day”).

With very little magic the next day dawned bright and June was a modern medical miracle. Thank you penicillin. At one o’clock my not-so-enthusiastic prince charming called from the base.

“My tux just came in the mail,” he said.

“Are you kidding me?” I couldn’t decide if it was Heaven sent or my worst night mare. That meant I had to add hemming his pants to my list.

“Do you have a bow tie for me?” he asked.

“Um…” I so did not have a bow tie ready. I thought he’d just be wearing his regular suit. “Almost..”

“You owe me big time,” he said before hanging up.

Honestly, the moment they were finally out the door I wanted to collapse on my kitchen floor and die a quiet death in my pajama pants.

Here is the finished product. Thanks to my darling Caitlin for coming to the rescue with June’s hair and makeup so I could finish sewing and tacking, plus my almost neighbor Stephanie who provided shoes and a back up sewing machine in my hour of need. And my sewing lifeline, Corinne, who talked me through some of my biggest snags. I made all of June’s accessories, and never ever ask me about the bow tie. I’ve still got PTSD from it. Those were four hours that I’ll never get back.

June added the purple tutu around her waist at the last minute and refused to take it off.

Waiting for the big entrance

 

See the red carpet and all the swords? Slightly intimidating...

 

Let’s just say that it was awesome, they had a fantastic time and made a great memory, and it will be three years before I’m willing to go through this kind of ordeal again.