Tag Archives: country life

Modern Love letter

 I don’t have a love poem or a sultry story to share, I thought. So I should skip it. Don’t post something without vigor. Without the blissed out flavor of Holidays past. Don’t tell the world about how you forgot Valentine’s Day cards for the kids and spaced out completely about Valentine’s Day parties. 

This is what perimenopause looks like

The day slogged on, a horrible day filled with pointless doctor visits and rain at the grocery store, where while inside I managed to accost a man buying Mother’s Milk tea and corn syrup to put in the baby’s formula. Oh, I wouldn’t do that, I said while dispensing totally unsolicited advice. Like a boss an ass. One more interaction that seals it for me that I hate leaving my house. The people out there, I can’t take it.

Embraced. Sheltered.

It hit me while I wandered the store tossing ingredients for enchiladas into the cart: I’m doing this for him. I am here, even though he would and usually does take on this chore, because I need to do at least one thing today that tells him I love him. I know. So old married couple, right? It’s not that. The thing is that since I’ve been getting sicker when we’d hoped I’d get better, he does everything. The playing, the lunches, the homework. He does them and I don’t know how he feels about it because part of what we do is pick our battles carefully. For a while I thought we were this way because we didn’t like each other’s company, but now I begin to see that all the overlooking of quirks, faults, sick days, socks on the floor, dumb purchases-these are all expressions of deep love. I look at something that makes me angry and I slowly roll around to this thought: “nothing that happened here was designed to hurt you. We are not a couple who uses pet peeves or passive aggressive actions to hurt one another. Glasses on the nightstand are what they are and nothing more. Laundry in the dryer is just laundry to fold. A period of silence after work isn’t aimed at you. Maybe it’s not about you at all.”

I spent the day hating myself and what I’ve become as a person and a partner and a mother. There are just so many days like this. A little scrap of conversation here-a new TV show marathon there- that’s my fuel sometimes for days. He still wants to be with me. He cares.

He holds me together

What they don’t tell caretakers of the ill is that they’ll never be allowed to have a real problem again. I wish I could tell you how long and how often I dwell on this, turning the guilt over in my mind for hours. 

This holiday is so stupid. So commercial. So much fair weather love. I wonder...could it also be the New Year’s Eve of our love? A time for resolution?

Here is what I know: when you give another person any part of yourself purely out of love, be it actions, words, skin: the internal reward is an opening of a closed up flower. A dim light in an icy window. I wish I could remember this feeling all day, every day. There is so much strength in giving.

Whenever I feel the least loved, what chases that feeling away is stretching to the end of what I know, and giving love freely.

I don’t know why he is so good to me. This is not the trip he signed up for. Sometimes it hurts even to share dreams with each other, given our situation. Sometimes I think he might leave me, and I would accept it. I think back on how we were and want those things for him again.

But we are partners and I love him. I want to be better.

He watched Breaking Dawn with me. I mean, what more can someone ask of their mate?

 This new brand of depression, packaged with what they’re calling perimenopause, is cruel and hopeless. I often sense that nothing will ever be right again, and I notice that my family is slipping away. I don’t know how to fight to get them back. I just, every day, wake up and try to pick a few things that will make them happy, in hopes that little by little they’ll see that I am so very much trying to be here, even as I burrow under the covers for another day of research and budgeting.

I am loved. I am grateful for that. And apologetic, deeply sorry, for the love I haven’t been able to give. I promise to do better.

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Celica Leigh.

Hannah’s actions and decisions make me sad sometimes. For long stretches I wonder how she’ll ever make it in the world.

But she is also the person through whom I have had the opportunity to know true awe and pride. (You might not know that Hannah fought and won a complicated lawsuit against the Nassau County School Board when they denied her the right to start a Gay Straight Alliance at her middle and high schools. The case went on for a couple of years and even when the high school case was settled, Nassau County intended to take Hannah to trial over her middle school discrimination case.

In the end, a settlement was reached. Would you want to go up against this woman on a witness stand?

You can see Hannah on Penn N Teller’s “Bullshit” in the following clip, starting at 1:44, putting it out there what attacking her on the witness stand would net those guys. Smart move, Nassau County.

On Saturday I watched my daughter bring her baby girl into the world free of painkillers, intervention, and most of all free of fear. She was a fierce warrior and at one point even exclaimed irritably, “I got this” when I tried to manage her.

Here is Celica Leigh.  She came into the world surrounded by love and Hannah’s chosen family, in the home that Hannah has made for herself and her family. She weighed 8 lbs and 8 ounces and was 21 inches long.

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Country Mice Get Mean

And we have curtains. Sort of. I can say most of our windows are covered for now, keeping prying freaky teenage eyes out of my house for the time being. Remember the squatters from last week? You’ll never guess where they’re sleeping now- My DAD’S YARD! IN A TENT! I’m not sure I’m OK with what an unbelievable softy the man is. I am positive he was much scarier when I was a teenager, and this is just not fair.

So the kids, they’re feeling pretty familiar with the area and especially our property, as evidence by their loud crash through the brush (did I say ON MY PROPERTY IN MY BACKYARD?), sans flashlights and of course dressed in all black, three of them, at 8 p.m. I’m standing in my back yard waiting for M to lock up the house and unlock the car (because now that we live in the fucking COUNTRY, we have to lock our car when we go inside our house for even 15 minutes. Love it here.) And I hear what can only be described as a ruckus coming from the brush just outside reach of the floodlights. Oh no! A Boar? A deer? A HUGE dog? A home invader? Get the rifle! And then out they pour into my backyard and walk up asking for my brother. Um, no, fuckheads, my BROTHER DOESN’T LIVE HERE and also? NO TRESPASSING!

My feeling is that these jackholes lost their privilege to use my yard as a shortcut and to step foot in my house, when they snuck in and SMOKED in my brand new house, in my daughter’s room, and threw their lit cigarettes onto the plywood floor. Perhaps the story of the crazy pregnant lady hasn’t made the rounds yet. I have to say, Internet- I worry for the safety of homeless kids dressed all in black skulking around my yard. I’m a trigger-happy lady these days.

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Then There Was That Time I Almost Shot My Daughter’s Boyfriend With An Assault Rifle

Not many happy stories begin with the line “There I was in my maternity nightgown, aiming an assault rifle (an AK-47, if you must know) at the sliding glass door. I pulled back the curtain with the barrel, which might possibly be the dumbest fucking thing I’ve ever done, and there was a guy in a hooded sweatshirt looking back at me….”

This is no exception, although the silver lining in this dark cloud of parenting hell is that the hooded figure who was almost killed by the protective pregnant woman was NOT a serial rapist or a home invader or a murderer. As far as we know, he was unarmed, or else I’D be dead, since I’d (luckily for the kid) forgotten to turn off the safety.

Let me back up. So late tonight I was checking into TeenHer’s cell phone usage, and when I realized a) she’s used 900 minutes this month and b) she’s been on her phone after curfew (for the 4th time) I decided to come downstairs and talk to M about the situation, and confiscate her phone. He was talking, or the TV was on-I heard voices down there even though it was late. When I flipped on the stair lights, M came over, phone in his hand, flipped them off and whisper-screamed, “someone’s on the porch. I’m on the phone with 911”. By the way, great response time 911, I’m glad I have my own weapon. After I got the few details (the person slunk across our yard, walked down the length of the porch, may or may not still be on the porch beside my 12-year-old daughter’s sliding glass door) I did the only sensible thing for a pregnant woman living in the country (wearing a nursing/maternity nightie, no less) can do: I ran upstairs and assembled the rifle. (yes it was in a locked case, yes the parts are kept in different spots in the room, no the ammo is not kept in the same place as the weapon, no our decision to own firearms is not up for discussion)

Upstairs, TeenHer is shaking on my bed, terrified. I’ve pulled her out of bed and she’s watching me assemble the rifle I’m not sure she knew that we owned.. I tell her this is her only chance to admit if one of her friends might be on our porch or in our yard, because someone may be about to get shot. “No! What’s going on! I’m scared!” We go on like that for a few minutes until I’m convinced. Stupid.

“I’ve got the rifle” I whisper-screamed (WE ARE WHISPER-SCREAMING ABOUT GUNS) as I crept down the stairs in the dark.

“Go stand at TeenHer’s door” M called to me, still on the phone. Where the fuck are the police? I hear nothing, see no sirens. I thought he meant her sliding glass door, which leads out onto the PORCH; he really meant her INTERIOR bedroom door. Details. I creep into the bedroom, rifle at my side, and ease the curtain back, and there stands that little fucker, his ghostly hooded face staring right back at me down the barrel of my rifle. I shouted. He ran. I ran to the living room, handed the rifle to M (I’m pregnant! Recoil!) I told him to fire off a shot down the porch and took the phone to talk to dispatch.

“Do you have a weapon?” asks the dispatch. “Fuck yes I have a weapon.” M doesn’t fire the shot; the scumbag is gone. So level-headed. Know your target. Know your surroundings. I’m still on with dispatch when she says “They got him” and I’m sure she’s talking to someone else, about something else. “What?”

“He was in a golf cart. Hold on. Does your daughter have a boyfriend? He says he was visiting his girlfriend.”

“No, that’s not him. She’s only 12. She doesn’t have a boyfriend. They’ve got the wrong person.”

“Well he says he was visiting his girlfriend. Is her name _____?”

“BRING HIM HERE”

Upstairs TeenHer maintains her position. Has no idea who might have been on the porch. The cop in the yard radios his partner for the name of the kid.

It’s her boyfriend.

After the lecture (please let me say I think it was mercifully short) I tell her she’s staying home from school tomorrow and she has the balls to argue with me. “That makes no sense!”

If the sight of your pregnant mother pointing a rifle at your boyfriend through a glass door doesn’t scare you into contrition, then I have to say I don’t know what the fuck we can ever do to keep this kid in line.

Ed. Note: As it turns out, not all that much. Now he’s the father of my grandchild, and the night she was born we drank dirty martinis and you know how it goes. Bygones. 

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