Tag Archives: family

On Clowns and Flowers and Insulation

evil clown curtain

Can’t sleep. curtain will eat me.

I am staring at a 50-year-old embroidered bouquet of flowers, repeated thrice over on my newly thrifted kitchen curtain. I am cursing the Instagram friend who commented that all he can see when he looks at the pattern is clown faces. At first I dismissed the observation out of hand; an abstract clown maybe, if it had two different-colored eyes and no mouth at all. But eyeworms, like earworms, work at us until we can’t unsee what’s there to be seen. The tiny yellow pinstriped curtain with its scalloped edges and delicate white ribbon embroidery has turned sinister now, the uppermost leaves in the pattern morphed into the furrowed brows of an angry clown stripped of his painted mouth.

When I found the tiny wisp of a fabric yesterday in the pile of vintage scraps, I thought only happy thoughts. Whimsical thoughts. (But even the word whimsical brings to mind circus music, doesn’t it?) My house needs whimsy. We need shaking up. Our home needs some mismatching, and I dare say a little old-time magic is in order.

“Perfect!”, I thought. Hanging a curtain on a rod is just my speed. You can’t half-finish a putting a curtain on a tension rod, the way I crapped out and left the  poor china hutch hovering in the spray-painted wasteland between shabby chic white and modern glossy red and black.

I hung the dainty piece of cotton as soon as we walked in the door. I felt accomplished, purposeful. My daughter and I cooked supper beneath the yellow pinstriped glow. We made Puttanesaca and chocolate pudding based on a chapter in the first Lemony Snicket book.  Then, we watched The Lorax even though at first Jack pitched a 15 minute nuclear shitfit because he would’ve preferred to dine in his room and play with Legos.

The internet turned the curtain evil. I hold this up as an example of the conversation of my life: The internet ruins everything, strips the innocence from all I love, and seeks to diminish the joy of my simplest moments.

I know this isn’t true, yet I find myself doggedly clinging to and bringing home things that evoke a feeling of Back Then. Before. Before it all went to shit. I found a worn set of Tupperware salt and pepper shakers, marked simply with an S and P, and a dog-eared copy of Jonathan Livingston Seagull. I keep composition books stuffed with pencils scattered throughout the house, which I fill with random bits of terrible prose throughout the day.  I quit Facebook.

Look, I don’t know what works. I don’t know how-or if I’m supposed to-insulate myself or my kids from phrases like “legitimate rape” and the statistics about breast cancer, and clown serial killers. I don’t know if reading Lemony Snicket aloud from the hardback copy of these books every morning while we drink our hot cider will keep my daughter from ever knowing what it feels like to be cyberbullied. Oh, how I want to believe.

Here is what I know: There is a value to the insular world of the unplugged household.

This feels like a good time to confess that I am typing this from my laptop while my daughter works on a poetry lesson in her online home school classroom.

Guys, I don’t know any answers. But you didn’t come here for declarations. You don’t come here for answers. Did you come here to buy a vintage floral pinstriped kitchen curtain? Just so happens I’ve got one for sale.

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Independence Day. We are Breaking Tradition Like the Black Sheep We’ve Always Aspired to Be

First 15 seconds in the room.

We never set out, as a family, to get frozen out over non-compliance with semi-mandatory holiday dinner attendance policies. Through no fault of anyone’s, really, we happened to glance at a piece of paper on the fridge that indicated that we have only 7 weeks left in which to use up a swanky hotel voucher that I won in an online auction a thousand months ago. And also, there is the other matter of I hate the fucking fourth of July, and I’m ready to stand here behind my keyboard, propped up against seven perfectly fluffed pillows in a ginormous, perfectly made bed in a swanky hotel and unapologetically admit it.

Michael said “Well that worked out perfectly!”

Why yes sir it certainly did.

Here’s a sample of what I didn’t do last night:

  • Frantically throw salsa and a bag of chips onto a plate because EVERY FUCKING YEAR I forget it’s a potluck.
  •  police my children’s plates of food, crushing their tiny, corn-syrup addicted spirits over and over again for seven hours while everyone else eats red white and blue cake, cookies, and candy. Yanking dinner rolls from their hands, handing them gluten free crackers and apple slices, asking repeatedly, “wouldn’t you like some carrots and ranch?”
  • watch my son get eaten by mosquitoes, begin coughing, and scratch his arms, legs and face until he starts to bleed, ultimately creeping everyone out with his zombie flesh
  • There was no sidestepping of racist jokes last night. None at all. My shoulders just relaxed and dropped about three inches down from my ears as I typed that sentence. AHHHHHH NO RACISM AT THE DINNER TABLE SO REFRESHING.
  • No inserting my physical body between my children and a pit bull. Enough said.
  • no heart pounding panic while family members lit fireworks. No holding hands over my son’s ears when it got loud. No holding hands over MY ears when it got loud. We watched fireworks from the 5th floor windows of a miniature hotel room straight out of an IKEA catalog. Beautiful.
  • I did not watch my children jump on the rusty trampoline this year! WHAT.

It’s too early to tell what the full ramifications of a decision like this will bring us. We’ve lived in Florida for eight long, family infused years now. Many holiday dinners have seen only one partner from our superduo, but we’ve never declared ourselves this way, pulled the whole family totally out of the celebration and created our own.

I have more to post, but I’m needed at the pool and I’m not ready to talk about my daughter’s headache and the front desk’s callous attitude about it just yet. THE POOL IS SO WARM. THE ROOM IS SO CUTE.

Independence Day.

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What We Do in Florida When The Rain Comes, Won’t Leave. Write, Get Sad, Eat. Puzzles.

As a family, we’re putting a puzzle together. It may be symbolic of something, but I’m tangled up in the memory of Jack screaming in the aisle of the store because he didn’t want a puzzle, he wanted hot wheels. And then I almost had a tantrum because I wanted the fuck out of the store and in the end we bought two puzzles and some Legos because what you do when kids have tantrums is don’t get them what they want but something smaller that you want them to have and that you can play with. (I’m not talking about Michael. I mean me.)

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We went to Target for bug spray, urgently. I got out of bed and put on a bra do this; to buy bug spray, with the whole family. First I researched the top six bug sprays on Consumerreports.org.  Nineteen mosquito bites had put me under the covers, where I nursed my pride and my wounds and considered taking some Percocet while I edited photographs of the hawk for display on Instagram. God. I hope I get lots of likes for these fucking photographs. Everything I went through to get them. We need bug spray. I can’t go out there again without it. I zoomed in too closely on the hawk. I have to get a better lens. A job. Then a lens. Oh, FUCK INSTAGRAM.

You say my eyes are crazy eyes

I’m afraid. I was going to write that I’m afraid about inflammation, and bites, and Jack, and inflammation, and me, and my thyroid, and rain, and PTSD, and my children, and heart disease and menopause. The truth is that I’m just afraid. I am fear. You know? Fear is what I am, and rage is what it looks like. I live in this moment, and the next moment and the next one as much as I know how but that song is such bullshit. Yes the fuck I DO know what the next moment’s going to bring. Bullshit. Bullshit and delicious rage that bleeds out of the seams of my person, in the way that I feel nothing when I pet my softest cat, the blue one that stays within 15 feet of me all day long. And in the dead space in my chest when I look at my new camera, waiting for me to breathe life into its lens. And in the way that all I think is killmekillmekillmekillmepleasekillmekillmekillmekillme when there is a space inside my cavernous head, which currently I’m keeping busy with a Robert Pirsig book, maybe not the best choice, but dense and sometimes difficult for my attention challenged mind to follow, which does the trick for my immediate purpose anyway.

I’m sinking into it. It’s not that I AM angry, I tell myself. I AM ANGER. Nothing has to happen. This is zen, right? I am rage. I am Summer. I am covered in mosquito bites.

And better bug spray, maybe and some ice cream and apparently a puzzle? Of Las Vegas, because apparently we’re taking a trip across the country next spring? I am not yet the person who has the skin on their fingers that can make the connection to the keyboard that will type the words that can express their feelings about taking a family vacation with two children to Las Vegas, the Grand Canyon, and Flagstaff, so let’s just work on the puzzle.

The next one is the Star Wars one, and I’m excited.

I, just so you know, cannot put together a working train track. But I work a puzzle in a grid pattern, searching for pieces by shape until I find the right one. Line by line like a dot matrix printer, at the same time sorting by color and pattern, I will stand, take the whole thing in and then break it down again and work.

This is designed as a family project, but the children are bored and a little put off by my irritability. I knew while we were standing there in front of the puzzles, and Jack was keening about hot wheels and Michael was saying “Let’s just look online for one we can all AGREE ON” that I should get a puzzle just for myself, a harder one. I was mostly an only child, and I was never taught to share. Plus, they are moving pieces into the wrong piles and just fucking everything up. Defiantly, I worked on it after they went to bed. In solitude.

I don’t have any photos of us harmoniously working on the puzzle and I don’t have a humorous wrap up for this post so I’m going to just leave you with a photo of a fence leading to an ominous tunnel of trees and that should take care of all the loose ends.

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Gluten Free Fresh Apple Cookies: How to Wing It

Apple cookies

Avery and I made these cookies for her end of school year party tomorrow, and I adapted them to be gluten free so that there would be at least one thing at that allergen fest of a germ infested nightmare for us to eat. I didn’t do any healthy sugar substitutions or any bullshit like that. They taste fine. Well OK they lack depth. Probably because they use light brown sugar as sweetener instead of Agave, but whatever. The point is I used Pamela’s Wheat Free Bread mix cup for cup for the flour and skipped the salt and stuff. They turned out great, well OK except for the burned ones on the bottom rack. Just don’t put any on the bottom rack if you plan to preheat your oven to the wrong temp and then turn it up to the right temp right after you put the cookies in. Just FYI.

I had a moment with the kitchenaid paddle and the cookie dough. No one was in the kitchen. I hadn’t eaten much all day. We got closer than I like to be with my appliances except sometimes the washer.

Oh. OBVIOUSLY, I didn’t use Crisco not that there’s anything wrong with that. I used Spectrum Organic Shortening. It did not cream up fluffy. So I had to add a couple tablespoons of butter. Except we are out of butter  (I KNOW RIGHT). So I had to add a couple tablespoons of organic vegan butter substitute. Which is also what I used to make the Glaze. Then, instead of spreading it onto the cookies WHICH WOULD TOTALLY RUIN THE GENTLE SPICE IN MY OPINION, I made it a bit more liquidy, being sort of artistic with the measurements in the directions for the glaze, and put the frosting in a ziplock. I snipped a hole in the corner and frosted the cookies with a little zig zag action. Avery said (paraphrase) “HOLY CRAP HOW ARE YOU DOING THAT”  and I said “I AM MAGIC” and then she said “Well it looks like you just cut a hole in the corner of that bag” and the four seconds that my life had meaning were behind us just like that.

Which is really just how life is. Eat the cookie dough while it’s there. Because you never know.

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