A Terse Note from the Pastor’s Wife on a Saturday Night

Dear Church Member:

Listen, you knucklehead. My husband is your spiritual leader. You interviewed him, you hired him, you chose him to lead your church. If you want him to lead, please get behind him. In other words:

1) When another church member or employee has a dispute with the pastor, don’t assume the worst of the pastor. He cannot defend himself publicly because he would be betraying a confidence and gossiping. Who do you believe? The church member or employee? Or your pastor? Who gets the benefit of the doubt? Here’s a hint: (the pastor!).

2) Your pastor is a human being, married to a human being, trying to parent smaller human beings. Cut him some slack. Do you have any idea who many hours he works? Do you really think he only works on Sundays?

3) Guess what? Your pastor has emotions. When you assume the worst about him, when you doubt him, when you decide that you will no longer volunteer because of some personal slight, his feelings are hurt.

4) Your pastor is not your parent. You are not a child, so quit acting like one. If your cell phone goes off during the sermon, your pastor will be annoyed. He might even make a comment. If he does, take responsiblity. You are really going to leave the church over this? Grow up.

5) Your pastor’s wife is not his secretary. If you want to leave a message for him, call his office. Your pastor’s wife is probably juggling a baby on one hip and the phone in the other while she makes a sandwich for the kindergartener. No, she canNOT take a message. She only said, “Can I take a message” out of habit. She wasn’t serious.

6) Sunday morning is not the time for idle chit-chat or bringing up a “concern” with your pastor. His mind is on the impending church service and on his sermon. He is trying to communicate God’s truth to a church full of people. Please do not divert his attention to anything non-esssential, like the fact that “Myrtle” was offended by the music last Sunday morning.

7) Your pastor is the first person who will be at your bedside during your hospitalization, even if you are an idiot. He will pray with you, bring you flowers, telephone you. He will try to convince your spouse not to leave you. He will visit your son in prison. He will arrange for help so you can pay your overdue electric bill. He will keep your secrets. He won’t roll his eyes at your stupidity. He’ll baptize your baby. He will invite your daughter to stay in his home when she’s released from jail. He will hold your hand while your mother dies. He’ll hold your hand while you die. He’ll spend his Saturday morning planning a meaningful memorial service for your father. He’ll marry you and bury you, cradle-to-grave service.

That’s his job.

My job is to take care of everything else at home and to listen to how sad and frustrated he is, even though he can’t tell me exactly why without betraying a confidence. My job is to tell him he’s doing a great job, despite the way you treat him. My job is to smile at you, even though you act like a twelve year old and make my husband’s job more difficult.

Frankly, I think I’m underpaid.

My Font

When you are preparing to host a birthday party for 10 six year olds, what do you do?

Here’s what I do:

1) Leave house at 7:30 p.m. to buy cake at Costco and pizza and Capri Sun drink pouches;
2) Head to Toys R Us for present and themed napkins and tablecloth.
3) Get home at 9:45 p.m., discovered chocolate cake has strawberry filling and wonder if ultra-picky birthday boy will notice.
4) Make cute schedule of party events, including stuff to do tonight and tomorrow morning.
5) Sweep and mop.
6) Wrap gifts. Check out Bingo game (my main party entertainment).
7) Moan about complete exhaustion.
8) Eat some of the miniature chocolate bars intended for the pinata.
9) Watch guy on news who tried to kill himself by jumping off Space Needle this afternoon. (He changed his mind.)
10) Read email, read message board, check journal for comments.
11) Wonder about font. Is this better? Worse?
12) Wonder if anyone reads this.
13) Decide remaining party preparations can wait until tomorrow and go to bed.

In twelve hours, it’ll all be over. Woo-hoo! Now, that’s something to celebrate!

Billy Baldwin and My Unicycle

I have a cold. I was so tired, but I slept so poorly. I kept peering at the clock and saw when it was 2 a.m. and 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. Sometime after 4:30 a.m., I fell asleep long enough to have the following dream:

I enter a large auditorium-like room, which is the location for a reunion of some sort. (Not my high school reunion, because in my dream I compare it to that situation.) I decide that the best thing to do is to ride a unicycle into the room, but not just any unicycle. No. This is a 30 foot tall unicycle, which brings me right up close to the popcorn-textured ceiling and deeply recessed lights.

I realize, of course, that I cannot get down, so I holler to the people on the ground that I need help. Who appears to rescue me? Billy Baldwin, of course.

I say, “Hey, aren’t you Billy Baldwin?” I am dangling with my arms locked through the recessed lighting fixture.

He grins and his eyes crinkle into upside down moons. “I sure am!”

I say, “You know what would be cool?”

“What?”

“An all-Baldwin Mole!” (As in the television show, “The Mole.” On the “Celebrity Mole”, Stephen Baldwin has been a contestant twice. My dream-self thought it would be fun to see all the Baldwin brothers compete.)

He agrees, then somehow I am lowered to the ground, where my dream ends.

Unfortunately, the dream ends because my alarm rings at 6:20 a.m. and fortified with very little sleep, I have to face a day filled with runny-nosed toddlers and laundry.

We aren’t really celebrating YoungestBoy’s birthday today, but I did make him a sweatshirt last night that says, “TODAY IS MY 6th BIRTHDAY!” I want everyone at school to be attentive and sweet to him. I’ll probably make cupcakes while he’s at school and we’ll have pizza–his favorite–tonight.

Six years ago today, I was walking around my house, having contractions. YoungestBoy wasn’t born until 11:42 p.m., after 43 hours of labor. He was born into the birthing tub, surrounded by a whole crowd of helpers. His twin brothers were sound asleep. What a blessing this boy has been.

Now, onward with my day.

I need a waaaaaambulance!

I wish I could stay in bed all day without responsibilities. Yesterday my throat began to feel scratched, literally like someone scratched the roof of my mouth in the back. During the night, I woke repeatedly and realized that I have caught the same cold the babies have. Ack! This is the major downside to taking care of a daycare baby. My own family is never as sick as other families. Last year Babygirl didn’t catch a single cold. Since DaycareKid has started coming over, she’s been sick about four times. At least.

Anyway, so I feel whiny. I don’t want to take care of runny-nosed kids. I don’t want to make dinner. I certainly don’t want to balance the checkbook.

The worst part of it is that YoungestBoy’s birthday is tomorrow and his party is on Saturday. I have to get creative and come up with some fun party activities. I need decorations, supplies, food. I found a brand-new Bingo same on sale for a dollar, so I bought it last week. At least I have one thing planned. Last year’s party was so much fun. It was Sponge-bob themed and everyone had a blast.

Here’s YoungestBoy last year:

But, this too, shall pass. I will be healthy again, someday. The party will come and go. YoungestBoy will only be five for one more day.

Oh wait. It really is too much to bear. My baby boy cannot grow up. Waaaaaaaaaah!

The Weekend

Is Monday night too late to write about the weekend? I hope not, because here I go.

My husband’s weekend was jam-packed with funerals and memorial services and a sermon and meetings. My weekend was full of kids and grit on my kitchen floor. No matter how much I “swiffer” the floor, I have grit. This is because I allow my children to go outdoors, dig in the mud and wear shoes, both indoors and outdoors. But. I digress.

On Saturday, I decided to rearrange the boys’ bedroom. This involved removing a lot of books and plastic bins from a huge shelving unit and using brute force to inch it to its new home. I moved beds, chairs. I vacuumed repeatedly. And, of course, I did all this while taking care of Babygirl and three big boys. After Babygirl napped, I took all the kids on a walk to 7-11 again for Slurpees. The weather was lovely, sunny and in the fifties.

Saturday afternoon, my husband calls and says, “Hey, when I get home later, you can go to a movie or something if you want.” Isn’t he thoughtful? I begin to look forward to escaping the four walls and gritty floors of my home. Half an hour later, he calls again to say, “Hey, let’s go to a movie together!” I say, “Oh. Okay.” Now, I have to finish my rearranging project, clean up the rest of the messy house which I’ve neglected while devoting time to my project, feed the kids, clean the kitchen, make myself presentable, bathe the children and put the baby to bed. All alone. By seven. Then when the babysitter arrives, I will go pick him up from his office and we’ll go from there.

I am an exhausted, sweaty mess with a bad attitude by the time I pick him up. And the house isn’t tidy. A girl can only do so much.

The other thing is this. I like movies that my husband would not like. I wanted to see “Against the Ropes” with Meg Ryan. I like literary movies, dark movies, psychological thrillers, critically acclaimed movies. We saw “Welcome to Mooseport.”

I must be very difficult to amuse because I did not find the movie funny. The audience was laughing, guffawing, chortling, giggling. I was shifting in my seat, trying to get comfortable. I thought the cast of character actors had been plucked straight from community theater. They were so overwrought, so unbelievable. And Ray Romano, bless his heart, was just Ray Romano. I don’t think he can act. He is just himself. Maura Tierney was exactly the same as she was in News Radio and on ER. Gene Hackman–yawn. I liked Marcia Gay Harden. The rest? Oh please. I wouldn’t even watch that on network television. It was so boring, so predictable. So not funny.

But as I said, I must be difficult to amuse, because my husband liked it. Everyone in the theater seemed to like it. Maybe I just have PMS.

Sunday was my day to be the volunteer nursery attendant. I don’t really mind since I usually end up in there anyway, sooner or later, with Babygirl. Two of the toddlers, though, had runny noses! I cannot understand why a parent would bring a runny-nosed kid to a church nursery. I am the nursery coordinator and I need to make a giant sign saying “This is a Mucus-Free Zone.” We had seven toddlers in attendance.

My husband worked all day–he had a memorial service and then meetings. We spent a lot of time outdoors in the afternoon. I trimmed a thorny bush by the gate and the kids dug another giant hole and then asked if they could fill it with water. They love to build lakes and streams. I allowed it, even though I was not in the mood for mud. At least they were getting muddy with a spirit of cooperation.

Some time over the weekend, I peered into mirror in the boys’ brightly lit bathroom and spied a strangely colored hair. I plucked it out and examined it. The pigment faded along the shaft of the hair and I couldn’t decide, but I think I may have found my first gray hair. I wanted to save it and immediately realized how neurotic and insane that idea was. So I just let it drift out of my hand. I’ve reverted to my natural color and now it is going to betray me? How is that right?

Speaking of hair, I came across a box of pictures and letters from and to my dad, which led me to another box of his family tree paperwork. And then I found the old envelope I’d searched for a few weekends back which contains a golden-red lock of hair. The outside of the envelope says in faded fountain-pen ink: “Gary’s hair.” Sure enough, I held this silky lock of her grandfather’s baby hair up to Babygirl’s head. Her hair is the exact shade. I snipped a curl off the back of her head to save before she up and leaves home for college. The days are long, but the years are short and soon enough she’ll be earning her Master’s degree and calling me once a week.

Last night, she woke up before 11 p.m., which is strange. I nursed her and put her back to bed and then dreamed all night that I heard her crying. Sure enough, she woke up stuffy this morning. She caught DaycareKid’s cold from last week. Sigh. DaycareKid still has his runny nose, too. I hate colds.

My husband has started taking Mondays off. So, he had today off. He took a load of stuff to the thrift store for me and then hung out. He read the newspaper, talked to me while I was trying to watch a show during naptime and took a nap. I’m glad he gets a true day off now–when he was taking Fridays off, he almost always ended up working.

I still haven’t painted my wall red. But I did iron my husband pants for the week, so he won’t have to go to work clad only in his underwear. I do have my priorities.

Stuff I Hate

In no particular order:

1) Getting out of bed in the morning;
2) Raw tomatoes;
3) Macaroni and cheese, especially Kraft;
4) Stupidity;
5) Paying bills;
6) Telemarketers;
7) Wearing pantyhose;
8) Pet birds;
9) Stepping in dog poop;
10) Sticky kitchen counters;
11) Stepping into something wet with stocking feet;
12) Dusting;
13) Long car rides;
14) Paying for car repairs;
15) Inconvenient parking places;
16) Losing things;
17) Clutter;
18) Going to the dentist;
19) Being too hot;
20) Thieves and liars;
21) My ex-sister’s behavior;
22) Divorce;
23) Bad breath;
24) Pretentiousness;
25) Big, loud parties;
26) Feeling ill;
27) Failure;
28) Being ripped off;
29) Disappointing my children or my husband;
30) Losing my train of thought;
31) Wearing a hole in the knee of my jeans;
32) Licking a popsicle stick or wooden spoon;
33) Hearing a fork hit someone’s teeth while they eat;
34) Cold sores;
35) The monotony of housework.

Stuff I Love

In no particular order:

1) Chocolate chip cookies, freshly made;
2) The smell of lilacs floating in the spring air;
3) My husband;
4) Sleep, especially after the alarm rings;
5) Well-written novels;
6) Music, especially James Taylor, Carole King, Chicago, Norah Jones, Dan Fogelberg;
7) The Daffodil parade;
8) Eating dinner in a nice restaurant and paying with a gift certificate;
9) Buying a nice item on clearance;
10) Hunting for treasures at garage sales;
11) Working on scrapbooks;
12) Clean, folded laundry.
13) De-cluttered and tidy, clean house;
14) Vacations without children;
15) Quiet;
16) Fine chocolate;
17) Good hair days;
18) Comfortable shoes;
19) The first signs of spring;
20) Watching YoungestBoy dive into the pool in the summer;
21) My baby’s grin;
22) Moments when my twins cooperate with each and play happily together;
23) Email;
24) Daisies in bloom;
25) Sunshine;
26) The beach, especially the Oregon coastline;
27) Taking a really great photograph;
28) Finishing a project;
29) Laughing so hard my face hurts;
30) My kids, even when they smell;
31) Friends who know me really well and still like me;
32) Excellent dreams;
33) Perfect timing;
34) Homemade muffins;
35) School supplies.

World’s Worst Mother

I am the World’s Worst Mother.

Today was my day “off” from watching my daycare baby. I mentioned by phone to my husband that I needed to go to Home Depot to buy some clog remover for the shower drain at some point. Since we have one reliable vehicle, I wondered if he would be staying in his office today or if he needed the car. He called me back later and offered to come home from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and stay with YoungestBoy so I could run my errand. I said, “Great!”

At 10:45 a.m., he returns home and at 11 a.m. on the dot, I was in the car with baby Babygirl, heading for Lowe’s. I wandered up and down the aisles, looking at hardware and furniture and shelving units and boards and doorknobs and cabinets. I found exactly what I needed and after wandering some more past doors and plastic pipes and sand, I paid and came home. I did not need the full two hours and was home by noon, so off my husband went, back to work.

YoungestBoy leaves for kindergarten between 12:25 p.m. and 12:35 p.m., depending on when the neighbor arrives to pick him up. At 12:25 p.m., without my prompting, he appeared with his jacket and backpack on. Then he stood in the living room, peering out the window, waiting for his ride.

Babygirl was watching television and I was sitting at the computer, waiting for YoungestBoy to leave so I could put the baby to bed for her nap.

At 12:30 p.m., YoungestBoy says, “Will she be here any minute?” And I said, “Yes.”

At 12:37 p.m., YoungestBoy comes into the family room and says, “I don’t think she’s coming.” I swivel and look at the clock. Twelve thirty-seven? Oh no!

At that moment, I remember that Beth, the neighbor, had mentioned yesterday that she would not be able to pick up YoungestBoy, but she would bring him home from school. I said, “Oh, you’re right! She’s not coming! We’re going to have to walk!” School starts for afternoon kindergarteners at 12:40 p.m. He would be late, but not much. No big deal.

I grabbed Babygirl (who was not even wearing shoes) and my jacket and a set of keys and off we went. The school is a five or ten minute walk from our house. The sun shone and I was thankful that it wasn’t raining. As we left our driveway, YoungestBoy said, “I sure would be sad if I died today.”

I said, “I would, too. I’d be sad forever.” Then we had one of our usual discussions about death and he said he would be glad he’d be with our deceased cat, Millie, again. And then he said I wouldn’t be sad anymore when I got to heaven because then we’d be together again. Then he chattered on and on about the two little white terriers who live in our neighborhood and how he misses our big dog, Greta, who was sent away after she bit him last September and on and on.

We came down the hill through the woods and wound along the chainlink fence until we reached the teacher’s parking lot in the back of the school. They keep the back door locked, so we had to walk around the school to get into the office. When I signed him in, it was 12:48 p.m. Eight minutes late.

I walked him to his classroom and we went in. The children were gathering on the carpet for the morning circle routine. Three excited boys rushed towards YoungestBoy and said, “You were going to be the Helper today!” And his face lit up. “I am?” And they said, “No, you were, but you were late, so Lauren’s the Helper.”

They were gleeful, thrilled to deliver this bad news.

Being the “Helper” in kindergarten is the biggest honor and the best possible day you can have as a kindergartener. The Helper gets to help the teacher, be first in line, pass out papers, and best of all, have a “Daily News” written about him or her. The “Daily News” is a piece of butcher paper that records the weather, the letter of the day and a sentence about the honored Helper. There is nothing bigger than being the Helper in kindergarten–with the possible exception of being the Birthday Boy or Girl. Being the Helper is like winning the Lotto. Big. Exciting. Random.

I handed the aide his tardy slip and she asked for his red folder, so he retrieved that. His face was flushed and I knew he was using all the self-control he had. I whispered, “Hey, are you okay?” and he fell apart. His whole chubby little red-cheeked face contorted in grief. He said, “I–w-a-n-t (sob) t-o (sob) g-o (sob) h-o-m-e.” Great shuddering intake of breath. I said, “Let’s go outside for a second.”

So, in the hallway, I hugged him and he said he needed to get out of there. We walked down the corridor and he stepped into the brisk air and walked in a circle. Then I said, “Okay, are you ready to go back in?” He said, “Yes.” He wiped his eyes and composed himself.

Back we went. He clenched his mouth and marched towards the carpet where the kids were talking about the weather. He almost reached them and then he turned back and ran toward me. “I can’t do it!” he cried.

I said, “That’s okay. Come on.” We went back in the hallway and he insisted he just couldn’t stay. I said, “Are you sure you want to miss a whole day of kindergarten?” He loves kindergarten. He adores school. He thinks recess is great. “Yes.”

I went back inside to grab his coat. When I came back out, he had a hand in his pocket and he was fingering his six quarters. Fridays are popcorn day. Twenty-five cents a bag. “Can I still get my popcorn?” he said. I told him I couldn’t interrupt the teacher. I thought maybe we’d find them selling popcorn in the multi-purpose room, but we did not.

He’s still sobbing as we walk down the corridor towards the office. The principal says hello to me and I tell her what’s happening. I ask if it’s possible that we get some popcorn. She says, “of course” and makes a phone call. He says, “This is the worstest day of my life!” We wait for the popcorn, then leave the building.

I tell him I’m so sorry. He says with reproach and sorrow, “Why didn’t you remember that Beth wasn’t coming?” I said, “I don’t know. Do you think you can ever forgive me?”

He says, “No.”

I say, “Your dad is going to be so disappointed in me.” He would never make his beloved boy late for kindergarten. Being late is a mortal sin in his book (if he had a book and if sins were classified in it).

As we cross the parking lot and head for the chainlink fence and trudge back up the hill and through the woods, I say, “This is all my fault. Is there anything I can do to make you feel better?”

He is wailing and crying and red-faced. “No.”

Then he stops. “Well, there is one thing. If I could have a Crunch bar when I get home, that would make me feel a little better.”

I say, “Well, that I can do.”

He resumes crying.

I have caused my almost-six year old precious child to have the “worstest” day of his life. What kind of mother am I?

When we returned home, he ate his popcorn and Crunch bar while I put the baby to sleep. (She even napped in her crib. Hooray.) When I came downstairs, I said, “Do you want to play a game or something?” He said, “Yes. I want to play Shipmates.”

So, we played Battleship. He won, even though we didn’t finish. Fortunately, he finished crying.

Then we played Uncle Wiggly. I made sure he won, without letting on that I was reverse-cheating. In fact, he won twice.

Eventually, he even forgave me.

I talked to his teacher on the telephone and she was sympathetic and kind. She promised that he can be the helper on Monday. I love her now. (She’s brand new. YoungestBoy’s original teacher is on maternity leave and until today, I’d never even seen his new teacher.)

In the backyard, YoungestBoy practiced riding his bike without training wheels for the first time. The trauma of the morning seemed forgotten.

I tell myself that if this is the worst day he’ll ever face, he’s a lucky boy, indeed.

However, I could still slap myself for being such an idiot. As my husband would say (if he was insane enough to comment on this issue), I should write these things down! My memory is not what it used to be! Make a note! (He’s learned to just not comment, though. Even though he doesn’t comment, I know what he’s thinking, though, which is kind of funny, when you think about it. He knows me well enough not to comment, but I know him well enough to know that he is commenting silently inside his head. Six of one, half dozen of the other.)

Tomorrow will be better. For one thing, there is no school.

My Cute Little Baby Face

Babygirl is boycotting nap-time. Instead, she’s putting a red and white checked hat onto her head, then flipping it onto the floor and laughing maniacally. She’s watching Teletubbies do some kind of scary dance and occasionally she falls down, too. I just took her picture with the red hat over her face and the flash distracted her, so she dropped the hat and ran across the room with great glee. Now, how can a child who would not nap today be so cheerful?

The boys will be home from school and alas, I have turned into Old Mother Hubbard and my cupboard is bare. I need to go to the grocery store. My husband has had meetings at night for so many days in a row. I will have to go tonight. I’m going to make Hamburger Helper tonight. How pathetic is that? I won’t eat it, of course, but my kids like it. And it cost a dollar on sale.

Today is the 100th day of school. YoungestBoy took one hundred Pokemon cards to school. His homework was to draw what he would buy with one hundred dollars. He didn’t even consider spending his fictional one hundred dollars on anything but 25 packs of Yu-Gi-Oh cards. I hate Yu-Gi-Oh cards so much, not only because they are addicting to small boys, but also because I despise Japanese Anime’..

My family room, the central room in our house, is in complete disarray. My computer desk has accumulated papers and magazines and a newspaper from last week, in addition to a small pile of used tissues. DaycareKid has a runny nose, again. There are scattered Cheerios on the floor, the toybox has been emptied and there is a precariously stacked pile of folded laundry on the back of the couch. The wall still needs to be repainted red. The dry clothes need to be folded and the wet clothes need to be put in the dryer and the dirty clothes need to be washed.

And here I sit because all these tasks never disappear. They reappear just like those horrible birthday candles that you can’t blow out. I often tell my husband it’s like pushing a boulder up a hill, just like that Greek guy I can never remember. (Remind me to take a course on Greek Mythology in my next life.) Click here if your knowledge of Greek mythology is as deficient as mine..

Okay. Time to speed clean. 1 – 2 – 3 – GO!