Compartments

Ancient History

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Summer re-run

Today, in between running house-related errands at Home Depot and SuperTarget, we had lunch at Chili’s. Our waitperson was enthusiatistic about bringing refills. She brought refills for our refills. Those refills got refills. At one point I am sure we had 14 drinks on the table, either half full or half empty. This led to confusion:

Aidan: Sammy is drinking Boo’s…

Me: Sammy is NOT drinking booze!

Aidan: Yes, Sammy is drinking Boo’s!

Me: Booze is alcohol! Children do not drink alcohol! Alcohol is a grown-up drink. It isn’t funny to say that Sammy is drinking booze! (meanwhile, I am wondering where she heard the word “booze”)

Aidan: Sammy is drinking Boo’s lemonade, mom!

I realized a misunderstanding of “Three’s Company” proportion had just occured. Aidan was talking about how Sammy was drinking Tommy’s (nicknamed Boo since practically birth) lemonade. I was thinking “booze”.

I hope Aidan never counts to six in German. My heart will do a triple back flip with a twist as I tell her to always remember that six is something to be shared by married grown-ups who love each other very much. If a boy ever tries to get her to explore six, she should say no. It is never worth risking a reputation or moral beliefs over casual six.

And she will look at me and tell me that maybe she will learn Spanish instead.

(originally posted July 28, 2005)

Bunting

Your first home was on Bunting Avenue.

It was a single-story strip of beige brick apartments, facing north to the plateau known as The Bookcliffs.

The front door opened to a small living room. The kitchen lay about ten steps beyond the threshold. It had tall silly-putty colored cabinets and mottled 1950s mosaic countertops. There was no dishwasher, only a sink under a south-facing window. The view of the back parking lot was broken by the rear-side of a motel, dotted with a dozen frosted rectangular panes of bathroom glass. The same blurry green and white bottles of shampoo on the window ledges told us the motel was no longer a stopover for the weary traveller en route to Salt Lake or Denver. People lived there, permanently.

Your first home was humble.

Two small bedrooms and the bathroom where I found out you were coming flanked the west side of our apartment. Daddy and I shared the bedroom that was two square feet bigger. In an apartment that small, it made a difference. You slept in the other bedroom, in theory. Most of the time you slept in our arms or your swing, which we cranked every ten minutes all night long.

That’s how we remember your newborn days, which began on the morning of July 8th, 1997.

So much has happened in the past ten years. We’ve moved twice. Our current home is ours and it is five times bigger than Bunting. You don’t remember that place, but my mind will forever see baby Aidan Elizabeth nestled in the backdrop of the worn and old and modest. It was the best we could do for you at the time, little daughter.

Ten years ago today, our little slice of ordinary was illuminated and made dear because you were there and nothing else mattered.

We were the richest people in town.

Sea level

sam_water.jpgIn January of 2006, Aidan and I flew to Chicago to visit the American Girl Place. We had a great time on our whirlwind trip, just the two of us getting away for a weekend of mother-daughter bonding over dolls and Mike Ditka.

From that time, my husband and I thought it would be great if we could take similar trips with our other children—short vacations with one or two kids to places we couldn’t go on a whim. Recently we were presented with an opportunity to go to Florida. My husband had to travel to his corporate headquarters in Naples. We decided to take our two oldest sons, Ryley and Sam for a long “weekend”—Thursday through Monday. We’d be joining daddy at the beachfront condo where he was staying. It would be their first airplane and ocean experiences. Baby Beatrix also went along for the 4,000 mile round-trip ride. She goes where I go. Our other three children were under the loving care of their paternal grandparents.

I managed to get two boys, a baby, her stroller, her carseat, three rolling carry-on suitcases, three backpacks, six shoes, three Ziploc bags filled with our liquid paraphenalia, and my electronics through the unsmiling and gold-badged gauntlet of 21st century security. The flying public surely felt safer when they witnessed the four of us being pulled aside by TSA agents so they could conduct a special search of Sam’s Superman backpack. After his blue elephant, comic books, and Rice Krispie treats were thoroughly stirred with a safety stick and latex-protected hands, we were on our way to sunny Florida.

We were lucky enough to be booked on flights that weren’t full, which meant I could use an empty seat for Beatrix’s car seat. The Denver to Orlando leg of our trip featured her jumping in my lap and the lap of the lady seated next to me. Her name was Marla and she graciously offered to hold and otherwise entertain Beatrix. The boys sat behind us and spent their hours ordering drinks, doing word searches, playing magnetic checkers, sleeping, and in Sam’s case, making a puppet out of the barf bag.

The puppet’s species: Bovine. The puppet’s name: Orlando.

Orlando, the barf bag cow mooed as we made our descent into the greenest and most water-logged place I’ve ever seen.

Beatrix fell asleep. I put her in her carseat. She stayed asleep as we deplaned, retrieved the gate-checked stroller, and dashed to our next gate for the flight to Fort Myers with Marla’s help. Thankfully, that flight had empty seats so I didn’t have to disturb her.

An hour later, we were waiting outside the Fort Myers International Airport for hubby to pick us up.

First Impressions of Gulf Coast Florida:

~Green
~Humid
~McDonald’s has sweet tea!
~Cops everywhere
~White sand beaches!
~Palm Trees!
~Yay!

We were hungry and tired when we arrived at the condo. True to the description, it was right on the beach. The sight of the water, sand, and trees was energizing. Within minutes, the boys had their swim trunks on and were sprinting to the waves. I lagged, snapped pictures, wondered how I got there, thanked God. ryley_water.jpg

Thousands of miles from the high and dry of home, I was on vacation. The next two days featured strolls on the beach, sea shells by the thousands, sand in and on everything. Luckily, the condo had a washer and dryer, so I could rinse away the pervasive grit before we left for the second half of our trip—a drive back to Orlando for two days at Sea World.

On the way, we visited the home and fish farm of one of hubby’s high school friends. They fed lunch to us and showed us around. It was great punctuating our trip with friendly faces.

shamu.jpgIt seems odd that we were in Orlando but we didn’t go to anything Disney-related. We decided to save all that is Disney for a time when our whole family can invade together. That is one of the reasons we decided to make our final days of vacation all about Sea World. They are running a promotion where you get the second day free, so we didn’t feel like we had to rush around the enormous park trying to jam everything in to one crazy day.

The grounds were lovely and well-kept. The shows, while bordering on gorgonzola-cheesiness, were well-produced. Dolphins smiled, sharks waved, manatees slumbered, seals were croupy and thrashed for expensive fish thrown by tourists. It was nice to be able to focus on our two big boys. The sense of herding I usually carry when I go out with the kids was gone, but I still missed our kiddos at home. We kept in contact several times a day, and it was clear they were having tons of fun with their grandparents.

We arrived home in the tender hours of Tuesday morning, thanks to flight delays and bad weather. I never went to bed, however, because Tommy (who stayed at home) was having an asthma attack. I took him to the emergency room, where he was admitted to the hospital for breathing treatments and steroids. By the time I got home and crawled into bed, I had been awake for slightly over 28 hours.

I was at the point where I was beginning to hallucinate a little. My brain was wooly and my eyes were as gritty as the beach sand as I sat in Tommy’s hospital room, waiting for hubby to arrive for his shift. I had the sensation I was swimming in impossibly warm waters with rainbow fish. Above me, palm trees undulated. A voice snapped me back into the room. It was hubby and his dad. I had been asleep, dreaming of the wavy heat and light that is unique to all that is level with the sea.