Monthly Archives: November 2006

They’re meaningless and all that’s true

Scene: Nate’s bedroom, 9 PM. The lights are off. A thumping noise is coming from the bed.

We hear footsteps from outside the door.

The thumping stops.

Silence.

Nate (in a very small voice): Dad?

The door opens and Dad enters.

Dad: What is it, my son?

Nate holds up Muffy, a small plush dog.

Nate: Muffy is getting wet.

Dad: I see. How is Muffy getting wet?

Nate: I am spitting on her.

Dad: I see. Um. What do you think we should do about this?

Nate: I think I need a different animal.

Dad (slowly): Interesting. OK, let me put Muffy in the closet for you. Which animal would you like?

Nate: Um…

Dad: One…

Nate: Um…

Dad: Two…

Nate: I want Giraffe.

Dad: OK, here is Giraffe. Sleep tight. And Nate?

Nate: Yes?

Dad: Please try not to spit on Giraffe.

Nate: Why?

Dad: Because it’s not very nice.

Nate: OK. Good night.

You are not alone

Every time you hear a cell phone ring, an angel gets annoyed

I ride the train to and from work every day. It’s an hour there and an hour back, but I love it. It’s the only time I can truly relax. Even if something were to happen at work or at day care, there would be nothing I could do about it, because hey! I’m on the train! And I’ll take care of whatever it is as soon as I get there.

But until then, I can read, I can play Sudoku, and I can take a nap, and I can enjoy the temporary respite from being Dad.

The only drawback of riding the train is that other people ride the train, too. The usual suspects include:

  • Teenagers screaming “Look at me, everyone!” (and I mean that literally. Man, adolescence sucks. I can’t blame them; they’re overdosing on carbonated hormones.)
  • Otherwise sane-looking ladies clipping their nails.
  • Jackasses bellowing into their cell phones.
  • People who have just purchased new cell phones, and need to listen to each of their 255 ringtones to see which one best expresses their utter contempt for humanity.

This one guy had his bags all over the seat, as if to say, “Hey, I’m a sociopath, please don’t sit next to me.” But I need my nap, and there weren’t any other empty seats, so I sat down anyway. He shot me a dirty look, and when that failed to move me, the dude took off his shoes. Yes.

Unfortunately for him, I have the perma-cold that goes with being the parent of a preschooler. Can’t smell a thing, but thanks for letting me know that you are crazy.

oh God can’t you keep it down

Before Sarah moved in with me, I used to sleep with the door open, so that Figaro (my cat) could wander in and out. Cats, for the most part, resent closed doors. But Sarah had asthma, so Fig was barred from the bedroom. He expressed his displeasure by scratching at the door at all hours, and he even managed to work the doorknob once or twice.

So I placed the Vacuum Cleaner, Devourer of Kitties, just inside our bedroom door, turned on but not plugged in. When Figaro would scratch and yowl, Sarah would mumble, “Go ahead, I’m awake,” and I would roll over and plug in the vacuum cleaner. Then we would hear vases breaking as Fig ricocheted off the furniture in the living room, and I would unplug the noisy and we would go back to sleep.

This worked like a charm. After about four days, Fig was cured of waking us up.

For a short time after Sarah died, I tried sleeping with the door open. I thought I could use the company. But, surprisingly, I’ve grown accustomed to sleeping without someone stepping on my face. So Fig is once again barred from the bedroom, and for the most part he doesn’t complain.

Skip to the present day. I slept at the Hous of Grous Wednesday and Thursday night, so Nate and I could help take care of Jennifer while Beth and Paul were at the hospital. I didn’t sleep that well, what with one thing and another. Thursday night was particularly rough. We had a wild rainstorm, and every time the wind blatted the rain up against the windows, I’d jolt awake, certain that my basement was flooding again.

Well, the basement didn’t flood. And so Friday night, as soon as Nate was asleep, I climbed into bed and prayed for eight hours of uninterrupted sleep.

However! I had spent three days away from Figaro, except for the five minutes I was here on Thursday evening, cleaning leaves and earthworms out the drain trap by the back door in preparation for the rain. Apparently Fig was a bit lonely, a bit starved for affection, and decided that what he needed most was a good cuddle session… at four o’clock this morning.

I shut him in the bathroom and went back to sleep.

Nate, praise Allah, slept an hour and a half later than usual, so that I got almost ten and a half hours of sleep, except for the few minutes it took me to imprison my demon cat.

When I got up, I discovered that Fig had somehow managed to free himself from the bathroom. I also discovered that Fig had managed to rid himself of a hairball, and most of his dinner, on the bathroom rug. I say it’s a small price to pay for a good night’s sleep.

The Water Is Wide

My travel agent

Sarah loved to travel. She took me all over the world. When she got laid off from Peregrine, she talked about going to school to become a travel agent. She used to set up fantasy trips on Travelocity, just for fun. And it might just be that she is still arranging things for us.

Tish and Francis spend a week in Hilton Head every August with Aunt Marylou and Uncle Jim (Tish’s sister and brother-in-law). Somehow it was decided that my mom would trade in her timeshare in Kaua‘i, so we could all get together in Hilton Head. She immediately found a unit in the same building, for the same week. The owner was moving to Kaua‘i, and was eager to swap. It was almost too easy. Coincidence? It just seems… unlikely.

My sister, Veronica, was there as well. Nate doesn’t get to see his Nonna or his Auntie VeeVee very often, so he was thrilled.

We walked to the beach a couple of times, but it takes Nate a while to warm up to an unfamiliar situation. So he would cling to me until everyone was ready to leave, and then announce that he wanted to go wading, or build a sandcastle, or whatever it was I’d been exhorting him to do for the last hour.

In an effort to escape the suffocating heat and humidity, we discovered a small children’s museum right around the corner from our resort. They had a real airplane cockpit, complete with pilot’s hats, and a scale model of a pirate ship. You can imagine the screams when it was time to leave.

South Carolina in August, well… I don’t know if we need to go back any time soon, but we had a great time in spite of the weather.

This is your Captain speaking.

And that laugh that wrinkles your nose

Tomorrow would have been our five-year wedding anniversary.

We held our reception at the Peabody Essex Museum. It was beautiful, except Sarah was slightly horrified by this mummified penguin in one of the display cases. When we got the disposable cameras developed, we discovered that nearly everyone had posed with the damn penguin.

Thanks again to Tish and Francis, and to everyone who helped to make our night special. It was the most amazing party I’ve ever been to.

The happy couple