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"Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it." ~ Mary Oliver

Friday, December 3, 2010

Heaven Is A Little Kitchen at 704 Devon Street...

Heaven is a little kitchen at 704 Devon Street...

Friday, October 22, 2010, 3:51:32 AM | Susan KellerGo to full article

 I don't buy Cheese Doodles. I just can't. A 15-ounce bag of those is a short-lived guilty pleasure, and it takes days to remove all traces of that messy, orange cheese-flavored powder from your hands. (And face, and shirt, and from your pants, where you invariably wipe your messy orange fingers...) But Cheese Doodles are one of my comfort foods, because when I see a Doodle, it takes me back to a small kitchen in Kearny, New Jersey...

My grandparents lived in a house at 704 Devon Street, in a house that used to be red. New owners recently painted it a light blue, sparking a page-long protest on my cousin's facebook wall, where the unanimous decision was to petition the new owners to return it to its proper color. (That petition was never actually circulated, but it sure was gratifying not to be the only one aghast at such an affront to our childhood memories!) Aunt Jeannie and Uncle Freddie lived upstairs for as long as I can remember, and when I was little, Uncle Danny lived in the back room off the kitchen. The cool room with the lava lamps and all the records. That room was where I held in my hands for the first time the original album cover of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road". It was where I absorbed all the music of that decade and the one before, and osmosis must be the reason for all the Beatles lyrics that are stuck in my head. Twenty years later when I stepped up to a microphone for the first time, the words to "If I Fell" simply flowed from somewhere inside of me. Pretty sure I have Uncle Danny to thank for that. He was the ORIGINAL Grand Funk Master of our saturday nights.

That music, coming from the back room, was the soundtrack to saturday nights at 704 Devon Street. At least that's how I remember it. In actuality, I wasn't there very often. Mom lived farther away than most of her seven siblings, so we probably only went to Grandma and Grandpa McNamara's a few times a year...? But those saturday nights make up most of my favorite childhood memories. The grown-ups would sit around that kitchen and talk for hours, while my cousins and I would play hide-and-seek all over the place.

Eventually even the youngsters would gravitate to the kitchen, for snacks and soda. There were always Cheese Doodles. I loved those damn things. Still do. Grandpa Mac would pour a Coke for me into a small jelly jar glass. When it was time to use the bathroom, you'd need to get past Grandma Mac, because the kitchen was so small that her chair blocked the door. I didn't mind squeezing past her though; cheek-pinching and kisses were a sweet toll to pay, as was hearing her scratchy voice call me "Susie". (Oh, a note on the bathroom- it was the first time in my life that I'd ever known anyone to decorate their toilet for Christmas. Even Christmas toilet paper. Is it any wonder where my sense of humor and whimsy come from...?) I would sit on my mother's lap when I was small enough to do so, and when I no longer was, I'd sit on the floor next to her chair, content to just listen to the adult voices as they'd tell story after story. The best - to me - were the often-told tales of each of our births. Every story was full of hilarious detail, told with vaudevillian comic delivery as only the Irish can, sure to elicit huge laughs no matter how many times it was told. Peppered between the storytelling - and perhaps due to the alcohol - was the singing. Lots of Motown, 50's and 60's girl groups, and of course, Manilow. It was all just so much fun. When you're a kid, nothing makes you feel as good as hearing grown-ups laugh; nothing bad can happen when people are laughing until they cry, hugging each other and dancing around the kitchen. As the night wore on, and they ran out of stories, things got a little quieter, but it always seemed to me that no one wanted to call it a night. Sitting and listening to the music coming from Uncle Danny's room was enough. That, and being together. My head would rest on my mother's lap and she would stroke my hair. Those rare moments were the best of my childhood! Okay, so perhaps it's not in a child's best interests to be in a room full of half-drunk adults, cigarette smoke and rock-and-roll...but ask me if I ever felt safe, loved and happy as a kid? Oh yes. On those nights I did.

So I think heaven, if it exists, is a small kitchen at 704 Devon Street, in a house that will always be red. It will be an eternity of saturday nights, and eventually we will all be there. It will be standing room only. There will be music and laughter, stories to tell again and again, laps to sit on, someone to stroke my hair and a rosy-cheeked little leprechaun to call me Susie...and there will be Cheese Doodles. 

A Letter To My Sister On Her Birthday

A Letter To My Sister On Her Birthday

Tuesday, November 02, 2010, 3:11:11 AM | Susan KellerGo to full article


Mary Jean,
You are my sister, friend, confidante, co-keeper of the family secrets, sharer of my history, the person I rely on to build me up, and the one most likely to keep me humble. Now that we are grown women I can see and admire your inner beauty; now that we are grown women I've stopped being jealous of your physical beauty...or, at least, I've stopped secretly drawing mustaches and chin hair on your high school pictures. It no longer makes me feel better.

We've had many long conversations over coffee, and, I hope, many more to come. I always learn something new about you, things that make me proud, make me laugh, sometimes cry, and sometimes you even manage to shock me. And no matter what I reveal about myself, you always accept all the facets of me with an open heart. For this I am grateful, and would like to reveal now that I am the one who stole your favorite cream-colored sweater 27 years ago. It was the only thing in your closet that would fit me, and it made my boobs look good. You won't be getting that back.

You may not know this, but I credit much of my love and knowledge of popular music to you. You built the soundtrack to my teenage memories; Summer of '69, Boys of Summer (got those wayfarers on, baby), blasting the Grease - and later, Flashdance - soundtracks off the record player in the front yard while you sunbathed with your friends. Toby Beau, Shaun Cassidy, Rick Springfield...Paradise By The Dashboard Light (and I wasn't supposed to know what all that meant!), Pat Benatar, Journey...no way that I can name them all. But so many of them were just before "my time", and I might have missed them, if not for you. Since you're OLDER than me, your musical coming of age overlapped my own, and rounded it out quite nicely; thank you. I do sincerely apologize for sneaking into your room when you weren't home and scratching the shit out of your records because I'd dance in front of your mirror and skip the damn things every time. I know you knew it was me, but my birthday gift to you is full disclosure. So I should probably tell you that whenever your make-up went missing...me too. (You might have guessed that wasn't the boys either.)

You might be tickled to know that I credit you with some of the skills I have today; being your social secretary when I was younger has really paid off. You'll recall that we didn't have caller I.D. back then, so someone had to answer the phone and weed out the "good" calls from the "bad" ones...thanks for letting me do that. It taught me organization, tact, phone skills, people skills, and how to hammer out one white lie after another. My sense of wicked humor was honed as well; you probably didn't know this, but the guys who wouldn't seem to take a hint...well, there really wasn't anything wrong with their love perception. I may, from time to time, have let it slip that you were just playing hard to get, that you had their names doodled all over your bedroom mirror, and they just needed to try harder.

Another part of my birthday gift to you today is forgiveness. I forgive you for all the times you wished me gone, wished me dead, wished I'd never been born. Because, you see, I know NOW just how typical that sort of deep-seated vengeance is between sisters! Of course, I know it NOW. I didn't know it then. Still hadn't figured it out on the day that I hired that voodoo woman to put a curse on you and your charmed life. I swear on my love for you that as soon as I find her surviving relatives, I will figure out a way to reverse that...

This might also be a good time for me to tell you that I was the one who was adopted. I know you always hoped it was you, but alas, it was me. My real parents found me yesterday, and I'm off to Palm Springs to go live with them. (OMG - my new bedroom overlooks the OCEAN!! How cool is THAT?!) They appear to be lovely people; they only gave me up because they were trying to get their heroin business underway and couldn't provide for my daily needs. They have been searching for me ever since their release from prison. It turns out that Dad - he said I could call him Dad - learned a lot in the slammer about the family trade, and has since made a FORTUNE. How ironic is this - I'm finally going to have my own cleaning lady! Can't wait for you to come visit and meet my new family.

I guess what I'm trying to say here is that...I am grateful to have a big sister. (Oh, wait...now that you're in your mid-forties I shouldn't use adjectives like "big"...) What I meant to say was, I am so glad to have an OLDER sister. Someone to look up to because you've lived SO MUCH LONGER than I have. You used to counsel me about boys, music, makeup, my period...and now you can start telling me about hot flashes, wrinkles, what to use to color greys and how to get rid of those unsightly chin hairs. (FYI - those might not be so much nature as that voodoo thing...) It is such a relief to know that you will be well-versed in all these areas long before I ever need to know about them! One small request - would you mind writing all that stuff down? I have noticed lately that your mind isn't as sharp as it used to be, and would hate for all that sisterly advice to just vanish the way your car keys keep disappearing...

So, to my sister, my friend, my former nemesis and future recipient of the monthly stipend I will have to send to you at whichever long-term care facility you end up calling home...I love you. My life - past, present, and future - wouldn't be complete without you. You're the spit that rubs the dirt mark off my face, the band-aid always at the ready, the sarcasm that yanks me out of the pity pool and tells me to walk it off (when needed), the wind beneath my tattered wings, and the little divider in my silverware drawer that keeps the spoons from falling on the forks. I hope you have an amazing day...and thousands more just like it.

Love, Susie <3

Damned Dog!

Damned Dog!

Sunday, November 21, 2010, 5:25:27 AM | Susan KellerGo to full article


      Wilson came to live with us about ten years ago, an invited guest who seriously overstayed his welcome. I was friends - at the time - with a woman who rescued dogs; she picked up stray and abandoned dogs the way some women collect shoes. Sometimes her compulsion dictated the forced removal of an abused canine from his or her current environment. (She didn't think much of local authority, so those occasions often required a covert-op delivered with military precision and a little lunacy.) Wilson wasn't one of those P.O.W. dogs. But he was found wandering, emaciated and exhausted, on Wilson Hill Road, so she coaxed him into her little Nissan and brought him home. She salved the shredded pads on his feet, bathed and fed him, and welcomed him into the fold.
     Let me take a moment to honor the breadth of this woman's heroism by telling you that her house had, quite literally, gone to the dogs. In a home filled with octuplets, you'd expect to find baby toys, chairs, tricycles, blankets and all sort of child-related paraphernalia; now mentally remove the human toys and replace the picture with doggie stuff. You couldn't walk through a room without tripping over a bone, a ball, a leash, a toy...Her great room was filled with dog furniture so that everyone could have a bed. No room was off limits to the dogs, actually; not even her bedroom. Anyone who has ever shared a home with a canine knows that if you don't keep the bed off-limits, you will have a sleeping partner. In her case, it was seven sleeping partners, often forcing her to sleep - you guessed it - on the dog furniture. Even the bathroom was doggie-friendly, with shelves full of dog shampoos and soothing herbal bath lotions, and the toilet seat was always up. Every window in the house sported a thick film of dog slobber, and every low surface was constantly covered in dog hair. And more dog slobber.
     She never complained, not about having the dogs, or having taken on the physical and financial responsibility. She complained about the neighbors a lot, but I always suspected there were two sides to those stories, and the neighbors probably had much to say about the crazy lady who smelled like dog and was driving their property values down. She had the two earmarks of a true lunatic - she had nothing but disdain for government or authority of any kind, and she was a walking encyclopedia. This is how she knew that most dog foods available for purchase at your local supermarkets were full of ground up horse bones and toxic additives, and the fact that the government allowed such a thing to be available to the public was simply proof of their inherent evil. So she bought fresh chickens and vegetables for the dogs, and gave them home-cooked meals every day, along with an herbal vitamin regimen which differed from dog to dog. There was always soothing music on, but she never listened. That was for them too. All seven of them.

     Which brings me back to Wilson. Once she had nursed him to health, she needed to find him a home. But in the interim, there simply wasn't enough room to keep a nearly two-year old Labrador Retriever. Her house, and her budget, were stretched far enough already. So she called me to ask if I might play the role of "foster parent" while she searched for his new home. I didn't see this for the underhanded, manipulative chess move that it actually was, and so I said yes. My second clue, of course, should have been the way she sped off after bringing him over, and stopped taking my phone calls. And that is the unceremonious manner in which Wilson became part of our family. (It also marked the end of my relationship with the crazy dog lady.)

     The first couple weeks were admittedly fun; it was nice to have a dog in the house again. My daughter, years earlier, had witnessed our family puppy's horrific death by auto. I swore then that there wouldn't be another.  My son wasn't even born at that time, and had never experienced having a dog around, and I'll tell you right now that there is nothing more heartwarming than watching a three-year-old boy fall in love with his first dog. Wilson was easy to love, a beautiful black Lab with expressive eyes and a wounded spirit. I'm a sucker for living creatures who desperately need love, so for me it was a match made in heaven. Sure, I fought it. He was only supposed to be visiting, anyway...which is what I kept telling the kids. "DON'T GET ATTACHED - WE ARE NOT KEEPING HIM!" is perhaps the most useless phrase in the parental thesaurus. It took about two months before I finally faced the truth - we were in love, all of us, and Wilson was there to stay.
    He was a funny fellow, and getting to know his quirks was often a hilarious thing. The most notable was his fear of water. And when I say water, I mean the water in his own water bowl. He would thirstily approach the bowl, fully understanding what it was there for. But when he took his first lap of the tongue, it caused the water to ripple and this scared the hell out of him, causing him to back away from the dish. He'd look at it fearfully, then at me, then back at the dish. Once the water was still, he'd approach it timidly and then repeat the same hysterical process. There was no such thing as a quick drink with this dog. I always found it amusing that my Labrador Retriever - a breed known for its familiarity with water - was broken. But turn liquid water into snow, and man, did that dog come ALIVE!! Even in his older years, he enjoyed a good snowfall with the enthusiasm of a child, driving his snout into a snow pile and tossing it up into the air. He would roll in it until he looked like a white pig with a black head. You couldn't help but feel good watching him; witnessing pure joy like that is an intimate miracle.
     Another peculiarity would occur every time we went for a walk; he loved being on a leash, never strained against it. When the walk was nearly over, and he was a few feet from the door, he would stop, turn his head and open his mouth. I don't recall how long it took me to figure it out, but he was asking for the handle of the leash. I would offer it to him, and he, with his own leash in his mouth, would walk himself right into the house. Every time. Never fully understood it, but I sensed that it was his way of maintaining dignity, of saying, "Yes, I understand that when we walk, I must be restrained, but never forget I am a free spirit, and fully capable of walking myself into my own home, thank you." Once inside, he would dutifully sit for the leash to be removed, and there always seemed to be a look of gratitude in those knowing eyes, for allowing him this small measure.
     As the years went on, we plunged ahead with our busy lives, and Wilson became more of a household fixture than a beloved family member. He was always there, always ecstatic to see us, but I shamefully admit that we did not reciprocate well. Initial arguments over who got the honor of taking care of Wilson became arguments over who got the chore of taking care of Wilson. I hated him sleeping on my bed, and was irritated by years of his stealing my covers. I secretly wished he would get too old to jump up on the bed. As a single mother of two, with a very tight budget, Wilson went without quite a few things that a well-to-do dog would expect to have, such as better dog food, stimulating toys, excellent health care, people who had time for long, lingering walks and the desire to just lay on the floor and scratch his piggy belly. I eagerly anticipated a future that didn't include expensive dog food, constant vacuuming, or dog farts. He slept at my feet when I watched tv, guarded my door when I slept (if he wasn't smushed up next to me on the bed already), padded through the house if I was cleaning, content to rest only after he'd determined which room I was settling into; I would curse him for being underfoot. That dog loved me like I have never been loved before or since, but I admit that in his last few years I barely took the time to notice him. Had it been a human relationship, that dog would have packed his bags long before the end.
     When the end came, it was the result of a decision that had to be made. He had no real quality to his life, he followed me with those eyes, pleading for my help, and I finally took him to the vet when it became clear he could no longer eat or drink. The vet was so understanding, offering assurances that I was doing the right thing. The funny thing was, I didn't feel sad. For so long I had been picturing the freedom of a dog-free house, and I felt relieved and a bit glad that I could go home that very day and start getting rid of the dog smell. This is what was on my mind as he took his final breaths, with me scratching the single tuft of white fur on his throat.

     As the vet listened with a stethoscope to be certain Wilson had truly passed, he gave me a speech I'm sure he's delivered many times, designed to help ease the pain of a loved one. Now, I wasn't about to admit to this stranger that I had actually been looking forward to this day for some time. So I listened with an appropriate amount of head-nodding and somber expression. And when the moment came for us to leave the room, the vet made a gesture letting me know it was perfectly okay to say goodbye just one more time. Not wanting to seem indifferent, I made a show of leaning over Wilson's face, kissing him gently on his forehead, and I whispered that I would miss him. And when I turned back to the vet, that's when it happened. That's when the dam broke.

    That poor man never saw it coming. He might have guessed that I was indifferent, or he might simply have thought I was being stoic. Either way, I don't believe he was prepared for me to collapse into his arms, clutching the lapels of his jacket and sobbing like Sally Field in "Steel Magnolias". Neither was I. Through my wall of tears even my disbelief was obvious; I kept saying, "But you don't understand - I HATED that damned dog!" Never did get around to sending him a card to thank him for his thoughtful words, for putting his arms around me while I lost my mind, and for not tranquilizing me on the spot. I cried buckets of grief as I filled out the check to pay for his services, and I cried all the way home. I learned a powerful lesson that day about my own capacity for - and fear of - love. And the person who taught it to me wasn't even a person. It was that damned dog.
     It has been over a year since I let Wilson go, but his imprint on our lives is still here. When I hear a noise outside the house, I wish he were here to let me know if I should be afraid. I wish he were here when I watch tv, so I could once again pry my cold toes under him for warmth. I miss being followed around and adored. I'll never forget the way he could talk to me, that special way that dogs have that is half expression and half telepathy. And I know that with each snowfall, I'll see him in my mind's eye, tossing that white stuff in the air with childlike abandon. Even after a year, I can't explain this any better than that. If you've never shared your life with a dog, I couldn't make you understand anyhow. If you have, well then...you know.

A Single Mother's Letter To Santa

A Single Mother's Letter To Santa

Monday, November 29, 2010, 7:19:32 PM | Susan KellerGo to full article



Dear Santa,

     I'll bet you weren't expecting to hear from me, considering I haven't written since the 2nd grade. To start, I really should apologize for my prolonged absence. Back then, my friends convinced me that you weren't real, which was kind of traumatic for me, but peer pressure wins when you're trying to make friends in elementary school. You might be pleased to know that I've outgrown peer pressure and I've chosen better friends.


     Actually, Santa, in the years since we lost touch, I've given myself a pretty good life. I have two wonderful kids that I have been raising alone, with the encouragement of family and friends who love and support me. I have a decent job that keeps us warm and happy, volunteer work that feeds my soul, and I never want for something fulfilling to do around the house and gardens. As far as lives go, I've been pretty blessed. But truth be told, life without you lacks magic. Maybe I should have kept on believing in you despite all evidence to the contrary. I hope you can find it in your jolly heart to forgive my breach of faith, and put me back on your list. I need you now more than I did when I was a child. As a single mother, there's no one in my life to tell my wishes to, never mind hope that one or two of them might be granted. So I beg your forgiveness, and with the hope of a child, I have made up a small list of things that would make my life a little easier. See what you can do.

    


     I remember when I was a kid, you would fill my stocking with good things and leave it at the end of my bed so it would be the first thing I found when I woke up. Even though I haven't had a stocking at the end of  my bed in 30 years, I admit I still look every Christmas morning. Maybe this year you'll bring one for me...and you can skip the toys and trinkets. All I really need is a stocking full of York peppermint patties and dark chocolate-covered espresso beans.


     A new pair of slippers would be nice, something soft and warm to slip my feet into after a long day...



     I was going to ask for a cook and a maid, but I don't want to be greedy! Besides, I really do like to do those things myself. However, I could use an Ipod with an infinite playlist and a killer stereo system to blast my tunes while I dance around the kitchen, fold laundry, and vacuum the floors. It seems grossly unfair that my children have Ipods and I don't; my music is so much better than theirs.

     That reminds me - I have always wanted a food processor and a professional-style mixer. And an oversized cast iron skillet. Really I need a complete set of pots and pans that didn't come from Wal-Mart so the nonstick surface might actually stick to them. Silicone baking sheets, a meat thermometer, a fryer, a pulverizer, a Bundt cake pan, tongs, spoons, scrapers...





    A Craftsman Professional 26325 Drill-Driver/Circular Saw Combo Kit, and a high-quality blade. I like to cut things when the day goes badly. Also, I want to build a new front porch, shelves for the kitchen and to expand the gardens a bit. So if you're feeling generous, you could throw in a professional sander and a new hammer, but make sure it has a long, heavy handle. The salesman at the hardware store must have thought "girl" when he pointed me toward the one I have now, and that piece of crap isn't good for much more than killing spiders.



         An oversized jacuzzi bathtub. All good advice includes treating yourself to many long, hot baths, but trust me - it doesn't matter how many candles you light or what kind of soothing music you pipe into the bathroom...if all you've got is a standard sized bathtub, then either your breasts or your knees are above the waterline and covered in goosebumps. There is no way to relax under those circumstances. One must be able to sink down into the water all the way up to the ears to truly drown out the sound of your son's profanity while he's playing XBox Live. This gift wouldn't be complete without a few cases of a rare vintage French wine and a Billie Holiday CD.






      For my Buick: A set of 4 new tires, brakes, an oil change, complete tune-up and exhaust system, a new windshield, repairs to the thingy that operates the windows because two of them don't open, and while you're here, if you could use your elven magic to figure out where the rain has been getting in and soaking the floor and the backseat for the last year and a half, that would be great. On second thought, just bring me a brand-new pick-up truck with an extended cab. Red would be nice.





     I'd like a little help with my son, whose sole mission in his teenage life seems to be thwarting my attempts to direct him toward secondary education. I don't need a full-scale miracle here, but if your elves can fashion a way to make him improve his grades and show more respect for authority, then I can do the rest. Perhaps you could send a good male role model his way; someone who would spend time with him that I don't have, doing all the guy things I can't do. He really is an amazing, smart, loving person; I just need a hand helping him grow into the fine man that he deserves to be.
 


     I could use a little patience. Actually, I could use a lot of patience...better make it economy size. And forgiveness, both for myself and for others. That's a gift that a stressed-out woman can never have enough of.


    I'm enclosing both of my children's Christmas lists. Now that they are teenagers, a simple Christmas Club just won't cut it; there isn't one item on either list that doesn't require a session with a financial planner.

      It might seem that this list is a little long, but in my defense, I have been a VERY good girl for a VERY long time. Yes, I know you "see me when I'm sleeping, you know when I'm awake", but I am not going to argue semantics with you over the whole naughty/nice thing. I'm not in second grade anymore. At my age, a little naughty is not only acceptable, it's encouraged, so please overlook that one time... (And while we're on the subject, maybe you could leave some more of that under my Christmas tree.)

     Perhaps there is just one more thing, Santa, now that I think about it. I could use a pair of strong arms, preferably attached to someone funny and kind who thinks I'm amazing, even when I'm not, and wants to kill the spiders for me. If you don't have room in your sack for that, then please find me a new pair of arms to wear; carrying everything by myself has had its rewards, yes, but it can really make your arms tired. And when you're a single mom, you need your arms for everything - for earning a living, for making your house a home that your children can happily grow in, and for holding them close when your love is all you have left to give them.

     Thank you, Santa, for listening to my wishes. I promise to leave cookies out for you this year. In fact, over the years I've become quite an accomplished baker, so these cookies will be far better than the broken gingerbread heads I used to leave you. I'll leave a bottle of Jagermeister right next to them; a gift from one hard-working soul to another.

                                                                                                      Love, Susie (They call me Susan now.)

     P.S. I almost forgot - Peace on Earth. Okay, that's everything. 

Baby Books and Cartoon Moons

Baby Books And Cartoon Moons

Wednesday, December 01, 2010, 3:24:02 AM | Susan KellerGo to full article


      There are two kinds of mothers. The first remembers the dates and details of everything each child has ever done since the moment of their birth; every illness, injury, playmate, Halloween costume, the names of every teacher, and who came to their middle child's third birthday party. These moms can rattle off baby stats like professional sportscasters: lengths and weights of their newborns, when they cut their first teeth, took their first steps, said their first word, had their first haircuts - and they can do it all without sneaking a refresher look at the baby books they so carefully scrapbooked over the years. I, for one, am glad these women exist because I've often thought there aren't enough self-righteous people on the planet. I also believe in harmony and balance, and mothers like these are the yin to my yang, for I am the second kind - the one who couldn't update the baby books because she kept losing them. They would surface occasionally under piles of mail or laundry, and I'd take a moment to reminisce over the birth announcement I'd tucked inside. Then I'd stick it on top of the refridgerator, resolving to get back to it when I had a little more time. Of course, when you have two children, time is the joke of the century, and the next thing you know, one's in college...the other is shaving his face...and you have absolutely NO idea when they took their first steps or which one had the chickenpox. Someone recently asked me how much my son weighed at birth, and I blanked. I stood there, stalling, while my brain tried desperately to think of how much babies GENERALLY weigh so I could MAKE SOMETHING UP! This is unconscienable to many people, I know; mothers are supposed to be keepers of their children's memories. I am not one such mother. In fact, I've been known to exasperate my kids by whipping out a pencil and scrap paper so I can perform the math necessary to figure out how old they will be on their next birthdays. This alone has caused my children to threaten to put themselves in foster care.




     Dear reader, before you run to the nearest magistrate to have my parental rights revoked, allow me to redeem myself. I may not have documented every milestone in their lives, and I admit I'm horrible with dates and statistics, but I remember the moments. Hundreds of them. I don't even carry them in my brain for fear of losing them to a head injury; I carry them in my soul, because they make up every piece of who I am:  Creeping into my daughter's room in the morning to peer over the rail of her crib and be rewarded by that incomparable baby smile, the one that lets you know you are her WHOLE WORLD. Walking around the house late at night with my son nestled in my arms, looking up at me; we were kindred insomniacs and I would sing to him for hours. The time he told me, "Mommy, I used to be an angel, but then I fell to the earth, and that's when you found me, took off my wings, and brought me home with you." The night in the car when he called a crescent moon a "cartoon moon", and how we've called them "cartoon moons" ever since. The time my daughter convinced her little classmates that she and I practiced witchcraft at home, and if they didn't play with her, we would cast spells on them. (They were terrified of her for a whole marking period. So was the teacher. That was one hysterical parent-teacher conference, but that's a story for another day...) I remember the look on her face when she let go of the coffee table and took her first independent steps toward me, as clearly as I remember my heartache as I drove away after settling her into her college dorm room. Etched into my heart is the sound of my son's little voice, every time he cried, "Mommy!" He sounds different now, but I'll always hear the little voice. I'll never forget the precious look on his 4-month old face when they removed the bandages after his eye surgery. It was a fairly routine glaucoma surgery, but there's always risk and fear, and when the doctor took the bandages off, it was clear the operation was a success - he saw me and his little face lit up like Christmas. There wasn't a dry eye in the room.



    There is one thing I have in common with the Ubermoms - ask me to tell you about giving birth to either of them, and you'd better grab a chair and a box of tissues. Every mother remembers with startling - often graphic - detail every minute of the most miraculous day of her life, and loves to share the story over and over again with anyone who will listen. And boy, oh boy, nobody loves to hear these stories more than other mothers! Get a few of them together over coffee, and it's like "Band of Brothers" with estrogen; it only takes one to start, and then the war stories begin to flow, replete with tears and laughter and appropriate moments of silence. Not one woman needs to express how giving birth to a child was their finest hour; every woman in the room simply understands this. We never need to say out loud how watching them grow up and away makes us feel because we're all in the same foxhole. This is why women can share knowing looks with complete strangers in supermarkets and restaurants. Our badges aren't on our clothing. They're in our hearts, and they shine through our eyes as courage and wisdom.





     As the kids start growing away from me, I find myself savoring these memories. I will start writing them down; their baby books will likely be hardbound novels with no clips of baby hair to be found, but they will be just as appreciated. Someday. And maybe my documentarian shortcomings will be forgiven. Years from now, when my memory starts to fade and these little moments slip quietly from me, my children can read them back into my soul, and share them with their own children. Speaking of which, I have every intention of ensuring that my grandchildren have the most fantastic baby books EVER. It's pretty likely I'll have caught up on the laundry by then, and will have the time to spare. I will record every vital statistic, capture every milestone, put in pictures and handwritten stories and create scrapbooks that Martha Stewart would envy. And I'm already picturing that on the front of each one, right above the hand-embroidered name of my grandchild, there will be a drawing of a cartoon moon.