altarflame: (deluge)
I talked to my Dad on the phone for the first time in awhile, tonight. It was good, and terrible, and...really fucking awful.

I just don't understand how my parents have painted themselves into such corners, and are falling apart to such a degree. It makes me sad for them, and sad that they aren't available to my kids as grandparents, and terrified that I don't want to ever be in the sort of positions they are :/

I don't know how you can just not consider going back to school or trying out a different industry, year after miserable struggling year, not eventually think to prioritize dental care as things deteriorate, not even contemplate counseling as decades pass and you get more and more muddled up and avoidant about all sorts of things.

My Dad has got approximately 4 teeth left. He's worried that he feels sick a lot of the time partially from decayed pieces of teeth gone by, that are still in his gums. He's embarrassed. He doesn't have any insurance - health or dental - and he lives paycheck to paycheck in a way that's very dependent on tourist (and hurricane) season. He's viciously dreading Obamacare because he works as an independent contractor - and hasn't filed taxes in over 10 years.

My Dad is only 53, guys. His arthritis is terrible, and he's never had any treatment or meds for it aside from self medicating (he was diagnosed at 20), and...oh God I just don't even know how to deal with it. He's living in near isolation and sees no light at the end of the tunnel. He absolutely will not accept help of any kind from me, either - even right after we got the settlement when I tried to gift him with something he'd wanted for a long time, he refused, and to this day if I mention ANYTHING the kids need or that costs more than I expected during our conversations, he says, "Aren't you glad you didn't spend that money on me?" :x

He is still him, with all these visible and invisible issues, and he wants to tell me hilarious stories that really make me laugh, and he sounds like he sounded when I was little - meaning, strong. Invincible. Really, really smart.

There are good things, my Dad has a few things - he lives on a canal his boat is parked in, so he can take it out whenever he wants and he gets a lot out of that. That sounds really glamorous, ok, but anyone can have an old, used boat in the keys and the canals are NOT glamorous where he is. I mean he literally has a 700 square foot duplex he's in with his girlfriend, and a car that breaks down parked out front, and lives on a canal with a boat, just like everybody else in the neighborhood. He's a mechanic and works on it himself. I'm just saying, it makes me happy that there are a few ways in which he is still living his life. He really seems to enjoy his job, too, which is kinda perfect for him.

He just also has this shame, about being broke (regardless of what I say about how I could give a shit less how much money anyone has) and his health, and the brokeness and the health also truly limit his options, and so we almost never see him :/ I feel like he is the person who taught me to advocate for myself, whether in fighting my way through the financial aid office and appeals process to go back to school or hunting down resources for my kids...but the whole concept of him advocating for himself seems too foreign. He truly acts like I just don't get it, and/or am living in a dream world, when I suggest options or avenues for him to improve any aspect of his life. It's so heavy, to think of what it must feel like to be really sad about all sorts of things that you've also just given up on ever improving.


My mother was recently diagnosed with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), i.e., the precursor to emphysema. This explains her quarterly ER trips for bronchitis, and her need for albuterol (as a non-asthmatic person) to always be nearby, and has in no way slowed down her smoking. It's an interesting combo, to go with the Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIA)s, or pre/mini strokes, she's had several times in the last few years. She does not exercise in even minor ways, and barely eats food. Really - one small meal or two snacks in a day feel like a lot, to her.

My mother is 49, ya'll. She's the age many of my kids' friends' parents are - and my kids' friends parents are vibrantly healthy people who take vacations, join yoga classes, knit things, have social lives and/or church communities...my mom lives in this teeny tiny place, in a crime ridden yet rural area, with a car always on the verge of breaking down. She has this night shift security job she's struggled by with for the past 5 or more years, where there is no opportunity for advancement. She reads the Twilight books over, and over, and OVER in a way that is probably not ok.


When I was growing up, my various houses (we moved...a lot) could be pretty terrible, but my grandparents were all very good, and actively engaged grandparents. My Dad's parents had some health issues at times, and didn't work, but they lived on their own, had enough money to get us (small) birthday and Christmas presents and leave $20 bills under our pillow if we lost a tooth while we were visiting overnight. They left baggies full of quarters around "from the Easter Bunny." They came along on Disney World trips, when I was little. They cooked us delicious meals and read us stories, when we stayed with them for weeks at a time. Took us in their above ground pool and on their riding lawn mower. We crouched in their windows at dawn with them, watching for deer and rabbits. I have nothing but good memories.

My mother's mom and stepdad (her "real" dad was the "pirate" - read, "international drug smuggler" I'm descended from), who were married from before my birth, both worked full-time until about 5 years ago. They always provided huge Christmas Eve celebrations for the family, including my own children for quite awhile. Laura and I spent every weekend there, as little kids, and weeks of the summer later on. When my mom checked out, that was where each of us ended up living for our high school years. I was driving Nana's car when I learned to drive, on the weekends, and they got me my own phone line and just...

I heard all kinds of stories, from my parents, about how their parents were shitty when they were young. Inconsistent, borderline neglectful, functioning alcoholics, broke as hell, etc etc. What I inferred as the natural order of things, is that people may be kinda derelict, as young parents, but then they get it together enough to take care of themselves, and pick up the grandkid slack, at some point in middle age. This seemed to be the way of the world, a pattern that could be counted on. My various stepdads and their parents seemed to follow this same trend - adults who played too many video games, smoked too much weed, got fired a lot...and their parents, older people who owned homes others could go back to in times of need, and never yelled at children who came over, despite the terrible abuse of yore that would be referenced at times. A need to size up in bras, or to get braces or have wisdom teeth pulled, was something taken to grandparents for review, when I was a kid.


The point is, my parents have not held up their end of this bargain at all. They eagerly accepted the help from their own parents, and talked shit about how their parents had sucked back in the day, and then they just kept on being total derelicts with no self-awareness, once we were grown. I mean. Do you know what I mean?

Grant's parents are not in much better shape, healthwise, though they are engaged grandparents and fully realized human beings - by which I mean, they have friends, and interests, and hobbies, and are living their lives. "Opa" provided half a house for us to live in for 5 years, too, allowing me to stay home with babies and toddlers while Grant built his resume, which is (beyond WAY above and beyond) priceless and lovely and I will never be able to adequately thank him for it. Oma has always been a great place to visit, a sure call and card on birthdays, she stayed with them all while we went out of town to Maryland in August. More importantly, since those kids needed them so much more, they have full on RAISED my sister in law's kids from day 1 of their lives - which has often been an awful lot of very complicated work.

So, I don't mean it as any reflection on their characters, when I say that it is still so scary and awful, what poor health they're in, and how totally without financial resources they are :/ My mother in law has a degenerative bone condition that causes chronic pain and a gradual loss of mobility. She and her husband have also been utterly financially devastated by him getting cancer, losing his business as a result, etc. They're in such a vulnerable position...my father in law has untreated back issues that nobody knew were debilitating him to the degree they apparently have been for a decade, until very recently. The amazing government job he had for a long long time, is no more.

Both of them, like my parents, have moved hundreds of miles away in recent years, and so are not at all easy to help out. There is also a scary, fast-forward effect, wherein more times passes between visits and thus their aging seems to happen in rapid fits and starts since they've moved. Grant and I have rarely gotten used to how old any of them looked the LAST visit, before we're seeing them again and it's progressed...

His parents are early 50s, too. It makes me wonder if maybe that's just how it is - time, and our bodies gradually falling apart.


My sister is really angry about how uninvolved our father is with our children. She remembers how great HIS dad was with us, and wants that for our kids. I get it, I really do, and I also think about it sometimes - but I don't feel mad at him. I feel like our kids (Laura's and mine) are in a totally different situation than she and I were, and NEED external relatives so, so much less. WE read to our own kids, and look at animals together, and take them swimming ourselves, and buy them their bras and their braces...they're safe, at home. They would love him, and they do love him, when he's around, but. Their lives are full, either way. Likewise with how my mother beats herself up semi-annually and vows in a passionate way to be more involved as a grandmother. I just kinda smile and nod. It's not something I'm very invested in. They don't really notice her coming and going.

My anger towards the both of them is more like, "WHAT THE FRESH HELL IS YOU FOOL'S PLAN, for 10 years down the line when you're utterly incapacitated? You're just gonna leave it in my hands, to either take your care on full time or put you in some state run, Medicare type home somewhere? Drink some water, put on some supportive shoes and go for a walk, and start repairing your credit, you assholes!"

That is partially me railing at mortality, and inevitability, as I am wont to do. Mom, Dad and the Grim Reaper all collectively piss me off.

I don't want them to die. Even more than that, I don't want them tottering around suffering and decrepit for long, torturous decades that are not much of a life.


I have these beacons, these inspirations that I look to as role models (and for hope).

Nancy is one. 65, travelling, attending births, speaking at conferences, working on her next book. She gets up every single day and walks or swims for 30 minutes. She has a great haircut, can laugh at Louis CK and is always searching for new music. Her clothes are mostly from Etsy. She really listens, when people talk. Nancy's bringing her mother (who lives alone, drives, etc) to our house for Thanksgiving.

Our pediatrician is another. He's 70, and spends every summer in South America doing charity work and care for brain injured kids. He moves with purpose and energy but stops and takes his very patient time with everyone who comes to see him. He and his wife have adopted over a dozen special needs kids over the years. His jeans are ripped up and he has a long rat tail and the embossed wooden sign hanging out in the strip mall outside his office says, "Dr Spiderman." I was actually shocked to learn his age just a couple of months ago, after going to him for many years and several kids, and then thought, oh yeah. Liver spots on the hands. Around his eyes. I can see it.

I think about my Cuban great grandmother, my Abuela, jogging around the island each morning into her 90s.


I am very aware of how much I'd like to age well - meaning, with tears and laughter but not bitterness or denial, without too much loss of mobility, with introspection and honesty. I would choose pain over loss of cognition, given the choice (which nobody is). Financial security, at least enough to cover essentials like my Nana and Pa have, would be nice.

One thing my "pirate" grandfather had that I think is enviable, is a quick death following a life lived just as he wanted it to be. The man drank all his waking hours, slept on couches (and boats) all over town, told jokes, collected stories, had affairs, got high, hung out with his dog and so forth literally until the night before his liver quit and then he spent a few unconscious hours puking up blood, and died without waking up.

My Nana, by contrast, my poor Nana, following surgery gone wrong, has been wearing diapers and struggling to discern reality from hallucinations for 4 years now, as people spoon feed her in the bed she can't get out of :/ I love her, but she can't stand to have us around and I can't help but wonder at times whether she would have wanted it this way, if she'd had a choice (which nobody does).

Both of them were, I believe, 62 years old - his death, her strokes. It was the same year. They were only 15, when my mother was born. My mother's stepdad, my Pa since I was born, is 80 and caring for Nana. He's starting to fall apart, now, but it's very recent and obviously somewhat related to the enormous burden of her care. All throughout his 60s and early 70s he was walking, dreaming, doing yard work, telling old stories, planning and executing their vacations. He took us out to see hot air balloons take off at dawn, and drug us to hot, bright, dusty things I didn't care too much about (rodeos, air shows with the Blue Angels) that were still better that NOT seeing things or going places. The world has always been very big to him, since he traveled all over it for most of his life before he married my Nana as a retiree and started a kind of second life.

I suppose the lesson to take from every really vital and with it old person I could aspire to be like is, MOVE YOUR BODY AROUND. Every day. Get out of the chair, up off the couch, etc. Keep learning, yes, and keep feeling and communicating, but also keep moving. It's mandatory.


It is so past my bedtime.
altarflame: (Default)
Please forgive me if I sound preachy, it's not at all my intention.

I've been seeing a lot of posts in communities and, of course, on my friends' page, about peoples' baffling baby/toddler/preschooler problems. I also listen to my sister struggle to solve her own toddler issues on a pretty regular basis. There's been a higher concentration of this kind of thing than usual, lately, and it made me realize that I don't really do much in the way of kid-centric posting, anymore. I still raise and interact with my kids all day long, of course. I just don't see a lot that's actually baffling. It's a lot of repetition. Which leads me to a conclusion.

The epiphany is that all those problems? Kid won't eat, kid's eating too much, kid won't sleep, kid hates bath, kid suddenly became cripplingly shy, kid no long respects your authority... that's just stuff kids do, man. They're all completely temporary problems that rarely indicate anything serious, and in the vast majority of cases you can research and network until you're blue in the face and NOTHING YOU DO WILL FIX IT. Time fixes it. You ride it out. That's...it. Even when it IS serious or could be something long term...there's not usually much you can do about that. Except love, nurture, watch, wait.

I was trying to come up with a way to phrase this in someone's post without sounding really stuck up or just increasing her frustration. Because I think it can actually be really, really liberating. I remember dissecting infant-Ananda's reactions to pooping and her sleepy-time sighs to the point of being at the pediatrician once a week. FOR NOTHING. I remember losing my mind about how in the world to keep Aaron off the table or get Isaac to stop scaling the counters, I kept going to forums and communities for ANSWERS and HELP. (the answer is to get them down whenever you see them up there, even if it's ten times an hour, for months, sometimes losing your temper and sometimes refusing to react, until eventually...they outgrow the urge to do that and you realize they haven't been up there for awhile)

With Jake and Elise, it's been kind of a relief to really understand and feel how temporary each of these sorts of things are. To know that in a year, it will definitely be some completely different thing baffling me about them than it is now. Some things DO require a lot of care and research...like, you know, diagnosable mental conditions and rare diseases and such. Major nursing problems that will sabotage the ability to breastfeed or clues that your child has been abused. Mostly, though, parenting young kids involves great heaping doses of love and surviving until they're bigger.

I'm really not advocating apathy as a parenting strategy. I continue to note that when I do less one on one time with anyone, it results in poorer behavioral results for that one. And each kid definitely needs their own tailored strategies. I just stopped wondering what in the world I was doing wrong and using every spare second they were occupied or unconscious to comb the web for solutions...for totally normal stuff that is SUPPOSED to make you nuts because that's what parenting IS. I really don't care anymore about the artificial color I can omit from a diet to help my little one with their really late cradle cap/aversion to long car rides/desire to go barefoot outside when they need shoes on. I fight with my three youngest about bedtime despite their highly consistent routine just like I did their older brother and sister. For an hour or more. While doing other stuff and without a lot of angst because, hello, obviously I'm going to fight with them about it but eventually they'll all simultaneously lay still long enough to surrendur. Then I settle in to watch a movie with Grant or veg out on the computer and I wake up without it even crossing my mind, the next day. Because I really don't think that I suddenly stumbled upon The Solution to Ananda and Aaron's bedtime woes. I stuck with the whole bedtime thing, but that's not really a magical cure. They just got older.



Prediction: I am going to do the same thing when latency ends for Ananda and Aaron and we're on adolescence. Then somewhere around the middle of Isaac's teen years I'll snap out of it and learn to roll with it as Jake slams out of the house or Elise screams at us about injustice. We'll still talk about it, there will still be consequences, but I will no longer be reading "How to pick apart and then micromanage your teen's quirks".




All that said, kid updates:

Ananda has lost interest in riding bikes with me, which is sad. She's developed a new love for Greek yogurt and a renewed aversion to brushing her hair. As part of our budgetary downsizing we've started frequenting the library again, which she is OVER THE MOON about. Also, after a talk with Dance Empire today, they can totally keep going whether we can pay in the immediate future or not, which was a huge relief and a lot of excitement for her. I didn't want them to even know this was a concern until we knew one way or the other, but Grant thought he should talk with them about how they might be dropping out soon in case they did and it was apparently weighing on her a lot. She's having another up-shooting growth spurt and this one has noticeably thinned her out for the first time in awhile. She's looking more graceful than I've ever seen her, and really pretty.

Aaron is kind of meh on the dancing at the moment, back on the unicycle and starting to be able to do all of his chores without any struggle. He's constantly trying to be funny, and is just barely successful enough that I don't kill him for how annoying it is the rest of the time. His obsessions for the week are acquiring spitballs from thinkgeek.com and getting the Christmas stuff out of the attic. Because he has 3 or 4 pairs and they're what he dances in 3 times a week, he seems to ALWAYS be in black basketball shorts and either a black or burgundy tank top. This simple, solid-colored getup only enhances his crazy gorgeousness and general athletic hoohaw.

Both of them are looking forward to a friend's birthday party at the skating rink this weekend and tired of me having a sore throat and not reading to them at night.

Isaac has been less whiny and miserable since we started him on daily probiotics several months ago - thank you commonreader. I will always call you commonreader, there's no fighting it! Anyway, his hair is a quarter inch or so longer than it has been in a year and as such, the orange is creeping back in. He cannot get enough of the Abeka handbook for reading or any of his workbook work...I think he will reading very soon, he spends an exorbitant amount of his free time doing things like writing "HAT" with a hat drawn above it, or laboriously printing the entire (all caps) alphabet. He hates PATH at the park, and every other physical thing, and asks for sedentary things (movies, computer time, sugary snacks and board game competition, mostly) all day long. His two biggest recent issues - hysteria when dropped off anywhere and poop complications - seem to be mostly a thing of the past. He's huge on counting down to things, like Christmas and his birthday and church and whatever else, and sleeps with a St Nicholas medal.

Jake is so awesome that I'm not sure any of the rest of us are cool enough to hang out with him. He wakes up in the morning, stretches, smiles and says, "Good morning Mom. This is going to be a great day." He says hi to everyone we see in the grocery store. He wears giant sunglasses and has a huge afro. He hasn't asked to do things like get himself a snack or go out in our fenced side yard to play in so long I can't remember; he's a free agent. When things are funny or outrageous he gives you "The crazy eyes" which means he opens his eyes wider than I physically can manage, myself, with his mouth turned down and tiny. Generally speaking when you suggest an activity to Jake his reply is, "What a good idea!" and he tells me often that we're best friends. Giving him anything is really gratifying; he accepts anything with joyous surprise and "Thank you so much! That's so nice of you!" and a massive hug. And he shares and plays with, cares for and entertains Elise a lot. He is also the one who will snap and slap when he's angry, on his siblings, and everytime this happens I think to myself, "I'm Rick James, bitch!"

Elise is in all 3 and 4t clothes, and size 10 shoes. She is really, REALLY affectionate. I wonder often if she is really that affectionate, or if she's making up some of the deficit that I can't ever lift her. But she co-sleeps with us for the second half of the night, nurses several times a day, gives me countless squeezy hugs and kisses, hugs and is carried by Annie at least hourly, demands that Grant carry her anytime he is around...it's just normal to find her cuddled with Jake under a blanket, to have her stroking your face, to see her wrapped around my brother's calf like a giant ankle weight...it gets overwhelming sometimes, you just can't sit down without her immediately being in your lap and not just in your lap, but stroking your face, squeezing your neck and kissing you. She hugs and kisses every mobile baby she sees at the park or who is over here, and cradles her dolls, and lays on top of the cat saying "Mama's kitty, and me". I think her two favorite things in the world are to lay in bed under a blanket with me, and to get in the kozy carrier with Grant. Either puts this massive loopy grin on her face like her eyes are about to roll back in her head from ecstasy. She is really not interested in our authority AT. ALL. And gets pretty loud about her disinterest, at times. She continues to be at or above average in pretty much everything.




As for me. Lemme tell you about Starbucks. I go to one particular one pretty often, in the Prius, while A and A dance. It is consistently this bizarrely meat-market-y environment. I mean, for Starbucks. I know I'm more aware of this because it's basically the only place I go without kids anymore, and people perceive me really differently when I have five kids with me and am driving the minivan. But...come on.

There is this one barista guy who always flirts and talks a lot with me when I order; he's harmless and I get the impression that is his personality in general. But like I got some nuts once and he seriously stumbled over double entendres about his own nuts for, like, 2 solid minutes while I waited to pay. I got this one salad twice and then didn't come back for a month, and when I did (on Monday) he yelled to me as soon as I walked in the door, "Oh, no, we're out of farmer's market salads!"

There is also a general thing where everytime I go there is some (different) guy in there alone, either also on a laptop, or more creepily just sitting and staring around - and everytime I glance up, I'm looking into whoever it is eyes. This is somewhat amplified because there is also always AT LEAST one couple there on a date. Who goes on a date to Starbucks? Do people really do this? I mean it seems like a date, a guy in business-casual reeking of cologne and acting nervous and a girl dressed up with a ton of makeup laughing loudly and often.

Today, they were packed, like I was going to have to take my laptop to the bar, which I don't really like for a variety of reasons but oh well, first world problems and all that. But even the bar seat that has an outlet was taken. I eventually found a cushy chair near that seat, when the girl who was sitting in it asked if I wanted to sit there - she had only books - and I was like, oh it's ok, and she was like, no really, come on, right now. Uh, ok. So she ended up scooting only one seat over, and staring at me with a huge smile on her face as I set my stuff up. So we're there on a row of 10 empty bar seats, next to each other, and she's like, touching my arm as she talks and looking into my eyes the whole time she's smiling, with her books seemingly forgotten, and I'm like, trying to subtly position my laptop and body so that she won't glance up and see the insanity I'm writing.

I don't know. It's surreal to step into this environment of people who are seeing me regularly and...don't know I'm a married mother of five who is not normally driving a small red car. And can only possibly focus on my writing for hours if I'm far from my house.

Sidenote: at some point college-aged people started looking...like "kids", to me. I'm only 28 here, wtf? It's kind of like how it was the first time I drove past my old high school at dismissal time when I was about 22, and went "...whoa. Those are...kids. How in the hell was I that age and driving, and pregnant?" What I like about this perception of mine, and how it changes, is that at least thus far, I've stopped seeing people more than a couple of years younger than me as really attractive, and started seeing them as, well, kids, basically. Younger people. My own peer group has stayed the one that looks "normal" to me and seems ideal as far as attractiveness goes. I think 30 year olds must have sort of looked old to me when I was a teenager, but now they totally just look like "normal people". I can't really imagine a 30 year old as seeming old. As opposed to kids (22 and under), or older people (45 and over). Likewise when I see pictures of myself at 17, aside from being horrified at how photogenic I am not, I think I look crazily young and can't believe I was becoming a mother, blah blah blah. There is this "little girl"ness. I don't like, look in the mirror now and go whoa I'm looking old. I actually just look like a grownup now. Which is obviously fine. *shrug* I wonder how long this can hold, is it possible to be 50 and think 30 year olds look like kids and 50 is where the real relatable hotness is? 70? What?

Related: I keep seeing old pictures of current hot celebrities and thinking, wow, they look a lot better now than they did in the 80s. Which is a big leap, to say that an adult has gotten more attractive over the course of 20odd years. But, say, Johnny Depp? Gwen Stefani? I am not talking about people like Madonna who are obviously plastic'd up.

May 2017

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