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Last Night

Last night. Oh last night.

Alden didn’t nap, and his parents weren’t too bright in not factoring that into our plans. We have a houseful coming to celebrate the boys’ birthdays this weekend and so we decided we should just grab dinner out and then hit the grocery store.

It was so early in the night when I felt everything unspooling, but we didn’t seem able to get it back. We absolutely should have abandoned ship and gone home. But we silly parents were convinced we could get it back. We could not.

Picture this: Alden has peed on the floor of the deli. Damon takes off to go buy fresh clothes since we forgot to bring. Alden’s crying. He(understandably) does not want to be in wet clothes. He’s also upset because I won’t put him on my lap because I (understandably) do not want to need a change of clothes myself. Dinner is rapidly cooling on the table. I’m swabbing the floor when I look over to see Alden has pulled his pants and underpants down, but can’t get them over his shoes. He’s crying again. I sit down on the now clean(ish) floor and put my arms around Alden and rock him back and forth, which calms him. I pat his bare bottom and try to maneuver him so he’s not mooning the restaurant. Elliot is starving in his high chair and he starts to cry. Also, he can reach my hair and starts yanking it all out of my head. So now I’m trying to free myself and at the same time rip up little bites of pizza for him, all while still holding on to Alden. Alden wants pizza. I give him a piece (the last one of his tiny kiddie pizza). He drops it on the floor, bottom down. I brush it off and give back to him. Not my finest moment. Two bites later he drops it again, cheese side down. This time I can’t do it. The pizza goes away. More tears.

This is all happening in a restaurant at least half full. I’m taking some comfort that 1) it’s a super-casual place and 2) at least I’m keeping the disaster contained to our table and the volume is low-ish. But really, you couldn’t miss us.

What would I have given for one sympathetic smile? I didn’t expect anyone to leap up and help me clean the floor. I know our kids are no one’s problem but our own. But we were attracting attention and it would have taken my stress level down a few notches to get a little “solidarity sister” gesture among the open stares at the freak show going down.

I promise that if I ever see a mom or dad in those shoes I am going to go hold that baby. I’m going to help clean the floor. I’m going to give the crying two-year-old a piece of my pizza. And if my help isn’t wanted I am at least going to say, “I have been there. Just get out alive. You’ll be fine. Also, your kids are really cute.”

Life List: Progress Report

That c25K program that I’m supposed to start Monday? Yeah, , I need to talk to you about that.

We’re friends here, right? Promise you won’t try too hard to picture me if I tell you I have a raging infection in both eyes. Odds are middling that I’ll even be able to leave the house as soon as Monday, and nil that I can go get my running shoes by then. One week deferral?

I’ve never had pinkeye, corneal scratch, detatched retina, or anything else occular I can muster. Why now? Who knows? I place the blame on preschool. What I do know for sure is that it’s gross and when Damon sees me standing in the shadows (which is always since the light hurts my eyes) he says I look like a vampire or a demon.

There are two other Life List items pending. The herb garden, I confess, is dead. I did grow the herbs, but then I got discouraged when I learned that the cilantro has such a short life. And more discouraged when I started harvesting basil leaves and soon wound up with a little stick plant. I did something wrong there.

It leads to the question: How do I consider an item on my list complete? I know I don’t think I did the garden thing properly. I think I need to start over and trust that I’ll know when it’s accomplished.

As for the recipes, I have a documentation issue. I started by just recording the recipe, the cookbook, and the date. That’s not very satisfying. Do I take a picture of each one? Do I record who ate with me? Tell a story? I don’t know.

Life List: Run a Mile

One. Mile.

This is a modest goal, at least for normal people. I, however, don’t exercise. I’ve flirted with it, but only in that I’m-backpacking-through-Europe-and-you-don’t-speak-English kind of way. I never meant it for more than a few days.

When I was a pre-teen I had exercise-induced asthma. It’s easy to recall all the fine details of an asthma attack I had in a health-club bathroom, alone and laying on the floor like a landed fish. Thus ended my Jazzercise period.

Bopping around to music can be a little bit fun, until it is miserable. Running starts miserable for me. I feel awkward and graceless, like maybe I’m doing it wrong. Not in the sense of imperfect technique, but in the sense that I might be putting my feet down out of order. My arms huddle in by my sides and my shoulders scrunch up around my neck. It’s less like an adorably gangly Bambi on the ice and more like a duffle bag full of laundry falling down the stairs.

Which is why I want to run one mile. I’m so far below average. I just want to rise to a place that isn’t quite so ridiculous. And if I’m a little fitter at the end of the process then that’s a nice bonus.

I think I’m going to try a beginner running plan I found on the Women’s Health site, but I remain open to suggestions. I plan to start, and now it’s in writing, the third week in September.

Things I’m Happily Anticipating

8.6
Summer Fridays at work (God bless media execs and this nutty invention of theirs) mean we’ll get to take off early for our trip to the cabin. Mom’s going with us. I’m thrilled and excited and heartbroken to be going. This is what’s going to pass for visiting my Dad from now on and I’m determined to make it so much more than a sad memorial.

8.15ish
Alden starts preschool. Ay yi yi. After some priveleged-class-style hand wringing we managed to find a school we love. It is, of course, the most expensive one we toured and I’ve got a shiny, healthy kidney for anyone who’s in the market.

9.3
We leave for Disney World. Not much more needs to be said about that except that it’s a good thing I made the down payment (a vacation that requires a down payment!) before we saw Alden’s new tuition sheet.

9.22 & 10.9
Two sweet boy birthdays, for which I currently have a million ideas but no actual plans.

Then it’s the sprint into the holidays. I’ll figure that nonsense out later.

Life List: Get a Gorgeous Family Portrait Taken

I needed a win. I needed an unadulterated victory. And I got it.

BAM!

We’ve been talking about it for a while. We actually went to Atlanta shortly after I wrote that, but our booking got rained out. Stacey offered to vamp up a shoot, but I wasn’t willing to compromise.

Good call.

Two weekends ago we tossed the kids in the car and pelted down to Atlanta to meet Stacey in Grant Park.

The morning went a little bit like this: We fed two boys an early breakfast and then hosed them down. We decided everyone would go to the park dressed and ready, except for Alden. His clothes were rumple-able, so he would ride in his underpants. I’d carefully picked our clothes to be nice, but not formal. Complementary, but not matchy. Neutral, but not dull. Then as I stood at the door with Elliot on my hip, he pooped explosively and torched both my outfit and his. So you may notice that Alden and Damon look ready to go to brunch while Elliot and I look like we’re ready to hit the gym. Improvisation, it’s the central pillar of motherhood. I actually had to dig through our host’s daughter’s closet for a top for myself that didn’t clash horribly. And I faked a bra with a sport tank from the same closet. If you’re wondering why I didn’t have a backup outfit… I can only manage one layer of planning.

So my outfit is wonky. The heat and humidity committed atrocities on my hair not containable by simple ponytail holder. I love the photo. It’s perfect. I’m askew, imperfectly prepared, a little out of synch. All of that is absolutely true of me right now. I love that our photos capture that, but in a compassionate way.

The whole preview set is on Stacey’s blog.