Monday, November 20, 2006

my many distractions

I was wondering why my mind was in so many places, why I couldn't focus on much of anything, when I realized I have too many things to think about and too many things I am involved in. It is only natural to be distracted when I have created hundreds of distractions of my own accord. Well, maybe distraction is not a term to be used for things like child-rearing, housekeeping, crocheting or whatever. But what happens is that I become preoccupied with all the other things while I am supposed to be doing something else. Like mentally restoring my dining room when I am not in the room and have no option to work on it. Or mentally crocheting scarves for the entire sphere of my acquaintance when I am really surfing the web. If only I had little gnomes to putter around and do stuff for me as I think of them, or at least a handy piece of paper attached to my person so I could write what has been happening in my head. And a pen...

Even now, I am writing emails in my mind, calling D on the phone, and thinking about vacuuming the living room to get ready for putting up our little christmas tree. But before that, I have to clean the toys up, put the furniture out of the way, lug the old vacuum out of the upstairs (which also needs a deep cleaning), and that reminds me of the advent calendar ornaments I made for us, which are still in the process of being made (d'oh!) and I forgot to get candy to put in them today and on and on.

And then my eye starts twitching.

Breathe.

There are some good things that have held my attention lately, and made long hours go quickly. I have listened to two Charles Dickens novels on tape recently (Great Expectations and A Tale of Two Cities), read by excellent actors who turn Dickens' ponderous descriptions into the works of art they really are. I find when I am reading Dickens, I don't breathe well because his sentences are so long that I feel I am reading them aloud and can't breathe until a comma or the end of the sentence. These actors are more than a match for the great Dickens' verbosity, and have reawakened my love for the author. I read as much of his work as I could stomach in high school, Bleak House being my favorite by far, and I am amazed at his ability to create such unique individuals--scores of them, sometimes in the same book (Bleak House has about seventy characters). As they are read aloud, each has a unique voice as well.

Dickens' most enduring theme is Squalor. It is its own character, in a way, the varied forms it takes and the stark contrasts with Plenty, embodied by both callous and kind individuals in every work. I have wept many times reading his descriptions of the degradations of children, the weakest of the weak, bearing the worst of all the miseries in his books. He had the courage to shove it in the face of his readers over and over, and was at least successful in reforming schools in the country (like ones in Nicholas Nickelby and David Copperfield), which substituted care and instruction with abuse, starvation, and neglect.

This shouldn't be comforting, and it isn't. All the same, it is a relief to my mind when I think about how evil and depraved our world is, how much suffering is in the world and in my own crumbled city, and know that it isn't getting worse; it's just changing its form with time and technology. The same murderous barbarism that wipes out villages in the Sudan was at work in the French Revolution, with Spanish Conquistadors, in the trenches of WWI. More people are being killed at once, yes, and it is an evil that everyone will answer for who participates in it, but it is at its root the same evil, the same intensity and the same unfettered mania that consumes the killers. I am quite sure that if the barbarians running the French Commune had death camps at their disposal, they would have gladly put them to use.

With all this Squalor, though, is a keen sense of justice throughout every Dickens novel. You know the most evil of the characters will have some spectacular, crushing blow that will take down the entire edifice they have built of miseries. That one little thing will destroy the carefully crafted lies and leave them bare to disgrace. That all things will work out to the good of those you love in the book, even though they will bear the scars of the catalogue of pain leading up to the denouement.

And there will be at least one person who bears a striking resemblance to another, remarkably different person, which will lead to the discovery of an orphan's lost parent, a lover's child, or what have you. I think it's the one weakness (albeit an enjoyable one) that Dickens has. I'm always waiting for the "he-looks-like-someone-I-knew-in-my-dark-past" discovery. Ah well. One must indulge the Master his little fancies.

And here I have gotten myself Distracted by a long-winded treatise on Dickens.

Here's an article by Peggy Noonan, which I wish to heaven that I had written. I couldn't agree more with her views about grace being sorely lacking and sorely needed in this time. In all times, really, but especially now. And I agree especially that people haven't been able to complete a sentence in ten years, what with all the obnoxious talking-over of reporters, "interviewers," and combative Maury Povitch paternity-test monstrosities (it was on at the gym the other day, and I was disgusted. Here are these women with several children and their deepest desire is to find the father of one of them, but they just don't know who it could be. It could be one of five different men, ten different men, UGH!!!!! It breaks my heart and makes me ill. And these men are unmitigated scumbags). Anyhow, this article should be required reading for all in positions of power, and people whose job it is to hold them accountable in a civil way.

Alright, off to tackle my distractions. Thanks for reading this novel.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

little quizzes

this is circulating in my email, and I thought I'd put it out to the general public instead of fwding. Not a big fan of the fwd, really.

Things You May Not Have Known About Me:
Four jobs I've had in my life:
  1. framing associate at prints plus (mall job at the McDonalds of frame stores)
  2. historical society rep on the Minnie V oysterboat (too long to explain for the minimal money I got doing it)
  3. art teacher
  4. freelance artist/crochet designer
Four movies I would (and do) watch over and over:
  1. back to school (you elitist fraternity scumbag!)
  2. adventures in babysitting ("and then he kissed meeeeee!")
  3. sense and sensibility
  4. ferris bueller (oh Ed, you sounded just like dirty harry!)
Four places I have lived:
  1. Baltimore MD...sigh...
  2. Brooklyn, NY
  3. Rome, Italy
  4. Annandale, VA
Four TV shows I love (or would love) to watch:
  1. Lost
  2. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
  3. Battlestar Galactica (if I didn't have an anxiety attack with every episode!)
  4. Firefly (insert Chinese epithet here)
Four Places I have been on Vacation:
  1. Estes Park, CO (honeymoon. woot!)
  2. two small towns in Tuscany, Italia
  3. Camden, ME
  4. London, England (hail, britannia!)
Four of my favorite foods:
  1. complete English breakfast (sausages, baked beans, rasher, stewed tomatoes, toast, and eggs--and black pudding though I don't want to know what's in it)
  2. cherries
  3. chocolate covered raisins/cherries
  4. cheese fondue
Four of my favorite books (a bit redundant from a previous quiz, but hey):
  1. The Bible, God (and others)
  2. Lord of the Rings, Tolkein
  3. The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoyevsky
  4. Bleak House, Dickens
Four friends I think will respond with their 'All About Me' list:
  1. lell--but you've probably already done this one ;)
  2. alecia?
  3. laura
  4. michelle?
And this one below is on Lella's blog. Proof that I am a smarty-pants (better than a dumbutt?). I don't know where they get the algebra stuff, but we're always having those metaphysical conversations over chicken nuggets...

Are You a Slacker Mom?

Your quiz results make you a Smarty Pants Mom

Smart parents like you have smart kids. They need plenty of intellectual stimulation and you provide them with all they need, plus lots of love. You know how to help them with algebra homework, and you are superior at kissing boo-boos.

Take this free personality test by Clicking Here>> or going to www.areyouaslackermom.com

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

c'mon lil fellas

Recent quotes from A, so I don't forget them. He cracks me up.

"C'mon lil fellas," he said to his mac and cheese, as he was pushing them onto his spoon.

Hoppo-pitimus. Rather like Runny Babbit, eh lell?

Suit-labor. His term for a light saber.

"I doon't knoo." His version of "I don't know." I am not sure who the Scotsman is he's hanging with, but as long as he doesn't call me a bloody wee git, we'll be fine.

"What happened to her pee-pee?" said upon seeing his little friend L after she forgot to put her underpants back on. He literally turned his head sideways in puzzlement to try and find it. Hm. The beginning of awkward questions.

And fill-in-the-blank with any joke involving the name Woody, as he received a Woody doll for his birthday, and has no idea of the goldmine of 7th grade humor it provides.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

le birthday partay


Instead of lying comatose on my bed with a half-drunk beer on the bedside table, I am surprisingly awake after A's birthday extravaganza today. Maybe it was all the sugar.

We had several friends and family over, a MOUNTAIN of playdoh and pizza, and birthday cake with an inch of buttercream icing on it. DEELISH! A turned 3 on Sunday (remember, remember the 5th of November--I'll never forget it, that's for sure!), and thoroughly enjoyed himself today. I was wondering if he'd be cranky, because he woke up several times last night when we got back from seeing The Prestige, a singularly disturbing movie about 19th century magicians and their obsessive revenge against each other. I had bad dreams like A, all about guys drowning in tanks of water. I preferred The Illusionist, with Edward Norton, in story, but Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale are almost gorgeous enough to forgive the maniacal way their characters behaved. Plus Scarlett Johannson is a babe.

The birthday party was quite well-timed with the renovation of the dining room, if I say so myself. As I have no fear of making the walls look any worse, I put paper all over them for the kids to draw, use stamps, and color as they chose. And the stuff's washable, so really no harm done. Then, we had quite a lot of fun with the new playdoh sets A got from friends, and I continue to be amazed at the relative hush that falls as kids are mushing the stuff into molds, extruding spaghetti and mixing the colors. And the smell! Oh, ecstasy! They could do some serious mind control if they sprayed that scent into a room: "MUST...EAT...SALTY...DOUGH...MUST...PULL...PIGTAILS...MUST...TATTLE...ON...BADGUYS"

(room update as well: I decided on a warm pumpkin color for the top part of the wall, and the deep cerulean for below the chair rail. white trim, and buttery warm yellow for the kitchen. all match my smurf collection and paintings quite nicely!)

The weather today was absolutely gorgeous--warm, breezy, totally atypical of the cold wood-smoky air we normally have this time of year. So I was thrilled to have all the messiest parts of the party outside on the porch (thank you becky!! you saved my life!--and my carpet!). Double benefit because the kids could run off half the sugar they consumed in the yard.

My best friend's older boys weren't bored either, as they got to play Lego Star Wars downstairs most of the time, which is a great game and such fun to see them excited about.

A only had one or two crying episodes, which is great for such an exciting day. He drew deep blue marker all over his hands and said he was Spiderman, and stamped red stampers alllll over his arms, so he looked like some sort of pox victim. What more does one want for a birthday bash?

I am so thankful for him, and D, and all my excellent friends and family. I am also grateful for my health, which was so poor for so long after he was born. I had thought that constant pain would be the norm for me, and I don't have any now. Praise God!

Thursday, November 09, 2006

recycling day

I am so happy that tomorrow morning the recycling trucks are coming. Not because I feel some civic smugness about "doing my part for the environment." I'd bet money, rather, that there's just some other landfill somewhere else that holds all my carefully-sorted waste.

No, I am thrilled to be rid of this lot, as half of it consists of campaign literature--if I can disgrace the word literature to describe the glossy patriotic filth that was shoved through the mail slot every single day for months. My mother-in-law is happy too; she works for the post office, and it's been busier than Christmas there with all the tripe going out. It's all classified as First Class Post, so it has to be in and out the same day, and they've been working around the clock, carriers breaking their backs, with twice as much stuff circulating.

I honestly didn't read much of it at all. D, responsible citizen that he is, read most of it and put it in a neat pile. What's the point, though? I'd sooner get truth from The Globe or Soap Opera Weekly. At least they don't have an incentive to seriously demonize anyone but the Villain of the Week, and that merely serves to boost viewership. No, there's not much to learn from your average leaflet going out:

JIM SCHMUCKBERGER HATES YOUR CHILDREN [picture of cute child playing innocently with simple blocks]. (Turn over leaflet to see in bold print, and photoshopped picture of Schmuckberger training at an al Qaeda camp:)

Jim Schmuckberger is the father of lies. In his 2-year term of office, he has consistently voted to turn your local school into a death camp, received campaign contributions from Wahabbi terrorists, and when he's not luxuriating in his taxpayer-funded yacht, he's drinking goat blood in a pentagram made of baby skulls. Is this really the best we can do?

Vote for John Shiney. He alone can pull us from the abyss in which we find ourselves. As your new county councilman, he will single-handedly end the war on terror, negotiate peace with North Korea, and unveil his breakthrough research to cure cancer once and for all. All with one stem cell from his beloved comatose grandmother's eyelashes.

John Shiney. The clear choice for County Council.


Below is a cartoon I found on one of my favorite sites to visit, Daryl Cagle's Professional Cartoonist's Index. If you're ever unsure of what's in the news, just browse the "daily cartoons" section and find out everything people are talking about, without the constant tickertape across the bottom, idiotic raving (mostly), and self-satisfied vultures crooning about the latest national tragedy. It's probably the only site that can honestly call itself "fair and balanced."