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kellyinrepeat
mom, wife, artist, writer, teacher, dog lover, pie maker, who believes that all things are possible
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Join us Tonight! It’s Show Time.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged art, art opening, drawing, gallery, painting, pius xi, school of visual arts
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Lost, but Bouncing Back
William’s school picture came back. So did Luke’s. We are still waiting for Lizzie’s, but I will tell you right now that no matter what that photo looks like, the image that will forever be burned in my mind from her eighth grade year will be from tonight: dark, raccoon mascara, streaming down her pale, wet face, hair, frizzy with sweat.
They lost the Seton. Seton is the biggest (28 teams) volleyball tournament of the Fall season, and for Lizzie, the very last volleyball game that she will play with the girls she has grown up with, the girls she has played with for four years. They easily won round one last night, but tonight was not in their favor. Seton winners win the best of five games before advancing. Lizzie’s team won the first one . . . a very cool and exciting victory after being down 18-10. They lost the second by four and the third by three. They needed, desperately, to win round four.
I sat, Quinn on my lap, my parents on either side of me, and the noise was so crazy that Quinn buried his sweet little toddler head in my shirt to block out the cowbells and cheers. William and his good friend, Sam, sat on the crowded floor, with spray painted red and white hair, shouting. Lizzie’s team, down by five came back to tie it up 23-23. We lost the next point 24-23, but it was the final point that broke my heart. It was served deep, likely out, right past Lizzie, where she reached, with regret, to hit it with one hand, barely grazing it, down to the floor. So yes, the last game of Lizzie’s grade school career was lost with one instinctual reach to the right. After that, knowing they’d lost, Lizzie fell to her knees and collapsed into tears.
Her coach lifted her up, reminded her to lose with empathy, and her teammates, her close friends since the time she was four, huddled around her and squeezed her with all their love. She will never, ever forget that moment. She did not want to go to the restaurant with the team afterwards. She wanted, she said, to go to Grandma’s and cry in her bathtub.
I told her that I understood the pull to do that, but that it might be better to eat and laugh with her friends, to let them lift her up. So we all sat, in a Mexican restaurant in Waukesha, and we let that happen. We let her exhale and rebound while she watched slow motion clips of her kills on someone’s iphone.
Last week, after we won the St. Joe’s tournament, I think all of us believed we could win the Seton. I was so inspired by the St. Joe’s game that I immediately painted about it. I just priced that painting for my show this week, but after tonight, I think it might not be for sale.
I never really played sports. I have never enjoyed watching professional sports. I never went to a game in college, never to a Packer game . . . nor do I have the desire to do so. Watching Lizzie, though . . . I could watch her for a thousand years and never tire. When she missed that last point, maybe I should have felt sad for her, but what I felt was so proud. I think anytime that you get to witness someone you love, fighting with all their heart, that it is a gift.
Later in the evening a bunch of parents went out for shots and while we were gone, Lizzie’s good friend Anna, a non-volleyball player, heard through the texting grapevine, about what happened, so at ten o’clock at night on this cold evening in October, she knocked on our front door and when Lizzie answered, Anna just reached out to hug her and Lizzie sobbed.
I hope that what Lizzie will remember is not that last missed point, but instead, that hug. There will be lots of games, more teams to play on, more life to live, but in that life, there are very few people that will show up on your doorstep and catch you when you are falling. I am thrilled that Lizzie is talented and athletic and smart (and I am ecstatic that we kicked St. Joe’s ass), but what I am most grateful for is that she is loved.
The whole thing makes me just want to start up some adult kickball league or something…just to hear people cheering my name. This has been a hard week for me. After dropping all my work off for the show, I have been having kind of a postpartum depression. Like I gave birth to this work and I have no idea what I am doing or if it is okay and the panic and stress of that doubt has sent me into a spinning and sad place. But tonight, Lizzie showed me what the human spirit is capable of and whether she knows it or not, the pride I feel in watching her live her life fully, restores my own spirit.
God bless volleyball and my lucky number 7.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged artist, athletes, friendship, motherhood, Seton, sports, the Seton, volleyball
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Happy Re-Birthday, David
“Always remember there is nothing worth sharing than the love that let us share our name.” -The Avett Brothers
I am sitting in a cold parking lot outside a grocery store. I am supposed to be at Lizzie’s last team volleyball game, but I dropped her off and drove to this lot and started to cry instead.
Today is the third anniversary of David’s death. He was killed, instantly, suddenly, without a glimpse of warning, in a car accident that involved speed and a curved road, a best buddy, and alcohol. The details of what followed are too sad to account here and frankly, are not my story to tell.
Today our family is gathering to celebrate David. A lot has happened since that awful day when my dad had to walk up his sister’s driveway and tell her the news. Quinn came home from the hospital, Lolo died, David’s first nephew was born, Jenny moved home, Luke fell in love, Noel married James … But I think what we are celebrating today is not just David’s life, but the way his death gave birth to all sorts of changes in us. We also celebrate his birth into death, and the image I hold in my mind is one from his funeral.
His funeral had a huge screen playing pictures on it and the one that got to me was one of his mom and dad walking through the front door of their home with him for the first time. To this day I have not ever seen a photograph where a face was beaming the way Sue’s (his momma’s) face was in that shot. Every new mom knows that feeling. It is the day you fall in love in a way you did not even imagine possible.
So today, I just imagine David’s birth into death like this: I imagine David in God’s hands…God walking through the doorway of heaven with David’s beautiful soul in his hands. I find myself grateful and blessed to have known and loved his sweet self.
Today I ask that anyone reading this hold our family in your hearts, but especially David’s mom, dad, brother, and sister, who were reborn this week, three years ago.
Ironically enough, when I called David’s little sister, Jenny, to check in on her and to offer her comfort on the night she heard the news, she was in a cold parking lot in front of a grocery store, crying.
Maybe, Jen, that I got distracted from volleyball and ended up here was no accident. I am thinking that David is saying hello.
Quinn is three and that means that even though I thought I was done trick-or-treating and figuring out costumes, I am not done. I didn’t even get a breather… just as the older kids got too cool for it, I have another one waiting.
I love Fall and I love the place where we trick-or-treat. All the houses are “done up” and we go at night, when it is good and crisp and spooky. Quinn loved it last year, but since then, child development has taken over and now, it seems, Halloween might be a bit too scary.
He has insisted, for weeks now, that he wants to be a pumpkin. “I AM GOING TO WEAR A PUMPKIN COSTUME AND I AM NOT GOING TO CHANGE MY MIND,” he has squealed a dozen times. I keep hoping he will forget about this idea or actually change his mind anyway because I think a pumpkin costume is stupid. Plus, I bought this little outfit from Etsy this summer for him to wear to Katie’s wedding, but when it arrived it was really ugly and I could not return it so I told Quinn he could wear it as part of a clown costume. “I DO NOT WANT TO BE A CLOWN. I WANT TO BE A PUMPKIN AND I AM NOT GOING TO CHANGE MY MIND.”
Today, the Sunday before trick-or-treat weekend, I gave in. I shopped all day. I bought a bunch of stuff to make a pumpkin costume and then returned it because I found one already assembled and, whatever, it’s a pumpkin. During my hunt, William called and reminded me that he and his friends are going to wear morph suits for Halloween and can I please buy one? I went to three stores to find one. The black ones are sold out everywhere, so he texted that “red is fine.” I brought it home and the piece that covers his head is too small and so his neck shows. He said, “That’s okay. I will just go to Halloween as a broken condom.”
I texted a photo of the found, pre-made, stupid pumpkin suit to Elizabeth and told her to show Quinn and ask him if he really, for sure, wanted to be this exact costume for Halloween. She texted back that he replied, “YES. YEAH. YAY. I AM GOING TO BE THAT PUMPKIN.”
I bought it and spent the rest of the day trying to find a pair of black boots that will actually zip up to my knees. I do this every goddamned Fall and I was hopeful that after dropping weight that this year I would actually find some, but nope. Black boots are still too small for my calves. The good news is that the manmade ones now seem to zip. Leather, I guess, just is not ready for me yet. I finally returned home with a new purse and ankle boots. Luke said the purse looks like it belongs to Gene Simmons. I took that as a compliment, but am pretty sure it was not meant to be one.
Anyway, I walked in the door with pumpkin suit in hand and shouted, “Quinn! Quinn! It is here! Your pumpkin suit is in the dining room.” He toddled in, took one look at it and said, “I am not wearing that! It has eyes! I hate it.” I tried to reason with him for a bit until he said, “No. I hate it. I will just wear gloves to Halloween.” William told him that if he did not wear his costume that he could not have candy. Quinn said, “You get the candy. I want to be home.”
I then made the mistake of showing him the new thermal I purchased for him that is decorated with tiny skulls. Too scary. I lied and said that they were not skeletons, they were cats, but he was not buying it. I gave in, collapsed on the couch and he crawled up on my lap. “Mommy?” I looked at down at him. “I really like you, but I am not wearing that pumpkin suit.”
I am pretty sure that this is the real reason that costumes are not returnable. It’s okay. Maybe we can shove the dog in it.
This has been a busy, busy October for me. My head, most nights is spinning. I usually quiet it, not through mediation or stillness, but with vodka and episode after episode of The Good Wife. I cuddle up in my bed, late, late at night, dog under my knees, Quinn to my left, snoring, and I push the Hulu Plus app on my phone and zone into oblivion with Alicia Florrick. I know I should possibly be quieting my mind in another way, visualizing, dreaming bigger, something …
But when I close my eyes and try to focus, try to just be, all I think about are the million things that need attending: volleyball tournaments, volleyball fees (did I tell you that Lizzie made Sting as an outside hitter?), parent conferences, college visits, the November show, the youngARTS deadline, the order I need to place for ink, the falling apart house, my closet that is spilled all over my floor, the laundry that never stops spinning, the bright orange postcard that came for the third time in a row announcing a recall on my car… Even these things, these little petty things that eat away at my mind, are just distractions, aren’t they? If I let myself think deeper or about things that are very sad, like how my friend Mark is very sick with cancer or how my mom still likely needs surgery or about the shortcomings of my own relationships … I find that these thoughts are all just too much right now and that even writing a sentence about them out loud makes me feel like I have swallowed my food whole and it has landed in a cement circle at the bottom of my stomach.
When my life gets like this it always makes me think about the last months of Lolo’s life and how so many of them were spent in silence, staring. I wonder if in that time, she let it all soak in and then, finally, in a fatal attempt, released it.
Exhausted, yes, but things are not all bad. Sean and I went to a dive bar and exchanged stories about his recent trip to Jersey and my tales of the kids. The Avett Brothers released Magpie. My Birchbox came in the mail. I made really good chili. I ate Indian food with Haley. Sean replaced a window that has been boarded up for years and he tore down William’s broken bedroom wall. I lost a pound. I finished all of my drawings for the show and am even okay with the fact that they won’t be framed. William’s team won a game. Lizzie’s broken finger seems to be healing. Lots and lots of things on the upswing … and in truth, if the worst thing that happened this weekend is that I wasted $17.00 on an orange pillow with eyes, then so be it. I am not going to change my mind.
Inside Out, Moons and Igloos
The group show is less than a month away and one thing I have learned about myself is that if I am making art, I cannot write. It is so weird. Writing is extroverted, drawing, introverted… At least that is how it is for me. Put them together and I am just inside out. So writing will resume full force once the show is done and I am no longer hunched over the dining room table, Quinn at my side, drawing and painting and playing. In the meantime, here is a sneak peek of some new works (and thanks, Q, for only drawing on ONE of the new pieces and not the whole stack:

And here is Quinn, working along beside me. He says he loves drawing and that he loves the way I draw moons and igloos. He drew moons tonight too.
Posted in Drawings
Tagged art, artist, drawing, motherhood, painting, toddler, writing
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3:59
Things have been chaotic and intense, but I did want to let you all know this:
Yesterday at 3:59pm, finally, my mom’s biopsy results came back and the 1″ nodule nesting in her thyroid is indeed just a momma worry lump. Benign and fine. Yay. Three cheers to not dying.
That was a long wait, wasn’t it?
Will write again when life settles a bit or when my head stops spinning. Thank you for all of your good momma wishes. She is gonna be okay.
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It’s a Brand New World and Louis CK is Not Playing
My uncle is in the hospital and my kids are sick and the last thing I should probably be doing is blogging, but I have nervous energy right now and there is only so much of The Good Wife that I can watch and each time I log onto Facebook someone else has liked or shared that damn Louis C.K. interview about cell phones.
I have made lots of decisions in my parenting life about technology. My kids do not have gaming systems anymore. We do not have live TV. I did not buy a minivan with a TV in it because for heavens sake if you cannot take a car ride without watching television, then you have a serious problem. Watching the rain drizzle down windows and learning that the moon follows you as you drive? Precious!
I have also been to restaurants and have witnessed two parents, two pre-teen children, all plugged into iPads and iPhones, none of them engaging in conversation or even looking at each other. So I get it, Louis C.K. I get that kids being plugged in at all times is probably not ideal.
However, a phone is a phone. Smart phones do lots of cool things (like make your interview with Conan explode into cyberspace). William has edited some pretty kick ass videos, connected with other kids from all over the world, shared his modeling portfolio with clients, and on top of it, can easily get in touch with me if he is lost or hurt or running late. Plus, he is my go-to-guy for cool new apps. If he turns out to be a kid who does not make eye contact or understand what it means to be empathetic, then that is my fault, not the phone’s fault.
Giving a phone to a kid before they are in high school has let me, while my kids still like me and are willing to listen to me, the ability to help them navigate social media discussions. What is appropriate? What is out of line? It is an opportunity to teach and to guide them into a world that does not even exist yet. Plus, if it weren’t for the damn PBS kids app, I would never survive four hours of volleyball with Quinn. Three games he can watch. Four? Where is Cat in the Hat?
I work with a ton of teenagers. If you want to know which ones hate their mothers, which ones sneak around, which ones repeatedly make bad decisions, it is frequently the ones whose parents try to control and monitor every single aspect of their adolescence. I am sure there are a ton of great reasons not to buy your kid a smart phone. They are expensive, for one. Maybe you read an article on their negative impact on growing brains. Whatever the reason is, I get it. But if you are going to use a phone by dangling the idea of a phone over their heads or use a phone as punishment or make phones seem really “grown up”, or make four thousand rules around the phone, then you have a long ass high school battle ahead of you. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.
I used to babysit for a couple in New York who only ate organic natural foods. Their pantry looked like the famers market. When they told their kids “no soda,” I respected that because they were living their message. I had zero respect for the mom who always barked “no soda” at her daughter as she downed a diet Coke. I just think that if Louis C.K. thinks smart phones are the devil, then he should not have one either.
The last few Sunday’s I have wandered into Target or the grocery store, only to realize that 90% of the people around me were wearing Packers jersey’s. I have never watched a football game in my life. A game, of any sort, sans the Olympics, has never been on the TV in my house (though back when we had live TV, I think William might have watched at Marquette game or two). Still, when I have that realization that the rest of Wisconsin is tuned into a football game, I always find myself thinking that this seems like a giant waste of time. You could be drawing or reading or baking or hiking or inventing a recipe or walking your dog or meditating or learning piano . . . I mean, seriously, how many hours do you spend watching strangers play ball?
See, there are lots of ways you can zone out. If you play Words with Friends for three hours in a row, well, waste of time, watch endless amounts of NFL, kind of a time killer, but if, like Lizzie did last week, you use your phone to see how many photographs you can take that illustrate the word “truth,” than that seems to be a creative use of your time. Could she do the same thing with a camera? Sure. Would she? Not when it is so easy for her to document, edit, and share her results immediately. That would be like choosing a butter knife to cut your steak.
Plus, I like that she follows her cousins in Colorado. I like that she can connect with a family that she would not really know otherwise. Her phone is a tool. She uses it like a tool. She also plays volleyball, reads, runs, and has deep conversations with me about God and the universe and what it all really means.
Bottom line, I agree with Louis C.K. that “everything is amazing and nobody is happy.” I just don’t think the reason behind our universal depression or our failure as parents is the phone. It’s football.
No. No it is not, but that was pretty funny, right? Did you LOL reading this on your phone?
It’s a brand new world. TTYL
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Conan, football, kids and smart phones, lazy, life, Louis C.K, Louis C.K interview on Conan, Louis C.K iphone rant, motherhood, NFL, Packers, parenting, phone rules, rules, smart phones, technology, wisconsin
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Teddy Roosevelt and My Dad, Getting Me From Friday to Monday
“Be loud let your colors show Try to keep the madness low…” -The Avett Brothers
Luke had four wisdom teeth pulled on Thursday afternoon. He was loopy from the anesthesia, which was pretty funny to witness. The nurses kept trying to shove gauze in his mouth, but he would not let them and kept giving them the finger and sticking his bloody tongue out at them. He would not stop taking pictures of himself with his phone until I said, “LUKE! If you do not let these nurses stop the bleeding then you cannot drive to see Haley this weekend.” That did it. He shut up, but kept doing charades and I kept giggling because his behavior was the complete opposite of his day to day self and then giggled harder because the nurses did not seem to think any of it was really funny.
Friday was a blur of a workday, followed by an hour long pediatrician appointment for William (annual check up) at which a toddler in the waiting room threw up, which made me feel empathetic and irritated simultaneously. Will has grown 4 1/2″ this year and also got four shots and a finger poke, including a tetanus shot, an hour prior to his volleyball game (ouch). Between picking him up from school, transporting him to the doctor, picking Lizzie up from practice, dropping Lizzie off at home, picking Luke up, and driving all the way to Germantown for a game, I did not have time to pee or eat or really breathe. In fact when I think about it, the only thing I ate between Wednesday and Saturday was a handful of Trader Joe’s crackers, some swiss cheese, two apples, and a bag of almonds. Oh, nope, I did make a kale smoothie for Luke and me the morning of surgery. That must be what got me through.
I missed part of the first match because I was out of gas (go figure) and knew that if I turned my car off and tried to get it back on again, it likely would not start, so Luke and I hightailed it to a gas station where I filled the tank and purchased $26 worth of soft foods for his weekend with Haley (tip: do not buy hot mac n’ cheese from a gas station). When I returned to the game, I saw the score was 23-23. The team ended up losing by one point (which, in volleyball is really two). Second game, same thing. This is the third week in a row that they have lost in close matches and I think between the tetanus shot and the fact that Luke was there to watch his game, William just broke down. I could see, from across the gym, tears falling down his face, shoulders shaking, while his coach talked to the team. I sent Luke over to deliver a Gatorade and when I asked Luke what the coach was saying he said, “He was asking, do you want to go out like warriors, like champions, or do you want to give in now?” They won the third match. I guess that was the answer to his question.
After the game Will and I drove Luke to Fond du Lac to meet Haley’s mom, who drove him the rest of the way to New London. He left us, with his puffy face and bleeding gums, to do two things: surprise Haley by officially asking her to homecoming, and then be there to cheer her on during her cross country meet. On the way there he said, “All I want to do is be with my girlfriend, watch movies, and rest.” 
On the car ride home, William and I were both starving and we could not find a restaurant anywhere and each time we followed a highway sign to a place that advertised food, we could not find the damned restaurant. He started to get really crabby, filled still with vaccines and sweat and tears. He punched the seat and I turned on the radio. After fifteen minutes of driving he said, when her song came on, “Miley Cyrus is a whore.” I sighed and explained that he does not even know Miley Cyrus and that all artists take risks and sometimes those risks bomb and even though I am not a fan of her recent performances, I cannot imagine the pressure it must be like to be her and how it must feel when people like Madonna and Cher, who wish they could still swing naked on a ball in a music video, bash her. I said, “You can criticize her work, but the fact that a twelve year old boy who does not even know her, is in the middle of a dark freeway in the middle of fucking nowhere and thinks it is okay to slight her character by calling her a whore is just not okay and it is not nice.” Then we found a Taco Bell.
As a side note, when I was in college, one student did a performance for her final project. She took off her shirt, sat cross legged and naked on our professors desk, and played a looped tape which said, “Nice tits. Nice tits. Nice tits.” Ah, art school. Gotta love it. Still, if you have ever gone to art school you will know that every twenty year old girl goes through their sex and naked stage and that girl who did that performance (whose name I do not recall, but I can certainly imagine her tits) is well into her forties now and probably still thinks about that day and now thinks, “What the fuck was I thinking?” Miley will too. She is not a whore, just young.
Today has just been one big suck fest, most of it spent in the car. I feel like explaining it all to you would just be boring because 95% of it was spent in the car and the other 5% was spent screaming at my kids (I kind of lost it when I asked for help and got the eye roll).
Quinn and I did eat a nice dinner together at Noodles and then went to Target to stock up on Fall clothes for him. He fell in love with a pack of Spiderman socks and he carried them around the store for over an hour. When we got in the car I put his new robot pajamas on him and then opened the pack of socks. Even though they were labeled 3T, they would not have fit a six month old. He was so sad. We walked back in to return them and he exchanged them for pair of plain blue slippers.
I don’t know that any of this is interesting to you or why you would care about my kids or my life or that my weekends are spent driving four kids around and buying groceries. For a long time, my dad was encouraging me to write and I asked him why anyone would ever want to read it and he just said, “for the same reason anyone reads anything.” Martina says I need to get out of my head. Martina also told me, “there is not yet mastery of your thinking/feeling state. Your emotions are still “owning” you- making your body the master of your mind instead of vice versa- which is the place of Empowerment.” Martina is moving to Arizona in two years, which doesn’t give me a whole lot of time to figure this shit out.
I will say this, the reason that I am sitting here in the dark right now at 10:13 on a Saturday night, in my underwear and a ponytail, writing to no one in particular when I have a million other things that I should be doing is because of the same thing my dad wrote to William when he felt so emotional after match two. He posted this on Facebook:
To William, who lost a close match tonight, from Teddy Roosevelt (and your Grandpa):
“The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena; whose face is marred by sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotion, spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement; and who at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who have never tasted victory or defeat.”
“The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena; whose face is marred by sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotion, spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement; and who at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who have never tasted victory or defeat.”
Whether it is me, writing, or William facing the third futile game, or Miley Cyrus twerking up a storm … at least we are all playing back. If you are out there and you are curled up on a clump on the couch and you are frustrated with the demands of parenthood or work or your boss your just the directions on a box of noodles, find time to play back. There is an artist in each of us and, as long as Godspell is still in the air, remember that you are indeed, “the city of God.”
Ack. The Sickness. It has Arrived.
I can never remember what day it is anymore. Apparently, it is September 17th, which means that it takes exactly three weeks after starting school for my kids to start getting sick. Poor Quinn. The only lingering sadness from his premature birth is that whenever he gets a bad cold, he gets asthma too, and so tonight I had to attack him with nasal spray and a nebulizer and you would have thought I was slaughtering him. He squealed and protested and cried fat, snotty tears, wailing, “NOOOOOOOO,” and then when it was all over and his face was just a wet mess of mucus and saltwater, he said, “I want you. I want yooouuu.”
Sigh. This has been the weirdest day. On my way to work, Luke and I noticed this old man a car ahead of us in the right hand turn lane. He looked like he was either jamming out to his favorite song or was pounding his fists in anger. I told Luke not to stare at him when we passed him because he was really odd. When the light turned I drove straight up the hill and minutes later this crazy loon of a man who used to be in the right lane was honking and honking at me from behind. He pulled up next to my car and motioned for Luke to roll down the window. I thought I must have had a flat or something. When we rolled the window down he screamed, “Are you trying to run me into all the poles?!” The rest of the story is stupid, but ends with me telling him to fuck off. Seriously, it was not even 7:30 AM.
I left school at four, picked up Quinn at 4:15, pulled into the driveway with a sleeping Q at 4:50 and then had this running dialogue in my head: “Okay, I have ten minutes before I have to get Will from volleyball and Luke from rehearsal. If I wake Quinn up, I will never get him back in the car because he will be crabby and impossible. However, I really, really, really have to pee. Can I hold it until 6? No, nope. Do I leave him alone in the car while I pee? God, no, my mother would die. Lolo would definitely say no.” I lingered over this dilemma, cursing the fact that I drank a bottle of water at the faculty meeting, for about four minutes until my bladder could not wait. It couldn’t. Then I remembered how, in college, there used always be a line of girls at the bar, all waiting to pee, and one time after I exited the one person bathroom, the whole line of drunk women applauded for me because, they said, I was the fastest pee-er ever. With that in mind, I dashed out of the car, locking it about four thousand times behind me and entered the house.
I was immediately struck by the strong odor of dog piss, which I could not ignore. Even though Sean had let Greta out at noon, she just did not make it again until five o’clock, and there were three huge puddles on the floor. I soaked up everything with paper towels, ran to check on Quinn, mopped up the floor with undiluted Pinesol (which, if you ask me, smells as bad as geriatric dog piss), ran to check on Quinn again, washed my hands, ran to check on Quinn again, and then flew up the stairs to finally pee, washed hands again, opened a window for the Greta-pine-lemon smell, returned to car where Quinn still slept soundly, and drove to William’s practice just in time.
William was crabby because I made him the same sandwich two days in a row and now he is “sick of pretzel bread” and said he “hates all sandwiches,” and “sandwiches suck and should never have been invented.” Together, we picked up Luke for rehearsal. Twenty-five minutes to spare before I needed to get back to school to go to the theater parent meeting, so I quickly checked my bank account to see if I had enough cash to buy the boys some dinner. Turns out, I am fifty dollars overdrawn until Friday, so we raced back home and I boiled noodles and heated up yesterday’s Pinterest disaster (Lizzie, if you are reading this, you picked a great week to go on a class trip).
I threw some noodles in bowls for Will and Q, grabbing a handful of them for my mouth, and told Luke to keep his warm chicken in the oven until he and I returned from the half hour meeting, which turned out to be an hour long meeting. We came home from the meeting (this musical is gonna be cool) and Luke ate his dry chicken and I tried to put pajamas on Quinn who told me that he will not wear any pajamas anymore except for his fireman pajamas and that he hates his monster pajamas and that he will also no longer wear blue jeans or shirts with buttons on them.
I made a giant vodka with lemons in it, snuggled next to wheezy Quinn, who tossed and turned on the couch until he said, “I want youuuu. I waaaannnt youuu in bed.” So I dumped the vodka and we walked upstairs, which is when Luke and I wrestled Quinn with the nebulizer. He slept long enough for me to record my day here, but now he is crying and wheezing and his fever is spiking. I have a feeling it is going to be a late night. I am crossing my fingers that we do not need an ER breathing treatment (preemie mommas, you know the one) and that a simple steamy shower will do.
If you are indeed a preemie momma, you know that even if a steamy shower does work, that I will be sleeping with one eye open and that my own breaths will be shallow and silent, just so I don’t miss anything. Turns out, I want him too.
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Tagged asthma, bad day, breathing treatment, busy momma, caring for a sick toddler, fever, life, micro preemie, mighty quinn, motherhood, preemie, taxi driver momma
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