Friday 21 February 2014


Bad Parents, or Not just Any Given Sunday


So we had the complete and utter meltdown of diplomatic relations between our daughter and us on Sunday. You may be asking, what was the shot heard round the world? It was a shoe. Well, a pair of shoes to be exact. Shoes, I feel, have always been underrated in their role in diplomatic breakdown. I mean, shoes are SHOES and I think shoes are an integral part of your personality so if someone messes with your shoes it’s like messing with you. Not to mention the whole President Bush and the shoe throwing incident!

Also it is important to keep in mind when diplomatic relations break down, the last time everyone had some protein. Because we neglected to remember that our daughter had risen at six am and had gotten herself a bowl of cereal. Thus, at twelve pm, when the war started, she is ravenous. (This gives me pause about current crises around the world. Has anyone ever tried making everyone a sandwich with some chicken on it? Because people get REALLY angry and irrational without food and I’m just saying it could be worth a shot… not that I am naïve enough to think that the problems they are facing could be fixed with food, I am just saying that perhaps negotiations would go smoother if everyone was fed.) Anyway, wanting to be parents of integrity and intending to show that she could trust us and that our word meant something, (and because we still haven't figured out the food thing and because we are a little scared of the level of escalation and what that would look like in public) Alan decides to follow through with the threat that if she doesn’t change her shoes and her attitude we will not be going to see her best friends. We deliver the news after much deliberation. The tears come, the bargaining starts and we begin to think that we may have gone about it in the wrong way. Starting with, putting a consequence in place that not only punishes her but seven other people, including us who were looking forward to spending the day with our friends.

Our day now ruined, we embark on a walk. We discuss our failings as parents and how many years back we must have made our first error because such an epic war always begins years before. I think it can be traced back to my winning of the argument that I felt we could raise our daughter without spanking even though Alan and I had both been spanked and seemed to have survived. I decided that our children would be logical and we could always come up with creative ways to discipline without using spanking. Unfortunately, it seems, at times we are unprepared for the level of creativity required to come up with a new punishment every time diplomatic methods fail. Also, sometimes we underestimate the amount of illogical behavior a child can produce. We replay the last few weeks and realize we may have lost a few key battles which may have lead to the all out, guns blazing, war. This is what we are in deep discussion about when we notice that, up ahead, our daughter who is riding her bike, suddenly stops and dives into a ditch.

“Now what?” asks Alan with a sigh.

“Probably animal rescue…” I say, knowing that animal rescue is what would send my daughter into a dirty hole faster than anything. As we approach she motions angrily for us to quiet down.

“KITTENS!” she whispers, her eyes wild with excitement.

Sure enough, three little kittens are living in a storm drain. She and Alan begin trying to coax them out. I stand by, offering helpful hints like “Aww you just scared it!” and “Oh, shoot!” Finally, since I have been so helpful, they send me home for, now this is very important: “1. A box with a lid. 2. Milk. 3. Any leftover meat I can find.” I listen very carefully and head home. I find a clean box with a four sided lid, check. Milk with a bowl I don’t care about, check. And a container of the leftover chicken that, if you are following my blog you will remember, Alan forgot to put away and it sat out all night, check. I drive back and present my offering: Al says ‘aww you should have brought tuna…’ I say, ‘You didn’t say tuna. You said leftover meat, I thought tuna would have been good but you said leftover meat, you should remember this is my first “rescuing kittens scenario…”’ (I get a little snarky there at the end; please feel free to read it that way.)

Now, we have coaxed a kitten out with food (apparently they do like leftover left-out chicken so there!) and Amelia picks up the kitten by the neck and then drops it. It goes running into the bushes. Amelia freaks out but, like a true professional, she regroups and coaxes the next one out. This time she keeps hold and brings it to Dad who showers her with praise (I do as well while trying to back away with imperceptible steps. I should make a confession here that animals have always scared me. I blame it on not having pets growing up but it is probably just my distrusting nature. I mean, animals can turn on you in a second! Also, they were living in the drain pipe and as a self-professed germaphobe… well you see my dilemma.)
 Anyway, Alan then sees the box and says “Oh… this is not a good box, you should have brought a basket or something…” I then say, in a slightly more whiny voice than necessary “…but you didn’t say basket, you said box with a lid! So I went home and found a clean box with a lid.” He takes in my defiant face, nods and approaches the box. He attempts to place the kitten in the box and close all four lids. As it claws its way back out he mumbles “not the right box, shhh calm down… not the right box…” He finally succeeds in closing the lid on the terrified kitten who is now in the dark and sure he is being taken somewhere horrible. Amelia has coaxed the last one out of the drain pipe and brings it to Dad who praises her again and attempts to place it in the box with the first one. This causes the first kitten to claw its way out by digging its claws into Alan’s skin. Now he is trying to hold both and keeps yelling “NOT THE RIGHT BOX! NOT THE RIGHT BOX! NOT THE RIGHT BOX…MEL HELP!!” to which I respond (while backing away from the carnage) “What do you need?” he responds “Just help! I can’t…” Then he loses one, who skitters off down the street (I try and look like I am making a run for it while secretly hoping I won’t catch it)  “It’s the wrong box…” he finishes, still holding the frightened first one, bleeding profusely from multiple wounds on his forearms. We decide to go and get an appropriate basket… and rescue the other one still caught in the bushes.

In the end we have arrived home with two of the three kittens immediately named Marco and Gonzales by Amelia (which I find perfect because they BOTH liked the chicken with the jalapeños mixed in).  A little later, I find the two kittens sleeping on top of each other and promptly send Alan back out in the middle of the night to find the other one who is now alone. He comes home empty handed. I am not impressed and he is confused (because I have been so worried about the kittens up to this point). He explains that he tried but it was…dark and… the pipe is now… dark… because it is the middle of the night… All the while we are explaining to Amelia that we are not allowed pets in our rental to which she tries to put on a brave face. The next day Alan spends $75 on flea treatments, de-worming tablets, specialty kitten food and a litter box… because he says we definitely have to give them away…


Clearly we are parents who keep their word.
 


Thursday 13 February 2014


The Realities of Valentine’s Day


You should know this is an unusual post for me (also you should know I had another post all ready to go so if you don’t like this one stay tuned). I used to be a romantic and get mad at all the Valentine’s Day haters. But now I am starting to see that my dad may be right. He used to say, much to my annoyance, that he didn’t like Valentine’s because he didn’t like a huge corporation to tell him to show love. I was like “Oh come on Dad, join the party! Every party has a pooper…” But now that I am old and apparently  a little cynical, I am beginning to see the wisdom in my Dad’s words. (This has been happening for a while, for my dad is a very wise man, like if he had been alive when Jesus was born he definitely would have been following a star and bringing a gift. He is THAT wise. And most days I am aware of how blessed I am to have a dad that wise. Just yesterday while listening to one of his amazing teachings online it occurred to me I had my own direct line to him literally… I called him and he sorted out my current problem with in about 15 minutes) Anyway, now I think he may be on to something with this Valentine’s Day thing too. I have a lot of single friends and some of them don’t care about Valentine’s but for some it is very painful reminder that they don’t have a valentine and the throw-up of red and pink everywhere is just like slapping them in the face.

But let’s look at this from another angle... all of us “happy” people WITH Valentines. My Valentine’s Day started with a angry diatribe about my husband because he forgot to put the leftovers away last night AFTER he said he would. (You may be wondering why I didn’t just slip them into the fridge myself; this is not the point! Stick to the real issue please.) Why so angry, you may ask. Well you see when you HAVE a valentine, NOT putting the left-overs away is not just "not putting the left overs away". It is, “You don’t love me because you didn’t put the left-overs away! You don’t respect the hard work I put into that meal… (that was WAY too spicy for you AND you were allergic to several key ingredients but told me it was yummy anyway”. Stick to the point people this is MY story).

This may have all started when having a discussion about life on our couch the other day (see the key is, this happened Valentine's week.) Something caught Al’s eye. It was an unidentified bug crawling up over his shoulder from his back. He proceeded to scream like a little girl and THEN flick it off his shoulder DIRECTLY on to ME! So now we are both screaming but mainly I am screaming at him for flinging it at me. This leaves the 2014 woman in quite the conundrum by-the-way and fighting about this must be done very carefully. Because we want to be all equal opportunities and such, so really we should not be screaming when we have a bug on us. However, I had a loophole you see, because HE was screaming about the bug too. SO it was already a case of equality. So then my argument was NOT about chivalry it was about common courtesy… see? So you can’t say “I can’t believe you didn’t protect me from the bug!” but use the carefully chosen words “I can’t believe you flung a bug at me!” which any guy could say to another guy… See it is very technical… (Secretly, I would still like to be protected from bugs by someone not screaming but feministly I am perfectly capable of handling bugs.)

Anyway, so to all the single people out there who are sad I will not say you are better off because that is insulting if you are sad and I definitely don’t feel that way. ALL of you deserve a Valentine and I hope you find the love of your life very soon. I will say though, that once you have a Valentine there is no guarantee you will have a fun Valentine’s Day… because he couldn’t get a babysitter (to be fair it is a Friday and we have like one babysitter because we don’t trust anyone with our daughter), or you are still mad about the leftover thing, or the bug incident is still very confusing. So 16 years after getting your Valentine you will be sitting at home watching American Idol with a messy kitchen (because clearly HE has to clean the kitchen because he SAID he would put the leftovers away!).

Happy Valentine’s Day everyone!

Tuesday 4 February 2014


Super Bowl sad and Mother-in-law sad


I have a confession to make. I think I may have contributed to the Broncos’ hideous game-playing Sunday. You see, I was pretty homesick and, if the Broncos had won, it would have been WAY too bittersweet. Heavy on the bitter and light on the sweet. The last time Denver won the Super Bowl, my Dad, a happy-at-home, self-described non-partier drove into downtown Denver and, in conjunction with the thronging masses, tooted his car horn and yelled out his car window. I would have given almost anything to see that but I missed it, being Down Under and all… So, if the Broncos had won yesterday and I had once again been sequestered on this tiny island, about as far away from home as I could get, I may just have cried and cried. Then I would have felt terrible because, while so many of my Bronco-brethren would be happy and Peyton Manning would have another Super Bowl ring after his record breaking season, there would be me: all self pity and sad, thinking how mean the world is.

As it is though, they not only lost but lost… wow… badly. So my Dad can recover in solitude and I don’t feel like I have missed out on something amazing and historic. So thank you Denver Broncos because, while the game was painful to watch, it is clear you need me in the country in order to win (as evidenced by the AFC championship, won while I sat in my Aunt’s living room next to my Dad). I will  humbly accept a plane ticket and season tickets in order to ensure victory next year and you may as well throw in a job (it is a long season). I mean, when going for the big one, you really should leave nothing to chance. And after yesterday, can you really be sure my absence had NOTHING to do with it? I mean, it was CRAZY bad and I think you should consider flying me in to Denver, just to see if it helps next time. (I should state that I am not a finely tuned athlete working towards a huge goal all year so I have no right to comment. However, I am not positive but, it may help if you guys sort out who the Quarterback is before you start... just so there is no confusion when it is time to snap the ball. I am not sure, but I think it's pretty mean to tell a guy he can be quarterback at the Super Bowl and then just snap the ball when ever you feel like it. It confuses him. And then for the rest of the game he is like "I thought I was the quarterback... I got to be the quarterback all season... remember, I broke all those records and such... hmmm"; meanwhile the defense is running all over and blitzing. I don't know, it is just a thought and again I have no right to comment.)

Anyway, just to be clear, I am Super Bowl sad but still a diehard Bronco fan.

Unfortunately, I cannot properly process the Super Bowl loss because I just found out that my In Laws are arriving for an unexpected visit. Now, for many of you this would not hamper your post-game blues recovery effort but (because I am a below-par daughter-in-law) I must pick myself up, dust myself off and figure out what to wear, what to cook, and of course clean the house because “we always live like this.” “This” being: sparkling, dust-free shelves, meticulously vacuumed floors, mirrors that reflect with pinpoint accuracy (not covered in spittle from tooth brushing), perfectly matched dinner table set ready with the most neutral food. The food must not make an impression; it must be delicious, but not too rich and not too bland. They should remember being satisfied without recalling exactly what you made because that would require discussion about cooking, which I do not handle well. (If I get a “this is interesting...” comment I tend to get a little insecure. Then I start speaking rather loudly and making REALLY bad jokes that no one is laughing at but I am laughing at such a loud volume I don’t notice, meanwhile shoveling more of the "interesting" food into my mouth to prove it is not "interesting" but delicious and then I am talking and laughing way too loud with the "Interesting" food coming out of my mouth… just trust me: neutral food!) I must put all my intrinsic crazy on hold so that they do not continue to get confirmation that their pride and joy son married a neurotic, dream-chasing, messy American. (You should get a bitter taste in your mouth when you say the word American. But I say, at least I’m not from Auckland! Right, New Zealanders from small towns? You know what I am talking about!) Mind you, I am pretty sure that after 16 years they have all the confirmation they need. But I like to pretend that, as they pull out of my driveway, they have a little conversation that goes, “Wow, Mel seems more normal right?” “Oh yes, much more normal…”
Or, I could just leave the underwear on the floor, the dishes half done, and the bags packed. (I haven’t unpacked from our trip to Denver… it’s for real reasons… I was busy… It is all winter clothes… OK, fine, it’s because I am not ready to be “back”, so if my bag stays packed, I’m not back, see? I realize it is a bit irrational, as I stumble over them EVERY time I need to pee, but leave me alone.) I could show that usually half of our dining table is used as storage for socks with no matches, laundry that is just to difficult to put away and bike helmets.  (It's a big table so we just eat around these things.) Then maybe I could top it all off by letting Amelia tell them that we had hotdogs for dinner two nights in a row. Normally, she gets a pre-visit lecture about what is okay to tell the in-laws. For instance: Don’t tell them that Dad has to sleep in the spare room (See blog from 20th of September before forming an opinion please) / Don’t tell them we sent you to your first day back at school with only half of your school supplies / Don’t tell them you were late on your first day back at school / Don’t tell them I put the left over hors d’ourves from the Super Bowl in your lunchbox and talked myself into believing it was a balanced lunch (there was, like, cream cheese which is goodish and, like, salsa which has, like, vegetables… you know, balanced). And please don’t tell them that I let you have unsupervised amounts of Coke, Fanta (because, you know, it's orange… team spirit!!) and endless bags of chips while I could not tear my eyes away from the train-wreck Super-Bowl, in order to actually parent.

Also, don’t tell them that when I told your Dad I needed to make his mother a birthday cake, he suggested I take the desiccated remains of the Bronco Super Bowl cake, put it into a smaller pan as if I had originally baked it in there and THEN rearrange the letters to say Happy Birthday instead of “GO Denver Broncos!” (This was particularly bad because I actually tried to fiddle with the frosting letters to see if I could do it…)

Maybe I will go for Daughter-in-law of the year next year AND the Broncos will win the Super Bowl…

But…probably not.