Transition. Change. Difficult words to embrace for someone like me. I am a creature of comfortable habit. In my down time I still watch re-runs of Little House on the Prairie (spare me the recent book award name change rhetoric. It was a different time, circumstances were not the same and the language she chose to use in her writing was authentic both to herself and to the time period. Yes, I still embrace her writing and the show’s sentiment. I make no apologies for that so deal with it. Snarky rant now over), the Walton’s and the Andy Griffith Show. These programs allow me an escape into simpler times that feel safe, predictable, warm and happy.
This is a big summer for our nuclear family. In close to a month we will be driving our first born to another small town and leaving him there. Without us. There will be many others there with him, but not us. Not his parents and his brother. We will head back home without him and try to figure out how to adjust to there being just 3 of us until the next transition, hopefully four years later when our household will reduce down once again (presumably) to just James and myself (and whichever furry friends are still left).
That’s some very real and very heavy change coming. It’s tracked by the pit I have in my stomach that grows wider and deeper everyday as we approach “move-in” day. Or as I have come to call it in my head “move away” day. As I sit and write this my youngest son is away at an academic camp for a week. They don’t allow any technology there so we have been unable to speak with him at all since he left. This is driving James and I a little nuts. I understand how good this is for each of us, Adam included, so spare me the lecture. I just really don’t like it. It’s uncomfortable. It’s full of change. It makes me want to retreat even further into the banks of Plum Creek with the Ingalls family and their friends.
We aren’t rich people. In fact, pretty far from it. But as I stated earlier this is a very big summer for us. We have already been to Italy and next month we will see Alaska together as a little family as well. We are taking our first Disney Cruise.
Growing up I always spent a summer week with my grandparents in Springfield, Illinois. It was usually in early August and purposefully lined up with the timing of the state fair. In addition to logging fair time, they took us to the (old) Lincoln museum, a mini golf park and fishing in a little lagoon across the street from their house in Lincoln park. During these trips my grandfather liked to talk about his retirement and how he hoped to travel. He said he always wanted a big retirement party on the top floor of a tower in Springfield. He eventually did get to retire but there was no fancy party and he and my grandmother never did travel. They were children each born with numerous siblings in a depression era where money was tight. As a result they chose to have only one child, my mother. They pinched pennies until they were translucent. They saved twist ties and re-used ziplock bags. They dumped the water from their pasta into the back yard for fear that it might damage their pipes. They never had a push button phone, an answering machine, a microwave or cable t.v. After my grandfather retired from the post office as a rural mail carrier they kept and used only one car. They had plenty of money to travel but my grandmother, quite the recluse in many ways was never comfortable venturing too far away from home. So my grandfather, never one to leave her, remained in Springfield until his last day.
It was the money from the twist ties and their lack of creature comforts that funded our trip to Italy with the boys just last week. The same money that will fund our upcoming Alaska trip. My inheritance. Some may have chosen to use the money for retirement or as a cushion to the kids’ college accounts. I get that and honestly, I am currently considering getting a second job to increase our retirement fund and continue to add to the boys’ college funds. But it was important to me to make those memories with the kids before our family dynamic quickly changes over the next eight years, dwindling away to a new norm that will include James and I still having children, just non-dependent ones. (That’s the plan anyways…..who knows really?) In spirit I took my grandparents with me to Italy and I know they loved it as much as I did. While there, we made lots of amazing memories and laughed hysterically. At one point, I was so tired and got to giggling so badly right out in public that the boys said “Rome broke Mom. She made it through Florida, New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Washington DC and Arkansas as family trips but this time she’s just lost it. Mom is broken.” And I was! It was the best thing ever. I can’t wait to see what Alaska holds with the four of us locked up in one cruise ship cabin together for a week! Should be very blog worthy.
So when you next see our Alaska photos online, please don’t think we won the lottery or have gone rogue on a massive spending spree. We are simply using money intended for my grandparents to travel to see a little bit of the world together as a family before things change. I am doing what my grandparents could not do. We are building precious memories. I have a terrible time saying goodbye. I always have. As a child, I used to cry every time we pulled out of my grandparents driveway to go back home. I cry now when I pull out of my parents driveway and I cried at the SSND generalate house as I hugged sister and waved goodbye to Rome. I can’t imagine the tears that will flow in August when we drop Alex off just 3.5 hours away and the reality of not waiting up for him each night sets in. Instead of focusing on the “goodbye” I will have the countless memories to focus on instead.
A few days after we returned from Italy I found something in my office after I returned from lunch. There was a hamburger from McDonalds, some money and a note. It read “here is the money I owe you, some lunch and a thank you. Without you, I would not be able to see the world.” (From Alex) So if you see me scanning groceries at Hy-Vee in the evenings or on weekends or you run into me working at Hobby Lobby please don’t feel badly for me. It’s a choice I made and one that I would make again. I have no regrets. If things indeed must change and we find ourselves inevitably transitioning to a new normal, I have a mind full of banked memories that will see me through the uncertainty of our new life with adult children. My aunt says this is all about giving our children roots and wings. I hope we are doing a good enough job.
I am a middle-aged (married) mother of two sons and I work as a speech-language pathologist. I enjoy writing about my life which vacillates from day to day (and sometimes from moment to moment) between a better-written sit-com (more often than not) and a less sappy Hallmark movie (less often than not---thankfully). Truly. I can't make this stuff up. Join me. You'll laugh, you'll cry and in between it all we can share life's lessons and blessings. Wooooo Hooooooo!!
Friday, June 29, 2018
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Merry Christmas from me and my merry band of misfits!
So I suppose you wonder what the title to this year’s
Christmas blog means? How many of you
immediately thought of the movie “Rudolph” and it’s “land of misfit toys?” (Insert quote “nobody wants a Charlie in the
box!”). Anyway, regardless, that’s what I always used to think of when I heard the word
“misfit.” However, this year brought a
whole new meaning of the word to myself and our little family and as such, I
will dare to explain here.
In March we travelled to Florida to spend time with my
parents (all 4 of them). Here are my three men feeling like misfits because I
forced them to take this picture at the airport. Alex’s expression says it all.
The boys (now teenagers in EVERY sense of the word) had fun playing in the pool and hanging out looking “cool” in the hot tub but may have felt slightly like misfits when they went with grandma Sue to an art studio to make fish out of coconuts. Nothing like arts and crafts hour for teenage boys with the retired crowd.
Not only do we
LOOK like complete societal and perhaps slightly demonic misfits, but we were
REALLY in the misfit crowd at the bingo parlor if you can believe that. Seriously, I want to go back to birthday
party bingo because playing bingo at the actual bingo parlor gets a little
dicey. Those people get REALLY into it
and actually, it’s a little frightening.
(Can’t wait to go back this year?
LOL).
Later that week we celebrated all of the people who had March birthdays that were together in Florida (Mom, Bob, James, Alex). Check out this band of four misfits.
While in Florida we travelled to another part of the state
to spend the night with my dad and his wife there. They own a motor coach and had just invested
in a concrete slab of their very own (Yea, turns out people sell those and other people actually buy them) and a “cottage.” James and I got to be the first “house
guests” in the cottage and we felt like quite the misfits as once the love seat
sofa bed was opened we could conveniently remove items from the mini fridge
with our feet. It was kind of like
spending the night in a very tastefully decorated doll house. Only we clearly aren’t doll size LOL.
In March Alex officially turned 17. Hers a pic of him and his misfit cake celebrating the big 1-7 with candles that don't match.
In later March and April we took a couple of short trips to Omaha where we were complete misfits at both the “spin stops here” tour and the Neil Diamond concert. I’m pretty sure we were the youngest in both crowds but we still had a great time at both.
Adam had a good time at the Mary Immaculate athletic banquet though I’m sure he felt like a slight misfit because aside from the coach he was the tallest kid there. (Privacy note: I'm electing to blur his friends faces as some of them I do not know. Feel free to draw them in)
For you animal lovers out there I'd like to pause here and take note of our misfit furry family members. We have three misfit dogs who were all adopted from a variety of misfit circumstances. They are all different breeds and have three completely different personalities yet they fit in very well in each of their own misfit ways. Here they are waiting for us to come home from one of our adventures.
I had fun at the MSHA convention once again this year at Tan-Tar-A. I always enjoy seeing my friends Gina and Cindy. We were behaving like misfits because I am fairly certain we were supposed to be paying attention here.
Alex and his misfit-looking tennis team took home the Camdenton team tennis title in their invitational while Adam bagged a turkey.
Talk about the ultimate misfit?! Here is Adam portraying Jesus during the live stations of the cross this year. WOW.
And here he is as Jesus with all of the other bible cast member misfits. I'm not blurring their faces hoping that his class mates’ families won’t mind. I mean really, who doesn’t love a good grade school bible picture? I'm choosing to show you the picture of him smiling versus, well, dead Jesus. Besides, smiling while on the cross makes him look like an even bigger misfit!
LOVE THESE KIDS!!!
Adam decided to try track this year. Here he is running the hurdles. He looks like a misfit because of his rather
untraditional hurdle form. Check it
out……
Alex and his girlfriend Abby went to the junior prom last Spring. There is nothing misfit about this photo because they both look so darn cute. Love them!
Here he is with his band of tennis team misfits. They clean up pretty well.
I came home one night to find my misfit family in true misfit form………….
Alex and his doubles partner Bennet took second place in district doubles. They felt like huge misfits compared to the size of their medals.
In May I celebrated 25 years at Truman. I continually feel like a misfit because I
spend all my days with college students.
(Seriously, why aren't they aging at the same rate I am?!)
Also in May, Adam turned the big 1-3 and officially entered his teen-age years. Here he is with his misfit cake and non-matching misfit candles………..
Speaking of misfit cakes, here's a picture of a combination cake celebrating Mother’s Day, Father’s Day and my sister and my birthdays. Hey, we were all together at one time so why not just hit all of those occasions as once?!
Later in June, my friend Amy’s daughter threw her a surprise
party for her 50th birthday.
Here are my misfit collections of friends on that occasion.
Later in June, I had the surprise of my life when my husband and girlfriends surprised me with a 50th birthday bash at my friend Andrea’s winery. There was amazing food, a band, a photographer, a Raggedy Ann cake and a CAR!!! I felt slightly like a misfit because as a 50 year old woman I had a Raggedy Ann Cake that said "Happy Birthday Missy tu-tu" which is what my grandmother used to call me when I was little. Here are some misfit pics from that amazing day!
I had the BEST DAY EVER!!!!!!
However, it was during one of these meetings that I lost my hearing completely in my left ear. I'm talking DEAF. I WOKE UP DEAF PEOPLE!!!! My SLP peeps will appreciate this audio gram of my hearing?! OMG!!!!!!
Seriously, it was terrifying, isolating and eye-opening. I have a whole new appreciation and respect for “sudden sensorineural hearing loss.” Ultimately, with high dose steroids administered at just the right time (THANK GOD I was flying into St. Louis) my hearing did eventually come back. (Mostly). I still don’t hear quite right but compared to what it was I am LOADS better so I am happy. Just excuse me if I say "huh?" more than usual!
In early August I had a fabulous cutting edge procedure on my leg to alleviate severe plantar fasciitis. I wound up in a walking boot for a month and felt like a misfit every time I ventured outdoors wearing my new apparatus.
In late August I had one child begin his senior year in high school and one begin his 8th grade and final year at Mary Immaculate Grade School. I felt like a misfit for having children who were growing up way too fast!!! Below you'll find a side by side of Alex from Kindergarten to senior year and then a pic of their first day this year. How did they get so tall? (I ask as I break out into a chorus of Sunrise Sunset from "Fiddler")
Alex and Adam both played foot ball again this year. Here is Alex feeling like a misfit as his mother makes him pose with his picture at the stadium. He really does love me he just hasn't realized it yet. ;-)
Alex’s girlfriend Abby plays varsity tennis as well. Here is a picture of them on her senior
night. He is posing with her because she
felt like a misfit standing in a picture alone holding a picture of herself.
LOL
Here's the photo proof of Alex’s school senior pics. I feel like he’s a misfit because he is wearing a St. Louis Blues tie with that suit! On another note, I feel like a misfit for not getting his senior pics taken this fall. They will now be senior pics taken in the spring. Pray for early blooms.
We attended a family wedding in St. Louis in October and felt like misfits taking these pictures because seriously, we are not this cool.
In October James and I celebrated 20 years of marital bliss
(it’s okay, you can laugh and shake your head here…I am). We had a very nice few days in New Orleans
where we felt like complete misfits most of the time. We were typically in bed by 10 or 11 and we
ate in a few super fancy-shmancy restaurants and tried hard to “look like we belonged”
there. Can you tell we have serious
issues trying to take selfies?! That is SO NOT us.
But just for you all, we tried.
Later in the year Alex was inducted into the National Honor Society. He felt like a misfit sitting in the front row.
Adam and James each got a deer this year so they did NOT feel like misfits among their hunting friends.
We attended a Halloween party at the Kuttenkuler Home where we went as Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham, Richie and Potsie from Happy Days. The boys felt like misfits because they had no idea who we were portraying.
We had fun celebrating my Aunt Polly’s (yes, I actually do have an aunt Polly) 60th birthday in November. If you check out some of our faces you will see why we are photo misfits. Honestly, I often wonder why we try and take photos…….
In early November my friends and I attended the ASHA convention and took in "Hamilton" while in L.A. One of these photos is a selfie. Let's see if you can spot which one. What can I say. We’re old but we tried………
In contrast, my sister Molly and I decided to stay upright for our photo——-You’re welcome!
Here is our annual “misfit” bottom of the steps pic taken Thanksgiving evening.
Here is Adam looking like a misfit as he is so much taller than the tree he decorated for grandma Sue.
Adam was lucky to be chosen to be a "student of the month" recently. He felt like a misfit in this photo because he looks like a giant compared to the others. (Monsignor actually stood on a step above Adam to look taller!) Faces are blurred to protect the innocent.....LOL
And finally, most recently, while not a misfit picture, Alex and Abby enjoyed attending their winter formal. I say again---Love these two.
So, that about wraps up the year for me and my misfit cast of real-life characters. Why the misfit theme? Well it's like this………
I missed the exit to get back onto the highway and found
myself driving the wrong way down several
tiny one way streets................ and I just lost it. I was driving around lost and crying. Sobbing actually. I was driving around lost and sobbing.
I was feeling pretty pitiful and honestly quite broken. Blurry-eyed I turned down a side street and quite by accident ended up
in the parking lot of this place………………
And there my friends, sitting in my van looking out the window I was made whole again. I laughed until I couldn’t breathe. In fact, I had to go back to the gas station to pee because I was that hysterical. I had indeed truly found my people.
Merry Christmas from me and my band of misfits!
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