Tomorrow Is Thursday and I Get to Shower

This is an entry in ChicagoNow’s monthly “blogapalooza” hour where we are challenged with a blog topic and given an hour to write about it.  Here is the topic:

Write about your tomorrow. Not figuratively — literally write about anything that you hope, fear, believe, expect, anything, that you may experience tomorrow.

I have a babysitter tomorrow.  Five hours of another adult in my home whose sole focus is to care for Mary Tyler Toddler so that I can “get stuff done.”  This concept of a sitter came to me early last fall when the then Mary Tyler Baby was on the cusp of his first birthday.  Our boy was growing up, crawling, inches away from his first steps, first words, his first of manys.

Just as it was time for him to take a few steps, it was time for me to do the same.

I put the call out to my network and there was Darlene — beautiful and kind and sincere and loving Darlene.  The first time I met her she was familiar to me.  We were both Cancer Moms.  We were both grieving moms.  We were both adoptive moms. Click, click, click.

The original plan was that Darlene would come once or twice a week, giving me the opportunity to KNUCKLE DOWN AND WRITE.  I had just accepted my first ongoing freelance writing gig and the idea of paying someone a few hours a week so I could carve out some time to focus on the most unexpected life twist of me becoming a paid (shut the front door) writer was like a dream.

And then, of course, life happened.  My Dad got sick a few weeks after Darlene started sitting for us.  Making time to write got put on the farthest of the back burners.  I started relying on Darlene to be here just so I could visit with my Dad in the hospital where toddlers or children were not allowed.

One day turned into two days turned into three days pretty quickly.  There is not a chance in hell I could have been there for my Dad the way he needed me had Darlene not been there for us.  I thank my lucky stars for her presence in our family’s life.  She will forever be intertwined with what I now refer to as “the winter of our discontent.” All apologies, Steinbeck and Shakespeare.

Long story short, I am grateful to Darlene for so quickly becoming so essential to us.

Tomorrow morning at 9 am, or, more likely 8:55 because she is always so prompt, the door will buzz and Mary Tyler Baby will pop off my lap or off the sofa or off my bed where we were playing and bop to the front door like a sandpiper at the beach, calling out her name in pure joy.

I will want to go to the nursery to buy plants and flowers for our window boxes.  I will want to tackle that growing corner of our dining room that is bursting with all things Da related — bills, death certificates, sympathy notes, extra ties that I brought to the funeral home for my siblings to choose from.  I will want to get a pedicure.  I will want to finish a submission I am tackling for a new anthology.  I will want to rehearse my next live lit reading.  I will want to do a lot of things.

Who knows what will get done?

More than likely, I will shower.  Yes, tomorrow morning I will shower.  When Darlene is here, I get to shower without the pressure of having an unattended toddler who has a predilection for climbing on all sorts of things he should not climb on.  I call them my “full maintenance showers” and they are rare.  They involve deep conditioning and shaving and exfoliation and hair styling.  They are delicious and, did I mention, rare.

Shower

Tomorrow this mama will be clean and spiffy in addition to being tired and overwhelmed and grieving.  Somehow it is easier to be those more challenging things with a fresh shampoo and exfoliated heels.

Thank you, Darlene, thank you.  Tomorrow will be a good day because of you. Tomorrow I will shower and for those few, brief, interrupted moments, life will be very uncomplicated.

 

Laminated Wedding Vows

My husband and I just celebrated our 14th wedding anniversary.  The ‘ivory anniversary’ it’s called, though, in the large numbers of slain elephants being killed for their tusks, the traditional gift has been changed to “animals.”  Yeah, um, no, we are not exchanging animals to celebrate fourteen years together.

One thing I love to do on every anniversary is to pull out the laminated wedding vows I keep tucked away in my wallet.  And, yes, I keep laminated wedding vows in my wallet.

Our vows, in the sticky fingers of our youngest child.  We never could have imagined where our marriage would bring us, but feel so grateful for these words which anchor our love.
Our vows, in the sticky fingers of our youngest child. We never could have imagined where our marriage would bring us, but feel so grateful for these words which anchor our love.

A few weeks after we got married way back in May 2001, months before the world changed on 9/11, when we were all a little more innocent, I realized that with the wedding and honeymoon over, there my husband and I were, well, just married and stuff.  Our days were hitting routine again with the planning and joy of the wedding over.

I was grateful for that, but also aware that the intense feelings and support and just overall sense of living in a space surrounded by seemingly limitless love for this person you’ve chosen to walk next to for eternity (always the optimist) was falling into memory and replacing it were the mundane tasks of life.  Soon, we knew, well, soonish, would be children and a mortgage and all those other things that conspire against the romance of a wedding day.

But then, almost immediately, I realized that we got married for life.  It’s not about the day you marry — the party and the dress and the dancing — but the life you create together.  The wedding vows that were written independently, to be heard for the first time as we spoke them to one another, reflected that knowledge.  I wanted those vows to be part of our marriage, not just part of our wedding day.

Enter the laminating machine.

I made two copies, one for each of us, and gave them to my husband with some timidity.  I hoped he would not think me an insufferable sentimentalist (though I am).  I read them aloud again then put them in my wallet sleeve, tucked just behind a photo of my parents taken on vacation at the Smokey Mountains in 1963.

Fourteen years later, I am grateful I did that. And, as I hoped, I do look at them.  Not every day, mind you, but a few times a year.  When I am feeling low and need a reminder.  When I am feeling distant from my husband.  When I am feeling like the Universe is working against me and I need confirmation it is not.  When we are knee deep in diapers and math worksheets and bills.  When I start to spend a wee bit too much time daydreaming about being alone on a beach with not a soul around me.

I read those vows and I feel better.  They transport me to May 19, 2001, a gorgeous spring day chock full of everyone I loved most in the world, standing next to the man I now got to call “husband.”  That day was lousy with love.  I was drenched in it.  We were both young and pretty and head over heels and full of hope.

Wedding 4

Wedding 1

That hope and love and intensity and wanting to never forget any of it is why I laminated our vows. I wanted to keep those words and that hope close.  So far, it seems to be working.

Two Gals Talk TV: Mad Men, an Introduction to our Obsession

I am in mourning.  Katy from I Got a Dumpster Family! is in mourning, too, which helps me feel less alone in my sadness.  Tonight is the very last episode, the series finale of Mad Men. No more Don or Betty or Joan or Roger or Peggy or Pete.  BAH.  I am not ready.

My heart beats faster just looking at this.
My heart beats faster just looking at this.

One the one hand, I am grateful I will never, ever need to see Don Draper wearing polyester leisure suits with too wide ties and lapels, which believe me, I have thought about a lot, but on the other hand, the ending of this show breaks my heart.  For real.

I’ve been a fan since before the first episode, when I first started seeing teaser ads for it and wondered what this mid-century drama was all about.  I.  WAS.  HOOKED.  I read about the storyline and have been watching ever since.

The other day, thinking about the end and my sadness, led me to think of my dear friend, Katy, who I know is equally obsessed with this show.  Misery loves company, which is when I thought it would be good to talk all things Mad Men with her.  Katy gets it.  We can cry together.  Hence, this new video series.  We hope you love it as much as we loved making it.

Our plan, if you like it, is to do a series of these where we talk about all the characters in the coming weeks.  You can see our second installment (featuring Don and Betty) over at Katy’s blog today.  WATCH IT HERE RIGHT AFTER YOU WATCH THIS.