8/18/07

Head Case

A funny thing happened to me on the way to moving into our new home. I lost my head.

It may still be in storage in the garage, mixed up in a box of miscellaneous apothecaries, gift decoration accessories and small hardware items from our kitchen junk drawer. Or perchance it popped off when I was packing up the bathroom cupboard and is now ensconced amongst vibrating toothbrushes, tampons, bath balms, lotions and sponges.

More than likely, however, it found kinship amongst our living and dining room ornaments and masks, and now sits precariously wedged in posed unblinking refinement in the mask box, all the while giving sidelong, squeamish glances at both the wooden brain picker utensil ornament from Fiji and my husband's cherished demon mask, which hails from Sri Lanka and enjoys only occasional exposure to human eyes from its permitted home on the back wall of our garage.

In any case, I have clearly misplaced my head, as evidenced by numerous recent, inexplicable decisions I have made in the past several weeks. Said mysterious choices are ranked below, in hierarchical order and direct accordance with their WTHWIT?! (what the hell was I thinking?!) significance.

Go, Dog, Go!
In the spirit of honest parenting, I will admit to having promised my children that we would consider getting a pet (of the non-cyber or igneous/obsidian variety) once we bought a house. We were still renting, after all. Now in the further spirit of dumb-ass moment admissions, I should also note that said statement was made with the teensiest bit of duplicity. At that moment in time, we had no plans to purchase a home. Hence therefore, it was an easy if rather empty promise.

What goes around comes around in karmic fashion or so sayeth grandparents who delight in such notions of parent/child payback. While we were busy praying for a healthy child with all fingers toes, limbs and sugar/spice faculties, they were fervently casting potions and spells to ensure we, their evil progeny of teen fame, spawned more of the same, in order that we, too, could enjoy the teenage fruits of our labors.

But OK, so here's the thing about promises to children. They may forget to make their bed and brush their teeth every day, despite having a good deed and chore chart posted on the fridge, being nagged sixteen times daily, and having to endure parents reading them nightly stories embedded with subliminal messages about good children who devote themselves to these and other altruistic daily regimes. Yes, it may be perfectly plausible that they could forget such important gestalt rituals, even though you might remind them that cleanliness and godliness are tight in finger-crossed fashion.

Heaven forbid, however, that you should murmur one lone, absent-minded and resigned someday promise, most often uttered in a state of duress after incessant and relentless badgering ("Mommy, Mommy, can we go to Disneyland someday? Please, please, please, please, please, pleaseplease pledeaseaeezzzzzzzzzzz!!!!!) ~ badgering, incidentally, that almost always transpires when one is engaged in an important long-distance business call or distracted by lost keys, a ringing cell phone and an empty wallet in the grocery store line-up.

Agreeing to such inconsequential, what-if, someday wishes is like giving your child a piece of treasure to lock in his or her memory chest. They.Never.Forget.These.Promises. Same child who has to be cattle-prodded each day to make his bed and brush his teeth because he somehow forgot these were his daily bread lots in life, will never forget the dog promise. Even after a frontal lobotomy.

Now speaking of forgetting and the need for psycho-surgery, I sometimes forget my brain has a different timeline than those of my pet-deprived offspring. When we move into our new home to me meant sometime in the decade thereafter, preferably near the latter part of said ten years, and most ideally in the penultimate days and months before both darling offspring move out on their own. How silly of me not to realize that my if/whens are actually taken in quite literal and immediate terms by my eager and tenacious children.

So no sooner did we pull up in the driveway, upon moving the last of the boxes, and what to my horrified ears should I hear but, now can we get a dog, Mom? You promissssssed!

In retrospect, I blame it all on Brenda. Had she not introduced me Webkinz, chances are good that my children wouldn't have taken to being pet owners with such enthusiasm. And chances are even better that they wouldn't have started harboring real pet attachments. And then none of this would have happened. It's her fault. Honest.

One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.
It doesn't help that we have moved into a neighborhood where all but three of us householders own a dog or cat. It literally rains cats and dogs here. So there's no getting away from the dog issue. Dogs barks at three minute intervals, sometimes in unison.

So, in quiet desperation, I resorted to my old retro parenting tricks. The bait and switch kind. You know the ones. Baby Johnny loved his noisy rattle and would bang and play with it ad nauseam until you finally got smart and switched the noisy toy out for a soft, stuffed one. He would then become transfixed with the new toy and forget about the old toy. There was a period of time that such manipulative parenting worked. I thought it would, could, should again. WTHWIT?!

I took them to the pet shop. The daily hound by the likes of my determined duo was beginning to take on the whine of the nauseating backyard beagles behind us.

Them: "We want a pet, Mom."
Me: "You have a pet, guys."
Them: "A goldfish isn't a pet. He's boring. All he does is swim around and eat. Bor...ing!"

So I took them to the pet store and introduced them to the concept of a plecostumus. This wasn't any boring old goldfish swimming around in a fishbowl. This fish is cool and looks gross - it sticks to the side of the tank and sucks algae. Bingo. Five dollars poorer and two kids happier, we headed home with Ted the plecostumus and to be safe, Rainbow, the red and blue beta fish in tow.

It worked like a charm. For all of about a week. And then the nagging started again.

Them: "Mom, can't we get a bunny/hamster/gerbil/chicken/dog/cat/....(insert miscellaneous animal name here - chances are good it was mentioned in the plea-bargain)?! We promise we'll take good care of it. We'll feed it, take it for walks, look after it, do all the work. We promise. Please please please please pleazzzze?!"

Me: "I dunno. We'll see."

Him (to Her): Yahoo! We'll see - that means Yes!!! Hurry, let's go wait in the van before she changes her mind again. Come on, Mom, are you coming?!"

After two aborted pet store visits, one in search of a hamster, the next on reconnaissance for a gerbil, we ultimately settled on a guinea pig. It seemed the best hybrid between his desire for a hamster and her hopes for a bunny. His name is Spud. We have owned him three days now and so far, Hubby and I seem to have done all the feeding. Promises, promises.

But perhaps it was inevitable, because Ted is now dead (found him upside down in the tank plant yesterday) and Phil our pugnacious goldfish is now an odd shade of blotched red and is clinging to life as I blog.


Circus McGurkus
It's really too bad that we haven't gotten around to unpacking all our boxes from the garage yet. Cuz if we had, then Friday night's scene could have been avoided entirely. I would have found my head in time, cancelled the festivities, and all would have been well in my world.

Sadly, this did not happen. Instead, four girls and one boy descended upon the Schmidt house for that ubiquitous world premiere occasion of High School Musical 2. On the offchance that you a) live in a cave; or b) do not have young children or c) do not have cable television and thus have not had the distinct pleasure of watching the Disney Channel, let me bring you up to speed on the pre-hype for this movie. Disney has been promoting the h,e, double toothpicks out of this movie for oh, I'm going to guess more than six months leading up to the premiere - August 17th, 2007. According to reports, Friday night's airing of HSM2 was the most watched telecast in history, with a reported 17.24 million viewers tuning in to watch.

Or suffer, as would be the case of the handful of us headless folks, who spent the better part of the movie fetching drink orders, picking up discarded napkins and remnants of chips and popcorn that were already quasi-embedded into the carpet, whilst deftly trying to thwart attempts by the more hyper of the bunch to dance and jump on the couches, sing the soundtrack off-key too loudly, fight over who got to sit where and with whom, and/or horde all of the available licorice, pillows and blankets for him or herself.

Of course, the real fun was having to phone three parents at 11:00 pm, in order to arrange pick-up of their freaked-out child. We managed to allay the concerns of one child such that she did still stay the night. She needed a telehug from mom and was fine once we surrounded her with Mickey, Minnie and untold amounts of other stuffed animals. The one boy bailed but he admitted, upon pick up, that this was his first sleepover so he was a bit unsure. Plus, he was used to staying up until 1am. Egads.

And so it was that after a breakfast of muffins, fruit, bacon and waffles, we were able to send the girls home to their parents with full bellies and last but not least, an obligatory treat bag filled with essential High School Musical paraphernalia.

I was relieved to see that according to television news reports thereafter, I am not the only headless mother in the Puget Sound area. Apparently there were countless HSM2 slumber parties going on. But I wonder how many parents dared brave the festivities sans alcohol? Apart from a few sips of a caffeinated soft drink, I actually survived the evening anesthetic-free. Remarkable really, considering that I didn't even dare brave childbirth without the epidural needle.

If I wasn't missing my head, I feel fairly certain I would have broken my martini virginity (yes I'm 41 and I'm a martini virgin). Gin of any kind, even lemon, would have smelled good Friday night. An entire pitcher might even have made the singing, dancing, bouncing, chip and popcorn crushing and licorice skarfing tolerable, or better yet, enjoyable. My one small thrill, was offering at strategic moments, to conduct disco dancing lessons. This threat would send my daughter into fits of horror (Oh Gawd, Mom! Please, don't embarrass me in front of my friends!!) and high-pitched screaming from the lot of them at the thought. Naturally, I always managed to get one John Travolta strut in before easing them off the torture rack. Parenthood should at least have some small pleasures.

But alas, I lost my head and thus, am prone to exhibiting apologetic tendencies of late. WTFWIT?! - which loosely translates as, "geegollygosh and oops, what ever was I was thinking? teehee."

I'd like to think the worst of my headless moments are over but I'm not so sure. Yesterday, my daughter somehow managed to talk me in to buying her teddy bear (who arrived at the mall sporting a teddy bear band-aid, cast and brace), a wheelchair. Uh huh. I'm serious. You can't make this stuff up.

So I have high hopes that with some diligent unpacking, I will soon locate my head and reattach it. In the meantime, I think I would do well to stay in, in case I start mistaking the backyard tree nests for those of the cuckoo variety and begin hearing my siren call approaching.

Whichever comes first. I'm gambling on the former. Only two more weeks until school. I'm scrawling giant X's on the calendar, as only a convict locked up for months that feel like years on end, can.

Godspeed me some sanity. Soon. Otherwise I'll have to go join the circus as a sideshow act.

Oops, silly me. I forgot. I already did join the circus. It just doesn't travel, is all.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

That was you Holy? I thought I recognized you hosting the HSM2 party, but my head already popped off after CS purchased his ELEVENTH Webkinz on Saturday. Hard to see without an actual head attached. You understand.

Not only that, but I was feeling a little dazed during my anesthetized HSM2 weekend. (You really went cold turkey? Dang woman, talk about punishment!)

So yes, I'll take the blame, way back to that weak Webkinz moment I had and subsequent passing of the torch to your children. Off to the confessional for me. Hail Mary, full of grace...

Anonymous said...

BTW: Best wished to you in your unpacking! Your head is in there, somewhere. :)

NB said...

HeadSchmead... in situations like that, the body goes orbital!
Why is it that some fish decide to jump to freedom in a last rites sort of suicide act? Our boys were mortified when our beta jumped, landed on the heater vent, and the only reason we knew it was because we were in Chicago and the heater was ON and, well, now we all get the drift... ew!
Moving is hell. We still have crap in plastic purple bins that we've actually sorted but have no idea what they are or why we have them. The one thing we left behind? The snow shovel. It wouldn't fit into the truck. Then it snowed 2 feet here... first time since 1983! WTFWIT'ing?
Poor Dead Fred and the Head Case.
Sounds like a movie title, eh? lol

So, I've volunteered to be on the BOE committee responsible for public input regarding the qualifications/characteristics/priorities for a new superintendent of schools. And then I was voted Chair... and now I'm losing my mind...
And I just (supposedly) finished my training and today was my first day in my store. I have no idea where anything is or who these people are.
And... 10 turns 11 tomorrow... save me from Chuckie Cheese!
And... ex-husband is doing crank phone calls.
And... S is now working fulltime.
And... I have no idea where my work clothes are.

But my truck has gas in it.
For that, ahem, quick get away.
Priorities... priorities...
I'm feelin' ya.

The only thing to get these heads screwed back on is a screw driver.
Or...
a Harvey Wallbanger.
;)
Yeah; the circus is startin' to look mighty good!

Anonymous said...

Remember - you didn't just join the circus, you are the circusmaster!

It does sound like a wild ride at the Schmidthaus though. Sleepovers, pet haggling, etc.

Ummm... what is High School Musical? Maybe my kids are the wrong age bracket or too geeky or something, I've never heard of it.

It might be a fun experiment to see how long you can function without a head, and whether you enjoy life more without it.

Think of all you'd save on shampoo & makeup. ;)

NB said...

Did I just read that you have vibrating tampons?
WOW!
I never knew...

(hehehe)

Tanya said...

Ok - you are not making me feel better knowing that you're still drowning in boxes. Here I was hoping we would be all unpacked and settled in by next weekend. (I made the lovely mistake of deciding to have a belated b-day party for Logan and invite ALL of our family.)

I hope you find your head soon :)

Anonymous said...

I still remember when I was a child, my parents promised me that if we ever bought a house, I could have my own dog. It's the only promise they ever broke to me, and you're right, I never forgot:-) Good luck with the labor Day weekend and the start of another school year. BTW, have I told you lately how much i enjoy your writing? Be well,
J.

Anonymous said...

All I can think of is...
"They're coming to take me away... ha ha hi hi ho ho.... "

Dear Lord... LOL!!!

Ciao bella,
KC

NB said...

Have you found your head yet?
:)

Holy said...

Even more headless this week - company in town and playing short order cook to 4 hungry kids each morning. Four more sleeps til school starts - yahoo!

The Beast Mom said...

ooh, the dog discussion. yeah. in the middle of all that too. must be the age of the kiddos. oh wait, it's my husband too. doesn't help that sister got a doggie and now the whole family knows 'bout that too.

-bm

Hollie said...

Glad you blamed Brenda and NOT me for the WEBKINZ thing, Roo by the way is now on her 5th! Oh and dont forget the charms now!

I am sure You will find you head it is in there somewhere, and as for the pet, guinea pigs are cute, but dont let him run free in the house or you will find brown pellets everywhere..

well off to enjoy my last few hours of summer holiday..

Anonymous said...

Holy...

Dear...brains are overrated. Can you imagine how much harder it would have been to sit through the HSM2 party with one? Cause you still would have had the party...you know you would have...but with a functioning brain, it would have been a nightmare.

Because I am so tardy, by the time I read this, the school year got off and running. Found your brain yet?? I found half of mine...the other will come home, wagging it's tail behind it as soon as I get Soph enrolled in half days at the Waldorf school around the corner (crossing fingers, toes, eyes and nether parts that they have space two half days a week...)

Of course, it has been two weeks since you blogged, so things don't look good for the brain thing...

Missing you...

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your recent comments. Somehow, I'm not surprised at the variety of you prior occupations. I hope the battle with the immigration bureaucracy will be short and successful. This country needs a lot more people like you. Be well,
J.