Tuesday, May 31, 2011

I'll have to think about it

May 31, 2011

I consider myself a thinker but not a fast one. I like to analyze and think it over. I received valuable advice many years ago from Norman Price (Lebanon Ward, Missouri) to say, “Let me think about it” instead of trying to come up with a fast answer. I’m also good with witty comebacks but they come to me six hours later, not at the moment I actually need to use one. This is great if you’re writing a paper and can let it sit while you think about it but terrible if you’re trying to interact with real people. This is why I’m going into accounting and not marketing/sales or social work--I’m slow but not stupid. ;-)

Last week, I took Melody and Nathan for an eye exam. It’s a new place I’ve never been to before and when we walked in, I looked around for the receptionist desk. A couple of guys were helping people pick out eye glasses and when I hesitated, hoping someone would say, “Can I help you?” they just ignored us. To my left was a desk with a counter so I walked over, still kind of waiting for someone to say something but no one did. So I put my purse on the counter. Then the glasses guy scowled at me and said, “What are you up to?” I was a little taken aback but I’m always in “polite mode” so I quickly said something brilliant like, “My kids have an appointment.” He pointed me towards the receptionist desk which had been completely blocked from view when I entered the building. I guess we came in the back door. But later, after thinking more about it, I wish I had paused for two seconds, smiled sweetly, and said, “What am I up to?? How about ‘Can I help you?’ I’m new here and a little customer service would be great right about now.’” He still may not have gotten the hint about his “bedside manner” but at least I wouldn’t have had to replay it in my mind for the next few hours – or blog about it. :-)

New M Com 320 assignment: “Buy a stranger a coke” then blog about it. Hmm, I’ll have to think about it and let you know.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Come over and do Zumba with me

May 25, 2011

I have a project for ISys writing a little bit of computer code in Excel. I’m sure it’s not that hard but since I’ve never done it before, I need to go to the lab and get help. I also need to write a few papers for my other class but first, the blog.

Emotionally, I feel like I’m on a surfboard—great highs, some lows and a little calm in between. My life is good and in many ways, I am happier than I have been in years. I love the challenge of school, I love having bigger kids—no preschoolers. But there’s sadness over JAC’s choices and as much as I’d like to never let thoughts of it cross my mind, they are there frequently.

I study for several hours each day, sitting and I told myself that after graduation, I would focus on exercise. Well, I see that it’s a bad idea to wait and my body is more than happy to pack on some fat if I keep sitting all the time. So I bought Zumba CD’s. Fun! Today, I had to make one of those government-bureaucracy phone calls and I did an entire segment of Zumba while on hold. Yea for multi-tasking. One day, my ab muscles will thank me, I hope.

Nathan has been sick for 5 days; throwing up for two days and an earache the last three so he’s here watching Tom and Jerry cartoons. If the following link works, it’s pics of my boys at least 10 years ago, maybe more. I LOVE these pictures. The first one is my four oldest boys on the right (Richard, Alden, Taylor, and Spencer) and Jeff, my “adopted” boy on the left (he’s my nephew and hangs out with my boys so much that he's like a brother to them.) The second one is L to R, Alden, his cousin, Joe Compton, Michael Matthews, and Richard.

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=10150252601141318&id=605131317#!/photo.php?fbid=1972268543032&set=at.1972268463030.172512.1132586179.1132586179.848835144.1096525312.100000835458749&type=1&theater

Monday, May 23, 2011

Marathons and tornadoes

May 23, 2011

Sam just informed me that his birthday is in ten days. He will be seven. I’ve been raising kids for a very long time, sort of like a marathon run, while it seems most others have opted for the shorter distances. I guess there are pros and cons to both. The decade of my 30’s was filled with hard work and I thought it would always stay that way but, in reality, it was fleeting and I think I have idealized it.

The current owners of our Missouri house let Richard, Spencer and Melody take a tour last week. There are good memories but some not so good also. Our budget was pretty tight in those days; it was hot and humid, 50 miles from Sam’s Club and the mall, 15 miles to the nearest grocery store. After what’s happened to us in Utah, sometimes I wish I could go back to those more innocent days but after talking with Richard and Melody, I don’t really want to go back to that place. Richard stepped on a plane 7 years ago to go the MTC and never got to return because we moved. I think he had a cathartic experience there and has closure now. At the end of this year, he will be the same age I was when we first moved there.

Jaye and Marene, Ardie and Cheryl, and families, Lebanon Ward, I have fond memories of our time together there but now I have a different assignment, also filled with hard work. I guess the marathon’s not over yet.

p.s. Three separate times, I have dreamed about tornadoes in Missouri endangering my life. Sorta glad I'm not there right now.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Life isn't fair and other Grammar Tips

I’m buried in homework but I will take a few minutes to write some thoughts. I’ve been feeling bad for Maria Shriver and the heartbreak and pain she and her children are feeling. People behave as if they have no idea of the pain they cause others. But I do know that time heals wounds. It’s little comfort in the beginning though. Enough about that.

This week, I took the grammar test for my writing class. I won’t put you to sleep with the details but I only missed 4 out of 75 so I’m happy. If only the Info Systems class were as easy. Here’s your tip of the day—some things I see all the time from otherwise-intelligent Americans.

“They’re”, “there”, and “their” are different words. Here’s how to use them: They’re sitting there in their car. See? Simple.

Would’ve, should’ve, could’ve—I’m sorry to break the news but there’s no such thing as would of, should of or could of. If I were your homeschool Mom, I’d harp more on this so count your blessings if you’re not my child.

“Then” and “than” are not interchangeable. I know, life isn’t fair. “Then” refers to time sequences, as in, “Do the dishes, then wipe off the table.” “Than” is for comparisons, as in, “I like chocolate better than vanilla.”

I’m tired so that’s all the grammar tips I can muster. See ya next week. If you ARE a homeschool mom, I just gave you tomorrow’s English lesson. :-)

Monday, May 16, 2011

Thor's Day

Nathan and I went to see Thor. I was thinking that we still like the mythological stories of heroes and bad guys just like people did 1000 years ago but we have much better media now. I remember learning Nordic Mythology in grade school and how we got the names of the days of the week but I don’t think it’s in my kids’ school curriculum. Well, now you just go to the movie theater to learn it, I guess. My gut instinct is that any movie that starts with a reference to Marvel Comics can’t be very high quality. But this just shows how little I know about screenwriting and movie making. (I did like Iron Man but Tony Stark has his personal flaws and it’s not a movie I could buy and let my kids watch.) I liked Thor enough that I will buy the DVD. Those who know me well know that’s saying something. I’ve bought only a handful of movies in the last 5 or 10 years. The movie might be a little too formulaic for some people—the good guys (Thor, his father, his grandfather, etc.) are SO good, it’s a little bit sickening. And the bad guy is SO bad, he double crosses good guys, bad guys, bites the hand that feeds him, loves him, etc. The people we’re supposed to like are sufficiently beautiful to look at, the bad guys, not so much. The only thing I didn’t really like was the ending and I assume it’s because they’re planning a sequel, a savvy money-making move. If you’re looking for fun entertainment, go see it.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Buns, "Daminals", and slow learners

May 12, 2011

I’ve learned something about Sam’s personality. He has an instant, hot temper and he doesn’t like change from his normal routine. He gets extremely anxious over it but then finds out it’s not so bad after all. A couple nights ago, I bought a pound of hamburger and made a fast, easy dinner: green salad mix from a bag, frozen French fries, baked, and hamburger patties, no buns. Sam threw a big, screaming, crying fit because there were no buns. I finally had to send him out of the room until he could stop crying so loudly. I have rarely made this for dinner, possibly not at all in the last two years. Trying to convince him that it was a legitimate dinner, I said that when I was little, my mom would sometimes make hamburgers the same way and serve them without buns. Nathan helpfully added, “Buns probably weren’t invented yet back then.” Yes, he was completely serious. This from the same child who told me a year ago to be sure and bring my driver’s license to GameStop because “you can’t return a game unless you’re over 18.” Wouldn’t it be great to live in blissful ignorance of the way things really are? Not really but that’s the world he is in for a short while longer. Eventually, Sam came back to the table and Joy brought out Danimals yogurts for each of them (better known as Daminals by Sam). I told Sam he could not drink his until he ate one bite of hamburger, one French fry, and his salad. He ended up liking it so much that he ate three hamburgers. What a waste of a screaming fit!

Two years ago, when my husband told me he was marrying another woman whether I agreed to it or not, my world was blown apart. On principle, I could not do what he was asking of me. The grief was deep, the trauma was long, but eventually, peace returned to my life and to my soul. I no longer see myself as a tragic figure. Possibly, I am very fortunate. (Give me a few more years to express that with more confidence.) It’s okay after all. There is still joy in life and I’ve learned things I could not have learned any other way—or at least, any less painful way. I was pushed to do difficult things that I would never have done otherwise. In that regard, I am thankful for what happened to me. I think that maybe the intensity of my response was a wasted effort though, just like Sam’s fit. The Lord implores us to “Fear not” over and over. Could I have responded in a more calm, trusting way that would have made my trial easier than I allowed it to be? I’m a slow learner. I hope to figure it out one day.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Confessions of Motherhood

I had a Mother’s Day get-together with 5 of my kids at Alden and Sinda’s house. We had great food, fun conversation, a push-up competition and an arm-wrestling competition. I will be doing push-ups for the next month until we reconvene. I can’t let all those much-younger-than-me people get too far ahead of me. Nathan (14), Joy (10), and Sam (6) were unstoppable, wrestling, laughing, doing their little competitions, etc. for over an hour. It’s the first time I’ve ever seen Nathan behave that way. Before his open heart surgery (last October), such things were not in the realm of possibility. It was very heart-warming to see him just be able to play with the little kids, like a normal boy. My other three kids are in Missouri (Richard and Melody are visiting Spencer) and they called me on the phone.

I love being a mother but I have to say that I have gotten better at enjoying it over the years. I loved the boys (first four, who arrived in a 6 ½ year span) but I was so overwhelmed with taking care of and keeping up with them that I wasn’t having fun. I loved them to pieces but it wasn’t always easy to like the job of being their mom. They were busy, loud, and broke everything. I think I was mystified by the sheer level of testosterone bouncing off the walls. Now I can just laugh when Sam behaves like a typical boy because I know what he will become one day. I can see the young adult he will be after watching the others reach adulthood. Now I see that those little-boy, aggressive impulses are desirable qualities for a husband and father to possess, in order to have the drive to protect and provide for a family. But when they are exhibited by a stubborn, pint-sized boy, it’s hard to have perspective. And I TOTALLY didn’t know about the payoff that was coming – daughters-in-law and grandchildren! Of course, in theory, I did; but really, wasn’t I ALWAYS going to be 20-something years old? What’s with this old body I’m stuck in??

Melody (my 17 year old daughter) sent me her journal-like description of the Greyhound Bus ride to Missouri with her oldest brother, Richard. Richard just graduated from college and has a month of down time before starting a job so he decided to go visit the place where he grew up (southwestern Missouri). I am including it below and have resisted the urge to edit it. It’s long so feel free to skim or not read it. The main reason I am including it is because I love what her writing reveals about her observant, clever personality and way with words. I love the monikers she gives people like Cowboy Guy and Crabby Driver. She and I need to figure out a way to make our living being writers. :-) FYI, to clarify her comments about the humidity, she was born in Missouri and lived there until she was 11 years old. I actually miss it and wish to be there and experience it myself!

Dear Mom,

All is well. We are safe. The trip was interesting, if nothing else. We waited a good hour before the bus even got to the 'station' [read: dirty gas joint where we sat on the cold cement outside in the pre-dawn chill{read: I went inside, Richard stayed out and watched the bags}] Anyways, we watched and waited.

There was also a cowboy...guy...kid...thing. You know those people who wear too-tight jeans, a tank top in freezing Utah morning weather, and cowboy hats? No? Well, that was what kind of person it was. Awkward.

So, needless to say, we were lagging a dreaded hour that would throw the rest of the day/trip out of sync. Richard and I were a little surprised when the bus finally did come and it was hardly full. A sparse eight or nine other people littered the rows, not including us and Cowboy Guy. Each row was two seats. Richard took one and I slipped into the one behind him. I whipped out my diary and scribbled a few notes that consisted of this:

May 5, 2011

Start: Provo 8: 36 A.M.
Air smelled like a rough mixture of cherry chap stick and cigarette smoke. In the earliest hours the customers were getting their smokes, energy drinks or coffee. One huge man walked in wearing an old brown leather coat. It took me a minute to identify the little twitching head and bulging body as a chihuahua squished in the refines of the coat. There was also the buff cowboy-hat wearing kid in a sleeveless tank top that liked to smoke, and wearing tight pants. And, as Richard pointed out, our first driver looks like Will Ferrel. There's also mushed mint gum in the window sills and frayed retro eighties seat covers. It sort of feels like Old puked in here and nobody bothered to clean up afterwards. [End]

But after that, I was unconscious before we got out of the Provo area, if my memory is correct. Which it NEVER is, so I should throw that saying out all together. Anyways. I woke up next in Green River, UT. The bus split for a fifteen minute break, and I scribbled down some more when I returned to the bus.

Green River, UT 11: 52 A.M.

It honestly didn't look all that promising . The motels had names like Budget Inn Motel and thatched roofs. And the majority of the gas station's merchandise consisted of hardware supplies and on-the-go urinals. (Plus a wagon literally sitting on the roof.) But I can say something about their bathrooms. Clean as can be, slick, shiny, blessedly automated machines! I was wonderfully surprised; also, as the only girl on the bus, I had it all to myself.

P.S. Cowboy has managed to strip to an even tighter tank-top. Somehow. I'm scared as to how much further it'll [his state of undress] progress as the hours go on. [End]

I was awake at this point, and knew we were running behind. Our bus was supposed to arrive in Grand Junction around twelve thirty-five. There was no way that was happening. We were late, but, by some odd fluke, the bus hadn't left yet, and Richard and I got on just as it was about to. We slept, curled up on the not-so ragged seats (the second bus was an upgrade; no gum-glued seats) Cowboy Guy was left somewhere in Grand Junction, CO never to be seen by us again. And we drove for something like five hours, arriving in Denver at six thirty-two. Three minutes before our next bus was set to depart. Our first assumption was that we would be fine--the last bus had waited over an hour, five minutes to grab our bags would be no biggie. But, no. We had to wait for the next bus to come through, something like an hour. I could see the frustration in Richard's eyes. Muttering about how train systems in Europe were so much more dependable.

Which is probably true.

People who ride the bus are quite...colorful. Or, as Richard put it, the lowliest of society. Something like that. I'm paraphrasing here. The people on the bus didn't seem too hesitant on sharing at all. There were a lot of, "Hey, can you watch my bag,"s and "Do you know when this bus is leaving?" and other such things. I'm pretty sure I overheard more than one fellow bus patron spilling out their life story. Whether anyone wanted to hear it or not.

We eventually grabbed a bus over an hour late, but we were counting on our three hour layover in Kansas City to absorb most of it. Or we hoped it would. From Denver to Kansas it was supposed to be something like a good twelve hours. Eight forty five to eight forty five, at the rate we were going. So we settled in, knowing it would be an all-nighter, and hoping we would be able to snag our own rows. Which didn't happen. We were almost jammed packed, every row taken, nearly every seat full. Combined loud, stuffy, gritty and you'll get a lonnnggg night. However, some moron opened a hatch on the top of the bus, only a few seats ahead of where Richard and I were squished in. Which was nice for the first thirty minutes while we sluggishly made our way the our freeway of choice. It was when the sun was down and we really started going that the wind started burning eyes and freezing off extremities. And that hatch wasn't closing until we stopped, which, by the unusually crabby driver's ruling, wasn't until our next scheduled stop. Thanks to our lovely delay, that wasn't until a bit after one in the morning. Until then, we huddled in and tried not to be totally miserable. But were anyways.

After we finally, FINALLY stopped and fixed the hatch Richard was out. Like a light. I, however, got to watch the sun rise over a fog laden Kansas. Probably because I was STILL cold. Crabby Driver had deemed the AC necessary, and it just so happened to be blowing right in my face. I probably got all of three to four hours of sleep. The sunrise was pretty though--a fiery peach-colored ball slinking over the vibrantly green hills. Plus the fog and no sound beyond the dull hum of the bus. It was cool.

Beyond that, it was smooth sailing. Besides the occasional toothless bag carrier rambling at you--I think he was chastising, but I can't say for sure--we hopped buses from Kansas to Bolivar, MO. The ride consisted of my own row, lots of sleep, and listening to two of the most authentic hillbilly conversations I will EVER witness. Ever. And doing crossword puzzles over the shoulder of a fellow rider.

Michelle and Spencer are car-less, as ever. Richard says he was surprised at how easy going I was on the bus. I wasn't really ever scared ever, and I guess he wasn't expecting that. It is HUMID. As first it was a bit of a shock; I would only be outside for a minimal amount of time but I would return with my shirt thoroughly stuck to my skin. However, eleven years of conditioning doesn't really go away that easily, and I quickly adapted. It's no longer a shock, albeit slightly uncomfortable. The air has a vibrant smell to it as well. You can tell it's clean. Richard loves the air; sometimes, when he's not in danger of sweating out his water supply, he'll go out and sit out on the front porch, pet skittish Shasta, and do nothing.

Love, Melody