Bouncy Birthday
28 AprKnight in Starched Khakis
10 MarShe is just a little more than five miles away from her sister’s house when the beyond-bald tires on her beat up, old mini-van decide they couldn’t carry her family anymore. The tires, like her, are worn out. Sharing the load of moving from Michigan to Georgia – they both have been pushed to their limits.
“Now this? Now this is going to happen?” she thinks as she looks for a safe place to pull over. The tire blew out a few seconds ago but she tries to keep pressing on – like she’s been doing since they first started struggling.
Her four young children are both frightened and interested in what’s happening. Two started to cry. The other two ask non-stop questions. She feels the same way – plus – helpless. She doesn’t know how to change a tire – she can’t afford a tow truck – isn’t a member of AAA.
Then, she hears a voice, offering to help.
Within minutes, he has her van up on the jack and the tire off but he can’t get the spare out of the trunk. He thinks about giving her his but it doesn’t fit. Instead, he calls AAA and explains the situation.
The children would have to wait almost an hour. When he offers to drive her and the children to her sister’s house so they don’t have to be the situation any longer, she was a little nervous to accept but he didn’t give her any reason to doubt his kindness, plus, he had two child car seats in the back – he must be ok.
She’s so overcome with gratitude and emotion that she can’t believe that she told him, “Of course you’re married! All the good ones are taken!”
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He thinks he’s just stuck behind yet another driver going way below the speed limit on the two lane road to his work. He feels bad when he sees the old mini-van cautiously pull over to the side.
He knows he has to be at work, but something in him compels him to make sure people are ok.
Little does he know, this is going to be so much more than a tire change. When he sees the four children, he immediately thinks of his own wife and kids and – what if. What if they were stranded on the side of a busy road with no one to call for help? He has to do what he can to get them out of this situation.
He doesn’t think it’s going to be hard to do. He just has to change a tire -something he’s done more times than he can remember. But this time is a little different. The van’s emergency brake doesn’t work and (for mechanical reasons the writer doesn’t grasp) the mom has to stay in the van with her foot on the brake. He finally gets the van on the jack but then he can’t free the spare from its compartment.
Knowing he can’t leave them like that, he calls AAA for a tow truck. They tell him he will have to be there when the driver arrives in order for her to get the tow without a charge. He knows it will take about an hour for the tow truck driver to show up so he offers to drive the family where they are headed. He worries about how the four children will safely fit in his small backseat but rationalizes it would be more dangerous for them to be where they are now.
In the end, the family safely reaches their destination and the Knight in Starched (and now slightly dirty) Khakis makes it to work. He knows the family still has to figure out how they will pay for the van’s repairs, but he hopes that he helped take a little of the burden off their shoulders – at least for one morning.
Tooth Watch 2009
10 MarFor the past few months, Nia has been experiencing loose-tooth envy. The way she tells it, every one of her friends either has a loose tooth or proudly sports a holey smile. She would ask us why she didn’t have one yet. When will she? Can I push on them and make them loose? She would also routinely think she finally had one and ask us to check to see if she was right. We would touch the suspected tooth and respond with disappointing news. Nope. Not yet.
That all changed last week. She finally felt her first real wobble! She was so excited as I picked her up from after-school. She came running down the hall holding the prized pearly white between her two tiny fingers, “I have a loost toof mommy!”
Now, she’s constantly asking us about it and preparing for the big day –
“When it will be ready to fall out?”
“What she can do to help make it fall out?
“Can we pull it yet?”
“Why will that hurt?”
“It hurts now.”
“Will it bleed?”
“After it falls out I will have 19 teeth.”
“If I don’t brush my teeth will it fall out faster?”
“I can’t eat that because my tooth might get lost in it and then the tooth fairy won’t come.”
Which leads to the big payoff –
“The tooth fairy is going to bring me two dollars.”
We have no idea where she got that dollar amount. To me, you can’t put a price on something so precious. Our baby girl is growing up so quickly.
Now on to worrying about how the tooth fairy will make the “exchange” without waking up the princess. Sometimes I’m in awe about how our parents pulled it all off.
Upchuck Sucks
1 MarThere is no pretty way to share this. If you have a weak stomach or just don’t feel like reading about this subject, I understand if you skip this post. I really wouldn’t want to read it either but misery loves company and all of that so here it is.
Since being a mom, I have heard, “Mommy, I threw up on myself” maybe four times. Each time, I heard the voice before I saw the helpless child. Each time, my brain had a few seconds to imagine the worst and, luckily for all involved, it wasn’t so bad. That is, until tonight.
Man, was she covered. Well, more like caked. Ech. There she stood, frozen, arms out, pasted in clumps of chunk. She wasn’t even the worst of it. The bed, the tent on her bed, her beloved stuffed creatures (including her precious doggy Andrew sent her from Iraq when she was a baby), all of her special blankeys and her Barbie she fondly calls “Hannah Montana.” Poor Barbie/Hannah. She was really caught in the cross fire. There probably was an outline on the bed where she was because she took the brunt of it.
Are you still with me?
I just find it so amazing what we all are capable of as parents. From the stomach-turning throw up situations like tonight to the horrifying time they sampled poop as a snack (what, that hasn’t happened to you?), what prepared us for this? I find it incredible that we go into parent-mode and take care of business. I mean, really? Andrew will get sick at just the thought of throw up (he probably did just by reading this – if he did read it that is) and he took all of her sheets off of her bed. I touched vomit. Lots of it. With my bare hands.
We just do what we have to do I guess. If we don’t who will right? It’s not like I can say, “Nope. I’m not going to fix that right now.” I’m proud to say my hands smell like bleach, Nia is clean and sleeping in a fresh bed and I only threw away her p.j. shirt and pillow. (If we were made of money the sheets would likely be trashed too.)
The Future of Our Country
25 FebNia, this morning at breakfast: “We get to watch American Idol tonight and have popcorn!”
Andrew: “No sweetie, not tonight.”
Nia, excitement dampened with disappointment: “Whyyyy?”
Andrew: “President Obama is going to talk on tv.”
Nia: “Again?! He was just on. He talks a lot.”
(In case you didn’t know, she “voted” for Obama in her school election so this is one reaction that has nothing to do with Republican or Democrat. It’s all Idol – a possible future political party.)










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