9/28/08

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" Survival is nothing more than recovery. "
Dianne Feinstein


I survived the storm. It wasn't the hurricane that just swept through, but the emotional storm that followed. The news reports of people pulling guns just to get water, gas and ice was enough to keep me from leaving my house. But isolating myself led to feeling sad because I was all alone with two kids to care for. With God's help I survived the storm and then I recovered from it and went outside. I was much happier once I realized that I needed to let go of the fear and get myself back into the world.



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9/26/08

Fourteen days without electricity. Fourteen days of entertaining children. Fourteen dark nights full of monsters. Fourteen days of mosquito bites. Fourteen days without air conditioning. Fourteen days waking up with tears wondering if I will make it another day. The last two weeks has been like walking along a narrow precipice, at times you are on steady ground and others you are struggling not to fall. I yelled at my children more than usual these last two weeks but I always managed to steady myself before falling off the edge. They have been miserable with their mosquito ravaged bodies wondering if there really are monsters in the dark waiting to devour them. The only monster was the one I was trying to keep from coming out of me. I struggled with bouts of depression over the last couple of weeks but once we saw those glorious lights come on, we were rejoicing and dancing with happiness. We made it fourteen days and I honestly think, I could have done more but I am glad that I didn't have to find out. I took the children to lots of places where they could safely play and entertain themselves leaving me to write out my feelings and experiences. I will be posting some of what I wrote and some pictures I took, but first I must clean my carpets.

9/12/08


What started with excitement and mystery has turned into nervous anticipation. I love tracking hurricanes when they are abstract concepts, wondering where they are going and what they are going to do next simply thrills me. Until I can see it coming my way. Then I begin obsessive cleaning and cookie making just to keep me calm. Part of me is praying that it won't come our way but the other part of me is so excited to watch it unleash its power. It truly is an awesome site to watch the ocean waves rip apart fishing docks and splashing over the Galveston Seawall onto the news people trying to keep us up to date. I certainly don't want to see anyone hurt or their homes destroyed but I wouldn't mind driving down to the beach and getting splashed before landfall. How awesome would that be? Perhaps my next blog will have a different point of view but will have to wait until I get electricity back.

9/11/08

The house was old but new to us. I hated it with a wild fury. Our old house was nothing fancy but its where I learned to climb a tree, to ride a bike, how snow felt, how to sneak out, to get drunk without letting anyone know it and many other skills that don't need mentioning. It was a nice house in a nice neighborhood with nice people. It was close to the river where I would escape my mother. This new blue house was not in a neighborhood, it was right off a highway and across from a bar. There were no nice people. It was much bigger which gave my mom more space to pretend to sort through and organize all of her moth eaten valuables given to her by her crazy mother who wouldn't get rid of it either. The house came with a bigger yard for all of our animals which meant that I would have more grass to cut on those hot Texas days. Our only neighbors were the sheep from a nearby farm and the speeding cars that seemed to laugh as they drove by. If you were to get an Aeriel view, the blue house would resemble the letter L. The largest room in the house was the loft room which we filled with maze of useless junk. The maze twisted and turned eventually spitting us out to the bathroom or to the stairs leading up to the loft. That was the short part of the L. The remainder of the house was one long hallway of rooms. The entry room. The living room. The laundry room. The kitchen. The dining room. This room was strange; perhaps it was an afterthought in the mind of a lunatic. It had a storm door with three stairs leading down to the mismatched linoleum, an out of place yet elegant chandelier with one door leading to the back yard and another door leading out to the carport. There were also ugly sliding glass windows that opened to the kitchen. Next came the bedrooms. Nothing remarkable until the last room of the house. This is the master bedroom with stairs that lead down to the closets and a puke green bathroom. The ceilings were ridiculously short in this room especially the shower where claustrophobia would overwhelm the bravest of people. This became my room.

Our first night in our big, blue house was memorable to say the least. Mom was asleep in the living area in a sleeping bag on the floor. Next to her was the laundry room door with a mattress leaning against it. She has always slept on the couch, never in her room. Now she reduced herself to a sleeping bag. I stopped asking why. All six of our grumpy cats are in the laundry room. My younger sister is decorating her room while listening to The New Kids On The Block. They apparently have the right stuff for my sister. Their faces litter her walls which turns the bile in my stomach everytime I walk by. This first night I am in the hallway by my sister's room since she has the only air conditioner in this part of the house and I am being disobedient. The night before I was caught in a compromising situation with my boyfriend and was forbidden to talk to him. Naturally, I call him as soon as mom falls asleep. Queen Toni was purring quietly nearby when BOOM! I look up to see that the mattress where my mom is sleeping has turned orange with flames and the laundry room door is barely hanging on its hinges. I am shocked to see that my mom is still asleep. I run over to her, shake her so hard I feel as though she will break. Finally she wakes up, sees the fire and leaps to attention. She attends the fire and I run to my sister who is in shock. I grab her arm and my cat while running to the door. We jump in the car and drive it up to the road away from our house. We sit in our car watching the firefighters work. My sister is hysterically screaming for the New Kids. Our crap house is on fire, flying cats were shot out of the laundry room and are possibly dead or dying, our mom is running around like a headless chicken and my sister is screaming for a stupid boy band. (I would say music group but that's just needless flattery). I am calmly petting my cat watching the blazing fire fighting to survive.

The fire is contained before spreading to the rest of the house and eventually we find all of our cats, singed but undamaged. Sadly, the house was rebuilt and we remained to suffer. I eventually moved to Oklahoma and my mom bought a house. I drive by the blue house whenever I visit my mom and I always think back to this night and how truly funny it was.

9/8/08

"Mommy, I want to be a doctor when I grow up!" announced Tiffany

(getting her doctor kit together)

"Daddy, I'm a doctor and its time for your check-up."

(pretend coughing)

(check-up begins)

"Well Daddy, you look just fine. I have to go now."

"But I'm still sick!"

"I'm sorry, I have to go."

"But your a doctor so can you make me better."

She pats him gently, "Sorry, I have to go now."

So much for that bedside manner. See you later, Dr. Tiffany!

9/2/08

Here is a glimpse into August insanity

- Tiffany no longer takes naps but I insist that she have rest time in her room. One day, I enter her room to find it empty. 'Hmmm . . . that's strange,' I thought. But wait! It is that what I think it is? Could it be? Yes! Tiffany has somehow managed to crawl into her pillowcase (with her pillow still inside) and curl up into a ball. That would be my genes coming through, I can so see myself doing that as a kid.

- Alternate name for Pump-It-Up, the inflatable jumping party place for kids. Pump-N-Dumps.

- One day we come home from the grocery store and the kids dart inside leaving me to bring in the groceries. This is no surprise since my kids are two and four. As I approach the front door loaded with groceries, I realize that my wonderful two year son has locked the door. I curse and kick the door (the only appendage left to me) trying to get my daughter's attention. It wasn't working. I look through the door window and see Benny trying to undo his damage and Tiffany hiding behind a couch laughing at me. I can only imagine how I must have looked from the street. A disheveled woman loaded with plastic bags, kicking and screaming threats of severe punishments to the children inside. Yeah, I would have called the cops if I had seen that. I finally get inside and after sending the imps to their room, I realize that it will be a while before I think this is funny. A long while.

- A comment from my dear sweet little daughter after reading her book before bed, "I can see your tummy Mommy, it's fat!" Goodnight sweethart, I'm going to the gym now!

- Sitting in Benny's room waiting for him to return from using the bathroom, I hear a strange sound. It takes me a minute to realize what it is. Splashing. Who would be splashing? Oh, Shit, I think as I bolt to the bathroom! Yep, Benny was splashing in the potty . . . before flushing it. Needless to say, we had bathtime a little early that day.

- My dessert rule is simple: eat your dinner, get dessert - don't eat dinner, get fruit. When Benny refused to eat his dinner, Tiffany got ice cream and Benny got a banana. Tiffany felt bad for Benny and asked to share hers with her brother. How could I refuse that? She is so sweet, sometimes.

- Upon entering Benny's room in the middle of the night, I find out what caused his screaming tears. The Monster Ate Me! Damn Monsters!

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