Monthly Archives: January 2016

Daily Journal #6 – Not so daily after all

January 11, 2016

Recently I listened to the novel Brooklyn by Colm Toibin. I selected it because it was on one of those lists of books you should read before you see the movie. Not that I’ll actually ever see the movie unless I stumble across it on Netflix a couple of years from now, but I thought I’d give the novel a try. It’s a small break from the cozy mystery vortex I’ve recently inhabited.

I wasn’t crazy about the book at first. It wasn’t awful. The dialog (usually a deal breaker for me) was fine. The characters were well-sketched. It wasn’t full of action, rather a telling of a life. A part of a life. I think it’s what people might call a quiet story.

Told from the perspective of Eilis, the main character, the writing was straightforward and almost mundane. Was it lacking detail? I couldn’t put my finger on it. Eilis seemed a little hard to get to know. She only told you the bare minimum about herself and there seemed to be a paucity in the sharing of her emotions. Sometimes I wanted to cheer her for her ability to hold it together and other times I wanted to throttle her for her naivete. True to most of my own life, she was a little late to understand things. By the time she had a full grasp, the consequences had already engulfed her.

As you have probably figured out, Eilis maybe bothered me most because I was seeing myself. I suppose that’s a common reaction to many stories, but this one, in particular, struck me as Eilis went back to Ireland after having established a life in Brooklyn. When she returned to her home, she experienced the same feelings I have every time I visited my parents’ home after I left for college. That feeling of being a guest in your own home. It’s also the feeling I get now when I visit the kids in Georgia and stay with MathMan and Sophie.

I starting writing this from the spare bedroom of my former home. I was there visiting. We celebrated Sophie’s birthday on the 7th. It was wonderful and loud and crazy and fun and sad to spend time with Nathan, Sophie, Nathan’s girlfriend Kade and Doug. I couldn’t help wishing that Chloe had been there, too.

But visiting there is hard. I AM a guest in my old home.  A new dynamic fills the house as it is just Doug and Sophie’s home now. Three of us – Chloe, Nathan and I can only be guests there. When I am not there, I don’t have to think about that reality. I prefer not thinking about it.

It takes me a day or two to adjust to the feelings of weirdness. I have to check myself. I can no longer act like a human bulldozer, cleaning and commanding while everyone rolls their eyes behind my back. I’m the person who gets to have things done for them as if by magic. I’m not entirely comfortable in this role even if it is kind of nice to get what you wish for once in a while.

By the time I’ve adjusted, I’m contradicting myself by feeling an itch to head home and be in my own space. Domestic Queen of my domain. I tell myself each visit that the next time I come, I will get a hotel room or insist that Sophie visit me in Indiana instead. It’s not that the visits are unpleasant. It’s just – – – – it forces me to take a good look at what I left behind and how our family has changed. While necessary to own the situation since I was very much the engineer of those changes, I think it’s unhealthy to revisit my old life every couple of months. I never get beyond the guilt and regret before the reset happens.

But back to the novel. The thing I am most struck by now is how Toibin unravels the story in a way that’s natural. Most of us aren’t information dumps of self-knowledge. Hell, most of us struggle with self-awareness. Eilis doesn’t spend large amounts of time puzzling over her own behavior. She’s more interested in observing the actions of others and only occasionally assigning intent. It’s only in short bursts of enlightenment that Eilis identifies some profound trait or value held by herself or another character that gives her some clue as to what may be not morally right or wrong, but right for her or the other character.

After a while, Eilis began to feel at home again in Ireland and began to question her life in Brooklyn. From Ireland, the time she’d spent in Brooklyn seemed like a dream. The life she’d had – school, work in a shop, her rooming house, the man she’d fallen in love with – it didn’t seem real anymore.

And I can see how this happens, too. Having straddled two lives since 2013, I recognize the opposing tugs of the familiar and the unknown, sometimes being unable to know the difference between the two.

Daily Journal #3 – Stream of Semi-Consciousness

From Weirdo Retro

January 4, 2016

Today was the first day back to work after the holiday break-ish. Was it just me or did it really feel like a Monday after a vacation with a vengeance?

The Electrician is on rotation which means he’s home for a week or two until work picks up again. I don’t know which is worse – the old days when I had to go to work while my ex-husband, a teacher, stayed home for long winter, spring and summer breaks. Or working from home while someone else lolls about playing on their phone, watching TV, sleeping in, and mentioning with a degree of regularity how hard it’s going to be to live without Mountain Dew.

At 5pm sharp I escaped the house for a trip to the Kroger. Note to self: Monday evening is not the night to go Krogering if you want to find most of what you’re seeking on the shelves.

Because no one sane wants to cook after a trip to the grocery store,  especially a trip in which one finds only a third of the things they were shopping for, I spent a little time in two different drive thru lines partially because I couldn’t make up my mind and partially because the line at McDonalds was ridiculously slow. Listen, if you can’t shove the sodium and fat out that window fast enough, I’ve got better things to do.

And now home again with the groceries put away, the cold cheeseburger consumed and my bra blessedly removed, I’m trolling websites extolling the benefits of chia seed pudding and coconut water.

I don’t know what I expect to find on those websites, but life’s about the journey after all, right?

– End –

Daily Journal #2 – Sunday Sunday Sunday

January 3, 2016

Sundays have their rhythm here. At least during football season.

The Electrician mans the living room from the time Fantasy Football pregame stuff comes on until he goes to bed. I create a nest in the bedroom. Laptop, Kindle, remotes for the TV, cable and Roku. Snacks within reach. Two pair of reading glasses. Books. Pillows. Fuzzy socks.

Before The Electrician, I had no idea of how the vagaries of the Fantasy Sports world could cast a glow or a pall over a home. Today I am laying low. Offering snacks and soothing words.

For my part, I’ve rediscovered the variety of offerings on Hulu Plus. True to my nature, instead of watching something new, I’ve been watching Cranford.  Everytime  commercial comes on, I think I should watch some of those other shows. I don’t get beyond considering though.

Cranford though. I blogged about it back in 2008, back when blogging was youngish and freshish and definitely red hot.

Eventually, my time in 19th century England came to a halt. Sophie wanted to use the Hulu account. Like the good martyr mother I am, I relinquished. I needed a shower anyway.

When we weren’t talking football, The Electrician and I discussed the merits of drinking water. Tomorrow begins The Electrician’s weaning from the Nectar of the Gods. Hold me.

While I think I’m making headway on convincing him that water isn’t poison, I think I’ve lost the battle to engage him in the glories of Downton Abbey. Tonight the first episode of the final season premieres in the U.S. and I’m more than a little excited about it. I want to share the love of all things Downton.

But it is not to be. Football. Duh.

It’s a shame really. I had big plans. A pot of tea with all the trimmings. A gown for me and a tuxedo for him. Alas no. He couldn’t even be lured with promise of a smoking jacket and ascot. Pity. He’d rock that look.

Oh well. More teacakes for me.

– End –

Daily Journal #1 or where I try to get my groove back in a most pedestrian manner

January 2, 2016 (I actually typed 2016 instead of typing 2015 and backspacing – Such a small, but pleasing victory.)
Weather: Cold and clear. Sunset, a recent event, was pink in the east and salmon in the west.
What’s happening right now?
There is a grown man watching a Wolverine anime DVD in Japanese with English subtitles. (That explains why it was only $5.00 at WalMart). A seven year old boy is playing Minecraft on the XBox One in his bedroom and alternately visiting the living room with one piece or another from his Nerf arsenal.
Me? I’m typing this in the dining room/home office.
Why am I doing this here instead of in one of my really nice paper journals?
My right arm and hand continue to feel like they’re asleep. It makes it very difficult to write longhand. Typing is easier.
Why am I doing this at all?
1. I can’t remember things like I used to and this will serve as my memory
2. I feel the need to start writing again and this is how I’m going to get started. Coming up with a themed, coherent post felt too out of reach.
What’s on my phone?
Sophie is sending me photos of ideas she has for a tattoo. I am not a fan of this idea, but, as I texted to her, it’s her skin.
I don’t get it. Why they need this kind of permanent self expression is beyond me, but whatever. Part of releasing them into the wild world is letting them make their own decisions. And trusting them to make the right decisions. Or learn from the wrong ones.
Now she has to convince her father. He’s the custodial parent. Stay strong, Mathman!
Wordbrain is also on my phone. It gives me small fits of rage. I can often see all kinds of complicated words that work and it always ends up being arm, piano and mince. Come onnnnnnnnnnn.
A group text between my children and me which ended with me pointing out to Nathan that he was missing a comma in his last text. So basically, very little has changed since the old blogging days.
Photos of barns and family dominate my photos.
What is the last thing I consumed?
A Remy Martin chocolate. Mmmmm dark chocolate. Mmmmmm cognac.
Current reads?
WINESBURG, OHIO by Sherwood Anderson (audio). I just started listening to it today.
A TRICK OF THE LIGHT by Louise Penny (audio). I’ve already finished this one on audio, but it will be my sleeping book (what I listen to to fall asleep) because the narrator’s voice is very soothing and I have a little crush on Chief Inspector Armand Gamache.
A collection of Miss Marple short stories (hardcover).
UNCLE MONTAGUE’S TALES OF TERROR on my Kindle. What? Don’t you read kids’ books?
Resolutions for the new year?
Nothing specific, but I seriously need to listen to my body. I am not well. I can feel it. It has much to do with poor nutrition, lack of exercise, not getting enough uninterrupted sleep and stress. First up? A doctor’s appointment on the 11th. It’s been a couple of years and I’m pretty sure I’m a poster child for the high cholesterol and messed up blood sugar set. I’m not looking forward to the much-expected lecture I’m going to get about lifestyle choices.
– End –