Category Archives: dentist

Look Up, It’s The Moon (Or Unclogging The Toilet)

About a week ago, I was inspired (infuriated might be a better word) by something my dentist said that made me want to strangle him with the floss he’d just used to clean in between my teeth.  He started his typical small talk bit with:

“How are you?”

“How are the kids?”

“Anything new?”

They were the kind of questions that elicit responses like I’m good.  The kids are good.  Everything’s fine.  Blah blah blah.

Then he asked… “How old are they now?”

Four and six.  Pre-K and 1st grade.

Then he asked… “Still home?”

“Still home?” – when you are – is as miserable a question as “Are you pregnant?” – when you’re not.  You might think I read too much into his inquiry and shouldn’t be so sensitive about it.  “Still home?” could be interpreted many different ways.  But, I was there.  I heard it.  I felt it.  Your kids are how old?  And you’re not back at work yet?  Have you lost your ambition?  Your kids aren’t babies anymore.  What are you waiting for?  Oh, I heard it.  Oh, I felt it.

Still home.

And then when I tried to write about it – about stay-at-home motherhood, choice, and everything in between – my mind clogged like a toilet.  I couldn’t write a single word, because my dentist made me doubt myself.   I honestly wasn’t sure if he was an asshole or if he was right (and an asshole), so I didn’t finish the essay, which got me thinking about how I really suck at finishing things.

Actually, there are some things I’m really good at finishing, like antibiotics, episodes of “The Good Wife,” and entire bags of Skinny Pop (and hopefully the 10K I’m running on Sunday morning).  But then there are the things I’m incapable of completing, and I’m not just referring to baby books, scrapbooks, and family photo albums.  I’m talking about the pile(s) of mail that I never quite get through.  The laundry that gets folded but not put away.  The super hero wall stickies that I put the boys’ room, except for the last one (“pow!”) that has to be applied on the wall above the fish tank, which requires a ladder and some awkward maneuvering.  The 2006 and 2007 boxes of bills and bank statements that need to be shredded but instead are collecting dust in my laundry room.  The box of stuff to be donated that lives in the corner of my dining room that I don’t even notice anymore.  The pictures that still need to be hung on the wall in the living room.  The toys that need to be sorted.  The doors for my office closet.  The book I’ve started writing a hundred times.  It seems like my life is a series of  unfinished projects.

Funny enough, Mike confessed to me in the car on Sunday that he, too, is frustrated that he’s easily distracted and has a hard time finishing things.  It’s true.  He’ll walk into a room to find his phone and an hour later I’ll find him building a bookshelf that requires a trip to Home Depot, where he’ll end up spending an afternoon researching raccoon-proof garbage cans.   Maybe we all suck at finishing things.

Speaking of sucking at things, taking care of Harry post-surgery has been a huge challenge.  If the tagline of Harry’s medical trauma was “expect the unexpected,” his recovery has unfolded in the same manner.  Even with all he endured in the hospital, he’s still fighting herniated discs in his neck and back, and sadly, his blood sugar won’t normalize, which means the insulinoma, or cancer, has probably metastasized.  He’s been on a complex feeding regime and an even more intricate medication schedule for weeks, and just when we thought he was finally making progress, we were told to consider chemotherapy as a last resort.  No matter what we do, we fail to fix him.

As long as we’re on the topic of failing, when you give your kids a surprise treat or something special, do they respond with, “What else did you get me?” or “That’s all?”  Mine sometimes often do, and it makes me want to strangle them with the same floss I fantasized using on my dentist.  Even worse (actually, the strangling thing is probably worse), I can’t help but wonder if they’ve learned this lack of gratitude from me.

Last Friday night, I took the boys to a kids’ Shabbat service and dinner at our temple.  It was a lovely event, but after an hour of standing in the middle of a category five hurricane of running and screaming children (with no wine in sight), I was ready to leave.  Dylan wasn’t happy about it, so he whined the whole way home saying things like, “This was the worst night ever.  I only got to bounce in the bounce house once.  Why did you make me leave?  This was the worst night ever!”

I wanted to pull the car over and run up and down the street screaming: “Why can’t you be grateful that you bounced in the bounce house at all?  You bounce in bounces ALL the time!  Do you realize how fortunate you are?  Do you know how bad you’re making me feel?”  And then I caught a glimpse of the moon.  It was the biggest, fullest, brightest moon I’d ever seen.  That supermoon from a few months ago had nothing on this one.

“Look up, boys.  Look at the moon.  Isn’t it beautiful?  Can you forget for one minute about the bounce house and all the things you want or don’t have or wish were different and look at this enormous, breathtaking moon?  You might never see one like this again.”

“Mommy,” Dylan said.  “We see the moon all the time.”

“Not this moon, Dylan.  This one is special.  Really look at it.”

I don’t know if they really looked at it, but I sure did, and my mind unclogged a little bit.  I stopped worrying about my choice to still be home, and realized that although I won’t ever go “back” to work, I will eventually move “forward” to a new endeavor.  Moreover, I’ll be the one who knows when it’s time (not my a-hole dentist).  I thought about how of all the things I have a hard time completing, this blog – this living, breathing journal of my life – isn’t one of them.  I realized how fortunate I am that Harry – even with his terminal diagnosis – is still here and that my still home status allows me to give him the love and care he needs and deserves.  I remembered that even though I wish my boys said thank you more often, they, like me, are works in progress, and, as usual, I’m not nearly finished.

“Moon moon moon, I can see

Moon moon moon, you’re taking care of me.”

– Laurie Berkner

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Filed under dentist, gratitude, Harry, health, motherhood, Stay-at-Home Mama

Sometimes We Lose Things

When I was a teenager, I spent a summer in Israel.  While there, I bought a ring that I wore every single day.  Back home that fall, while doing ecology experiments at a pond on the grounds of my high school, I lost the ring in the water.  Just like that, it was gone.  It was on my finger and then it was on the bottom of a deep, murky, and muddy pond, and there was absolutely nothing I could do.

The trip had meant so much to me.  The places I saw.  The friends I made.  The emotions I felt.  The growing up I did and the independence I forged half a world away from my parents.  It was remarkable.  I felt like the entire experience existed inside that ring, and suddenly it was gone.

In 2004, in the middle of packing up everything Mike and I owned to move from Brooklyn to Miami, one of the diamond baguettes in my wedding band slipped out of the setting.  We looked everywhere, but it simply disappeared.  I was devastated.  I lost it in the apartment we bought and shared as a couple.  In the place where we bought our first piece of furniture – a couch from Macy’s – together.  Where Mike proposed.  Where we ate sushi every Wednesday night.  Where we nested after 9/11.  Where we relished in and struggled through our first few years of marriage.  Losing that small stone felt like losing a slice of my life.  “We’ll replace it,” everyone said, but it – and all it encapsulated – was lost.

And then on the morning of the move, I saw something small catch the light on the floor of our empty bedroom as I did a final walkthrough before catching a cab to the airport.  It was the diamond.  I found it.  I flew to Miami holding on tight to that stone along with every invaluable moment it represented.

Last week, I left a purse in Naples where we were on vacation. Once I realized it (the day after we got home), I panicked. It wasn’t just any purse. It was my Louie Vuitton.  (Yes, I’m the proud owner of a little Louie.)  I love this purse, but it’s not because of the pricey label.   It’s because it was a gift from my mom.  She gave it to me when Mike and I got engaged.  It was a special time in our lives – for my parents as much as for us – and the purse was my mom’s way of saying I love you and the woman you’ve become and the choices you’ve made and the future you’re heading toward.  And I left it in a closet at a hotel.  As it turns out, luck was on my side.  Someone from Housekeeping turned in the purse, and it’s in the mail as I edit this post.

In the spring of 2008, I took Dylan for his first haircut.  As hard as it was for him (he was miserable!), it was even more difficult for me.  You see, he had these amazingly soft curls at the back of his neck, and I thought that once I cut them, my baby would be gone.

Dylan_May08

dhaircut

The curls never did grow back, but my baby – my Dylan – wasn’t lost at all.

dNaples

Hardly!

Yesterday morning, after more than two years of hanging on, having hope, and doing rain and sun and moon dances, Riley lost his front right tooth.  The loss was neither a surprise nor unexpected; rather, it was scheduled.

I thought a lot about Riley’s tooth the night before the procedure.  I thought he would be afraid.

On the drive to the dentist

On the drive to the dentist

He wasn’t.

I thought he would be nervous.

In the waiting room

In the waiting room

He wasn’t.

I thought it would hurt.

Grape scented "magic gas"

Grape scented “magic gas”

It didn’t.

I thought my Riley would be lost.  But he’s not.

I’m not going to lie.  There’s definitely something missing….

tooth6

…but his spirit and his smile and his silliness haven’t gone anywhere.

tooth1

He may be down one tooth, but due to Grandma Irene’s unprecedented generosity when Dylan lost his first tooth, Riley woke up with twenty-five buckaroos under his pillow from the Tooth Fairy.  (Even-steven is the law of the land with siblings.)

Sometimes we lose things.  Most of the time, they’re just things, but sometimes they’re not.  Somewhere in the middle, though, there’s acceptance and letting go, occasionally there’s a little bit of good luck, and every now and then there’s a sprinkling of fairy dust.

What have you lost?

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