For immediate release
* * * * *
RESPONSIBLE OLDEST GIRL RECEIVES THRILLING GIFT
Merry Cockroft, responsible eldest girl of three, received a bright pink case of make-up Sunday afternoon. Her response?
"It's a relief and pleasure for me to receive something frivolous," she said, or would have, had she articulated the look of bright excitement that lit up her large eyes.
"Merry gets a lot of books," her mother said. "Everyone thinks Merry likes books the best, and she does enjoy them, but sometimes she just wants to be a kid. I try reminding her that she is the most responsible, the most mature, the most grown-up of young women. But she is eight. Wanting a frivolous present is understandable, I guess."
Watched by her younger sister, Elspeth, Merry carefully applied purple eyeshadow above and below both eyes. Then she walked around like "she was somethin' hot," a bystander observed.
"I like the black eye appearance," her father commented. "It makes Merry look older and more mature."
Both parents are processing Merry's unexpected glee at the pink duffel of make-up. "It will take us a while to get over the shock," her mother said, quietly zipping the bag around the twenty shades of eyeshadow, "But we must remember, children are complex. We may think they only like books and lists of spelling words, but they are full of surprises."
Elspeth, who is enjoying her book of Tinkerbell stickers, also shocked her parents. "We always expect Elspeth to do the unexpected," said her father. "Her mother and I were sure we'd find stickers on her baby sister, on the walls, possibly up her nose, and on pots and pans." Instead, her mother reported, Elspeth covered papers with the stickers--"Paper!" her mother emphasized, wiping a tear from her eye. "Just like really responsible children! It just goes to show you," she added, deftly swiping the makeup duffel out of reach of Elspeth and her baby sister, "Children are full of surprises. Truly. That's my Christmas message to you and your family this year: Enjoy the unexpected. I have."
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Monday, December 14, 2009
Happy, Busy Weeks and Elspeth
Well, it's been an extremely busy holiday season here, and we're on the cusp of a trip to Texas. On the day we arrive back (Christmas) in PA, so do all of my family members!
Before I get carried away in the final pack/clean, here's a little Elspeth story I've been saving for some days now. A little background: Thomas is a boy in Elspeth's preschool. He features largely as a character of mischief in her stories, and the troubles he encounters and the devious nature he shows in her narratives are certain embellishments of what I am sure is a peaceful, calm demeanor. When I try to pry details of preschool out of her, mostly what I get are Thomas Stories instead. This one was too good not to record. Following are her words:
Thomas was inside his Mommy waiting to be born. And he ate one of his Mommy's bones. Then they jumped over the sea and he got swallowed by a fish. He jumped over the moon and that's all of the story.
Happy Christmas season, everyone!
Before I get carried away in the final pack/clean, here's a little Elspeth story I've been saving for some days now. A little background: Thomas is a boy in Elspeth's preschool. He features largely as a character of mischief in her stories, and the troubles he encounters and the devious nature he shows in her narratives are certain embellishments of what I am sure is a peaceful, calm demeanor. When I try to pry details of preschool out of her, mostly what I get are Thomas Stories instead. This one was too good not to record. Following are her words:
Thomas was inside his Mommy waiting to be born. And he ate one of his Mommy's bones. Then they jumped over the sea and he got swallowed by a fish. He jumped over the moon and that's all of the story.
Happy Christmas season, everyone!
Monday, November 16, 2009
Up Toward Ohio Pyle Park
Last Friday we took a long, long drive up toward Ohio Pyle Park so Martin could purchase his Rock-Collecting Permit. Ten tons of rocks from State Forests for five dollars a ton! Not a bad price, really, if you love collecting rocks. More about that later.
The drive started beautifully, dipped into Ugly and stayed Ugly for a while. But then Beauty rewarded us for enduring dreariness as we climbed in altitude--hills lush with rhododendron, ornamental pear trees still blazing orange, running fences and horse farms.
After a brief stop at the Park Office, where Martin obtained his rock-collecting permit (first one ever issued) and the girls flirted with a huge statue of Smoky the Bear, we drove a short way to Lynn State Park where we piled out of the car for our mile hike past Lynn Falls. Seemed as if it would be a simple hike until we realized that the thick carpet of leaves hid jagged rocks. We held the two little ones, since every time they began running they fell flat on their faces. Near the end of our hike, Elspeth chanted from my hip: "Stumble, trip! Stumble, trip! Stone man! Stone man!" I joggled over and around all the hidden rocks. As we hiked the light shifted through Canadian hemlocks, delicate fans of needles like frost patterns. The light began to take on a wintry quality as the sun fell. Underneath the leaves and among the rocks we saw thousands of acorns with hats lying askew. What lazy squirrels had missed these riches?
Occasionally, a crashing in the brush would make me look up for another human or a deer, but a little striped back would disappear over a rock--all that noise from a chipmunk! I wanted the children to see the little chaps but they moved too quickly and the children were too loud.
Night was falling quickly as we drove back toward home. Running colonial-style fences, constructed of crudely hewn black lumber, fenced in a field of dun colored sheep. On the hill behind them, black cows grazed; behind them hills rose, covered in bare armed trees against a the bright pink streaks of sunset. Trees arched over the dipping roads as we passed old stone farmhouses, bright red barns. A man outside his door stretched his arms out as if he were welcoming the warm evening.
And then we were back to Ugly again--bars and roadhouses forced us to stop at Wendy's, where we grudgingly ate our junky food under blue and red balloons given to our children by a clown dressed up with fake eyebrows and perky braids as Wendy. I glanced up from my bacon cheeseburger to see a giant cheeseburger passing by the window on the side of a semi.
Ugly shook us into Eerie as we drove by the powerplant with its huge towers white against the night sky, billows of white steam chugging from gaping mouths. We looked at a city of lights and electric spikes so close we could have tossed our giant Wendy's diet coke cup over the fence.
Ugly, Beautiful, Eerie, Exhilarating and Sad. That's our piece of America, rural coal mining country. Today as Martin collected ancient rocks covered in moss, he listened to the sounds of mining across the street, looked up to see the twisted stumps of recently felled trees and the deep tire tracks of excavators that bare mountains to dirt.
Post script:
That Friday night a magnet from the Forestry office, discarded on Martin's bedside table, advised me to "Get My Smoky On." What does this mean?
The drive started beautifully, dipped into Ugly and stayed Ugly for a while. But then Beauty rewarded us for enduring dreariness as we climbed in altitude--hills lush with rhododendron, ornamental pear trees still blazing orange, running fences and horse farms.
After a brief stop at the Park Office, where Martin obtained his rock-collecting permit (first one ever issued) and the girls flirted with a huge statue of Smoky the Bear, we drove a short way to Lynn State Park where we piled out of the car for our mile hike past Lynn Falls. Seemed as if it would be a simple hike until we realized that the thick carpet of leaves hid jagged rocks. We held the two little ones, since every time they began running they fell flat on their faces. Near the end of our hike, Elspeth chanted from my hip: "Stumble, trip! Stumble, trip! Stone man! Stone man!" I joggled over and around all the hidden rocks. As we hiked the light shifted through Canadian hemlocks, delicate fans of needles like frost patterns. The light began to take on a wintry quality as the sun fell. Underneath the leaves and among the rocks we saw thousands of acorns with hats lying askew. What lazy squirrels had missed these riches?
Occasionally, a crashing in the brush would make me look up for another human or a deer, but a little striped back would disappear over a rock--all that noise from a chipmunk! I wanted the children to see the little chaps but they moved too quickly and the children were too loud.
Night was falling quickly as we drove back toward home. Running colonial-style fences, constructed of crudely hewn black lumber, fenced in a field of dun colored sheep. On the hill behind them, black cows grazed; behind them hills rose, covered in bare armed trees against a the bright pink streaks of sunset. Trees arched over the dipping roads as we passed old stone farmhouses, bright red barns. A man outside his door stretched his arms out as if he were welcoming the warm evening.
And then we were back to Ugly again--bars and roadhouses forced us to stop at Wendy's, where we grudgingly ate our junky food under blue and red balloons given to our children by a clown dressed up with fake eyebrows and perky braids as Wendy. I glanced up from my bacon cheeseburger to see a giant cheeseburger passing by the window on the side of a semi.
Ugly shook us into Eerie as we drove by the powerplant with its huge towers white against the night sky, billows of white steam chugging from gaping mouths. We looked at a city of lights and electric spikes so close we could have tossed our giant Wendy's diet coke cup over the fence.
Ugly, Beautiful, Eerie, Exhilarating and Sad. That's our piece of America, rural coal mining country. Today as Martin collected ancient rocks covered in moss, he listened to the sounds of mining across the street, looked up to see the twisted stumps of recently felled trees and the deep tire tracks of excavators that bare mountains to dirt.
Post script:
That Friday night a magnet from the Forestry office, discarded on Martin's bedside table, advised me to "Get My Smoky On." What does this mean?
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Greene River Trail
The Hiker in early spring
Bea in her green longjohned legs sprouting out of her sparkly pink nightgown, damp hair. . .she should drop off to sleep quickly. She gave a good, May Westish "Buh-bye" and then blew kisses indiscriminately as we walked up the stairwell. We had a funny sort of supper--tons of leftovers--but I told the girls they were having a four course dinner (better than what most princesses can boast) and they were utterly delighted: first course, scrambled eggs; whisked away to be replaced by beef stew; a plate then instead of a bowl and they ate up a piece of pizza; and finally I gave them each a rice bowl full of whipped cream for dipping their fruit.
We spent such a lovely afternoon by the Monongahela River--a tugboat pushed two barges down the water, which was so still it looked like a lake; the girls played in leaves and Martin built a rock fence by the Hiker, who was made entirely out of scrap metal by an ambitious boyscout. The Hiker signals tea time, but when we spread our blanket in his shadow I realized I'd forgotten our mug. This gave me the pleasure of a very brisk walk to the car and back whereupon I fell at the Hiker's feet and ate chocolate cake with my fingers.
On our way back Bea crouched down and crawled after a tiny cricket, marking his progress with her animated exclamations. At one point she became puzzled because he had suddenly disappeared; it turned out that he was rather squashed under her fat baby hand. I think he may be crippled for life, but how he was adored! At our right the hill rose up into a fringe of trees. At our left the horizon smoothed away in the glassiness of the still river. The air was unseasonably warm, but as we passed by the waterfall, a cool, muddy breeze blew down at us. We stopped and drank it in--the change was so sudden it was as if we'd passed into another world, another season, a memory of our childhood.
Then back home through the golden light spilled over the hills, the old beautiful houses and cows grazing and the smoke of a leaf fire. Finally the sheen of late sunlight was behind us; there was home and our funny dinner and baths and loud noises of children thumping up our stairs on their way to bed.
Bea in her green longjohned legs sprouting out of her sparkly pink nightgown, damp hair. . .she should drop off to sleep quickly. She gave a good, May Westish "Buh-bye" and then blew kisses indiscriminately as we walked up the stairwell. We had a funny sort of supper--tons of leftovers--but I told the girls they were having a four course dinner (better than what most princesses can boast) and they were utterly delighted: first course, scrambled eggs; whisked away to be replaced by beef stew; a plate then instead of a bowl and they ate up a piece of pizza; and finally I gave them each a rice bowl full of whipped cream for dipping their fruit.
We spent such a lovely afternoon by the Monongahela River--a tugboat pushed two barges down the water, which was so still it looked like a lake; the girls played in leaves and Martin built a rock fence by the Hiker, who was made entirely out of scrap metal by an ambitious boyscout. The Hiker signals tea time, but when we spread our blanket in his shadow I realized I'd forgotten our mug. This gave me the pleasure of a very brisk walk to the car and back whereupon I fell at the Hiker's feet and ate chocolate cake with my fingers.
On our way back Bea crouched down and crawled after a tiny cricket, marking his progress with her animated exclamations. At one point she became puzzled because he had suddenly disappeared; it turned out that he was rather squashed under her fat baby hand. I think he may be crippled for life, but how he was adored! At our right the hill rose up into a fringe of trees. At our left the horizon smoothed away in the glassiness of the still river. The air was unseasonably warm, but as we passed by the waterfall, a cool, muddy breeze blew down at us. We stopped and drank it in--the change was so sudden it was as if we'd passed into another world, another season, a memory of our childhood.
Then back home through the golden light spilled over the hills, the old beautiful houses and cows grazing and the smoke of a leaf fire. Finally the sheen of late sunlight was behind us; there was home and our funny dinner and baths and loud noises of children thumping up our stairs on their way to bed.
Labels:
Beatrix,
Nature,
Parenting,
Wazoo Farm
Friday, November 6, 2009
Hide and Seek
I observed Elsepth and her sweet friend Ben yesterday playing Hide and Seek. They were both hiding; nobody was seeking. At least nobody I could see. As they crouched in the front hallway behind a heap of shoes, Ben said, "We're hiding from God."
"People have tried that before to bad results," I said. Watch out for large fish with capacious mouths.
Later I reflected playing Hide and Seek with a three- and four- year old is probably a bright spot in God's rather serious schedule of disasters and dreary requests from the rest of us. Ben told me God can't see through doors, so maybe he turns that off as a sort of handicap to level the playing field.
In other news, I have a new nephew! Born this morning to my sweet sister-in-law Caroline: Jacob(nobody knows?) Guerra.
Martin's already announced his intentions to call the boy "Yakov." Caroline's husband, Ilich, is Columbian and named for a character in Russian literature, and Martin thought it only right that the tradition continue. Congratulations, Guerras! Welcome, Yakov!
"People have tried that before to bad results," I said. Watch out for large fish with capacious mouths.
Later I reflected playing Hide and Seek with a three- and four- year old is probably a bright spot in God's rather serious schedule of disasters and dreary requests from the rest of us. Ben told me God can't see through doors, so maybe he turns that off as a sort of handicap to level the playing field.
In other news, I have a new nephew! Born this morning to my sweet sister-in-law Caroline: Jacob(nobody knows?) Guerra.
Martin's already announced his intentions to call the boy "Yakov." Caroline's husband, Ilich, is Columbian and named for a character in Russian literature, and Martin thought it only right that the tradition continue. Congratulations, Guerras! Welcome, Yakov!
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
My Friends
I lost my three half-days a week, and though I mourn the absence of our dear friend who is now student teaching, the cut in hours has been good for me. Now my nurturing friend (Bea thinks of her as another of her mommies) takes the non-school girls for two mornings a week, and those two mornings are so precious to me that I do not squander a single minute. If I have three hours, I sit down and I write the whole time. I am glued to my chair, no getting up or lollygagging unless I am DESPERATE to urinate or my three-baby bottom falls asleep. I write two new chapters a morning. Having limited time (say, over the past seven years) has produced one very important characteristic in me: Gratitude. I don't take even ten minutes of writing time for granted. I imagine that's a key: not having too much. Generally speaking, having just enough and making the most of it seems to be one of my keys to contentment. And what do those keys look like? Do they gleam like ice or are they dull from burial? I suppose it depends which day you catch me.
My dear Maple Mullihan and her oddball family feel, like my friend LJI in Missoula reflects about her novel's characters, like good friends by now. I hear Martin playing a song ("Dancing in the Moonlight") and I think, "That's a song the Mullihans would LOVE. I bet they're singing it." For a while there I felt all caught in the morass of publication (I had missed my by-the-time-I'm-thirty-I'll-have-a-book deadline) and then I turned a corner, and like Arnold Lobel's Frog, I spied spring! Why do I write? I asked myself. And I answered: Because I must to be happy; because I enjoy it! And so I jumped into the rather brisk waters of the new book and splashed around like a happy idiot. I must admit there are fairly muddy eddies here and there where I'm not sure what's on the bottom and I'm afraid to put down my toes. But why do something if I can't find a shred, or a hunk, or a whole lot of joy in it?
My girls are always spinning such delightful tales, and they have no use for time lines or inner pressures to produce. Elspeth turned her face to me at nap time the other day and reported in all seriousness: "Mommy, when I was born someone threw a pie in my face."
That's good stuff.
So is the warthog story from my dear friend Rachel that you must view. It's not every day warthogs eat your hand cream.
My dear Maple Mullihan and her oddball family feel, like my friend LJI in Missoula reflects about her novel's characters, like good friends by now. I hear Martin playing a song ("Dancing in the Moonlight") and I think, "That's a song the Mullihans would LOVE. I bet they're singing it." For a while there I felt all caught in the morass of publication (I had missed my by-the-time-I'm-thirty-I'll-have-a-book deadline) and then I turned a corner, and like Arnold Lobel's Frog, I spied spring! Why do I write? I asked myself. And I answered: Because I must to be happy; because I enjoy it! And so I jumped into the rather brisk waters of the new book and splashed around like a happy idiot. I must admit there are fairly muddy eddies here and there where I'm not sure what's on the bottom and I'm afraid to put down my toes. But why do something if I can't find a shred, or a hunk, or a whole lot of joy in it?
My girls are always spinning such delightful tales, and they have no use for time lines or inner pressures to produce. Elspeth turned her face to me at nap time the other day and reported in all seriousness: "Mommy, when I was born someone threw a pie in my face."
That's good stuff.
So is the warthog story from my dear friend Rachel that you must view. It's not every day warthogs eat your hand cream.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Driving
Hello, lovies.
I've a peeling nose from overblowing, a full heart, and a swollen gland. I just finished my morning goal of writing two more chapters on my Maple Mullihan sequel (never mind the first book hasn't yet been accepted--a mere detail!) and I'm rather happy with the sunshine filling the whole of my window pane. I'm rather less happy with the rotten fish smell outside, but that's different mining-town Pennsylvania story altogether. I did want to share an account of my mystical drive to church yesterday while my gratitude for it is still fresh in my innards:
I left the children with Martin yesterday morning. With my travel cup of coffee and my materials for Sunday, a sandwich and pumpkin cookies in a crumpled paper bag, I left a screaming Elspeth and headed down the front steps. I'd been complaining a bit about making the drive by myself, especially as Martin seemed fabulously comfortable in his slippers, but as soon as I sat behind the wheel of our Subaru, I knew I was in for a happy time. I banished NPR, my usual background noise to the cacophony of children, for the silence that sat beside me companionably as I pulled out of town and onto the highway toward Morgantown, West Virginia.
The highway cuts in between rolling hills, which were once mountains of the western america magnitude, but are now comfortable and more like an old grandmama who is a bit saggy and droopy but all the more beautiful for the marks of her children, who have eroded all her sharp edges. Occasionally you spot a house on a ridge line or in a valley, and occasionally there's a blight, like a box store or a car dealer, but mostly there are just endless trees, curving upward and out until you find the horizon. The morning of my solitary drive, the sky was clear blue, the sort of blue that makes you wait for contrails and swooping birds.
The deep green and thrumming reds of our autumn seem to have burned away to give way to a golden blaze. As I drove down toward the edge of Pennsylvania, the maples burned on all sides. The trees seemed to have drunk up all the summer sunlight and were alive with gold. The maples were like a blast of music, ringing in my head, bringing tears to my eyes, when suddenly the road curved upward into a cloud.
All the singing hushed, and everything was white and soft and far away, echoing out on all corners of the road. I thought the mist would last only a few seconds and then I'd plunge back out into the color again, but it went on and on. I turned on my headlights. The cars around me slowed a bit. The mist moved through the hills and as I moved more deeply into it.
It wasn't until I was in West Virginia that I realized the fog was gone. I don't know when I drove out of it, but suddenly I noticed I could see the striated browns of the rock walls to the left of the highway. Shafts of water darkened the rock in solid waterfalls. Then it was out of the mountains back to the rolling color, the spheres of yellow and red, the flickering of leaves, the dipping of the road. I increased speed to that good old West Virginia pace--78 and curving through autumn, descending finally to my exit and to the university traffic and to the responsibilities of people and noise.
I've a peeling nose from overblowing, a full heart, and a swollen gland. I just finished my morning goal of writing two more chapters on my Maple Mullihan sequel (never mind the first book hasn't yet been accepted--a mere detail!) and I'm rather happy with the sunshine filling the whole of my window pane. I'm rather less happy with the rotten fish smell outside, but that's different mining-town Pennsylvania story altogether. I did want to share an account of my mystical drive to church yesterday while my gratitude for it is still fresh in my innards:
I left the children with Martin yesterday morning. With my travel cup of coffee and my materials for Sunday, a sandwich and pumpkin cookies in a crumpled paper bag, I left a screaming Elspeth and headed down the front steps. I'd been complaining a bit about making the drive by myself, especially as Martin seemed fabulously comfortable in his slippers, but as soon as I sat behind the wheel of our Subaru, I knew I was in for a happy time. I banished NPR, my usual background noise to the cacophony of children, for the silence that sat beside me companionably as I pulled out of town and onto the highway toward Morgantown, West Virginia.
The highway cuts in between rolling hills, which were once mountains of the western america magnitude, but are now comfortable and more like an old grandmama who is a bit saggy and droopy but all the more beautiful for the marks of her children, who have eroded all her sharp edges. Occasionally you spot a house on a ridge line or in a valley, and occasionally there's a blight, like a box store or a car dealer, but mostly there are just endless trees, curving upward and out until you find the horizon. The morning of my solitary drive, the sky was clear blue, the sort of blue that makes you wait for contrails and swooping birds.
The deep green and thrumming reds of our autumn seem to have burned away to give way to a golden blaze. As I drove down toward the edge of Pennsylvania, the maples burned on all sides. The trees seemed to have drunk up all the summer sunlight and were alive with gold. The maples were like a blast of music, ringing in my head, bringing tears to my eyes, when suddenly the road curved upward into a cloud.
All the singing hushed, and everything was white and soft and far away, echoing out on all corners of the road. I thought the mist would last only a few seconds and then I'd plunge back out into the color again, but it went on and on. I turned on my headlights. The cars around me slowed a bit. The mist moved through the hills and as I moved more deeply into it.
It wasn't until I was in West Virginia that I realized the fog was gone. I don't know when I drove out of it, but suddenly I noticed I could see the striated browns of the rock walls to the left of the highway. Shafts of water darkened the rock in solid waterfalls. Then it was out of the mountains back to the rolling color, the spheres of yellow and red, the flickering of leaves, the dipping of the road. I increased speed to that good old West Virginia pace--78 and curving through autumn, descending finally to my exit and to the university traffic and to the responsibilities of people and noise.
Labels:
Faith,
Nature,
Wazoo Farm,
Writing and Words
Friday, October 23, 2009
A Full Tea Kettle
Here is my short Friday wish list:
A full tea kettle always ready to whistle but not screaming. Perhaps I should like the heft of the kettle under my palm and fingers, enjoy the filling. Still I wish it were always full.
Also a silent person who puts the tea cup, with perfectly blended milk and no sugar, at my elbow, whom I do not thank but who knows I am thankful.
Beds that change their own sheets.
More tunnels.
I think maybe I would miss the snap of the sheets and the way I feel my mother is with me, at my elbow, watching every time I tuck a hospital corner. I would perhaps miss bobbing the tea bag by its string in the hot water, watching the swirls drift into the corner of the cup.
So I'll whittle my list down to one:
More tunnels to beautiful places.
And add one:
A yard full of mature maples and pines. I awaken one morning and there they are, standing in my yard like old uncles, hands shoved in corduroy pockets. They have always been in the room.
A full tea kettle always ready to whistle but not screaming. Perhaps I should like the heft of the kettle under my palm and fingers, enjoy the filling. Still I wish it were always full.
Also a silent person who puts the tea cup, with perfectly blended milk and no sugar, at my elbow, whom I do not thank but who knows I am thankful.
Beds that change their own sheets.
More tunnels.
I think maybe I would miss the snap of the sheets and the way I feel my mother is with me, at my elbow, watching every time I tuck a hospital corner. I would perhaps miss bobbing the tea bag by its string in the hot water, watching the swirls drift into the corner of the cup.
So I'll whittle my list down to one:
More tunnels to beautiful places.
And add one:
A yard full of mature maples and pines. I awaken one morning and there they are, standing in my yard like old uncles, hands shoved in corduroy pockets. They have always been in the room.
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Autumn, Continued
Bea's face looks like mine when we take drives these days.
New England may be fine, but our autumn is pretty glorious, too. I wish you all could be here to see it. Today I cooked up an acorn squash and my o my but there isn't anything better, especially with a little cinnamon, brown sugar, and apples.
Lest you be tiring of the odes to autumn, I do have a luscious piece of news: my man Martin just got a poem accepted at Beloit Poetry Journal! Pretty proud of that guy. So proud, in fact, that I whipped him up an acorn squash tonight. That's the kind of wild way we celebrate around here.
New England may be fine, but our autumn is pretty glorious, too. I wish you all could be here to see it. Today I cooked up an acorn squash and my o my but there isn't anything better, especially with a little cinnamon, brown sugar, and apples.
Lest you be tiring of the odes to autumn, I do have a luscious piece of news: my man Martin just got a poem accepted at Beloit Poetry Journal! Pretty proud of that guy. So proud, in fact, that I whipped him up an acorn squash tonight. That's the kind of wild way we celebrate around here.
Labels:
Nature,
Wazoo Farm,
Writing and Words
Monday, October 19, 2009
Autumn Now
For my parents in Bangkok and Martin's parents in Houston, here's a little of what you're missing:
Our first hoary frost lay over everything--the stroller, railings, car, trees--zapped the zinnias, but melted quickly to give way to a perfect autumn day. Beatrix's favorite new thing: chasing squirrels in the park. One threw down nuts at us today as we waited for Martin. My mother has always had a particular knack with squirrels--one at the Episcopal Church in Maryland chatted regularly with her.
Are there squirrels in Thailand? I won't list what I'm missing by NOT being in Bangkok. Martin cooked Thai noodles tonight, so it's almost as if we're there. Hmm.
Zippitydodah! Hoorah for yellow and red! And for Thai noodles!
Our first hoary frost lay over everything--the stroller, railings, car, trees--zapped the zinnias, but melted quickly to give way to a perfect autumn day. Beatrix's favorite new thing: chasing squirrels in the park. One threw down nuts at us today as we waited for Martin. My mother has always had a particular knack with squirrels--one at the Episcopal Church in Maryland chatted regularly with her.
Are there squirrels in Thailand? I won't list what I'm missing by NOT being in Bangkok. Martin cooked Thai noodles tonight, so it's almost as if we're there. Hmm.
Zippitydodah! Hoorah for yellow and red! And for Thai noodles!
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
The World According to Elspeth, Age 3 1/2, in Photos
I just downloaded some pictures with the intention of creating yet another ode to autumn. . .and then I found that Elspeth had been quite busy with the camera. I actually found myself loving her photo journal, though of course she's not technically supposed to be running around with our only digital camera. Technicalities like these have never stopped her before. I wish I could include all her takings, but I've chosen just a few. Without further ado, then:
You'll note that focus is also a silly detail she doesn't pay too much attention to, which tells you much about her: she is ALWAYS on the move. Most of our pictures of her are out of focus for that very reason.
The first set of photos are from one evening and the next set are from a following afternoon.
We end with a self-portrait.
You'll note that focus is also a silly detail she doesn't pay too much attention to, which tells you much about her: she is ALWAYS on the move. Most of our pictures of her are out of focus for that very reason.
The first set of photos are from one evening and the next set are from a following afternoon.
We end with a self-portrait.
Monday, October 12, 2009
Writer's Bird
This is Elspeth's photo of me, when my head was taken in glory. It was a great trip. I missed my body. Someday I will write of it.
So here I am. I don't have writer's block, exactly, which is a dumb name and makes me think of laxatives. We don't want writer's diarrhea, either, just. . .well, I'll stop there. I have these lovely shards to a story and I'm not brave enough to throw them all into the fire.
Maybe it's not cowardice, either, that stops me--maybe just laziness, or weariness, or the water is too cold to jump in all at once. What I need to do is just plunge in like those fools I've known who whoop like gorillas and beat their chests and whip around their wet cold heads like buffaloes in heat. They are not fools at all. They are brave.
I wet a little bit of my body at a time, afraid of the full hit of coldness. . .and then the story is gone. This is not how I usually operate. Usually I write like mad for four hours and then sit back with my scissors and begin snipping. Martin comes in with his chainsaw and takes off all the appendages, leaving maybe just the head. Or maybe just an ear. "There's your story!" he says, holding up that one ear with a grin. A small silver loop dangles. I hold the ear, despair for a minute, and begin mixing up the plaster to construct a body around it again. If I am brave.
I think all the reading of Sylvia Plath's journals has taken it out of me. I looked at a mushroom today in the grass on the way to class and I wondered, "How would Sylvia have described this mushroom?" And low and behold if I didn't open my book at random in class and read, "A mushroom's black underpleats."
What is that high buzzing in my office? I hate high, constant sounds. They get behind my eyes and stick themselves down in my throat.
Maybe, just maybe, I will start that story. As soon as I finish this exceptional cup of tea. Then. And maybe when that buzzing goes away. A black bird just flew past the blinding, sunlit clouds, like the blur of a waving hand in an overexposed photograph. . . .Actually, not like that at all.
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Vegetables Make You Feel Lovely
Whether it was the perfect autumn day, a measure of my surrender to weariness, or the simple meal of vegetables I ate for dinner, I feel so content. Green beans and local purple potatoes and peppers that a farmer and retired professor showered into my lap (with a gruff, 'don't want to take these home') and I carried around in my capacious purse all afternoon. . .onions, a little tomato, and a long simmer.
I never feel this happy when I eat meat, except perhaps turkey, and that's the sleepy drug kicking in, I suppose, and the fact that I always eat it with family on holidays. I feel vegetarianism at my heels again. I've become picky and paranoid about meat lately, even local, all-natural, no-hormone meat. And then, the other day, this happened: We were driving along, almost off the interstate, almost into the bosom of our little town, when a big semi passed by. It was one of those with slits in the walls, and through the slits we could see great big soft, dirty black cows.
"Where are they going?" the girls wanted to know, delighted that, Richard Scarry fashion, they'd seen a truck full of cows.
"I'm not sure exactly," I said, not untruthfully, since I didn't know WHICH slaughterhouse they were bound for.
"I think they're going to the fair," one daughter suggested, and then another said they might be going to a great big cow park, and then Elspeth concluded they were headed for a field of flowers.
That would be nice. Ug. It was like a knife had plunged itself into my liver. All I could see was the death-agony eyeroll that accompanies a cow being slaughtered.
The sticker on the back of the semi said I [heart] LOVE BEEF. I did not read it aloud.
I think I'm a vegetarian, I said to Martin. That clinches it.
In other happier news, for the first time I saw a semi with its bed full of apples--not crates of apples or bags of apples. Just the naked spheres tossed in. There must have been thousands and thousands, piled to the top. It brought to mind another Richard Scarry fantasy: the overturned truck with apples strewn everywhere and the truck driver, in happy resignation, setting up a stand with "Apple Cider" advertised on a jolly sign.
Here's a cup of tea and some dahlias for you, be they a bit out of focus:
Enjoy!
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Monsters and Free Will
This morning over Cheerios, Elspeth (3 1/2) asked me if we were like Playmobil figures and Jesus just played with us and made us do whatever he wanted. She illustrated her point: So when P-- comes over tonight, it will be like this. . .
She extended her arm, pretending she was holding a figurine, and plopped it along the table: Plu, plu, plu, she said.
And tonight we rehashed a much replayed bedtime theme: MONSTERS. I tried to explain that her imagination belonged to her, and she was in charge of what sort of monsters came in. I told her a story about a little girl who plays so happily with her friend Fleurfleur that she never realizes Fleurfleur is a monster. Well, one day Fleurfluer comes over to play and her mother opens the front door and shouts: Ahhh! A monster!
To help Elspeth, Merry shared her memories of being afraid of monsters jumping out of her closet--she just imagined that any flick of light, in the house or on the street, would dissolve the monster, and so she was no longer afraid. When I came to kiss her she confided, Actually, I am still afraid of monsters sometimes. But (with a shrug) I just go with it.
And Elspeth made me alter the sign next to her bed so it now reads:
NO MONSTERS ALLOWED.
Only nice monsters in E's imagination.
WATCH OUT! JESUS IS WITH ELSPETH!
I heard her reading the sign out loud, presumably to the monsters assembled outside our front door, angling to get in and hide in closets. It doesn't matter how many times we repeat there are no such things. And why am I afraid to go into the basement by myself at night? And why are you?
She extended her arm, pretending she was holding a figurine, and plopped it along the table: Plu, plu, plu, she said.
And tonight we rehashed a much replayed bedtime theme: MONSTERS. I tried to explain that her imagination belonged to her, and she was in charge of what sort of monsters came in. I told her a story about a little girl who plays so happily with her friend Fleurfleur that she never realizes Fleurfleur is a monster. Well, one day Fleurfluer comes over to play and her mother opens the front door and shouts: Ahhh! A monster!
To help Elspeth, Merry shared her memories of being afraid of monsters jumping out of her closet--she just imagined that any flick of light, in the house or on the street, would dissolve the monster, and so she was no longer afraid. When I came to kiss her she confided, Actually, I am still afraid of monsters sometimes. But (with a shrug) I just go with it.
And Elspeth made me alter the sign next to her bed so it now reads:
NO MONSTERS ALLOWED.
Only nice monsters in E's imagination.
WATCH OUT! JESUS IS WITH ELSPETH!
I heard her reading the sign out loud, presumably to the monsters assembled outside our front door, angling to get in and hide in closets. It doesn't matter how many times we repeat there are no such things. And why am I afraid to go into the basement by myself at night? And why are you?
Labels:
Elspeth,
Faith,
Merry,
mice and other small things,
Parenting
Monday, September 28, 2009
letters to the dead, dahlias, and other daily things
Outside the wind has calmed a bit and the air is cool and buzzes with crickets. The sunflowers are heavy with seeds and rain; their faces almost brush the grass.
On my desk is a plate with the remains of an apple cake Bea and I baked this morning (she sitting on the counter, dropping whole apples into bowls and batter--I saved my hand-beater just in time) from orange, green, yellow, red local apples. Also there is the copy of my book for young readers (the first page scrunched by a zealous baby), an empty tea cup the color of an ostrich egg, a blinking answering machine, and an envelope, unaddressed. Inside the envelope is a letter Elspeth wrote last night by herself. I believe the page is covered in orange scribbles. She folded it up messily and asked for a case (envelope). After licking the flap multiple times and with great spirit, she sealed the letter and said, "It's for Greatgrandpa because he's dead. It says, 'I'll see you in heaven.'
So there it is. What to do?
Elspeth wrote a letter to a dead person and now she fully expects us to send it to him in the mail. Is the USPS up to the task, I wonder?
I close with a dahlia bestowed upon us by the lovely lady across the street.
If such a flower is REAL and actually grows upon a stem, surely a letter to a dead person can be delivered.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Cusp of Autumn
Autumn, I adore you! Hurrah for your golds and apple reds! For cold nights creeping under warm window sashes, for birds polished shiny as nut shells!
For children in slippers
Grandfather trees
Bowing sunflowers
A late raspberry on my tongue
Autumn, dear bearded one, come and simmer cider with us. Stay long! I do not feel as kindly to your successor. Why do you never come alone? This year, O Autumn, leave Winter behind!
For children in slippers
Grandfather trees
Bowing sunflowers
A late raspberry on my tongue
Autumn, dear bearded one, come and simmer cider with us. Stay long! I do not feel as kindly to your successor. Why do you never come alone? This year, O Autumn, leave Winter behind!
Thursday, September 17, 2009
For Slugman MD
Whether ‘tis nobler to drive your tractor
into a nest full of yellow jackets
and by opposing them not end them.
To sting, to sting—
One more—and by the third or tenth end
the stinging and make way for the natural shocks
and swelling. To swell, to smell of Benadryl—
aye, there’s the rub,
for in that stinking comes the verse of friends
who think: instead of almost shuffling off this mortal coil,
by bearing the whips and scorns of yellowjackets,
you should have paused
turned heel and run like hell,
plunged into your septic tank
or water well
with a bare bodkin! Who would fardels bear,
but that dread of bees, their great buzz
from which nest no traveler returns.
Soft you now,
The swollen Slugman!
Shed Update, in Pictures
First Day of School
Finally! Here are first days!
Merry's first day of 2nd grade: she declared she didn't want us to drive her to or pick her up from school. Ms. Independence with stoic face and determined stride.
Elspeth's first day of preschool: she'd been chomping at the bit for weeks, and Martin could barely get her attention to say goodbye once they got there.
They left without a backwards glance, both of them. A sign of things to come, I think.
Bea and I went home, danced for a while, and then had some tea and cake with a friend. Hoorah!
Merry's first day of 2nd grade: she declared she didn't want us to drive her to or pick her up from school. Ms. Independence with stoic face and determined stride.
Elspeth's first day of preschool: she'd been chomping at the bit for weeks, and Martin could barely get her attention to say goodbye once they got there.
They left without a backwards glance, both of them. A sign of things to come, I think.
Bea and I went home, danced for a while, and then had some tea and cake with a friend. Hoorah!
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Big Nosed Me
Elspeth, while snuggling with me last night, said, "Mommy, you look like the child-catcher in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang."
"You mean I look like Truly Scrumptious?" I queried, hoping I had misheard.
"No, like the child-catcher." She paused and continued matter-of-factly: "You have a big nose."
All these years, struggling to accept my great big Finish honker, and the child tells it like it is. I am proud to say I laughed, and it was a good laugh from my tummy, not a sad laugh. I do have a big nose.
As an unrelated postscript, I made a cake for our lovely babysitter, decorating it with icing balloons, until I suddenly realized, "These don't look like balloons! They look like sperm!" Truly, green sperm swimming all over her cake. Thankfully Elspeth covered the images in such layers of sprinkles that you can't even see them anymore.
"You mean I look like Truly Scrumptious?" I queried, hoping I had misheard.
"No, like the child-catcher." She paused and continued matter-of-factly: "You have a big nose."
All these years, struggling to accept my great big Finish honker, and the child tells it like it is. I am proud to say I laughed, and it was a good laugh from my tummy, not a sad laugh. I do have a big nose.
As an unrelated postscript, I made a cake for our lovely babysitter, decorating it with icing balloons, until I suddenly realized, "These don't look like balloons! They look like sperm!" Truly, green sperm swimming all over her cake. Thankfully Elspeth covered the images in such layers of sprinkles that you can't even see them anymore.
From a Mama Letter
You see above my mama with crazy-haired Baby Beatrix. Here my mama is saying, "You're just the funniest looking baby--" and Bea was with her hair always on end--now she's just the littlest of the Cockroft nesting dolls.
And below is a little excerpt from a letter I just wrote to my mama, who is very very far away today.
September 16, 2009
Dear Mom,
How strange to think of you so far away today. You are perhaps on your way to Lamu, that East African island fabled for its clear pristine water and white beaches. The night you and Dad were flying across the ocean toward Amsterdam and then onto Nairobi I slept badly. Maybe it was biology that made me feel bereft as you went further and further away. I thought the next day what it would be like to be without you completely and I am thankful that is not so.
I remember when I was ten or so and Daddy took Heather and me off to Ecuador, and how melancholy I felt looking out of the plane window at the clouds tinged with pink, thinking of you being very far away, back in Georgia with Kenton. Of course I had a wonderful time but I missed you every day. I still remember well how, after one of our vehicles rammed into the side of the mountain on a narrow road, Daddy let me walk through a field, heavy with dew or rain (I don’t remember which), and though it had looked Romantic to me and I had pictured myself picking a bouquet and wandering happily through the flowers, the whole excursion mostly produced anxiety about fat bees and soggy shoes. In the end I was a discomforted little girl who reproached herself for the rest of the trip until her shoes dried. Would you have let me walk through the field if you had been there?
So you are off to Lamu with Dad, continents and time zones away from our house, and I am here in my office, with the warm autumn sunlight filtering through the window screen. Outside the garden is at its mellow decline, alive with the sound of crickets. The sunflowers are heavy and will soon be bereft of all their seeds. Elspeth and I went out early yesterday morning to harvest the sharp, black cosmos seeds and the last of the raspberries. Some of the berries were half eaten by wasps and bees, and the lower ones were absent due to the vigorous munching of our groundhog, Grassy Sam, who is as fat as ever. He is more of a friendly presence in our garden than the renowned pest most people think of. I actually find the sight of his big wiry bottom disappearing down our hill comforting.
We have come to be more and more at ease about the garden, a bit more zen-like in our approach (though perhaps that translates to lazy), and we share our produce with the critters pretty happily though I must admit annoyance when the deer chomp down our lovely fruit trees to stumps on a regular basis. Then I am inclined to make myself feel better by thinking of all the trouble fruit trees could be: prone to disease, and having to be harvested year after year, and so convince myself that even the deer’s damage is okay. Isn’t it easier just to buy apples at Farmer’s Market, after all?
Well, that’ll do me for now. Beatrix is about to climb up my chair and stage a coup.
Labels:
gardening,
Parenting,
Writing and Words
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