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Alone for Thanksgiving
You know, moms lose their sons – but tend to keep their daughters.
I was informed last week that my offspring would be eating turkey at his girlfriends house.
I knew this day was coming – but didn’t know it would hit when he was 19!
I had prepared myself for the “We’re spending Christmas at my wife’s parents house” sentence – but that was supposed to be YEARS from now – and I’d be tending to my 15 cats by then and unable to dwell too much on his absence!
What happened???
We usually go together to my moms for a feast. But this year, after hearing I would be sans child – I decided to stay home with Butters.
My mom understood. Mostly because she’s a huge animal lover and advocate and knows how I hate that every holiday we end up bailing on Butters to partake in festivities without her.
I’m also not a huge fan of Thanksgiving.
Don’t get me wrong – I’m a HUGE fan of being thankful. And if it was just a special day set aside for doing just that, I’d be all in. But there’s that tricky Pilgrim/Indian factor.
The whole myth of the harmony of that first feast turns my stomach to the point of not wanting to fill it with brussel sprouts or stuffing.
Then the completely food selfish glutton in me manages to get over that and pig out.
I bought myself a turkey – plan to make a full meal and enjoy having the relaxing time at home. I’m going to love smelling the meal cooking while lazily flicking through channels to find the perfect corny holiday movie to settle on.
I might even fish out the Christmas decorations – or at the very least, the Christmas candy bowl.
It’s my first 4 day weekend in I don’t even know how long!
Butters and I will enjoy every moment.
None of those moments will include being anywhere near a shop on Black Friday by the way.
I’ve managed to restrain myself and not bring up the way the Wampanoag were treated … so I’ll keep it light and skip the holiday commercialism speech too.
I DO wish everyone reading this, Peace, Gratitude and Love in their lives. May your day fill more than your stomach – may your heart be filled with precious new memories.
And hey, if you’re parents of young children, let them be loud, let them climb down from the table, let them stick their fingers into the pumpkin pie – don’t sweat the small stuff! Because one day – they will have other plans.
Minimal Parenting State of Frustration
Come on down folks!
You can carry concealed weapons with no license AND it’s a Minimal Parenting State!
Seriously.
My frustration level today was at a full Spinal Tap 11.
I had my annual property inspection this morning.
All went well. Considering I’m a goody two shoes and have been cleaning like an OCD queen for a year, there wasn’t really any doubt about that.
Feels intrusive though – taking photos of every room – my bedroom, all my precious things. (almost expected them to bring in a table with stirrups for a full examination) The bathrooms – our towels and toiletries. Even Butters!!!
Don’t get me wrong, the people who manage the property I live in are really nice. I also understand why the homeowner is well within his or her right to know what condition their investment is in.
I’m just saying the inspection itself feels like a cell check. A reminder that where you are is not yours – and someone else has a set of keys and a set of rules.
Speaking of rules.
This was also my time to mention anything that needed fixing etc.
Well, other than some minor items, an obvious thing that needs fixing is the behavior of ‘the neighbors’.
Both homes are owned by the same person and managed by the same company.
I brought up recent events (the dog’s appearance, the witnessed dog abuse, the traffic/drug-likelihood continuance, yelling at the children)
I bring it up because I can’t escape it!
I’m no Mrs. Kravitz!! I’m not a ‘Curtain Twitcher’ (as my Nannie would say)
Every room I spend a lot of time in (kitchen, living room, bedroom) have windows directly facing ‘them’.
Walls are thin – I hear every car, every verbal barb from my couch – I assure you, I am not pressed against the wall with my ear to a cup.
I cannot enjoy the sanctuary that ‘home’ should be with the uncomfortable dysfunction constantly on display.
___________________________________
Fast forward.
I told the inspector that I was done.
It doesn’t seem fair that I follow the rules, and can’t enjoy my home to the fullest.
I received an email at work from the landlord.
She was going to call CPS and if they did not renew the tenancy, would I consider staying?
Wow.
Yeah – of course. (I actually wasn’t intending to leave.)
The yard is a great size for Butters – I don’t feel like her barking interferes with anyone (no direct neighbors that we’re butted up against) and I’ve been in the home for 4 years and am settled. The inspector today kept saying how cozy I’d made the place. And it’s true.
It is cozy.
If you can shut out the world and just be in the moment – it’s a hell of a homey, cozy place to be.
I received another email from the landlord.
Apparently, the State I live in is a ‘minimal parenting’ State.
Huh?!?!
What is this, and why didn’t I know about this when Nic was under 18?
You mean I didn’t have to supply love, entertainment, attention to his education etc??? What the hell?
I joke of course.
The landlady had an example for me, and I quote:
“Do you know that if someone is dealing drugs out of their home and they are not doing it in front of the children and the drugs are locked up so the kids cannot get to them that it is not a danger and therefore they cannot do anything!!”
Wow.
There was another example:
“I was dumbfounded when I asked her what would constitute getting them involved and the responses made me so mad! She told me that if someone had dog feces all over there floor, with children in the house, that if the children were crawling through it or at an age to still not understand not to put it in their mouth that would be an issue.
If the same situation occurred and the child was 6 or 7 and knew not to put it in their mouth that would not be an issue. I don’t understand how that cannot be health and safety????!!!!!”
Again, Wow.
We went back and forth and exchanged exasperation and ideas. I finally mentioned that the dog’s waste is not picked up and is located amongst the childrens backyard toys.
Two are under 6.
Grasping at straws I know!
That failing, they could at least call ‘the neighbors’ out on the unofficial dog and we can get that innocent party out of the mix.
In order to keep Butters, I MUST have renters insurance and had to put a pet deposit down. They should have to do the same!
And I don’t say that in a ‘wah wah’ tantrum way … I say it because it is NOT fair that there are people who follow rules and people who don’t and the ones who don’t seem to get away with it.
I think (especially before Christmas) that might be something they won’t want to do and they’ll opt to relinquish the dog.
It should have no problem finding a home – it’s a sweetheart.
What keeps returning to my thoughts though is how on earth is anyone supposed to prevent a tragedy?
The minute a child is killed or found in a disgusting environment, strangers comment ‘why didn’t anyone DO anything about this?’ And they tut and sneer and judge. (I know I have.)
Well people, guess what? I bet someone TRIED to do something and there were no avenues for them to take.
I’ve called the Sheriff.
I’ve advised the landlord.
CPS has been spoken to.
And as I type, I’m still across from that family – and unless someone is seen walking out of their house holding a bag of drugs or they beat their children in the middle of the street – or they … gawd, what?
Unless they WHAT??
What IS it going to take to finally do them in?
I don’t know.
But I only want the best for those three children and for that pup.
And yeah – call me crazy – but I still only want the best for the flipping parents too. Because they were once children. Whatever makes them capable of being the way they are and lashing out the way they do – needs fixing.
I only want the best for EVERYONE!
Related posts:
The Help and how I almost didn’t
Porch Sounds – what about the children?
Musings from the Laundromat: The Parenting Paradigm edition
I’ve figured it out.
The parenting paradigm. This progression of unconditional love and support to ‘If he leaves a dirty dish in the sink one more time, I shall end him’.
I’ll preface all of this with, if my son needed me to die today in order to live – I would not ask a question except “Where do I have to go for this to happen?”
If he needed a body part and I had to saw if off myself – okay … probably that would be hard to do – but I’d let people hold me down and do it without any anesthesia.
My son is my most favorite person – my raison d’être.
Then he got older. And more capable. And more independent.
Which is great! But as I strained to lug two laundry bags inside today, and realized that 3/4 of it was his – and that he is not even here … well.
Know how we panic then experience such emotion when an animal is killed in a movie, but not so much a human?
Yes you do.
I’ve figured it all out.
Once someone is capable of taking care of themselves but won’t – then it’s on them.
A small child – innocent animal – they can’t do it. They depend on us. Count on us. Love us with pure abandon.
Which, is why I broke down and cleaned out Nic’s hamster last night. Poor thing.
I remember how he begged to have her for his birthday – we stood in the pet store, his 19-year-old hands sweaty with birthday money and he pledged that THIS animal would be different. After all, he was a MAN now.
When I returned home from work Friday, he had left for the weekend – and little remnants of his visit were everywhere. Curiously, none of them cedar chips – which invariably end up on the kitchen floor during a cage cleaning.
Our current situation is this – he works Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday in a neighboring State. Then he comes home Monday night and goes to our local college Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. I think. There may be one more day in there. Anyway, he stays with my mom while he’s working. The excuse was ‘to save gas’ although, I think that was the beginning of another necessary paradigm shift – the spreading wings part.
It’s working out for me. I get the weekends alone and still get to see him during the week in-between video games/calls to his girlfriend and Skypes. So basically when he’s hungry and rooting around in the kitchen, or bored because he’s had his fill of online entertainment. It’s working out for my mom for sure – she get’s grandma time. And it’s working out for Nic. So it’s win-win-win really.
But before he left this time, I asked him to please clean his hamster and before he came home this time, I had asked him to please keep the house as clean as it was.
Neither happened.
So Friday night after telling him I was confused and was he coming home that night? Due to the fact that his TV was on, hamster wasn’t done, trash was overflowing and dishes were on the counter. (And I wasn’t being sarcastic) this chat happened.
it started with me telling him I would clean out the hamster this weekend. Yeah I know, pushover. But remember, we are pulled to caring for the defenseless.
Back to the Parenting Paradigm.
So the more the young is capable of doing, and the older the young get – the more it feels like you’ve got a non-paying roommate that does nothing to contribute to the house and yet enjoys all the benefits of living there.
Nature knows what it’s doing. Because we were all like that to some degree and I’m certain its on purpose. So that when the time comes for the young to leave the nest – us parents willing to saw body parts off won’t be so devastated.
I enjoy my quiet weekends. But I’m not ready for silent weeknights just yet.
I cleaned out the hamster last night by the way … after I gave Butters a bath and cleaned the house – because none of those things were capable of doing themselves.
And the laundry hasn’t learned to fold itself yet – so I’m headed to the dryers and hoping you all had a wonderful weekend.
Nearly 19
Nearly 19.
It’s been so strange to see my son through my eyes lately.
I find myself noticing new things about him as if I haven’t spent almost 19 years watching him grow.
He takes my breath away sometimes – when I catch a glimpse of the man he’ll be.
I’m filled with pride when I hear him share his original thoughts about life – about the universe. Whether we share the same opinions or not – I love how his mind works!
He definitely inherited the best of both of his parents. Big blue eyes and full lips from his paternal side. My smile, my humor.
It really is hard to feel any ill will towards his absent father when I see so much of him in the person I love most on the planet.
He’s growing into himself – finding what makes him happy, interested, angry.
It’s fascinating.
I’m trying to hang back – be a casual observer and not interfere. Hoping my lessons over the years have taken seed.
And I think they have.
I genuinely like this person who is about to enter his last teenaged year on the last day of March.
And I love that I get to like my son.
Happy Birthday Nicholas Avery Charles.


















Foie Gras Children and Slender Men
Jun 4
Posted by debaucherysoup
I have always been an avid reader.
I would lose myself in book after book when I was a child. They fed my soul, took me places even my dreams could not conjure.
I absorbed every word – they painted vivid, breathtaking, amazing and sometimes frightening pictures for me.
I was rewarded with a rich vocabulary and a very intense imagination.
I drew pictures of the characters, dressed up like some of the protagonists, reenacted scenes with my dolls and my stuffed animals …
But never, ever did I confuse them with reality.
Having said that, of course, I learned from Aesop – I knew enough to summarize that his fables were teaching me things that I could and probably should be applying to ‘real life’.
But I didn’t expect that if I happened across a white rabbit and followed him, that I would be transported to another world.
I didn’t believe that there was a porridge pot that would produce endless amounts of the oats.
I knew magic beans, glass slippers and talking toads lived only in the pages of my books.
Even the fictional stories with real people, and real possibilities I knew to be entertainment. Enid Blyton’s Famous Five series was among my favorites when I was little.
No adult supervision, friends, lighthouses, ginger beer, cream buns, adventure AND a dog?! I was in!!!
But not really. I knew how to separate a fictional adventure that a fictional person was having – from reality.
We have that capability to make amazing mud pies – and the sensibility not to eat them.
(Ok, to be fair, I have tried dirt.)
We dressed up like royalty, but didn’t expect a carriage to pull up and whisk us away to our castle when playtime ended.
We had sword fights with sticks and shot people with our fingers – and not once did it seem like a good idea to take that play to the next level.
So what’s changed?
Not the movies. We had A Clockwork Orange – Night of The Living Dead.
(And is it just me or does Nosferatu resemble Slender Man?)
It’s certainly not the bad guys – they’ve always been. Always will be.
And as for stories and monsters – they’ve always been there too.
The Grimm brothers offered our version of ‘creepy pasta’ type tales.
What’s changed?
In my opinion, copious amounts of unmonitored and uncensored access to it!
____________________________________
The past couple of days, an internet horror meme named Slender Man has been in the news, blamed for an attempted murder by two 12-year-old girls.
Slender Man is responsible for an untold amount of jump scares – but attempted murder?
Too often the blame falls to video games, horror movies and even music for today’s violence.
I do not agree with this.
I blame instant access to age inappropriate material.
Instant access to graphic images.
I blame the decrease of services for the mentally ill.
I blame the constant barrage of ‘negative news’ desensitizing those already mentally fragile. News stations vying for viewers via shock value.
And finally, yes, I blame ‘the parents’.
That’s such a broad accusation isn’t it??
I usually cringe when I hear it – so please know I shuddered when I typed it.
But I do hold parents responsible in general, because the internet is not going away!
If we don’t want our children becoming world-wide webbed foie gras geese – we have to monitor what’s feeding their developing minds!!!
____________________________________
When I was raising my son, I put limits on what he was exposed to.
By no means was I ever a perfect mother, far from it, but I do think I did a lot of things right.
I knew what he was doing, who he was doing it with and where he was as much as I could.
I was a working mom, I couldn’t possibly know everything or be there every moment.
The computer was in a family area – he did not have one in his room.
I checked the search history and monitored what he was looking at as best I could.
He was read to and encouraged to read.
We talked. We still do. No topic was or is off-limits.
He was not allowed to play with toy guns when he was very little – I didn’t think pretending to shoot someone was funny.
Of course, he still pretended with sticks or his fingers – and that was fine, but I was not contributing to it – that was the point I needed to make.
He was taught that guns were to be taken seriously and respected.
Nic was not allowed to play any video games I did not believe he was mentally and emotionally ready for.
Oh sure, I knew he was playing the games I wouldn’t allow in the house when spending the night at a friends.
Let him have that fleeting feeling he was getting away with something.
Every kid needs that too.
Because the lesson had already sunk in, the games were deemed inappropriate by the person raising him. He knew it. You certainly don’t think you’re ‘getting away’ with doing the right thing.
Horror movies – nope. Graphic unneccesary violence – nope. Nudity? Sure, in measure.
I have a more European take on that having been raised in the UK.
In England, growing up, I would turn the dial past some boring old sex scene to find a show that interested me. Nudity and sex was natural – violence was edited.
Every child is curious of course, and it breaks my heart that probably my sons first sighting of a naked woman was on some porn site and not a boob shot in a movie or the full Monty in the center of a secreted Playboy.
It’s the total opposite here in the States.
God forbid you see a nipple, but a beheading? A fatal car crash? A slaughtered village full of people? “Put that on a loop!!”
If my son committed a horrific crime, would I hold a single genre responsible it?
No.
I would know that something was broken inside of him, or hadn’t grown properly to begin with.
I would know that he was not possessing that ability to filter fantasy or intense information in a healthy way.
And I would know that I, as his parent, obviously did not provide him with the adequate amount of discipline or tools he needed.
Posted in Motherhood, Uncategorized
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Tags: blaming video games, Clockwork Orange, current-events, desensitize, horror movies, media, mental-health, news, parenting, raising children, slender man, social commentary, video games, violence