Weekend Snapshots 3

FRIDAY

Doctor’s appointments for the boys.

SATURDAY

Got a call from Colin, who was visiting Auschwitz on our anniversary. No comment.

Soccer games.

Bowling. 

SUNDAY

Violin recital.

And an extremely touching Mother’s Day serenade…(get out your hanky):

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My Mama, the Drama Queen

Originally posted in November…

My dad told us that he heard about my mother before ever setting eyes on her. According to him, Seoul was abuzz with excitement about her acting. This horrified and mortified my grandmother, who considered acting a déclassé pursuit not too far removed from prostitution.

Although my mother gave up stage acting after college, she has worn the tiara of an inveterate drama queen all her life. She is brash and sparkling: like a firecracker rather than a candle. It was a cosmic accident that my mother was born in Korea, and not in America. Korean women titter hesitantly with their heads bowed and a hand covering their mouth; my mother throws her head back and guffaws raucously. When she’s happy, she trills like a bird. When she’s angry, her eyes blaze, the moon eclipses the sun, and darkness falls heavily upon the cold earth.

Her exceptional acting skills have been called into service many times over the years. A Korean couple once called my parents in the middle of the night to ask them to accompany them to the emergency room so that they could help interpret for them. They waited in the emergency room for hours while the woman’s condition worsened. She was doubled over in agonizing pain, but was still made to wait. Suddenly, my mother stood up and started screeching at the top of her lungs like a madwoman, “This woman is DYING! She’s DYING and NO ONE IS TAKING CARE OF HER! SHE’S GOING TO DIE, RIGHT HERE IN THE WAITING ROOM!” Later my mother reported burning with shame and embarrassment as she created the scene, but she didn’t stop screaming until the orderlies rushed over and wheeled the woman away. When the doctors came back, they reported that the woman had had an ectopic pregnancy, and had indeed been minutes away from dying when my mother gave the spectacular performance that saved her life.

My mother continued to hone her craft over many years and in many venues. Bank performances became her specialty. In fact, torturing bank employees across America and getting them to do her bidding became something of a hobby for my mother. As she can’t drive, she would have me take her to the bank. My mother would sit silently, clutching her big shabby purse on her lap until called, whereupon she would blink her eyes like a dazed little bird and wander into the cubicle of her next victim. The affable bank employee would size up this little old lady, crack a few genial jokes, make a few pleasantries…And then my mother would begin.

“Now. I received this letter from you telling me that my CD matured. I would like to withdraw my money, please.”

“Ah, yes, Mrs. Kim, but it’s now July 15th, and the deadline for withdrawing was more than two months ago.”

“Yes. I understand. But I was in Korea, and I couldn’t come until today.”

No matter what the banker said, no matter how patiently he would point to the date long passed, my mother would just keep repeating her request over and over in the same mild-mannered way.

“I couldn’t come by May 1st, because I was in Korea. My flight arrived only a few days ago. I was sooo jetlagged, but finally I was able to come today. And I would like my money now.”

It would go on like this for a good ten minutes. “Pooooooor sap,” I’d think to myself as I would watch the banker squirm like  a pinned insect. Finally, he would succumb to the inevitable and hand my mother whatever she wanted on a silver platter. I imagine those bankers consoled themselves with the thought that they were doing a good deed for this dear, confused little kitten. If they had paid attention, though, they would have witnessed a remarkable metamorphosis as she strode out the door counting her bills like a Korean Keyser Söze.

Her own family was treated to the theatrics as well. When she thought we were watching too much T.V., for example, she heaved the  set into the driveway, pulled the plug out from both ends, and chopped the cord into a million pieces. When I was struggling to finish my Ph.D. with a toddler and an infant to care for and was ready to give up on the whole project, my mother called me one day and pleaded in a voice overwrought with emotion, “Just finish it for your father’s sake. It would mean so much to him. Please. Do this one last thing for him, before he dies.” Never mind that he was in perfect health, the dissertation got written that year.

About four years ago, we almost lost my mother. She was diagnosed with primary amyloidosis and given eighteen months to live. She came back to America to be treated at Sloan-Kettering through a clinical trial of a chemotherapy drug. When it was clear that the treatment would kill her faster than the disease, she was kicked out of the trial, but she had had just enough chemo to knock her disease into remission. Fiercely independent, though still weak as a newborn lamb, she insisted on dragging herself back to Korea on a 20 hour flight, against doctors’ orders and despite the entreaties of her family. My dad shudders when he recalls her lying on the airport floor from sheer exhaustion during a layover. She broke three ribs the day after arriving when she tripped over the suitcases she was too tired for the first time in her life to unpack the minute she arrived, but she had triumphed. Giving Death the finger, she had staggered back to her own apartment, and her own life. We went to visit my parents that summer and met my father’s assistant minister. This grown man in his thirties, married with two children, confessed to my brother in his heavily accented English, “I am scared of your mommy. But I love her.”

Honestly, I could write a whole novel about this woman, but I’m too scared she might read it and I’d be in big fat trouble. Instead, I’ll leave you with some photos of my mama, the Drama Queen from her early acting days.

There she is……….on the left!

In these next two photos, she’s the badass on the right.


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16 years ago today…

…I married the man, who would sixteen years later abandon me and our three children on our anniversary and on Mother’s Day to go gallivanting around Poland, of all places. O.K., so maybe he’s not actually gallivanting…but STILL!

At least my daughter cares. Yesterday, we were in the grocery store and happened to be going past the candy aisle. She slowed down and said, as she expansively gestured in the general direction of the Jelly Belly dispensers, “Mommy, you can pick aaaaanything you want from the store for your anniversary and Mother’s Day present and I promise I’ll pay you back when we get back home.”

Me & T

I take comfort in the fact that with any luck, Colin will have many, many more years to make it up to me.

Wszystkiego dobrego z okazji rocznicy. Kocham Cię!

xoxoxo

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Life without Colin…

We are missing Colin, who is teaching a course in Poland for the next couple of weeks…

Stages of withdrawal:

Sorrow:

Despair:

Disbelief and anger:

Frustration:

Just plain losing it:

Resignation:

Making plans for the future:

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Science Fair Emergency

Did I call you last night? Did I leave a plaintive message on your answering machine?

Here’s why:

My son’s science fair project is due today. He’s been working on it in his usual industrious way for quite some time now. He was busily putting the finishing touches on it when I called him down for dinner.

His plan was to have people listen to a recording he made of “Ode to Joy” in both its original major key and then in a transposed version in a minor key and to have them rate each version as “happy,” “sad,” or “neutral.” His very reasonable hypothesis was that more people would rate the minor key version as “sad.”

“The only thing I have left to do now is to figure out what my independent variable is,” he announced as he came down the stairs.

“Your independent variable is the two different keys you used for “Ode to Joy,” his older brother explained.

A pained expression came over my son’s face.

“But I only played it for everyone in the minor key,” he said as tears started welling in his eyes.

“That’s a survey, not an experiment,” his brother said with devastating nonchalance.

For a minute there the situation looked pretty bleak. My boy’s shoulders slumped and he looked like he was going to have a nervous breakdown. After choking down his dinner, he disappeared into the basement and reemerged with a new set of recordings. We got on the phone and started calling everyone we knew to play them the two versions of “Ode to Joy.” It’s 11:30 pm now and my boy, who is usually conked out well before 8, has just finished his project and has gone to bed. I feel like I’ve aged ten years in one night.

Number crunching

Thanks to all of you very kind friends and family members, who answered the phone and helped Teddy pull it off literally at the eleventh hour!

Done!

I’m thinking my girl should probably get started on her 5th grade science fair project now.

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I’m on a roll

IMG_1691Last week I had a mini-revelation in my minivan as I was driving my youngest two children to school.

My son is usually unflappable, bordering on phlegmatic. Lately, however, he has been extremely crabby and hypersensitive in the mornings. It’s been like navigating through a minefield.

When we arrive at school, late as usual, the kids get out of the car and I say:

“Bye! Love you! Hope you have a beautiful day! Mwah! Mwah!”

While I can always count on some sort of reply from my daughter, my son has been responding with stony silence.

Sometimes, just to make myself feel better, I’ll answer for him, “O.K.! Bye, dearest Mother, who gave birth to me and has taken loving care of me for ten years! I love you too!” He doesn’t even bother to glance back over his shoulder.

Last week, starting on Tuesday we started our streak of punctuality. On both Tuesday and Wednesday, although it was looking a little dicey, we just managed to get to school on time. This past Thursday, we were actually early for a change. When my son realized this, he became positively gleeful. He chirped all the way to school. I’m not exaggerating when I tell you, the boy was CROWING that we were definitely going to make it to school on time. I could see his eyes in the rearview mirror, crinkling with the smile that was on his face. He was singing songs and cracking jokes…It made me so happy, but it also broke my heart…I had long ago come to terms with our perpetual tardiness, and I’d assumed that everyone else had too.

I realized in that moment how trying it must be for this child, who prizes order and schedules and predictability to live in a household in which we by and large fly by the seat of our pants. I realized that it must pain him to have to sign the “late book” at school 4 days out of every 5. I realized how hard it must be for him to have to depend on rides from a mother, who swells with pride when she manages to get her kids to school on time three whole days in a row.

On Friday, as we drove over the rumbly wooden bridge that signals that we are almost at school, I glanced at the clock.

“Guys! It’s a new record!!! We’re going to be on time for the FOURTH DAY IN A ROW!” I announced with unseemly, naked exultation.

There was a lot of whooping and hollering and cheering until a tiny little voice piped up from the back…

“Wait a minute…Is this really something we should be celebrating?” my daughter asked doubtfully.

There was an uncomfortable silence as we contemplated the truth of this observation.

“Hey! Don’t ruin our moment!” her brother finally said, and we started cheering for ourselves again.Happy

I wanted to tell my boy right then and there that I was going to turn over a new leaf. I wanted to swear to him that they would be on time for the rest of the school year. But I couldn’t in good conscience make that promise. So, while I don’t dare utter the words out loud, I am resolving to do my very best to get the kids to school on time almost every day for the rest of the school year, or at least more days than not…

I’m going into single-parenting survival mode for the next couple of weeks, while my husband is away in Poland. If I don’t show up here for awhile, you’ll know why. Please wish us all luck…we’re going to need it!

Weekend Snapshots 2

FRIDAY

The SPCA. Helping Hands, the elementary school service group I co-lead, took a field trip to our local SPCA. Miraculously, we left with no more and no fewer than the bodies we came with, though one of our second graders piped up at the end to announce that he had money in his pocket and was ready to make a deal…

SATURDAY

Soccer Games. My girl kept a clean sheet as goalie in the first half, and then scored the only goal for the win in the second!

Fundraising. My son’s Destination Imagination team is going to Globals along with another winning team from his elementary school. Between my daughter’s and his own soccer games, we worked at a huge yard sale both teams held in the school gym to help offset the considerable cost of the trip. My daughter was wandering around the yard sale when she spotted something on one of the tables.

“Is that my jack-in-the-box?” she gasped in horror.

I squirmed as I said, “Ummm, well, yes, but that’s a toy for babies.”

I told her we would take it back if it didn’t sell, and fortunately, it is now back in our house, where it belongs. For the rest of the weekend she kept pointedly reminding me about how my sister had asked me for a pair of her baby sandals that had the perfect imprints of her tiny little feet and was furious when she found out I had thrown them away.

My beloved Janel” surprised us by sending a check to help with the fundraising. We haven’t been able to see each other in way too long. We had a phone conversation to hatch a plan to fix this!

Gardening. I made the rounds of some local garden centers and got my fingernails dirty in my own garden…

SUNDAY

Theological Debate. My oldest son and I had a hasty and somewhat tortured discussion in which we weighed the merits of atheism vs. agnosticism and discussed the importance of being reflective, keeping an open mind, and always asking questions. All this in the church parking lot, minutes before Sunday School was about to start, as I fervently prayed that he would stop asking questions for Christ’s sake! I broke into a sweat as I surreptitiously snuck glances at the clock, and mentally calculated how much time it would take to cut up the paper strips we would need for the purple “cloth weaving” we were going to do as part of the lesson I’d prepared on Lydia opening her heart to Jesus.

Wrestling. Back at home, having just partaken in Holy Communion, where they symbolically sought “reconciliation in every instance of conflict or division,” the boys decided to have a wrestling match. As always, it ended up in tears and bitter recriminations. For the next half hour, I made them practice for their piano recital, but Beethoven’s Rage Over a Lost Penny, kept derailing into Rage Over a Lost Wrestling Match. Finally, I was forced to bellow, “STOP TALKING TO EACH OTHER! YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO SPEAK TO EACH OTHER AT ALL! NOT. ONE. MORE. WORD!!”

Piano Recital. My husband headed off to Lynchburg for his own concert with his singing group. The rest of us dusted ourselves off and staggered to the boys’ last piano recital of the year…Rather than run the risk of more bickering, I made the oldest sit up front with me during the ride, instead of in his usual spot in the back of the minivan with his siblings. En route, he and I devised a post-recital game plan.

Obligatory Photo Op. As you can see, the boys worked it out, as they always eventually do.

The kids took turns taking pictures of their own.

Then they took a series of “artsy shots” and insisted I post them on the blog today. There you go, kids:

Dick’s Sporting Goods. After the photo session I announced that it was time to go to Dick’s Sporting Goods.

“Why are we going there?” my younger son asked.

His brother and I answered him simultaneously:

N: “To buy a punching bag.”

Me: “To save your relationship with your brother.”

When I went to check on the boys tonight, I realized that N. had set up a makeshift bed for himself on the floor of T’s bedroom. Peace in the valley. I’m heading to bed.

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The Best Advice I Ever Got, Pt. 2

More random bits of great advice…

My sisOnce I was shedding bitter tears over a relationship that had gone bad. When my big sister heard me sobbing over the phone, she dropped everything to take a train from D.C. to New York to be with me in my hour of need. (It is so good to have siblings). With my sister by my side, I wailed about all the regrets I had. I bemoaned the years of my life I had lost by having misinvested it in a dead-end relationship. My sister quietly listened to every word I managed to choke out between sobs and then gave me a piece of advice I’ve returned to in my mind many times over the years.

“Live without regret,” she told me. “Every experience, even the most painful ones, make you more of a human being. Your life is richer and fuller for everything you go through. Maybe you learn how to be a more compassionate person, maybe you learn what to avoid in the future, and maybe you learn how it is that you really want your life to be.”

In retrospect, I realize that our mother would always give us a version of this truth when, as children, we confided our hurts to her. It would never fail to take us by surprise when she would say she was glad that someone had been mean to us, or had hurt our feelings. But then she would explain that now that we had experienced that pain, she knew we would never inflict it upon another person.

My second sisWhen I became a mother for the first time, I always sought advice from my second sister, the amazing mother of four. She has taught me a lot by example rather than with explicit advice. I admire the way she recognizes the kernel of goodness in each child and praises and nurtures it. She is also my role model for finding the humor in trying situations. One of the most useful practical pieces of advice she ever gave me was: “No matter what your baby is wearing, it can always be pulled down off the body rather than over the head. If you really can’t manage to pull it down and off the baby, you can always cut it off.” When her children were very young, she never went anywhere without a pair of scissors. My sister gained this valuable piece of wisdom the hard way and saved me a whole heap of trouble by passing it on to me. For those of you who have had babies, and have had the shocking experience of seeing mustard yellow poop shoot up the baby’s back and all the way to the neck, you’ll know exactly why this is such sound advice. (So much of parenting involves the management of all manner of bodily excretions)!

Aaand then there’s my third sibling:  my “little” brother Teddy. In response to my request for the best advice he‘d ever gotten, he wrote with his characteristic brevity: “Aim for the throat.”Oh, Brother

Yep. That’s my brother.

Friends have offered these pearls of wisdom:

K, (the mother of twins): “Keep twins on the same schedule, so Mommy can sleep too!” and “If it’s important to you, you will find a way. If it’s not, you’ll find an excuse.”

R: “In fits of rage, take one big deep breath before responding.”

R: “Never put off until tomorrow that which you can do today.”

J: “Be the change you wish to see in the world.”

F: “When you feel like screaming at your child, WHISPER!!!”

Finally, here’s a favorite piece of  advice that the minister of my church gives every year at around this time to the college students in the congregation who are heading into exam period:

“Remember that your worth cannot be measured by grades, but has already been determined by the fact that you have been claimed as a child of God.”

What’s the best advice you’ve ever gotten? Or conversely: “What’s the worst advice you’ve ever gotten?”

Hope you have a wonderful, wonderful weekend!

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The Best Advice I Ever Got, Pt. 1

I’ve gotten a lot of advice in my day from: “Don’t buy junks!” (thanks, Mom) to “Go to yoga!…please, please, PUH-LEEZE, Go. To. Yoga!” (uhhh…thanks, kids?).

I think one of the best pieces of advice I ever got came from one of my professors in grad school. One of the first steps on the long and arduous journey to a Ph.D. was the  proseminar that all beginning graduate students in my department were required to take in our first semester of studies. The professor was a runner, and used to live in hilly Vermont. She told us that she would dread the last stretch of her daily run up a steep hill. Each step was agonizingly painful and it always seemed to her as if she would never reach the top. One day she decided that instead of looking at her final destination at the top of the hill as she ran, she would look down at her feet. She was amazed to find how much easier it was to get to the top of the hill.

“Keep looking down at your feet,” she told us, “Put one foot in front of the other. You’ll get there before you know it.” That piece of advice has stuck with me and I’ve passed it along to my own students and others who are facing long uphill battles.

My brother-in-law also received some sage advice in grad school. After having completed his degree, he was having one last consultation with his thesis advisor before he headed out into the wide world.

“I have one piece of advice for you,” this wise and distinguished MIT professor told my brother-in-law in his thick Greek accent.

My brother-in-law leaned in to receive the precious nugget of wisdom distilled from many decades of study and experience that was about to be bestowed upon him by his mentor…

“When you buy furniture, don’t buy CRRRAAAPPP!”

I polled friends and family to hear what they considered the best advice they ever got:

Colin:

“If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, and try again.”

Child 1:

“Don’t get married to only one way of achieving a goal.” (I have to admit, I was worried about the direction this piece of advice was heading until he got to the second half of the sentence)!

Child 2:

“Don’t cry over spilt milk.” (I know I’ve said this more than once to my children, but I’ve usually added: “Just hurry up and get some paper towels to clean it up!”)

Child 3:

“Treat others the way you want to be treated.”

My sister gave me a few good ones:

“It’s o.k. not to talk during an awkward silence.”

“Relax-you’re not curing cancer.” (“But what if you are?!” my dogs might ask – see yesterday’s post).

“When you’re really stressed out about a situation, think about how much it will matter tomorrow, next week, or next year.”

“Don’t put off traveling the world until you’ve retired and have time and money to spend – you may not have your health or life by then.”

“Don’t burn your bridges.”

C.:

“If you’re having fun, then you’re doing the right thing.”

X.:

“Be a whole person. Life is more than work.”

W.:

“Just because someone asks a personal question, it doesn’t mean you have to answer it. Secondly, you don’t necessarily need to elaborate or provide explanations when you answer. It’s your business, you chose which bits of information you want to share.”

M.:

“Holding onto hatred or anger only hurts yourself.”

K.:

“Don’t forget to eat breakfast!”

What’s the best advice you’ve ever been given? Please leave a reply!

Tomorrow: More great advice.

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My Genius Dogs

Can I brag a little?

I think I must have the most industrious, hard-working dogs in America, or maybe even on the face of the planet.

When they’re not tinkering with the furnace, edging the lawn, or checking the air pressure in my tires, they’re finding innovative cures for cancer, or putting their heads together to come up with ways to broker lasting peace in the Middle East.

They are Captains of Enterprise and Industry, these two.

More about my genius dogs:

Cute, but Rotten Pt. 1

Cute, but Rotten Pt. 2

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