Compartments

Ancient History

Follow Me?

Instagram

How to guarantee a snow day*

There’s a legend amongst elementary school folk.

The legend is whispered over worksheets that are blown away in the wind after school because why zip them backpacks? Never you mind, it’s just a dot-to-dot of Betsy Ross sewin’ the flag.

The legend is passed like an 80s note, all folded fancy-like into a compact little triangle easily held in a turned-down palm, away from the sweeping stern eyes of teachers who just don’t understand…

Give a third grader some chocolate milk and a good granola bar, one of them without raisins and stuff, and she’ll tell you. Her eyes narrow. She wipes frothy milk off her lip with her sleeve. “Tonight,” she says, “I’m wearin’ my pajamas inside out.”

You gasp.

“Pajamas inside out?” you wail. “Is it safe?”

She continues, “Also…”

“What!? What!?” Your heart can’t take much more.

“I’m puttin’ one of them spoons you got from Target under my pilla!”

“Now you’re playin’ with fire. Fire!”

She purposely blows bubbles into the chocolate milk, punctuating the air with sounds that recall the origins of magma in the earth’s deep, deep core. A shudder gallops through the room, faceless.

“Mama? I’m not through yet.”

You start sketching the simple pine box to be used for your imminent burial.

She looks at the refrigerator. “I’m takin’ an ice cube. I’m puttin’ it in the toilet.”

You start dialing Home Depot to find out how much they charge for pine boards and nails. “Do you know what you are bringin’ to our house? To our home?” you shriek.

In one motion, she tilts her head back and slams the rest of her drink. She opens the dishwasher and slides the pink IKEA cup onto top-rack prongs. She looks at you square in the eye. Square. Dead.

“And then I’m flushin’ it.”

Aligned: Pajamas. Spoon. Toilet ice.

Outcome: Snow Day.

*Or, simply be in the path of a low pressure system carried by the jet stream as arctic air dips into the west central US as an upslope of heavy moisture is carried from the Gulf up to the continental divide.

Who knew toilet ice could do this?

Who knew toilet ice could do this?

Man Pants

For two years, I was proud to be a contributor at A Deeper Story. I wrote alongside many amazing authors, writers, and poets, often wondering how on earth I got so lucky. I often felt unworthy. They were the Alice Coopers to my Wayne.

Nish Wiseth, the founder and chief editor, has decided the time has come to move on, so she is closing up shop. I’ve decided to re-post my work from there here. Every Saturday, a new-to-Lifenut post I wrote for A Deeper Story will appear here (with Nish’s blessing and encouragement). These posts often focus on issues of faith, culture, church, and how they intersect through story. I am very fond of these posts and don’t want them disappearing. Folding them into Lifenut is like folding chocolate chips into cookie dough. They are in no particular order.

This post is one of my favorites about Ryley.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Man Pants
(originally published June 21, 2013)

“I have no idea what size you wear,” I sighed, slightly rattled by my confession.

My teenage son snorted and said he had no idea what size he wore. I suspect this bothered him less than it bothered me.

We stood in the men’s department and looked at each other. The border of the boy’s department had been breached. We escaped the domain of skateboarding skeletons and dinosaurs piloting planes. The two of us were Von Trapps, traipsing over peaks, through valleys, until we found ourselves starting over in a new land. Of course, I had been there before, but only as a tourist shopping for my husband.

Emigrating with my oldest son was entirely different. It wasn’t long ago I had to put footsie pajamas on him backwards to prevent him from stripping in the middle of the night. It was just yesterday I buckled his overalls and sent him to the backyard to splash around in a sandbox with Tonka trucks. With seven boys, I was about to become a permanent citizen of the Men’s Department, with every smiling race car on a cotton tee driving toward this one goal, a finish line. Grown.

My son needed pants for eighth grade continuation. Skinny jeans and baggy shorts didn’t convey a seriousness I felt the occasion demanded. The pants in the boy’s department were comically short. They’d convey an entirely different message: My mom thinks I’m nine and she looks the other way when I eat paste.

pants

Slowly, we began to pick at racks and racks of pants, holding up possibilities across the rows, shrugging, not speaking much. I rejected pants that seemed too old and serious. Too many pleats, creases, fabrics for dads with comb-overs signing refinance paperwork! Finally, we found a section devoted to younger men—the trendier stuff. Still baffled about sizes, we chose a few pairs of skinny, flat-front pants that seemed nice, but not fighting-a-traffic-ticket nice. I chose a waist size with no numbers to back me up and we headed for the dressing room.

My son had never used a dressing room. I told him to show the attendant the clothes. They would give a ticket to him. Choose a booth and try them on. I’d be right outside if he had any questions or felt the sizes were way off. I sat on a chair and played with my phone. It was taking a long time. I walked into the dressing room and called his name. He answered from the first little booth, “In here!”

“Is everything okay?”

“Yes!”

“Do they fit?”

“Yes!”

It never occurred to me to confirm they fit, which is very unlike me. Finally, he emerged from the dressing room lugging the pile of pants. He told me about each. I asked him to choose his favorite. He settled on grey.

A few nights later, he wore his new grey pants. He was right. They fit perfectly. Now we know his size. It will change as he grows, but there are no more borders to cross. He’ll sift through man pants and man shirts, knowing what to do in a dressing room, knowing what to wear to fight the speeding ticket, knowing how it feels to stand under a sign hung from a ceiling that heralds, “Men.”

The Amazing Repository of Ridiculous Advice

The first time one of our kids left home for a few days without us, I was a bit of a wreck. I worried about the travel. Would roads be icy and would the other drivers be idiots? It didn’t matter that it was summer and she flew. Worries and irrationality are great dancers when they partner up. They spin around mommy brains at 3am and those stilettos irrationality wears really, really hurt. Since that first separation, we’ve waved goodbye to kids who have climbed aboard planes, charter busses, and cars driven by people who I trust aren’t idiots.

It gets easier. I trust them more. But that doesn’t stop me from giving or at the very least thinking ridiculous advice.

One of my kids is out of town right now. The kid is off on a school-related trip many mountains away. Before leaving, I had to bite my tongue numerous times because advice can quickly slip to insult.

Wear your seatbelt! This kid has been an avid seatbelt clicker since graduating from a carseat. I’ve never had to argue, ask, or stress over seatbelt use with this child, so why would I suddenly have to worry now? I wasn’t going to treat my near-adult as a young child. So, I let it go and I trusted the example we’ve set and the 100% compliance record would suffice.

Here is ridiculous advice I’ve actually given to various kids upon the occasion of their suitcase rolling away and I’m not:

~ If there are icicles, don’t stand under them. Don’t look up at them and don’t knock them down.

~ Check your boots for scorpions every morning!

~ If you have to lean over the boat to throw up, take off your sunglasses.

~ But don’t lean over too far!

~ Let your feet breathe at night! Take off your socks!

~ If there’s a hot tub at the hotel, don’t stay in it for too long. You’ll get a headache.

~ Hang up your swimsuit to dry in the bathroom. Do not leave it balled up! Unfurl!

~ Don’t mix your dirty clothes with the clean. Pack a kitchen trash bag and use it!

~ Just because we’re giving you $X.XX doesn’t mean you have to spend it all!

~ Make good choices at the gift shop.

~ If you touch anything on the subway, wash your hands as soon as possible!

~ Don’t clog toilets.

~ If there are bunkbeds, try to get a top bunk. You don’t know how strong they are and you don’t want to be sleeping on the bottom and find out.

~ Take pictures of things and places, not just people.

~ But don’t hold your camera over the side of the boat.

~ I see there’s a mixer planned on the schedule. Brush your hair before you go.

~ If you’re at a restaurant and have your own check, don’t forget to tip! Do 20%, even if service isn’t that great because restaurant work is hard! ***THIS IS WHERE I LAUNCH INTO ALL MY BORING FOOD SERVICE WORK STORIES*** Back on track: To figure out 20%, first determine 10%. Like, if your bill is $10.48, 10% is $1.05 because you round up. Then, double that! (I told this to a child who has taken Pre-Calculus and is currently in Statistics.)

~ Use the bathroom before you get on the big bus/airplane. I know it has one, but you want to avoid it if you can. What if you go over a bump/hit turbulence or something?

~ Don’t be that guy who doesn’t wear a coat. They have a very different kind of winter there. It’s more humid and the cold feels colder.

Much nonsense!

Much nonsense!

I’m sure there are many more golden tidbits of unwelcome advice spawned by motherly over-thinking. These are just a few I can remember uttering, to my horror. Yes, some of it is solid advice, but most are redundantly common sense. My hope is by the time they are grown I will stop anticipating what could go wrong and trust in their capability.