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Skirting the barren

I’ve been quiet around here lately, probably because late winter makes laser beams shoot out of my eyes and ears and not in a cool Saturday night dance party kind of way. The crust of the earth is a fallow cracking shell, blanketed by snow, ice, mud over and over. Glimpses of spring are coming more and more often. My mind turns to things like lilacs and Easter, memories of breakfasts of secret calf-brains and walks with my dear grandmother.

I poured all of this into a post over at A Deeper Story called The Witches’ Lilacs. It pushes up through my silence. Go say hello?

not lilacs

Love Love Love

Happy Valentine’s Day! If you love someone, and you haven’t told them in awhile, do it today. Some people love deeply, but they can’t make their mouths say, “I love you.” Some say it multiple times a day, but have trouble showing it non-verbally—not because they’re lazy beasts but because they are unsure where to start.

If you are more demonstrative with your love, make today declarative. Say it. You might shock someone in a good way, and that’s always fun.

If you are more verbally inclined, try showing how much you love someone by performing an act of service for them, without pointing it out. It’s quiet and quieting.

You are loved.

On trapping teenaged mice

It wasn’t a surprise when my husband announced he saw a mouse in our garage. It has been stinging-cold outside and you can’t blame it for seeking warmth, shelter, and the crumb bonanza we offer. I have conflicted feelings. Part of me salutes this mouse for choosing wisely, for braving the unknown just like Ponce de Leon. I’m proud to be his Florida. Another part of me wants it to go to the neighbor’s. Then there is my dark side.

I think the mouse should be trapped. His mortal coil should be shuffled right off.

Unfortunately, we know from a past mouse invasion that for every mouse you see, there are ten you don’t see. An exterminator shared this with us as he stood in our kitchen when we lived in Golden almost a decade ago. “Did you know…’ he whispered, perhaps conscious of dainty cupped pink ears listening from behind baseboards, ‘…mice can squeeze through a hole the size of a dime?” A dime. If a mouse can poke his head through a hole, his body will follow like a seeping greasy grey-brown fertile smoothie.

The mouse in the garage was independently verified by Ryley, who was at school when the mouse was first spotted and hadn’t been informed. I heard him shout. He came back into the house shuddering and demanding we trap it immediately. Of course we don’t plan to let them live out there, propagating and such. We discussed humane traps and effective traps. These aren’t always the same, unfortunately.

Not the actual mouse.

That same night, the doorbell rang. It was UPS. They left a large box. Last week, Hasbro contacted me and asked if they could send a toy or game to us. I said sure and selected one of the items listed in the PR pitch. We’d have some fun, I’d write a post sometime. I opened the box and pulled out Elefun & Friends Mouse Trap. The little kids gathered around to see. Mouse Trap! They wanted to play immediately. I told them no, they’d have to wait for the weekend when homework was done and the house was tidy.

An hour or so later, Ryley wandered in and saw the box on the piano. “Mouse Trap? Why did you get this?”

I told him it was because of the mouse in the garage. Pity, horror, confusion…every look crossed his face. “Mom? You can’t actually trap a mouse with this.”

“I can’t? It says Mouse Trap?” I pointed.

Ryley explained, carefully, as if he were talking to a small, sleepy child, how Mouse Trap is a game. It’s plastic, not suitable for catching actual mice! He told me all about traps made of wood and springs they sell at the grocery store—he’s seen them!—that we could use.

Suppressing my laughter was really, really difficult until I realized I was actually kind of insulted. Did he think I was that dense? Or, was he playing along? There was no hint he was joking and I gave him no hint I was joking, so there we stood squinting at each other. Lips tight. Eyebrows scrunched. Squinting. It was a showdown. I was the first to break.

“I know it’s not a real mousetrap,” I burst. But I thought to myself how I wish it was. Maybe…?

He grinned. He won.

If I’m ever confronted with the mouse or two dozen, and our eyes meet, I hope I don’t melt as readily. But I will and then they will all squeak squeak squeak and slap their little knees with their filthy little paws. I’ll inch my way into the house with a red plastic net the size of a teacup and a tiny orange boot held behind my back.

(This is not a review of Elefun & Friends Mouse Trap.)