Simple Saturdays

four a.m. alarm
(Spanish happy hour lost
from my Friday night)

i eat, skip shower
dressed for skiing, snowpants on
but she doesn’t show

friend complications
include the plans i canceled
for her desperate plea

i fill my morning:
yoga followed by a bath
she begs forgiveness

i reschedule date
–best friend dates as good as love–
know all is not lost

in the midst of this
i discover oldest’s lie
and fear my strictness

i write a letter
she reads it over breakfast
with tears, she accepts

younger two travel
separate rows for the long drive
(friends with my friend’s kids)

sleepover ends day
three extra girls in our house
screams, doors, stomps, giggles

simple Saturdays
for the married family set
are never simple

alarm sets the tone:
puzzle-piece plans made for friends
(single, she hits snooze

sleeps the day away)
but she lives with the burden
of no love-led life

The Day After

back to school today

golden sunrise clock tower

guess it could be worse

 
 

Free. Time.

In the outside pocket of my backpack, under my Subway-kids-meal-bag packed lunch, I cram my sneakers. The snow will be too deep this morning to wear them, but the thought of wearing my discount-store leather boots that pinch my toes all day burdens me more than switching out shoes once I get to work.

I could drive now, having two cars for the first time in three years. But then I would miss the beauty of freshly frosted branches, of silent flakes floating out of the Colorado sky, of the words tapping into me from my latest audiobook.

I am eating my amped-up breakfast, a bagel with cream cheese, spinach, and two eggs scrambled with red peppers, to sustain me for the late start day and the late lunch day, when my colleague texts me to announce the snow day.

I don’t believe her. Denver doesn’t cancel school, not unless there’s more than a foot and blizzard-like conditions. I check three web sites who haven’t caught up with the news as quickly as her, and then the email from the superintendent pops up and my entire family receives a rare and beautiful gift that cannot be wrapped and yet we open with such joy that it warms our entire house: Free. Time.

This could be so different. We could be part of different districts, just like before, Bruce could be at work, just like a few months ago, and we wouldn’t be all together. It would be my day, mine alone, and I would be crawling up the walls by the end of it, probably using the time to work and clean the house and dig out the driveway and be the person I am for 95% of my life.

But today? I fix French toast with sliced strawberries, powdered sugar, butter, honey, the works! We read Shel Silverstein under a blanket on the couch. Bruce visits a former colleague, helps him figure out a trouble ticket (unpaid, of course), and borrows his crockpot for our Sunday pot roast dinner. I listen, for once, to the girls practice their piano songs. Riona teaches me to play chess and Mythili beats me in a game in five minutes. The girls play Wii, Bruce shovels the walks and driveway, and I ski to, around, and back from the park, capturing the utter emptiness and silence in a way that couldn’t come to me on my frenzied walk to school, where I’d be thinking about my lesson plan, my seating chart, the upcoming testing nightmare… I come home sweating from head to toe, peel off my clothes for a shower, and he waits for me in the bedroom, ready to make me sweat from head to toe all over again… Isabella and I play Sorry, the younger set drives with Bruce and I to the local coffee shop where we have gluten-free pastries and mochas and hot chocolates and play Go Fish and compost our waste and pretend, if only for an hour, we are just like the yuppies who can actually afford this neighborhood. We have freestyle dinner–each person gets to choose what they want, Bruce fries up some ham and eggs to supplement the girls’ inadequate choices, I eat his delicious teriyaki chicken leftovers, and he whips up some instant pudding when the baby requests it because, well, she’s the baby, and, why not? I finalize the girls’ sleepover plans for Saturday and in the midst of texting with the mothers I don’t really know (nothing like the good old days when the girls were young and we actually took time to get to know their friends’ parents), we’re dropped with a mini bombshell.

How dare she ruin my snow day, my gift from God (or at least my gift from the god-of-the-school-district superintendent)? How dare she flaunt something in our faces and snatch it away? But worse, how dare she draw that rift up between he and I?

It is what we don’t talk about and what we always talk about. What he hates for me to bug him about and what I hate to be the one bugging about. How dare she flaunt an easy path for some extra money and take it all away before giving us one dime, all for us to be right back where we started, which is: Can we afford to live this way?

“I’ll look for a job…” He reassures me. “I mean, I’ll look harder. But you know, you can’t have it both ways. You can’t have me work and expect all the things you have now. You know–” He sucks in his breath, flips the ham on his plate. “I’m not going to say anything else or I’ll get too upset.”

I know. If he works I wouldn’t be able to ski, or walk, or listen to audiobooks on the way to school. I won’t have neat piles of folded laundry stacked on the bed, ready for me to put away. I won’t have a chef fixing me his latest recipe, or a grocery list with everything checked off. The wood floor will be gritty when I move back the mat to do a yoga video, or I’ll be cleaning that floor instead of doing yoga. I’ll work two jobs and spend my free time transporting three kids to their schools and activities, and we’ll be able to eat out whenever we want and surely pay that hefty price for the piano lessons they so love and drive all the way to the east coast and back because we’ll have the money to pay for it… but at what cost?

The cost of silencing everyone who’s always asking me, “Why doesn’t he work? Where has he been looking? Why doesn’t he do this or try that? How do you do it? Why would you…” I won’t finish because I’ll get too upset.

The cost that would snatch the peace of a family snow day right out from under us. Of knowing that he’ll have a good job with decent hours and enough vacation time to actually enjoy our lives together, just like all those years before.

My day ends with a ping on my phone: a message from a former colleague who didn’t get a snow day, who is tired of everyone bitching about not getting a snow day, and announced it to them all today on the social media that consumes our lives and makes us not have a life. Why is he calling them out on their complaints? Because he remembers the 25 miles I used to ride my damn bicycle to and from work every day, all so we wouldn’t have to try to replace our broken-down van, so Bruce wouldn’t have to work, so we wouldn’t have the damn frenzy of a rat-race life that everyone around us has, all those parents out there who are stressing about delayed starts and snow days and having to fight the battle to bring home that extra buck.

How ironic, he points out in the end, that I was lucky enough to get a snow day today. That I wouldn’t have to ride my bike or walk or ski to work.

In the outside pocket of my backpack, leaving a space for my Subway-kids-meal-bagged lunch, my sneakers wait for tomorrow. I could drive, but why wouldn’t I walk? Why wouldn’t I enjoy the freshly fallen flakes, the peace that comes with early morning movement, where I can rethink my lesson plans, still have time to change them, and know that my husband will drive all the girls to school and fix their lunches and be there for them when the last bell rings and not have the money to take me out to dinner but will have a ten-million-times-better meal already planned?

Tomorrow, the snow will not be too deep. There will be no snow day. No Free. Time. And I will walk. And he will be home. And he will be the happiness that I am lucky enough to come home to.





Pass Codes to Nowhere

ninety minutes lost

a test to test the test: fail

computer burnout

what are we testing?

inadequate servers, schools?

pass codes to nowhere?

the students see it:

the farce of education 

on the error screen

Child Find

the midnight liar

who’s taken over my girl 

hard for me to face

adolescence starts

with attitude and disguise 

where’s my little girl?

i hope i find her

beneath her burgeoning tears

with patience and love

Ski Commute

no snow day for me

just my skis, backpack, and trees

to beat Monday blues

how lucky i am

to have nature’s wealth guide me 

where money will not





Snowmelt

t-shirt weather splits
for a silent snowy stroll
peace in every flake

city surprises
around every cloudy turn
wild birds await

we had our date night
but these icy, fluffy steps
are what melt my heart

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Half Birthday Party

In the small inadequate car, I leave her. The door shuts before I can peek inside, and I chitchat with a mother like me, one from across town. Dented version of my car, parked on the wrong side of the street. The flakes barely fallen, we talk about cancelled plans, rushed grocery trips, piano lessons that neither of us can really afford.

Three hours pass in my tiny house, new orchid stretching for the blocked sun as the storm blows in. My two remaining girls curl up reading and bicker and settle for Wii stress relief while I attempt, and fail (motherhood steals this from you) to take a nap.

We gather our bags and respond to my mother’s text: Yes, we’re still bringing them. We have to get Riona anyway and Bruce wants to try out the new four-wheel-drive car in this crazy snow.

A man hovers on the porch as we arrive, my outfit transformed to fit the sleek style of the neighborhood. Silver lining, heated leather seats, I open the iron gate and walk up the concrete steps. He peers at me, cell phone in hand, sheepish, as if he’d heard me mutter to my husband, “Is that some kid’s dad waiting for the exact moment of the party ending before he rings the bell?”

Beside him, leaning against a column on this masterpiece of a house, is a bag full of knives small enough to fit in eight-year-olds’ hands. “I was the chef for the party,” he explains, as if I’d asked him. “I’m just waiting for my ride.”

“Yes, I understand,” I want to reply. “This three-thousand-foot home certainly isn’t large enough to accommodate your wait time.”

Instead I ring the doorbell and smile as if I make conversations like this every day.

“Thank you so much for allowing your daughter to come to Emily’s half birthday!” Her mother coos as I enter. She begins to gather homemade cupcakes, rice noodles, Rio’s coat. I peek. An entryway. Hardwood until there’s no forest left. A wingback chair at the head of the twelve-person dining table. A parlor, just like back in good old Victorian England. A stairway to heaven with a hand-carve handrail. And these beautiful cupcakes with multicolored frosting and a mother who can’t take the time to bake, handed over with a hand-colored chef’s hat and goody bag full of Nerds that will spill all over our new car.

“Are you moving?” I ask, having noticed the For Sale sign propped up in front. “Well, we’re thinking about it. We found our dream house! And you know, the market is great right now for sellers, so we’re seeing what will happen.” I have no response for this. If this is the shit-hole, I wonder what the dream house looks like?

We make our way across town. He speeds up because we’ve been driving a 1998 Hyundai Accent for far too long. I have the leather baking my thighs, and the girls are all spread out in three rows of candy-induced lethargy. On the city streets that take us from the south side to the north side, we see a bus angled into an intersection, having tried to brake on a hill, failed, and run over the curb. Its hazard blinkers allow cars like us to pass, and as we move through, evaluating the damage and probability of escape for the bus, I see the three passengers standing without shelter under the storm, not ten feet from where the bus is unable to reach them. Two without hoods, one with barely a coat at all, thinking this morning that the weatherman was wrong, as the winds and flakes now swirl about them and collect on their shoulders, hair… souls.

“Oh, the bus…” he moans, and me, “Oh, those people…” And I want to reach over and say, “We have three extra seats. Stop.” But I don’t, because I’m not seventeen, and he isn’t that boy, and I have three little girls. And my car is so warm and the world is so cold and I have just extracted my youngest from a HALF birthday party with a chef who can’t wait for his ride inside the house, and all I can think is, I am one of them. I am sitting in this luxury car bought with the blood sweat and tears of fourteen years, staring out into the snow that will not ruin my day. I am one of the privileged ones, whether I want to deny it because I can’t buy this house or hire this chef or host a half birthday party, I am still one of them.

We drop the girls at the grandparents and venture out to a mediocre dinner in a highly-rated bar in the posh neighborhood that we could never afford to live in. “What should we do now?” he asks, “Do you want another beer, should we go to another place?” It is 7:32 on a Saturday night. Our children are occupied until late tomorrow afternoon. The snow has let up and we have boots on anyway. “Let’s go home. Have the wine. Watch Friends.” (It’s on Netflix now).

We enter the tiny, entry-less house. Curl up on the 17% bonded leather sectional. Flip on the broken/borrowed/fixed entertainment system that sits atop the plywood desk, our first furniture purchase eighteen years back, in the small corner between the door and the insulation-less wall. I clap when The Rembrandts ask me to clap, we watch four episodes, Chandler proposes, Monica cries, and it is just like the old days, in the apartment with ants that bit our toes if we walked across the carpet, with cockroaches and heat that went crazy and borrowed furniture and everything that was then that is now.

I am not one of them. I am just lucky enough to not be one of them, to know the value of what lies beneath my thighs, to make my own damn cupcakes and have a real birthday party, not a HALF one.

These are the things I tell myself as he falls asleep beside me, wine gone. As I make my way into the next decade that stretches between when I bought the first car that I still have and the new car that makes me look at our lives in a different light, a different snowstorm, a different drive across town.

It’s a Saturday night. And we are just like we always were, curled up in a love that’s just good enough to make any house a home.

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With These Words

a guilty headache
writing, yoga abandoned
for Spanish test prayers

four-forty a.m.:
swallow last night’s leftovers
extend my commute

four ibuprofens
dawn on a two-mile walk:
sunrise on my school

early arrival
i make lesson plans and grade
till they shuffle in

solid essay work
they have surprised me again
with how i love them

early return home
to intense yoga practice
this happy hour

headache free, i’ll sleep
ready for a new sunrise
guiltless with these words

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Harsh Parenting 101 (SCI)

We’ve tried everything on you, our guinea pig. First I read Babywise, aka Harsh Parenting 101. You were on a schedule for nursing. I would hold you in my arms and rock you, your mouth opening and closing like a fish, your whimpers getting increasingly impatient, until the time allotted had passed and the book said I could give you milk. For the first six weeks of your life, it was a battle between you and me… and I “won.” You were sleeping through the night, just like the book said, at six weeks old. I could leave you in your room, on the floor, in your crib or playpen, with a few small toys, from the day you were interested in them until you were nearly two. You would play, entertaining yourself, because “boredom develops creativity.”

By the time your sister came along, I didn’t even consider this style of parenting. She nursed when she wanted to, relentlessly, all night long, for almost a year. For her first six weeks, you tried to climb into my lap every time I nursed her during the day, and I would push you away or go into another room. I had to be hard on you, I told myself, because your behavior would be the model that they would follow.

I was a different parent with you, my first, than I would ever be with her, or with the baby sister who came two years later.

I am a different parent with you, my first, than I am with them.

I expect more from you because you have to set the precedent. I test theories out on you. Naughty step? She’s not too young. (Months later, still unable to sit still for more than a few seconds, I would grab you up from your dash, place you right back on the step, and start the timer all over again. Battle two. Isabella: 1. Mama: 0.) Bilingual charter school? Let’s try it! Even if the kindergarten teacher doesn’t actually speak Spanish, the kids are running around the hallways like banshees, and the second grade teacher gets fired for poor classroom management at the end of a year where you got in trouble enough times to make me think you might have ADHD (the survey from the doctor sat on the floor of my car for months until I realized it was not you… it was the environment).

And now, the dreaded age. Middle school. A year ago, we were right back where we started in kindergarten, hemming and hawing about the best choice for you. My guinea pig, my eldest daughter just wanted to walk three blocks to the mediocre neighborhood school. I wouldn’t listen. I wanted to set a precedent, a level of expectations that your sisters could shadow. So the militaristic charter school it was, where you learn to never forget your pencil, to charge your computer, or not to speak one word in the hallway, for fear of an hour-long detention after school.

So it is no wonder, after a lifetime of me making decisions for you, that when you don’t get what you want, you pester and beg. You tease your sisters, mock their kindness, flaunt your gifts in front of them to incite jealousy. You pitch fits, ignore our instructions, storm out of the room, throw folded laundry down the basement steps, and slam your bedroom door. You stay up all night playing on your phone, begrudgingly tread through specified activities the next day, and have teary-eyed breakdowns over which seat you’ll sit in in the new car, over who lost your colored pencils, over what we’re having for dinner. You tell lies to avoid your parents’ wrath.

You remind me every day how much I’ve failed you. How Harsh Parenting 101 will never work. How you need hugs and hand holds, not criticisms and impossible expectations. How your sisters will never have the same parents, because they are not the first born. We are softer around the edges with them, our patience worn thin, our will weakened after all the battles with you.

These are the words I don’t hold out to you on my blog. I don’t watch tears well up in your eyes at the kindness of my poem for you, acting like parenting is all about coos and cuteness. I keep them here for the world to see and for me to remember:

1. You are not a guinea pig.
2. I am not a scientist.
3. Parenting is hard.
4. Despite everything, I love you more than anything. Till my heart bursts. Till I lose my mind and you have to fight your way back to it. All the way to the moon… and back.

5. Let’s get in a spaceship and make our way to the moon. And back.