Friday, August 22, 2008

A note to our readers


As you may have noticed we are a little behind here and the summer is coming to a close. It is our intent to keep writing and posting over the next couple of months as there are more stories from the trip as well as from our stay in Cape Cod. But, it will be a couple of weeks before we post our next entry because I have to get cross country with Nick and Sherman and Miss Kim needs to get the Kids ready for school. So please check back in Mid September.

The Battle of Springfield

And then it was on to Springfield, Illinois and St. Louis, Missouri where we were to see The Lincoln Presidential Museum.

D. offered to drive. Unthinkingly I handed the keys over, a misstep on my part. Keys are like the remote: He who hold’th them, has’th the power. No sooner did Sherman leave the Denny’s parking lot when D. inserted a disk titled The American Civil War. Part I. I gave D. the are you #$%ing kidding me look. Unfazed, he pointed Sherman’s nose to the highway and turned up the sound.

“We need to be in the mood.” He blithely opined.

Gee, as if, sitting in this car, I couldn’t already imagine acrimonious debates, territorial disputes and taking up arms.

Lecture one: Prelude to a war. The societal differences between the North and the South commenced.

I proceeded to look out the window (crows and cornfields), checked for voice mails (none) and investigated a chip in my pedicure. Then, I thought about home. I worried whether the cats are being feed which oddly, led me to worry about school starting which segued directly into compiling my new School Year Resolutions.

1. I will not STILL be wearing my workout clothes at pick up.

2. I will pay the Lunch Ladies on time.

3. I will clean Cowboy Pat (the minivan) so biohazards don’t spill out every time we open the doors.

4. I will sign AND RETURN all permission slips.

5. I will keep on top of the sock situation.

6. I will throw away shit.

7. Dinner and milk will be a priority.

Then I noticed that my belly rolled over the top of my pants. Is that new flab? Folded over like that? I lifted my arm and waddled my deltoid. It waddled back. Shit. I’d only missed- what? -ten work outs? My body is so disloyal. I want a new one.

I checked my cell phone, I had frittered away seven minutes.

But surprisingly quickly, we were driving through Illinois, where it is flat and green and populated, with towns and restaurants and antique malls. Not that we stop anywhere. We were meeting Opi (Grandpa M for those of you not versed in diminutive German) in St. Louis for dinner, thus on a time schedule. Still, with Professor Gallagher in da club I was hoping for any small diversion. Then, I got one.

“Hey Mom” asked Nick conversationally “One prairie dog roasted would be… what? One biteful? How many prairie dogs would it take to make a lunch?”

Double quick, Ronnie launched over the seat with a left hook to Nick’s eye. Wow. Those boxing lessons really took.

“Nick” howled Ronnie, intent on damage

“Mom” howled Nick, intent on revenge.

“Kim” howled Don, intent on listening.

Insert new scenario (E) where the din in the back encroached on the drone in the front.

I threaten cell phones, computers and iPods. Order was restored. D’s jaw stopped convulsing. Professor Gallagher, toneless as a treadmill, resumed. A few minutes later, from the back, under his breath I heard Nick singing,” MMMmhhhh Good, MMhhh Good.”

I guess he just really, really, wanted another black eye.

Eventually we saw signs to Springfield and to Chicago. The traffic picked up. The towns got closer. The houses got closer. Then we veered off and once again were in green fields and flatlands and I thought, perhaps not too unchanged since Lincoln’s time. And D. buoyed by the civil war tapes asks the kids if they know why they were going to Springfield.

“I know! I know! I know!” Ronnie said excitedly, waving her hand “To see Homer!”

Hey. I know what you’re thinking. Too much TV, but Homer DOES live in Springfield, so there.

Our hotel was in St Louis which was an hour beyond Springfield. The kids gave up the videos and any pretense they weren’t intent on torturing each other. Sherman muscled its way through several wrong turns; Shirley stridently objected; D. yelled. I issued Scenario E warnings like a weather service. At long last, we found ourselves at the hotel.

And joys of joys, Opi was waiting to greet us and the kids piled out even before Sherman’s motor had stopped, charged the revolving front door and mobbed Opi with hugs and kisses. Quite forgotten, D. and I unloaded 6 bags, 1 suitcase, three computers, one essentials bag, and one technology bag.

Shortly thereafter, we looked for a place for dinner. We needed a restaurant, we tell the concierge, which can accommodate kids, vegetarians, all day breakfast but maybe Mexican but something with steak. The befuddled concierge finally suggested Houlihan’s restaurant as the place most likely to come anywhere near our requests. He gave directions and we set off walking.

Within minutes, we were at directional odds with each other.

“Cross over here” Opi said.

“No, you’re crazy” said D. “we need to go up and then crossover”

“Really?” I said “because I am positive the concierge said to go straight and it would be on our right hand side.”

No one listen to each other. We argued several more blocks, unyielding in our positions.

“We are going the scenic route, yeh?” challenged D.” To me he said “I don’t think there’s even a restaurant anywhere near here. There is no one on the streets”

However, after a few hard twists and turns, Opi delivered us to St. Louis Union Station Mall and, yes! A Houlihan’s restaurant. Ahh, we of little faith.

“Wow” Said D. looking around at the empty booths. “The economy must really suck here. Its 6 o’clock? There is nobody here.”

Leaving the restaurant, the girls spot a tattoo artist offering henna art. M girls? Tattoos? Need I say more? Chase chose a dragon, B a crow, Ronnie a skull and I picked a lion. Nick said he’d rather poke his eye out with a hot poker. Sensing an estrogen dominated moment, D., Opi and Nick beat a fast path back to the hotel.

“Never mind them” I said, watching their backsides disappear quickly “Girls rule. Boys drool.”

Getting a henna tattoo isn’t as easy as I thought. Its labor intensive and our artist was a perfectionist. He stopped and restarted several times. I found myself making small talk to past time. The booth across from us sold fudge. The chief fudge maker was also the chief salesman. He had gathered a crowd around him. With a large rack, he mixed the fudge while inciting the congregation to put their hands in the air, clap to a rhythm and send shout outs.

“It’s like a revivalist tent meeting" I observed “does it sell fudge?”

“It must” mumbled my tattooist. I guessed the same technique wouldn’t work for tattoos. And then he tells me he was engaged to his girlfriend. They were getting married after she finished school. He looked barely twenty and I privately hoped this was not high school she was finishing. As I watched him painstakingly map out my lion, I started getting anxious for him. How much could he make in this mall? Could he afford rent? Buy a car? Buy gas? Wait. Stop. You don’t know what you are doing.

Then he cheerfully finished my lion, charged my card and wished the girls and me a wonderful St. Louis visit.

Ahhhh. The very young, so optimistic, so carefree. Me? I’m pessimistic and old. We caught cab back to the hotel; it was way past my bedtime.

The next morning we headed back to Springfield. As we loaded up, I joked to Ronnie, “Ready to see Homer?”

She looked at me over her nose. “Mom, you do know the Simpsons are a comic strip, right?”

Well then, don’t I feel foolish?

The seating arrangements were different now that Opi was with us. He took the front seat. I wedged myself between Nick and Chase, noting sadly the spread of my thighs. I sucked in my tummy to see if that made a difference. Uh. No. Moreover, there were only four head sets, so no Pink Panther for me.

Professor Gallagher embarked on General McClellan contempt for Lincoln’s war strategies.

“Dad, you’re going to love this guy” D. enthused. I was convinced Prometheus had it easier.

Springfield itself was a bit under whelming. The main road in was lined with nondescript houses, strip malls and dentist offices. Even the sign pointing to Lincoln’s Presidential Library appeared rather dingy. It took some hunting but we found a parking garage which could accommodate Sherman’s height (8 ½ feet with his “hat”- the Thule compartment). The kids spidered out of the car. I followed more slowly, carrying four cameras, two cell phones and three water bottles.

Our museum entry was less then welcoming. A security guard wearing a gun on his hip instructed us to check our bags: No Backpacks. No water bottles. Small purse ok. Yes sir. As we left the security area I wondered where I could get a Glock. Hey Kids: Dinner. Homework. Brush teeth. Bed. Perfect.

“Link up” I said to B and Ronnie, taking both their hands as we entered the Plaza. “Absolutely no wandering off. You need an adult to be with you at all times. Got it?”

“Yessmom.” Monosyllabled. ZZzzzzz. Mom is so predictable.

We were greeted in the plaza by life sized Abe, Mary, Tad and Willie, behind them stood the White House. An absolutely must do photo op. We got pics with kids, pics without; with D., without D.; With Opi, absent Opi; and one redo because Ronnie touched Mary and the security guard interfered. After we got that out of our system, we were able to focus. The plaza is the entranced to every exhibit or gallery. After some discussion, we chose two introductory films.

The first was Ghosts of the Library. It started in a staged library with a host whose spoke to us on how things are collected and studied and what you could learn from simple tools or letters. He walked about, lifting objected, talking history. But, as he talked, ghostly figures rocked a chair, civil war soldiers appeared and disappeared, battle scenes were laid out, a quill pen wrote in the air in Lincoln’s handwriting.

How did they do that? I wondered. Were there screens? Sheer curtains? Projected light? Then I wondered about the host. He looked real enough but….hmmmm. I wasn’t the only one baffled. Chase leaned over and asked if he was a robot. While I puzzled, the host snapped his fingers and disappeared. I didn’t think even a robot could disappear like that.

“I don’t know, honey. It’s a mystery.” I finally answered.

Our second film, Lincolns Eyes, was an interpretation of Lincoln done by an artist. It was just as engaging. The artist split Lincoln’s face down the middle and interpreted every line and curve as a way of understanding Lincoln’s life and choices: Melencholy, intelligence, resolve, forgiveness and finally the sunken face of death. Like Ghosts in the Library, the film interacted with the audience: Screens snapped up and down, cannons boomed, a horse kicked. This last, the horse kicking, particularly entertained Ronnie. So much so, she re enacted her unexpected astonishment- eye popping, head spinning, body jerking- several times. Finally, I could take it no more.

“Ronnie” I said “The first time is funny; the second time it is not so funny; the third time it is downright unfunny.”

God, I hate it when I open my mouth and I hear my mother talking. Ronnie was unperturbed.

We started the pre- presidential years, called Journey One, which began in the log cabin replica and Abe reading on a fence. I learned something new. Lincoln’s mother died when he was ten and he was raised by a wonderful step mother. Other exhibits illustrated life on the river, a slavery block, Lincoln with his rumored girlfriend, Lincoln with Mary. We meander through Campaign 1860 where Tim Russert moderated the Lincoln Douglas debates. I left Nick fixated on the screen. Ahh, my little politico.

I was listening to Lincoln give his Springfield farewell speech when I sensed a commotion coming on.

“Mom” complained B, raising a gouged hand,” Look what Ronnie did”.

“You were trying to choke me” Ronnie countered.

“I wasn’t trying to choke you” gritted B, swelling up like a puff adder, “I was trying to.POP.YOUR. MELLON. HEAD!” Challenge issued. Challenge taken. B tackled. Ronnie blocked. Together, they convulsed to the floor in a Gordian knot of knee caps, knuckles and permanent teeth. Heads turned. Jeez Louise, where was that Glock when I needed it?

I waded into the fray, wedged in a knee, followed it by the tiniest bit of elbow, applying my Vulcan death grip and squeezed them into submission. I had them subdued by the time a security guard descended on me.

“Ma’am” He said “Could you keep the children from running? There are elderly people about.”

“Yes, of course” I said as contritely as I could, squeezing harder to quiet their squawking. I held my smile waiting for him to move on. He didn’t. Oh, how it sucks to be in the clearly in the wrong.

“May I suggest Lincoln’s attic as a more appropriate venue for the younger ones.” He continued. “It has coloring” he sing sang brightly, lowering himself to their eye level. Still swaying in my pincher grip, both girls suddenly become mute. In the prolonged silence, Ronnie rolled her eyes like a cow; B probed her gouge wound with her tongue. Both intermittently flapped a limb, wordlessly declaring themselves imbeciles. Ok, maybe just dimwitted. Still, I was mortified and made a hasty exit the moment I could.

“That really, really, really was….awful. That sucked! ” I sputtered, looking desperately for D. or Opi or even Chase. “We looked like idiots.” The royal ‘we’ didn’t land any punches. So I upped the rhetoric “YOU looked like idiots” They surreptitiously grinned at each other. Nothing unites faster than a common enemy. Reluctantly, I released them back into the wild.

The presidential years, Journey Two, began with a fashion show. Presumably the intent was to show the Washington fashions of the time. The creators, however, thought it clever to have Mary’s social rivals as part of the exhibit, each woman dressed in a different style, offers some snide remark about Mary looks or her hostessing skills. I thought this wholly unfair to Mary. What woman wants her enemies to have the last word? Hell, we don’t even want our friends to have the last word.

I mulled over what my frienemies would say about me as I past the Fort Sumter (a picture of the shot heard round the world). From there I entered the Whispering Gallery where you saw all the political caricatures of Lincoln, hundreds of them, mean and ugly. You know, I think I must be too thin skinned for politics. My feelings would be hurt. I’d plot revenge. I’d kill someone. I stopped short. I suddenly realized I hadn’t seen a kid in awhile. I back tracked to Fort Sumner. No kids. I found D. in Lincoln’s office. Seen the girls? Nope.

I discovered Ronnie in the Kitchen Gallery. She was trying to touch the tools which made the perimeter alarm buzz. She was (being a M) amused by this and repeated the maneuver several times. I elbowed past a group of interested observers to get to her. I saw the leg of a security guard rounding the corner. I gave her the elbow hook and exited, stage left.

“Where are B and Chase?” I ask, wrestling her hand in the hallway.

“I have No idea” she declares, disentangling herself from my grip.

”You must, I said “absolutely must hold my hand” She complied by glomming on and dropping like a pendulum. Oh boy.

Then it was back to the gallery, Ronnie in swing, to Willie’s death. I stood in front of the recreated bedroom with Mary at Willie’s bedside and Lincoln coming through the door from a party. You heard the party music tinkling in the background. It was so poignant for me. Lincoln is standing in the doorway, caught between his public life and his personal life; Mary, stroking the face of her dying child, her guests dancing away. My heart constricted. How could you bear it, Mary? I wondered. Of course she didn’t. She went mad. I decided I could live with Ronnie hanging on my arm like a monkey. In fact, I wouldn’t have it any other way, security guards and all.

We found Opi, D. and Nick in the War Room watching the Civil War in four minutes. It’s an electronic map which lit up every battle of the Civil war. It was so cool I watched it twice, vowing to listen more to Professor Gallagher. Then it was on to an exhibit of eight soldier’s stories (four from the North four from the South). Bits and pieces of their stories were sequentially displayed though out history of the war. There was one about the youngest solider on the side of the North, a drummer. He is wounded and survived to be sent, after the war, to West Point. Another was a black standard bearer, wounded three times and who insisted he returns to battle. He eventually got a Medal of Honor.

This was followed by a huge interactive wall. You could pick a picture, touch a screen and the picture’s story would appear. I touched one called Jennie Hodges, a woman masked as a man who served as a soldier. She lived as a man afterward, her secret safe until she broke her leg. The screen told me there were an estimated 400 woman who masqueraded as men to fight. I touched another photo. It was a Union soldier from Andersonville prison: a skeleton, just bones with skin and haunted eyes. Such inhumanity, such sacrifice on both sides. Not for the first time I wondered whether I had that kind of courage for my convictions.

Then I realize, again. No child is with me. Where did Ronnie go? She was here just a second ago. I irritably back track to the soldiers’ stories and found Chase reading the inscriptions. I asked her where her sisters were. She didn’t know; she didn’t care. I made her. Relatively soon we retrieved them from Mrs. Lincoln’s Attic.

Back on track, the girls and I found ourselves in the Emancipation Proclamation Gallery. It’s a corridor where, presumably you are Lincoln and everyone is yelling at you. The North is unhappy. The Abolitionists are unhappy. The south hates you. I started to appreciate how extraordinary Lincoln was, truly extraordinary, and way ahead of his time. He abhorred the war. He abhorred slavery. He knew he could never make either side happy. So, instead, he did what he believed was right. No poll taking. No advisor committee. Just Duty. Honor. Country.

I followed the corridor to the Tide Turns and Washington Celebrating, wall paintings commemorating various victories. Against the odds, Lincoln is re-elected, the North started winning battles and the Emancipation Proclamation was issued. Somewhere along the line, D. caught up to me. As we turned the corners, each display became more somber. The inevitable was going to happen. The war would end and Lincoln, this great man who single handedly turned our course of history, would die.

I found myself with an enormous lump in my throat. By the time I saw the display picturing Lincoln addressing party goers on the White House lawn with Booth skulking in the background, the lump had grown enough to make my nose itch and my eyes sting.

D. and I proceeded to the Ford Theatre. We read how Mary hugged Abe’s arm moments before the shooting. We learned how Booth timed the shot to coincide with the audience’s laughter. We read how bystanders pulled Mary off her dying husband. We heard how she asked the doctor: Is he dead? Can he recover? Most heart wrenching, she begged someone to run get Tad because Abe would always talk to him. That image of Mary, Mary who had already suffered so much loss, confronted with yet another dreadful reality, well, that’s all it took for Kim M. I started openly sniffling.

D. and I viewed the funeral trail map, listened to the speeches and read about the crowds who gathered along the track. Lastly, we filed past the full scale replication of Lincoln’s lying in state in Springfield’s Representative Hall. Everything was draped in black. The lights were dim. If the was an audio to this display I don’t recall it. I remember it being soundless. I exited from the dark hushed room into the bright rotunda light. My throat was knotted, my nose runny, my eyes puffy and red. And then, I realize I’d quite lost the kids.

Next up was Lincoln’s law office. Somewhat of a letdown after the terrific presentation the Museum gave. The guide spent an inordinate amount of time talking about the history of the building (three stories, Greek Revivalist structure, was a goods store, then wasn’t, then was). Finally we saw where he worked, where his children famously misbehaved (good- he’s approve of B and Ronnie) and where he told his law partner not to take his name off the plaque because he’d be back after being president. What was Lincoln thinking? Hold that thought. I have to go be president. I’ll be back in a jiffy.

Then we walked maybe six blocks to Lincoln’s home where a ranger gave a un air- conditioned tour. We found out Lincoln bought his house for 1500 dollars in 1850. They had a horse hair sofa. They had raised the roof for more room. The family room had kinescope (pictures slide that is three D). We found out their beds were custom made, their eldest son, Robert, was already off to law school, and they had maids who came and worked and lived with them. That’s what the guide knew. She didn’t know: how much Lincoln made the year he bought the house, whether he owned a German newspaper and whether the wallpaper border was the original or added later.

“I’m sorry” she said “I’ve just come off of maternity leave. I’ve forgotten a few things. I’ll have to brush up” It’s got to be her first child, I thought, or she’d know damage from Mommy Brain is permanent.

Our last sightseeing was Lincoln’s tomb in Oak Ridge Cemetery. I was glad we ended the day there. It was fitting, having followed his life, to end at his grave. The cemetery was serene. It was near closing and very few people were about. Huge oak trees cast longer shadows across soft green grass. The tomb itself was a huge granite structure, decorated with four military sculptures (Naval, Calvary, Artillery and Infantry). Each sculpture depicted scenes from the civil war. An obelisk topped its base.

In the rotunda, a ranger gave a small talk about the tomb, its history, the many bronze statues which line the walk to the vault, and who was buried there (Lincoln, Mary, Edward, Willie and Tad) Till that moment, I hadn’t really thought about this being a family tomb. Here, even in death, he was divided: a president, a father and a husband.

A visitor said she noticed that in each Lincoln’s statue, his foot appeared worn or rubbed. Did the artists all do that on purpose?

“No” said the ranger, “Even though no one is suppose to touch the statues, everyone rubs Lincoln’s boot, he pointed to the rotunda statue “except this one because I’m standing here”

Who would want to rub a shoe, I thought. But as we make the circle heading towards the tomb chamber I found my hand compulsively touching each boot.

“Mom” Chided B. “You’re not supposed to touch. Look with your eyes.”

“Opi did it” I countered.

When we got to the burial chamber, the kids were appropriately hushed. There were wreaths laid by the grave marker, apparently Lincoln is buried underneath the ground because of an attempt to steal his body. I touched family members plaque wondered why Robert wasn’t buried with the rest of his family.

I snapped a few picture of the statues. We walked back to Sherman, and the kids spidered back in.

“You know” Opi said” what we forgot to factor in today?”

“What” I said.

“A nap” he yawned.

In the car, General McClellan laid siege to Yorktown for a month.

I hear ya, Opi.

Two pop guns, one shirt (Lincoln singing along to an iPod), two presidential trivia books (#3, #4) one refrigerator magnet, one doll (named Mary Todd) and one family portrait with Lincoln.

Nirvana in Wisconsin?

We left South Dakota heading towards Wisconsin.

The loading up process was hampered when Nick and Chase prematurely loaded into Sherman, blocking the middle row. They seat belted themselves in, refused to move, then screamed murderously as B and Ronnie crawled over their laps to get to the far back. The younger ones, for their part, took full advantage of this opportunity to kick, gouge, rib and knuckle all in the name of simply getting into the car.

Scenario B, full blown, with asses and elbows and some nasal blood involved.

“Chase! Nick” I intervened, ordering the blockade out.

“Here. Observe carefully” I enunciated in my best pissed off mommy voice.

“Lower the back seat, let your little sisters in. Then, and only then, do you get in. What is so hard about that?”

Chase muttered something.

"What did you say?" I demanded.

“Huh?” She said, looking directly at me.

“What did you say?” I repeated, becoming more vexed.

“Huh?” She repeated, face solid as a Buddha.

I pointed wordlessly to the car door. She feigned all sweetness and light as she strapped herself in.

Sheesh. It wasn’t even 7:30.

We were off, but not far. After 27 showings, Ratatouille lost its charm, as did Enchanted and Weird Al and Roots and Alvin and the Chipmunks (even though that had a scratch which made the singing very funny for the last five showings). The M children, already bilious, didn’t need any encouragement for an all out revolt. Yes, We Can to family harmony? No we couldn’t. Not without videos. We made a pit stop before leaving town. D. stocked up with The Pink Panther, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and two Scooby-Doos.

Finally, an hour later then we had planned, we pulled away from the video store. Shirley (the GPS) instructed us towards the highway and shortly thereafter we reach a smooth and easy sixty-five mph. Which, fifteen minutes later, was interrupted by a brain- pithing shriek from B.

“Squeak’ems! Squeak’ems! Where are you? We left him at the hotel! We left him! Go back.”

“Who the hell is Squeak’ems?” I ask D., unwilling to slow Sherman down without good cause.

“It’s her bear she got at Yellowstone” Clarified Chase.” You know, the defective noise one”

O. That one.

“Are you sure it’s gone?” Asked D., turning around for a better view. “Chase” he commanded “help her”

Chase obediently unstrapped.

“He’s gone. Heee’sss goooone. I’ve lost him forevveer" B sobbed.

I reluctantly brake, looking for the next exit.

“He’s gone. He’s gone.” B wailed “He’s-“

She stopped mid convulsion. “Oh wait. Here he is. Never Mind” She said sweetly.

“Fucking doll” I muttered.

“Not doll” D. corrected “Fucking bear”

“I love you, Squeak’ems” snuggled B

And then, unhindered, Sherman reached cruising speed.

As we left South Dakota, we passed an enormous statue in the middle of a brown field surrounded by rows and rows of barbed wire. It was a statue of the Virgin Mary with a sign that said ‘Madonna of the Prairies’.

“Look, kids” I pointed. “It’s the Madonna.”

“Oh” said Chase, looking out the window. “Did she do a concert here?” This, from an alter server. Can hormones do permanent damage?

There is just a whole lot of nothing out there and we saw most of it. Along the way I gave up counting road kill, too many slow raccoons and ill- fated deer. Eventually the craggy brown cattle ranches mottled into greener dairy farmlands of Minnesota. We got cell coverage. D. called everyone to let them know how glad he was to be out of South Dakota and how much prettier Minnesota is. We drove through miles of corn fields and grazing cows, grain towers and red roofed houses. And, something rather surprising, churches the size of football stadiums. And then, miracles of miracles, we got NPR on the radio.

“How stands the empire, Caesar?” I asked

“Don’t know yet” said D., turning the dials.

We were headed to meet the Colemans at The Wilderness Lodge Water Park in Wisconsin Dells which I found ironic; Ironic because Wisconsin Dells was the site of all that flooding mere weeks ago. And I said as much in the car.

Flooding. Water Park. Flooding .Water Park. Get it?

But the kids don’t and replace their headsets after staring me down. I gave up trying to explain my little joke.

What should have been the last 15 minutes of the journey to the lodge wasn’t. Traffic crept down to a mere inching, then a complete halt. I switched off NPR searching for local news and what the hold- up was. I hoped for something exciting. A mudslide? Perhaps a house fell, maybe one of those enormous pigs who got displaced? Nothing. No word

D. and I took advantage of going no- where- soon to discuss two family vacation etiquette.

“Language” said D. when asked why we needed to change anything.

“We really have to watch our language.”I clarified

“What do you mean language?” said Chase

“I mean like cuss words. We are lax about swearing. Lots of families are stricter”

“Well, can I say crap?” Said Chase.

“Please don’t.”

“How about suck? Is that ok?”Asks Nick

“Preferable not. If at all possible” I hastily amended, considering that suck is the lexicon of all M - speak.

They pondered this from the backseat

“How about the S-word” asked B.

“Youre not allowed now, or ever” I said, giving her the hairy eyeball from the review mirror.

“You say it” She giggled. “All the time”

“I know what the S- word is” Ronnie jumped in.

“No you don’t” Challenged Nick

Insert Scenario A.

Turned out Ronnie did know the S word.

But D. and I stuck to our guns, insisting despite how WE talk ALL the time, ALL of us must be more polite in company.

I hear reluctant grunted agreements.

“And” I said “ I am hoping we could leave off the farting and burping for a few days”

Absolute silence for the consideration put on the table. This apparently is just TOO much to ask.

“Mom” said Nick firmly “It’s your fault we fart. You married a farter, I’m the son of a farter and my son will be –“

Alrighty then. Nobody light a match.

The traffic jam was a fender bender, long cleared to the side of the road. Nothing exciting there.


When we got to the hotel the parking lot was a zoo. D. jumped out to go to the lobby. I shoehorned Sherman up its narrow curvy driveway, past double parked cars before I figured out that I couldn’t go forward or backward. And there we sat for ten minutes until the guy behind me honked SO insistently that the guy in front of me moved the ¼ of the inch I needed to get around and complete the circle. Then I parked on the street for another 20. Eventually, I sent Nick in search of D. He returned saying there were at least 15 people ahead of his father.

A few minutes later D. exited and made me drive to a second lobby and the whole process is repeated except D. returned with the keys and in a foul mood, made worse when we couldn’t find the map to the villa.

“I can’t believe I went through all of this and you lost the map” he grumped.

As we turned Sherman around in the parking lot, Chase let out a whoop. She had spotted the parks, huge buildings with hamster- trail waterslides coming out of every level. The closer we got, the more audible the din. I rolled down the window. You could hear hundreds of bodies thundering down the tubes. The kids started unbuckling their seatbelts and stripping off clothing in anticipation.

Come’ on, Hurry up. We’re missing ALL THE FUN!

Nosing Sherman into our parking space, I demanded calm. “Stop screaming. We still have to unpack. And get our suits on. And the Coleman’s aren’t here yet.” Then D. opened the door and I started whooping. It’s huge! Absolutely beautiful! Bedrooms (plural- yippy!), a living room, a kitchen, a dining room, three TVs and TWO bathrooms. I thought I might just be in heaven.

D. shared my enthusiasm. “This does NOT suck” He pronounced, looking for the remote. The kids skedaddle to the far corners. Moments later, I hear Naruto at full blast

Clearly, an M kind of a place.

Austin and Melissa arrived with Elisha (9), Isaiah (7) Sophia (5) and 2 year old Josiah. Between us, we had two 11 year olds, one nine year old, one eight year old, two seven year olds, one five year old and one two year old. Within a matter of minutes, the kids paired up and dissipated to various rooms of our adjoining condos.

Parents are, you know, ok, unless you have someone else to play with.

After unloading 5 backpacks, 1 suitcase, 1 essentials bag, 1 technology bag, and three laptops, Chase found me in the kitchen.

“Hey, Mom. Where’s the seltzer water?”

“In the refrigerator. Why?”

“Oh, we are having a burping contest.” She pointed to Nick, Elisha and herself.

“Wouldn’t you rather go swimming” I countered hopefully.

“Nope”

The Ms are obviously the lowest common denominator.


I asked what the plans were for dinner. Should we head to the store?

“We have it all taken care of” said Melissa. That was an understatement.

12 plates, ten bowls, 7 cups, one sippy cup, 4 wines glasses, 20 assorted utensils, To-die-for-Mexican lasagna, garlic bread, salads and fruit. By the time the scraggly Ms arrived, the table was set, the food was on and it was all over except the blessing. Which Austin did, posthaste and with aplomb.

“Please let me do something” I said, my mouth full.

“O no” said Melissa “You’re in our neck of the woods”

Minneapolis, last time I checked was three hours away. I am really going to have to brush up on my hostess skills. I am way behind the curve.

D. and Austin had the kids at the water park by early morning. I meandered slowly over with Melissa and Josiah. It took a few minutes to find the right park (there are seven).We found them in Klondike Kavern. This is Disney with water: Inner tube slides and body slides and racing slides and drops and careening funnels and a 1000 gallon water bucket drop. Given all my choices, I headed directly for the old people hot tubs but I got Shanghai’d by Nick instead, and found myself in line for THE HURRICANE with Nick, Elisha and Austin.

I tried to get out of it. I just got here. I need to find Ronnie. My knee hurts or might hurt or could possible hurt.

“Are you scared????”Challenged Nick.

“No” I lied. We walked up the three levels to the top to await a four sitter raft.

“Hey Austin” I huffed next to him. “Did you ever think when we all were sitting in muddy Bremerton that we would be here, at a water park with eight kids someday?”

“Noooo” he said, shaking his head.

“Me neither. Well, maybe one kid”

When I took the kids to Disneyland, I learned one thing. I could do any ride as long as it was over before I could think: I am going to die. As we load up on the inner tube, I tried to remember Splash Mountain at Disneyland. How many feet drop was that 30? 40? 50 Nick told me. And this one? More he said and that doesn’t include the funnel.

Funnel? There’s a funnel?

Yes, there was a funnel but not before a drop of cataclysmic proportion where I hit the water so hard my bathing suit pants ended up around my ears. Then we slipped and slid and nauseatingly zigzagged to each new crux. Every time I opened my eyes we were sliding down. Again.

“Wasn’t that great!” thrilled Nick “Want to go again?”

“You couldn’t pay me enough” I said, dislodging my wedgie.

I headed back to where Josiah was sitting by a water flower, much more my speed. I wiggled my toes in the water, splashed a little water, when I see Ronnie and Isaiah take their positions underneath the 1000 gallon water bucket, its bell ringing to warn of an imminent downpour. They grabbed hands, turned their expectant faces upward and greeted the water crashing down on them. Cute. Beyond Cute. Cute together. As they run off, I plotted. I would make a terrific MIL.

Later, somewhat recovered from the wedgie, B. talked me into going down one of the body slides. Sadly, I was off kilter almost immediately because I couldn’t figure out if I should be sliding on my butt or my back. I opted for something in between. I bumped my head and my knee all the way down and hit a huge pool of water on my exit. The flow of water went directly up my nose, both barrels. Through the curtain of water, I saw Chase and B cheering wildly for me. Then their expression changed from ones of excitement to horror. They stopped clapping.

“Ewwh, Mom, you have snot coming out of your nose.” B said.

Only snot? I thought it was my brains.

After that, it was the hot tub and nothing more challenging then the lazy river (a gentle flowing circle) with Sophie.

And in the middle of this, D. said “You know all that national park and history stuff? Pffft. This is a vacation”

Agreed.

The next morning I got a chance to write while the kids and D. take on even more water challenges, and races and an amazing fourteen runs on the hurricane. My computer was still up when Nick got back. He read my stories and took issue.

“Mom, he said, you’re making fun of us.”

“It’s my blog. It’s all about me” I joked

“It's embarrassing” said Nick seriously, “Take it out. It’s gross.”

“Nick” I soothed” My friends know me and they know us and-“

“Do you have to put EVERYTHING in there?”

“Hey- I left out plenty” I countered.

“My friends are reading this” he insisted.

“Your friends?” I said, taken aback.”Your friends are reading My blog?”

He nodded.

This gave me pause. Twelve year olds are reading this? I looked over what I had written and got a little anxious. Nick had a point, I conceded gloomily. I deleted a scene. Then I deleted another one. By the third deletion, I was unhappy. The stories didn’t read smoothly, weren’t true to the moments and weren’t nearly as funny.

I sat at the computer deflated, unsure of what to do. Then D. came. He made a huge argument: This was my first amendment right. Nick can write his own perspective! Who cared if he didn’t like it?

Still.

“Look, Nick” I said, hoping for a compromise “I took everything out. Instead, I put ‘deleted scene’ in. That way the reader can use their imagination”

Nick didn’t look convinced but eventually I persuaded him.

“I disagree” D. said “I wouldn’t alter a thing. Not a thing.”

“I just love their bodies” said Melissa as we walk over to the park. The kids were running in front of us. “Didn’t God just make them perfect?” I looked. Jumbled legs and freckled noses, round bellies and gap tooth smiles, strong backs and perfect bottoms, tilted heads and long black lashes, braces and ponytails and pudgy fingers and deep brown eyes. Yes, God made them perfect. And beautiful. And healthy. And utterly miraculous.

That afternoon we had some excitement. I did a head count and B was MIA. There were outdoor pools and I headed there. Outside I noticed huge black clouds rolling in. I saw the lifeguards high tailing it to cover and the big cheese lifeguard stopped me saying the outdoor pool was closed. Just looking for a kid I said, turning back to the indoor site.

Chase greeted me saying “Hurry Mom, B is losing it. They said a tornado is coming and she is scared”

“Who said a tornado?” I ask thinking of those black clouds but am interrupted by a hysterical B.

Are we going to die? Is it coming? What should we do? Can we start praying?

B played Toto in the school play. She knew all about tornados, little dogs, wicked witches and being a long way from home.

“No to the first, yes to the last” I said, looking for D. Others park goers were quickly gathering their things. Surely, if there was a tornado warning there’d be a formal announcement. Assessing the sheets of rain now hitting the glassed ceilings above, Austin said “Well, it’s probably just a storm”.

I ask a life guard, who said, “There’s a storm outside?” This didn’t not reassure me. How cued in to a tornado would he be if he didn’t even know about the storm pounding over his head.

Melissa insisted D. and Austin go to find out. If there really was a tornado coming, we didn’t want to be anywhere NEAR shattering glass, she pointed out. We needed to know. Hey, I was down with that, the Wizard of Oz notwithstanding. But it turns out it was just a really big storm and the resort really does have a system in place for severe weather and this was not it. B finished praying and we head back to the villa, safe and sound.

Our last night, Melissa and Austin came over after the kids had fallen asleep. We hooked up the baby monitor, listened to the sounds of sleepy silence, opened a bottle of wine, ate Tabasco popcorn and watched a movie. Simply wonderful.

Later, D. readied to upload the South Dakota stories to the blog.

“Hey” he said, annoyed “I look like an asshole.”

Deleted scene.

Our last morning we go to a Denny’s fixed up as a retro diner, complete with James Dean, Elvis and Marilyn Monroe statues.

“How many kids?” The Hostess asked.

“Eight.” I replied.

“How many under twelve?” She specified.

“Eight.” I said. She blinked first.

There were so many of us we divided up the tables; parents at one, kids at the other. The poor waitress took warring orders (us versus them) with at least three different outcomes. Water got knocked over. Confusion reigned. M distemper flared.

“You’re the worst brother I ever had!!!” B screamed

“I’m your only brother, which means, I’m the nicest brother you ever had.” Nick said

“No you ARE NOT!!!” She frothed purple

Finally, D. brings Nick over to our table.

“We’re going to do a little test, Nick. We want to see if things quiet down if you sit here with us.”

And things do quiet down.

I said “Gee, Nick, that table sure is quiet now that you’ve left it for the adult table.”

Without missing a beat Nick said” That must be because I’m more adult then they are”

Indefatigable.

“A lawyer” laughed Melissa.

After breakfast it was a long heartfelt goodbye, with hugs and scribbled email accounts and pictures. Then more pictures and more hugs and a few tears ( mostly from me).

And little Sophie said “I can’t wait until I see you again”

Sophie, we couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

Take from Wilderness Water Park: 4 shirts, three hats, and a key chain.

Take from outlet store two blocks down: 3 Hollister shorts, two Hollister pullovers, two The Children Store skirts, size 8, two sun dresses, size 8 and ten.

Memories: Incredible ones, worthy of a lifetime.