Category Archives: dad

Skunk 2.0

It’s back.

We thought we’d dispensed with it three years ago. Remember? No? Read about it here, here, here and here.

Okay, so maybe this skunk is just a distant relative.

Either way, a few day ago this little bugger must have found cousin Pepe’s former apartment, moved in and got right down to the business of stinking the place up.

It’s really horrible to be awakened by a smell. Scents are the things that reach deepest into your most primal, lizard-esque brain cells and touch your very soul, whether for good or ill. This smell is definitely squarely in the “ill” category, as it propelled us both out of bed and into various activities: me going downstairs to fetch the vinegar jug, my wife to opening windows and doors wide to let in the 30-something degree air from outside, which smelled fresh and sweet.

I filled up a spray bottle with vinegar and began saturating the surfaces and air with the tangy, neutralizing elixir. This helped some, but it required regular booster sprays throughout the day. Whatever that polecat was doing, it certainly knew how to smell up the inside of the house without being detectable from the outside.

I called up the same wildlife guy as last time, and he came out and set traps the very next day.

Nothing caught so far, but it’s only a matter of time.

And this time, I am going to put up the wire mesh around the deck to keep that bugger OUT. Between that and a regular application of cayenne pepper spray in the back yard, we shouldn’t have skunk problems any more.

Michael asked me why God made skunks, if they’re so stinky and cause so much trouble. It was difficult for me to provide a good answer: “God needs skunks here for a good reason. Daddy can’t really figure out what that reason is, but God’s a lot smarter than daddy so that’s why He’s in charge.”

I am going to ask Him when I get the opportunity, though.

Wealth

Things that make me feel wealthy, in no particular order:

  • A drawer full of clean, matched socks.
  • A clean kitchen.
  • Being married to Michael’s Mommy.
  • A house full of happy, helpful, interested children.
  • Dining Al Fresco (out in back, in the summertime).
  • Both cars parked in the garage.
  • A fire in the fireplace.
  • A freshly mown lawn
  • An uncluttered work bench.
  • Having time to write.
  • Knowing that I’m part of God’s grand plan, and He’s already got it all worked out.


  • What makes you feel wealthy?

    Portal Of Doom

    Toilets are evil. At least, the ones in our house are. I’m convinced they’re sentient and angry about something, and have for some reason selected me as the target for expressing their resentment.

    We have three bathrooms in our house, each with a toilet having its own personality. Upstairs in the kid’s bathroom is “Breezy”, the toidy that is forever discarding its seat. I must have re-attached the seat five times last year. Over in the master suite is “Twitchy”, the latrine that never quite stops running; you have to actually get into the tank to adjust the flapper to seat right so it doesn’t keep on repeating the “endlessly tinkle and loudly refill” pattern all day. And downstairs in the powder room we find “Eager”, the commode that tends to be done with flushing before the job is complete. To get him to behave, you must hold the flush handle down in order for the bowl to empty, or to “drink it up” as Michael puts it.

    Guarding Eager’s chambers was an equally evil powder room door. A pocket door. A door that I have dubbed “Surly.”

    From the time we moved in, the thing never worked right.

    First of all, it was impossible to lock. Pocket doors are not known for presenting a high security level, and this one was no exception. In fact, because the house had settled funny in its twenty-some-odd years, the frame was askew, and even when you closed the door as much as possible, it left a gap big enough to drive a Buick through. There was little hope for the door’s latch to ever span the distance to make contact with the strike plate.

    Once my stepdaughter’s dad visited, bringing along Cousin O (stepdaughter’s little half sister, who was no more than two at the time). He stepped into the downstairs restroom for a bit, no doubt believing he had a semblance of privacy. This lasted until Cousin O decided to find out where daddy went, and she opened the door wide, and then scurried off elsewhere to play. From his compromising position he called out frantically to me for help, since I was the only other responsible male in the house. I mercifully shut the door and stood guard.

    Eventually, the door went from merely not locking to full-on sticking. It became an ordeal just to cajole it into sliding shut. It required puzzling skills and acrobatics in order to properly align it while simultaneously sliding it along, and even great skill to open it. While this new behavior did incidentally provide a rudimentary form of privacy, it was far from ideal.

    After a year or two of door wrestling, I’d had all I could stand.

    I decided to take it apart and fix it. How hard could it be?

    After removing approximately three thousand four hundred nineteen pieces of trim, bracing and structural lumber to access the door itself, I became quite aware of exactly how hard it could be.

    I tilted the door outward and pulled it off its track.

    Ah, simple! The rollers were bent! No sweat.

    I employed some carefully chosen pliers and clamps to re-straighten the rollers, and then replaced the door.

    It rolled smooth as silk, open and shut. And as a bonus, it even closed enough to get the latch to work! Amazing!

    Time to put back all the lumber!

    I got it all back in place, though the resultant pock marks on the trim made it look a lot like I employed a burlap sack filled with jagged rocks.

    But at least it was done. Problem solved.

    Then after about two or three days, it started sticking again. Except it was worse.

    We endured worse for most of a year, until I decided I needed to try again with the fixing. Because it takes a whole heap of lessons before I learn.

    Somehow this time it required the removal of six thousand eight hundred thirty eight pieces of lumber; not sure how I got so lucky the first time I did the job.

    But I was eventually able to remove the door, and saw that the rollers were completely shot.

    Off to Home Depot for new rollers!

    Luckily, they had them.

    Replace rollers, adjust and align rollers, replace door, smile, replace lumber, whap thumb with hammer, come this close to issuing extremely foul language. By this point the trim looked like I re-installed it using a shotgun loaded with hatchets and piranhas.

    But the door worked great!

    For two days.

    From there on out, it closed just fine – and then wouldn’t open up. I mean, it really wouldn’t open. Surly’s first new victim was Michael, who upon discovering his surprise jailing, cried frantically until we could let him out. This required the deft application of daddy’s fist against the door in a forceful and relatively angry manner.

    Then the inadvertent incarceration happened to his mother. And his sister. And his grandmother. And then me.

    So for several weeks, we just went without a door. You could use the bathroom, but only if you didn’t cling to social mores such as discreetness. I could have hung up a sign: “Check your modesty here before you enter.” My personal choice was to run upstairs to take my chances with Twitchy instead. On the plus side, that meant lots of trips up and down the stairs. That counts as exercise, right? There’s a silver lining in every cloud.

    In time, the balance of reason and decency outweighed my pride and I called in the handyman.

    He came in to inspect, and immediately confided that he hated pocket doors. We chatted about our options, tossing around ideas such as a bi-fold door, curtains, beads, etc., but eventually settling on replacing Surly with a regular hinged door with a knob and a real lock. For actual privacy.

    That weekend, he got to work removing the old door and frame, and hanging and finishing a new door. In the space of three hours, he was done with the whole job. Why the heck didn’t I have this done years ago?

    This new door I have dubbed “Jeeves,” because he looks proper, and is there solely to do my bidding without giving me any attitude.

    Now that I don’t have to go running up and down the stairs any more, I should probably get a stairmaster.

    On Coupons

    Here I’ll be ranting about grocery store checkout lines and the use of coupons. Fairly warned ye be, says I. Arrrgh.

    I’ve mentioned before that I have a knack for picking slow lines at the grocery store.

    This phenomenon is usually exacerbated by the urgency of my mission: the more in a hurry I am, the slower the line goes. And it’s usually because of coupons.

    My big problem isn’t coupons themselves, but the problems they create. Or rather the problems that crop up when coupons are either misused or misinterpreted.

    I absolutely ABHOR getting stuck behind someone who’s adamant about forcing the checker to accept coupons, when the checker is either confused or hesitant. Invariably, what would be a two minute process is drawn out into a fifteen minute one as checker and customer banter and haggle over 50 cents off of toothpaste.

    For crying out loud.

    In all the time I’ve spent waiting in line, I’ve honed my perturbation down into this crystalline point: the argument is not worth it.

    Time is money. The time we’re all spending balking at give or take of a quarter or two is worth far more than the face value of the coupon. If Sally Spendthrift is trying to use a coupon for half off a pair of 99 cent nail clippers but it’s for a slightly different model, then just give it to her! It’s just 50 cents!

    While waiting in a situation like this I’ve often been very close to tossing a twenty dollar bill over the belt divider and yelling “There! That ought to cover it! Now LET’S GET CRACKING HERE! CHOP CHOP!”

    Instead, I’ll stand there and fume while my ice cream and frozen orange juice become sauces, the eggs turn and produce degrades into compost (note to the concerned mother: the ice cream is totally for the kids).

    To me it is this simple: to be sure the store isn’t giving up a few extra pennies, they’ve spent numerous dollars worth of the checker’s salary arguing.

    And what if I decide I don’t want the goo that once was my groceries and just leave them and walk out? There! Lost revenue! How about them apples?

    Stores should implement a policy: if the customer uses a coupon that doesn’t scan but insists upon the price break, give it to them. It’ll save us all grief and save the store a lot of money, not to mention provide impetus to the customer to return out of joy of good customer service.

    Or, alternately, we could set up one or two checkout lines that prohibit the use of coupons. I’d think this would be acceptable, since the money the store would save having a steady stream of customers go through those lines quickly and coupon-free would more than pay for the extra infrastructure.

    I can dream, can’t I?

    Heck, I have plenty of time for it, waiting for the customer ahead of me to go through all her coupons.

    Sleep Wreck

    Tom yawns and he sets the last button on his jammies. He stretches and climbs aboard the Sleepytime Express, ready for a good night’s trip through Slumbertown.

    “Good evening, sir,” the driver says. “Usual stop? 4:30 AM?”

    “Not this time, Joe! It’s Saturday! I’ll be going straight on through town,” Tom says with a sleepy smile. He sits down on the second bench seat right next to his wife, who’s already on board. “Just drop me off wherever. 8:30 would be okay. 9:00 would be even better.”

    “Okay, sir!” The driver pulls the doors closed, releases the brake and carefully steers the Sleepytime Express out onto Drowsy avenue.

    “Boy am I bushed,” Tom says as he nestles into the seat for the night-long trip.

    The bus drives on through the night. The lights of dreamland flash by as Tom sits back and enjoys the journey. He recalls previous trips throughout the week, ones in which he was forced to get off at his 4:30 or 5:30 AM stops, feeling entirely unrested. This non-stop trip through town would be a welcome change.

    “Wow, I might make it through this time,” Tom thinks as the bus passes a sign for 4:15.

    CRASH!



    Out of nowhere, a brick wall named Michael appears in the middle of the road, taking the Sleepytime Express driver entirely unawares as the bus and all of its passengers smash into it at full speed.

    With tinkling glass still flying and the smell of charred rubber heavy in the air, Tom and his wife lay sprawled on the road, blinking and jarred, next to a mile marker that reads “4:24″

    The wall transforms into a six-year-old boy.

    “Mommy? I’m all sweaty!” Michael cries as his mom and I reluctantly haul ourselves out of bed and into active service.

    It had been such a nice trip. Maybe tonight we’ll make it through.

    In all fairness, it was sister S’s alarm clock that woke him up. I have yet to understand why she’d have it set to go off then. But there’s precedent, so it doesn’t surprise me much.

    God Speaks in a Familiar Voice

    Sunday was a heck of a day. Not sure what his deal was, but Michael was in rare form, breaking previous records of impishness-per-minute.

    I was very much looking forward to my favorite part of the day, the time when I can tuck Michael in bed and basically be done with him.

    Bedtime rolled around at last, and after tooth brushing and goodnight kisses, Michael made a plaintive request that his mother join us for story and prayer time. She acquiesced and rose from the comfy couch to make the trek upstairs to Michael’s room.

    During these infrequent and thus highly sought-after visits, mommy’s job is to snuggle up to Michael and be a partner in his play while he “listens” to a story.

    We read the story about Stone Soup. Not necessarily one of his favorites, but I like it and it gives me a chance to practice different voices. Michael played with his mom’s arm, raising and lowering it and allowing her hand to smack him in the face. He knows it annoys me that he doesn’t really listen to story time.

    So I stopped reading.

    “Michael, should we just be done with this? You’re not listening.”

    “I am listening! Keep reading!”

    “I don’t know… you’re playing and giggling and I don’t feel like you’re enjoying the story,” I said.

    “No! Please don’t quit. I’ll be good,” he pleads.

    I continue reading, pushing through the words quickly, hoping to reach the end before his mischievous antics reach the boil-over point.

    Finally done, I put the book down and turn off the light.

    “Okay, sport. Let’s get you tucked in here so I can say prayers.”

    He snuggles up next to his mom, who is only too happy to remain horizontal at this point, after a grueling day of yard work under a hot sun.

    Before I can begin saying prayers, though, I heave a sigh, shaking my head at Michael’s phenomenally difficult behavior during the day.

    “Lord, please let this boy learn how to behave.”

    In almost no time, I hear that still, small voice respond:

    “He is learning. He learns every day. You teach him.”

    I’m taken aback, because this isn’t what I want to hear. I want God to fix him, not chide me.

    “But Lord, why must he behave this way?”

    “He is who he is, and exactly who I made him to be.”

    “Then please give me the patience I need to deal with him!”

    “I am teaching you patience by providing you the lessons.”

    “What, are you in cahoots with my wife or something? Why are you saying the same things she says?”

    I hear no comment back from this, but my wife is giggling audibly now, having heard only my side of the conversation but no doubt knowing exactly what God must be saying to me.

    “Is God not saying what you want to hear?” she asks me, finally.

    “No! And He’s speaking with your voice.”

    She reaches her palm straight up and says to the Almighty: “High five.”

    Return To Reality

    Michael and his sisters and cousin are back from vacation at Grandma’s.

    I drove 173 miles to pick them up, 3+ hours of driving along the mighty Columbia river through alternately verdant and barren countryside, to reach a small town whose main claim to fame is being home to one of the few remaining coal-fired power plants in the state of Oregon. It’s also a convenient midway point between our house and Grandma’s house. It has a big park, where Michael can burn off some pent-up energy and stretch his little legs before getting strapped in for the second half of his journey home.

    It had been a grand week.

    Michael, two sisters and a cousin were all in eastern Oregon, enjoying the relaxed pace and small-town atmosphere of the Wallowa Lake area, along with the diversions afforded by its rugged mountain features and glacier-forged landscape. One of Michael’s favorite activities was to chase crickets, of which there are plenty. His other favorite activities apparently centered around keeping his sisters in a state of high annoyance, at least by their account. With the low horizon and clear skies, his days began at the very crack of dawn, as the crimson sunrise flooded the loft room where he and his sisters bunked.

    His grandmother made sure to keep him well occupied, providing trips to the lake and trips to town, adventures in the parks and up the mountains and of course plenty of busy-work to keep his little hands engaged and out of mischief. His sisters and cousins pitched in, taking shifts to ensure that grandma didn’t get overwhelmed. The daily reports his mom and I got back were quite colorful; text messages from the girls, phone conversations from Michael and his grandmother.

    to wit: “Why is it that michael always wakes up at 5 AM and then chooses the LOUDEST toy in the room to play with? X(” (this from sister L)

    And from his grandmother, a report about Michael at the lake: “He told me he had to go to the bathroom really bad, but said he couldn’t make it back up the hill to the potty so I told him he’d just have to use the lake. So he comes out of the water, stands up on the shore and starts pulling down his shorts…”

    Meanwhile, at home, Michael’s mom and I spent a week in a quiet house. The only noise came from the cat, who was VERY CONCERNED that all of her people were disappearing, and wanted to BE SURE WE UNDERSTOOD HER CONCERN. Repeatedly, every ten minutes or so.

    We did a whole lot of nothing, which was wonderful. We didn’t paint anyone’s room, we didn’t re-work the garden or re-decorate the house, and we didn’t travel.

    Well… not much. We did go to the beach for one day, spending the night at a bed-and-breakfast inn along the coast. This place was magical on all counts, and we’ll be back one day. For one thing, they had a guests-only wine social the afternoon we checked in. They handed us a couple of glasses of wine and pointed out a couple of forest trails behind the inn, encouraging us to explore, which we did. Never before had either of us hiked through the forest holding a glass of wine.

    The dinner we had that night was truly amazing. Neither of us had ever had an “amuse bouche” before either, the sort of pre-appetizer course they served. To say dinner was good would be to say the ocean is deep.

    But time marched onward, and she and I both had to get back to our normal occupations.

    Thus on Sunday, while she was at work, I drove alone to the middle of Oregon to pick up children.

    After transferring bags and blankets and assorted gear from Grandma’s car to ours, and a few hugs goodbye, we were on our way back to Portland.

    And even though I’d had a week to recuperate, any vestige of parental patience I’d gained was quite deftly erased after fifteen minutes in the car.

    I can’t wait for school to start.

    Mr. Fix-it

    Wife: “Honey? The vacuum cleaner won’t turn on. I’ve tried three different plug-ins and it won’t work!”

    Husband: “Okay, sweetheart. Let me take a look at it.”

    Husband disassembles and performs tests on aforementioned vacuum cleaner, strokes non-existent beard thoughtfully while making various murmurs of concentration.

    Husband: “Ah ha! Here’s the problem. The cord retractor has an intermittent wiper connection. I can fix that.”

    Wife: “The retractor?”

    Husband, while skillfully removing the retractor unit: “Yes. This thing. See? It has this huge steel coil spring that pulls the cord back inside.”

    Wife: “What spring?”

    Husband: “This -”

    Husband: “-was the spring.”

    Wife, dialing phone: “Hello, Stark’s Vacuums? Uh, my husband tried to…”

    Maybe I should stick with plumbing.

    Booster Seat Driver

    My wife and I have noticed recently that Michael has taken to questioning our driving abilities.

    Just about anywhere we go, seconds after we’ve left our neighborhood, Michael will begin loudly casting doubts upon our course:
    “Are you sure you know where you’re going?”
    “I don’t think this is the right way.”
    “We’re getting lost.”
    “You’re definitely going the wrong way.”

    It doesn’t matter that in every instance we actually arrive where we intended to.

    It doesn’t matter that we take the same routes to the same place, every time, and that the landmarks don’t change.

    It doesn’t matter that he himself still struggles with getting his shoes on the right feet.

    In his mind, we’re all clueless.

    And aside from the gloom report, he’s started to become a nagging alarm as well:

    “Don’t hit that dog!” (when passing a dog that is thirty yards away, on the other side of a concrete barrier)
    “Watch out for that cone!” (while slowly negotiating a turn around an orange pylon that is a good ten feet from the side of the car)
    “You’re too close to the edge of the road!” (from the middle lane)
    “Don’t forget to stop at the light.” (because Lord knows I love running them)
    “You can go now. What are you waiting for?” (light just turned green, but there are twelve cars ahead of me)

    I’m not sure where this comes from, aside from perhaps his listening to my own tirades against other drivers, or maybe even as the result of some experience he had while we were in the car in which I got us lost (which, to my memory, has never happened).

    In any case, I’ve decided that since I cannot stop it, I’ll bend like a reed in the wind and just play along:

    Michael: “Are you going the right way?”
    Me: “No. I’m just driving around aimlessly.”

    or

    Michael: “I don’t think you know where you’re going.”
    Me: “That’s true, I don’t. Aren’t we having fun?”

    and

    Michael: “Are you sure this is the right direction?”
    Me: “Hmmm… I don’t know. Do you know which way is the right direction?”
    Michael: “No…”
    Me: “Then I guess it doesn’t matter which way we go.”

    He doesn’t like it much, but it makes me feel better.

    What I’m really looking forward to is when his older sisters start learning to drive. If they give me any trouble I’ll just threaten to make them drive with Michael behind them.

    Oh, that.

    Step daughter is standing in front of the refrigerator, staring blankly in to it.

    After a moment or two I ask what the issue is.

    “I’m looking for something to eat,” she says.

    “I made blintzes this morning. There is one left.”

    “Really? Where?”

    “Right in there,” I say, pointing inside at the top shelf.

    “I don’t see it,” she says.

    I take a closer look inside, and notice that the foil pouch containing the last blintz is not where I’d left it.

    “Huh, that’s funny. I put it right there just a little while ago.”

    “Where?”

    “On the top shelf. I wrapped it up in a little foil packet.”

    “Oh, that. I already ate that,” she says.

    Long pause.

    I stared at her, not sure where to begin. “So, when I mentioned the blintz, and you said… aah, forget it.”

    Kids often say we don’t understand them. I have to concede that point.