Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Environmental Awareness

When my husband, George, gets home from work, he usually comes in the house through the garage. When he gets to the interior garage door that leads into the laundry room, he swings the door open and takes a quick look around before he actually steps foot inside. You see, I have made my husband paranoid, or at least paranoid about coming into our home. I like to say that I am teaching him to be aware of his surroundings. It may seem odd that George should be so cautious about walking into his own home on any given day, but the truth of the matter is George married a prankster and my all time favorite go-to prank is hiding from him, then jumping out and scaring the poo out of him. It's his own fault really. If he didn't scream like a little girl or yell absurdities all the while dancing in place and doing his best bobble head impression, I wouldn't waste my time. Frankly, it's the best laugh of my day.

The game of hiding from loved ones only to jump out and scare them within in an inch of their lives is a game that my mom taught my brother and me when we were kids. Imagine that. One minute Mom would be busy in the kitchen or putting laundry in the dryer and the next minute, she was nowhere to be found. In those moments, I knew Mom was hiding from me, and that at any second, she would pop up from behind my bed or burst out of a closet, scare the daylights out of me, and then we would both crumple over with laughter. It was always fun and unnerving at the same time. I remember one such instance when she went into hiding and I searched the whole house in an effort to beat her at her own game only to come up empty handed. Needing to relieve myself, and feeling confident that she was probably in the garage, I headed to the bathroom, which I had already searched. I went into the bathroom, started to close the door, and as I turned, I found Mom perched on the toilet seat hidden from view by the opened bathroom door. I think she quietly said, "Boo." I know I screamed and it's possible, just possible, in light of where I was, that I may have peed my pants a little. We still laugh about that one.

Mom taught me the fine art of choosing our victims. The bigger the screamer, the better the target. Enter my Uncle Robert. Now Uncle Robert was actually my great uncle so he was an older gentleman and quite easy to catch off guard. He always put on quite the show of hollering and jumping out of his skin any time that we scared him, so of course, he was the obvious target. What I have failed to mention is that in earlier years when Uncle Robert was still a smoker, he suffered not one, not two, but three heart attacks. Yeah, I know we probably shouldn't have been hiding from him but I like to think that it brought him almost as much joy as it brought us. I should also mention that we stopped hiding from him after he had the quadruple bypass and you'll be relieved to know that he lived to be 91 years old and his passing was not the direct result of any of his heart issues.

So now, the not so coveted title of Most Demonstrative Victim falls to my dear sweet George. Oh, I'd love to scare the kids, and I have on occasion, but it's hard to savor the scare high when Nathan is crying or Liam is telling me how angry that makes him. Jacob puts on a good show, and he usually falls to the floor with laughter but I don't like to target him too much because it just doesn't seem sporting. I get Vivie every now and then so she doesn't feel left out, and she thinks it's the funniest thing ever, but George is by far my favorite target. Before you start thinking I'm twisted and mean, let me just say that George has gotten me a time or two (he actually brought me to tears once) but I'm not as jumpy as he is thanks to Mom's Environmental Awareness Program for the Up and Coming Paranoid.

All this to say that for several consecutive months on an almost daily basis, I would hide from George in the laundry room upon his arrival home from a long day at the office. It's reasonable to assume that I would be able to scare him once. It's even probable to think that I would scare him twice, but let me tell you, I scared that man nearly every single time I hid in that same spot for months on end. One day, George decided to push the door open and take a look around the laundry room before he actually entered the house. That decision was life changing for him. This is now his habit and it makes my job a little more challenging, and to be honest, a little more rewarding when I actually score the scare. I keep at it because I would hate for an intruder to scare George and George's initial reaction be his usual jumping in place, arms flailing in all directions, topped off with a shrill scream; however, this might just cause the intruder to fall to the ground with uncontrollable laughter buying George the small amount of time he would need for his fight reflex to kick into gear. Nonetheless, I have been laying low for a while. It might just be time to crank it up a notch.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Save the Books

Today, my 12-year old son, Jacob, started reading To Kill a Mockingbird -- my all time favorite book. I read it for the first time when I was about 11 years old and I think I have probably read it a dozen times since then. It always amazed me that Harper Lee's first and only novel is an American classic taught in classrooms around the world. Can you imagine your first attempt at writing a book and not only do you win the Pulitzer Prize but you are considered to be among the greatest of American novelists? Lee certainly didn't need a mulligan, did she?

I have always loved reading, but this is the first book that I read that I truly devoured. It was the first time I read a book that I just couldn't put down and I was so sad to leave it when I finished reading the last page. So for about a year now, I have been encouraging Jacob to read the book in the hopes that he will enjoy it as much as I have over the years. I guess the title threw him because he was reluctant to pick up the book. Thus began my oh so subtle campaign (I took cues from Sam I Am--think Dr. Seuss, not Sean Penn) to persuade him to give it a try.

We got a puppy last summer, and I insisted that we name her Scout, and even after I told Jacob that the name came from the main character of To Kill a Mockingbird, he still seemed uninterested even though he enjoys reading. I had high hopes that it would be required reading in sixth grade because it was required when I was in sixth grade, but apparently, they don't really teach literature in sixth grade in this school district (don't get me started). At the end of the school year, I suggested that he and I read it together over the summer. His response was simple, "Nah." Now that seventh grade has started, I hoped he would be getting a required reading list that included my beloved book. Not so much. Again, even though he is in advanced English and has a separate reading class, he will not be studying the finer aspects of literature. This year is all about grammar, writing, and building vocabulary, which are all important things; however, by now I was well versed in symbolism, themes, irony and all those wonderful layers that unfold when delving deep into literature. I can't help but think standardized testing has played its ugly hand here, but I digress.

Desperate to get this book on Jacob's radar, I decided to loan him my copy weeks ago when he was looking for something to read. Nothing. My last ditch effort came when I decided to add the movie to our Netflix queue. You see, the kids and I have a long standing ritual of reading a book and then watching the movie counterpart. We then discuss how the two compared and which one we enjoyed more. The book always wins. When Jacob saw me updating the queue, he insisted that I not add the movie just yet because he eventually planned to read the book, but not right now. Then out of the blue today, he finally decided to crack it open. I was just giddy...that is, until I saw Jacob dog ear one of the pages to mark his place. Oh no he di'int! Oh yes he did! I mean who is raising this kid?!

When I was in elementary school, I had the greatest librarian. Her name was Mrs. Barksdale and she influenced my love of books almost as much as my own mother did. When our class went to the library, Mrs. Barksdale made all of the students line up at the sink so we could wash our hands before touching the books. Then we all chose our seats and the one lucky student who sat in the secretly marked chair was allowed to select his book first and read it while lounging in the whimsically painted claw foot tub filled with colorful throw pillows that sat center stage in Mrs. Barksdale's library. (Alright, now that I have children, the idea of allowing the kids to lounge in a pile of throw pillows gives me pause what with head lice being so prevalent in school settings.Yikes! That being said, the rest of library time was nothing short of enchanting.)

Not only did Mrs. Barksdale make library time special, but she went to great lengths to teach us how to handle and care for books, how to really appreciate books. She was a lovely woman but you didn't want to cross her. So watching Jacob dog ear that page in my most favorite book, my inner Mrs. Barksdale wanted to smack the back of his head, but she and I restrained ourselves. I said in a horror stricken tone, "Jacob, what are you doing!?" To which he so innocently replied, "What? I don't have a bookmark." It was as though we had never even met.

Just what goes on in those school libraries these days? Next thing you know, the kids will all have ebook readers and the crinkling sounds of a book's spine opening, the wonderful tactile experience of turning the pages, and the warm yellowing hues of aging books will be meaningless to upcoming generations. The horror, the horror.


Sunday, September 4, 2011

Basketball Courting

I have never been athletically inclined. I'm not that coordinated, I don't enjoy sweating, and I am convinced that the whole runner's high theory is just a big scam similar in nature to a snipe hunt. So no, I never played sports in school. I took a dance class in lieu of a p.e. class in high school, and I took health psychology to opt out of my p.e. requirement in college. I enjoy watching sports, but I am about as athletic as a three toed sloth; therefore, during the fall semester of my freshman year in college, when three cute boys asked if I would round out their intramural co-ed basketball team, obviously I said yes.

Newsflash: I didn't really think through this grand plan of mine to hang out with these three cute boys. I shudder at the number of times I have made a fool of myself all for a pretty face, but I digress. I genuinely wish my present day self could go back and knock some serious sense into that goofy girl who thought that the only girls playing intramural sports would be the ones just wanting to flirt with cute boys. Forget about the notion that there are dedicated athletes with tremendous ability playing intramural sports. I'm laughing at my foolishness right now. (Oh how it hurts me to think back on this. There truly is no place for pride in this narrative).

When my brother got wind of my basketball team (once he stopped laughing and regained his composure), he asked, "When is your first game? There is no way I'm going to miss this."

My team and I had just a few practices before our first game. My best friend, Jen, was also on the team because I coerced her into playing so we would have 5 players. She was my athletic kindred spirit, thus you can understand why she and I were only getting more and more nervous as we realized these boys were hoping we would actually win a few games. Oh, you mean the goal of playing sports is to improve your technique and hopefully win some games? It's not about looking cute and getting asked out on a date?

Before Jen and I could think of a way out of this predicament that I had allowed my hormones to create, the day of our first game arrived. True to his word, my brother, Tad, met us at the gym and not only did he not miss my first game but he brought his girlfriend, and a handful of our friends from work to cheer me on to victory, or at least that's what I told myself. I pretended not to hear Tad when he laughingly asked the cute boy who was both a teammate and the coach, "Have you seen Allison play?"

There I was, in the gym, stretching and warming up my muscles. I had my hair pulled back in a cute ponytail, and I was working on my game face which included full makeup, by the way. Don't all serious athletes have vanity issues? Suddenly, I looked up, and I kid you not, just as the radio in my head began playing "We Will Rock You," the other team strutted onto the court. These girls looked as though they had just left their day jobs as Justice Leaguers. I knew there was no way I was going to walk off that court without suffering some form of humiliation, but I had no idea that it would be reminiscent of The Bad News Bears. Jen and I, or maybe I should say Lucy and Ethel, struggled through the first period, we were out of breath by the end of the second period, but I think the sugar hit the fan in the third period, when Glenda The Not So Good Giant, decided to guard me. She was all over my stuff, standing head and shoulders above me with her chest pushed right in my face. I couldn't breathe, and in all honesty, I didn't realize that her aggressiveness was considered fair play. I thought she was just being rude. In that moment, I snapped. It's as if I thought we were in some women's prison status sqaubble and I was not going to be her punk. I put my hands on her ample chest, and I shoved her so hard it knocked her off  balance, all the while I was yelling for her to get out of my face and back the heck off of me.

The rest of the game was just a blur, but I will tell you, we lost significantly. We withdrew our team from the season, my brother had some great laughs at my expense, and while none of those cute boys ever asked me to play on any of their teams again (nor did any of them ask me out on a date) we remained close friends for the duration of my college years. And that, was the start and finish of my not so lucrative basketball career.