Thursday, August 25, 2011

Mama

This is an idea I am toying with.  It came out of something else written in third person, written as a sister piece to another I wrote this past spring.  I can't decide whether or not it is believable.  I will leave it minimally public to embarass myself into editing it into something better.  Comments are welcome.  Criticism also welcome. 

Keep in mind I have never been a little boy, so if it's not realistic, PLEASE SAY SO.  Hmm.



Mama said he would be coming home soon but I don’t see why she keeps saying that, he’s never been here before. This is my home and her home. We picked out the new sofa when the old one busted and rearranged all the furniture in the living room. Well, she moved it, but I came up with the idea of where to put everything. All the food in the fridge in my favorite and Mama’s favorite. I don’t even know if Papa likes baloney. I hope he doesn’t, cause I don’t want to have to share it with him. I asked Mama how’m I supposed to know him? I’ve seen pictures, but they are all older than me, so what if he looks different? I sure look different from back then 1) because I’ve been born since then, 2) because I’m not a baby anymore. She’s shown me pictures of Papa and all, she’s told me loads of times that I have his eyes, but I don’t know about that. She says he’s going to love me to pieces, but I don’t get how she can know that seeing as I’ve never met him before. I remember having to sit still for my birthday pictures every year and never getting to see if I was making such a squirmy face as she said I always did from when I was a baby seeing as she sent the pictures off across the ocean to Papa. One time when we were at the library she showed me on the globe where Vietnam is, where Papa’s been since just after he and Mama bought our house. It’s all the way across the world! No wonder it’s taken him so long to get back!

Mama’s always read the letters we’ve gotten from him at bedtime except for the letter that came a couple weeks ago that said he’d got his leg hurt and he would be coming back to little old, boring Iowa just as soon as he could. Mama didn’t even bother to hide in the bathroom to cry that afternoon. She thinks I don’t know, but I can tell that she’s been crying cause her eyes get all puffy like mine when those rotten kids down the street trip me and call me bastard, which Mama won’t tell me what it means, which I guess means it’s pretty mean. But all the crying from scratching my knees makes my eyes all red a puffy, which is how I can tell Mama cries in the bathroom. That and the soup tastes too salty like there are tears in it.
She says it’s going to be great to have him back, that it will mean all the ladies on our street will stop looking at me funny, but I don’t think they look at me funny. They are always really nice when I’m playing in the front yard and sometimes give me chocolate doughnuts if I happen to kick my ball into their yard and have to go get it on Saturdays after they get their grocery deliveries. Accidentally kick my ball into their yard. It’s the kids at school that I don’t like. Mama didn’t want me to start going, but I told her that I wanted to go. She cried that day too. Maybe she just doesn’t like the house empty and that’s why she wants Papa to come. I like the teachers at school. Miss Wattley has been really nice to me since that time I got put in time out and she came back to tell me I could come back to the rest of the class and found me reading the books from the corner bookshelves. She thought I was just looking at the pictures, but I showed her I could read and not just look at the pictures. Since then she’s had me stay in from recess two days a week to work on reading other books she thinks I might like. She showed me these books about two brothers that solve dangerous mysteries. I don’t know a lot of the words, so I read some of it and she reads the rest of it aloud to me while I look on. Then she makes me read some of what she just read back again to see if I caught any more new words. If she just read aloud the whole time it wouldn’t be so boring sometimes, which is why she says we only do it two days a week now. I got too squirrelly when I stayed in from recess everyday that one time. Plus some of the bigger kids started making fun of me saying I was bad and had detention all the time so now Miss Wattley keeps other kids in on the other days. Emily and Sarah stay in on Mondays and Wednesdays to work on math and Friday is actual detention day for any one who teased me or Emily or Sarah during the week. When Bobby, Gary, Neil, Jimmy, and Katie all had to stay in with their heads down on their desks two Fridays in a row, the teasing stopped and I stopped minding staying in to read sometimes.

Mama says the boys at school teased me because they were jealous they weren’t as good of readers, if they could even read at all, she said. But they never said anything about reading. It was either about detention, which, like I said already, wasn’t why I was staying in, or about Papa and asking me where he was. All of their Papas were at home or working so they didn’t get it when I said he was in Vietnam. They asked where that was and I said farther away than you’ve ever heard of and they told me I was acting smart wasn’t I and I said yea, cause I’m not stupid. Then they punched me and said my Papa wasn’t ever coming back, if he even was my Papa cause how can someone be your Papa when you’ve never met them before? That’s what they said. I didn’t tell Mama they had said that because I had asked Mama the same question before and she just gave me this hard look that was so cold it was made out of icicles and made my eyes dry up and my back go shivery. I didn’t like what she said after that, she’d never sounded so stretched out and broken before when she told me I was never to ask her that question ever again because that was the question that no one ever spoke to her with words but with their eyes. I wasn’t sure exactly what she meant by that, but if words could have come out of Mama’s eyes at that moment, I’m sure they would have been scarier than when Mama forgets to turn my nightlight on and I’m all alone in the sticky darkness of nighttime in summer. Her eyes when she told me not to ask that question again had a sharp shininess like the time the blue glass fell off the counter and sparkled on the floor in a hundred shimmery, wet pieces. What I’m trying to tell you is that I’ve never seen her so dark and alone and sharp and broken like all those things I already said. I didn’t like her looking like that so that’s why I never told her about what the boys at school said. I didn’t want to see her like that, all broken and angrysad again.

My Mama has always been really good to me. She doesn’t always get me the newest toys, she says it’s because we don’t have a bunch of money but she does her best. I don’t mind not having all the toys like the neighbors do, it means I can come home covered in mud and smiling and she doesn’t yell at my like my friend Tommy’s Mama sometimes does when he comes home dirty. Mama says that the whole backyard and the woods down the road are my playground and natural toys, which kind of sounds stupid, but when you think about it, it means that all my toys, all the trees and grass and deer and bunnies are bigger than all the other boys toys. So what they have a shiny red fire truck to run around their floor all day? I can go to the woods and look and all the foot prints that the deer make and watch the little ones look at me curiously. I bet I look just as strange to them in these stupid shorts and overalls. Mama says it’s the only way to keep my pants from falling off cause I’m so skinny none of the pants fit me right, but sometimes before she can stitch them up to fit better I have to wear them and I look like a big corduroy balloon. Those are the days I go to the woods instead of Tommy’s house. Tommy’s a good friend, but when I look stupid he lets me know it. I don’t mind it so much from him, but I’d rather watch the funny deer instead of being told I look funny myself.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Rough Draft

I wonder if anyone would notice if I used this blog as a rough draft for a second blog.  I find myself 1. Lazy about blogging and 2. Discouraged to continue blogging on a blog that has no clear, central theme.  I thought I could do grammar, but that fell apart faster than a peel off a banana.  I have a multitude of ideas, but no solid choice yet.  Which, perhaps, I should get over and merely refer to this current experiment as a rough draft. 

I am clearly also still working on figuring out how to address an audience, or even who I imagine the audience to be.  I feel, rather egotistically, like I am directing myself to myself.  Because I am self involved?  Perhaps.  Because I can only predict my own responses?  Perhaps.  Because I am too lazy to imagine anything else?  Perhaps. 

To state any of my possible plans will lock me into doing them, resulting in an actual requirement to invest time in this experiment, or it will merely make it even more apparent how completely incapable I am of following through on my electronic plans.  Or any plans.  Man.  I need a desk; they help me actually get stuff done.  Labor day labor?  Build a desk.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Empty Shelves

Once again I am preparing to move all the belongings I have collected up here in Grand Rapids to a new location, only this time there really is particularly important to mark the move.  Generally a shift in location has coincided for me with something like school starting or ending, or even just moving out of the country. This time my parents will come up on Friday to help me move some furniture, possibly help me acquire a desk, hang out a bit, and then leave.  And Monday I will go to work like everything is exactly the same.  I was remarking to my current housemate that this lends itself to a state of denial where I would like to pack up all my clothes, but I can't seem to bring myself to do it, since it they could effectively spend no more than a few hours in my suitcase.  Even so, I spent this evening--yes, a Saturday evening--packing up the pants I rarely wear and the winter sweaters I didn't leave at my parents house into my big, red, Atlantic-crossing suitcase.  Taking those clothes off the bookshelf I have been using as a wardrobe of sorts has made my corner of the room look mildly more empty, but the most obvious evidence of removal is my bookshelf formerly holding books.  I only allowed myself one small bookshelf this summer so that I wouldn't be tempted to unpack all my books and try to put them on display.  I resisted mildly well, though I just ended up buying more books to fill it anyhow.  But, they are now all very compactly sequestered in two boxes in the living room.  I would provide a picture, but that is impossible until late next week.

When my shiny new computer will arrive!  This summer, as I hoped would not happen until later this year, I was in the midst of trying to import some of the many photos I have on my camera, when my computer alerted me to the fact that my computer's disk was utterly and completely full.  So full it would be unable to save my iPhoto library.  So full it would lack the memory to turn off and back on again without severe risk of losing some important information.  The only things I keep on my laptop anymore are photos, a few employment documents, and a portion of my iTunes library.  And the disk is full up to capacity.  For the second time.  I haven't cleared out my photo library because I have waited until I had the time to work with Aperture, which I received as a gift and only recently tried to install.  To no avail; my operating system, as it turns out, is too old.

Option 1: Buy new operating system.
Pros: Will be able to run Aperture.  Only costs $30-60
Cons: Requires wipe of whole drive.
Will take up significantly more space on aforementioned full drive.
Add Aperture and space further diminishes leaving far less space for the photos that need addressing.

Option 2: Sell laptop and put money towards new laptop.
Pros: New laptop!
Cons: Laptops are vastly more expensive than desktops, which I would prefer to move to.
Currently function, though outdated, laptop will be undersold because of age, despite lack of faulty running.

Option 3: Sell laptop and put money towards new desk top.
Pros: New desk top!
Cons: No more mobility with laptop.
No desk for a desk top.

Option 4: Keep laptop, buy new/refurbished desktop.
Pros: Keep mobility of functioning, though old, laptop PLUS increased power of desktop.
Cons: Costs slightly more than Option 3
No desk for desktop.

Which option did I choose?
Option 4.  And the new computer will arrive in the mail mid to late next week.  I got quite a good deal on a refurbished desk top that qualifies me for a free upgrade to the most current operating system.  Hurray Free!  Perhaps shortly thereafter I will finally post some photos.