Picky

David has been involved with Habitat for Humanity since we moved to Marble Falls, and these days he’s the president of the local chapter. This involves getting permits from the towns where the homes are to be built, taking bids and hiring plumbers, electricians, and roofers. Before he took over, the accounting had been poorly handled, so he’s taken on a few people to help with the finances, and things are now on the right track.

David’s not in this alone, though. All the crew chips in by picking up supplies, managing the site, directing the labor, and meeting the contractors and installers. They’re all team players and seeing the way they work so well together has been a joy.

One of the tasks that’s fallen only to David since he began this involvement almost ten years ago is providing lunches on their two workdays a week. This is the most thankless and difficult responsibility there is.

“How did you end up being the one who has to hunt down the lunches?” I ask.

“Nobody else wants to do it,” he tells me. Typical David.

Several of the local restaurants, like Subway, Chic Filet, and Pizza Hut have been good enough to occasionally donate lunches. Mostly though, the food’s provided by volunteers who bring sandwiches and chips. When my name came up in the rotation, I was happy enough to make tuna sandwiches. But when David came in at the end of his day, he informed me that one of his workers didn’t eat his sandwich because he had a “sensitivity” to pickles, and that the next time I made tuna it would be appreciated if I made one without pickles. This seemed audacious to me in that, yes, they’re volunteers, and they certainly earn their lunch, but I, too, was volunteering and I didn’t think I should be required to construct each sandwich according to the different needs of each individual.

In the case of the pickle “sensitivity,” the next time I made sandwiches I did as requested; however, though I marked it clearly as his, someone else got to it before he did, so once more, no sandwich for him. Also on that day, David brought home a complaint about the type of bread I’d used. Apparently one of the guys prefers the brand with an abundance of wholesome seeds and grains and the picture of the macho baker on the packaging. In other words, the most expensive bread on the shelf. And another worker said he didn’t like sandwiches filled with salad—not tuna, not egg, not chicken.

So, pretending to care about all these special preferences, next time it was my turn to furnish the lunch, I made roast beef sandwiches using the costly bread, only to have David tell me later that one of the men had an aversion to red meat.

That was it. Never again. There had been a time when I thought that, as sandwiches are a simple food, it’d be impossible to mess them up, but it was obvious that I would never get it right. By this time so vexed was David that he actually considered making a list of preferences to give to the lunch makers. Thankfully his sense caught up with him before he went down that rabbit hole.

In a way, this reminds me of years ago when I volunteered at a downtown soup kitchen in Houston. It fell to me to be the traffic cop for the food line, where I was instructed to allow five through at a time—and I was surprised to hear grumbling about what was being served, which was usually chicken in some form.

“Chicken again?” “Pasta? Yuck.” “I hate green beans.” “The gravy looks like barf.”

To gripe about a free meal shows an arrogance so profoundly incongruous that I simply could not comprehend it. This lunch for the homeless was graciously prepared and graciously served by volunteers; but there was no grace to be found in the meal’s consumption.  

While providing food for the homeless isn’t the same as providing it for the Habitat crew, it kind of is in that people are complaining about a meal that’s being prepared and offered in the spirit of kindness. It’s a sad truth that, in a lifetime full of meals, every morsel isn’t going to be delectable and wondrous. It’s just sandwiches, guys. Eat whatever’s on offer and then finish out your day.

A great group of hard workers!

The Reluctant Caregiver

Our parents were called The Greatest Generation—and if by great you mean prolific, then yeah. Our generation, Baby Boomers, is the result of that greatness. There’re more seniors living in America than ever before, an immense population over sixty-five that’s been anticipated since the birthing spree of the nineteen fifties.

Occasionally I hear grumbling about how much we’re costing society. And it’s true. This multitude of non-working people on Social Security and Medicare is costing the taxpayers dollars that could be better spent on infrastructure, education, and oh, so many other things. The generations following us are having to pay higher taxes because we live. It’s a warped system.

The reason I can hear the grumbling I mentioned is because I wear hearing aids. Ten years ago you could only get them through a doctor of audiology. Just think, students went to medical school to learn to turn noise up and down with a knob and watch sound waves on a screen so they could end up make a living by being a hearing aids salesperson. Then along came the Baby Boomers; and entrepreneurs, recognizing the need, rushed to make hearing aids better and cheaper. In a short amount of time, the price dropped to a couple of hundred bucks and they’re available online.

This is only one of the many innovations created because The Greatest Generation’s progeny has grown old. How about those chairs that’ll carry you right up the stairs? Or Siri on your phone asking if you’ve fallen and do you want her/him to call 911? Hip replacements, knee replacements, shoulder replacements—doctors and their ilk, knowing they’d be hit by a wave of gray humanity with worn out joints in the twenty-first century, have been perfecting replacements since the sixties.

Away from the musing and on to the personal: David has recently had a shoulder replacement. He tried to prepare me for him not being able to use his right arm. He’s left-handed, so I figured he’d do fine. Though, like I said, he warned me.

I’m compassionate. I am. Well, in the abstract. I can get teary-eyed over a homeless dog or a hungry orphan, but when it came to the helplessness of a man who had a good arm and a brain, generosity abandoned me. The sling that kept his arm immobile was composed of many straps connected by Velcro, hooks, and buckles—most confounding. Working as a team, we mastered getting it off and on and, as I saw the necessity of it, I didn’t mind. But the other things he needed me to do for him were maddening, as were all the interruptions: Would you—dry my back? cut this lemon? pour this for me? Invariably I was in the middle of doing something else and I became impatient when I had to stop and help him.   

Getting him dressed was beyond irksome—buttoning his shirt, putting on his socks and shoes, pulling up his pants. And my attitude was awful. The most shameful thing was when I didn’t offer to cut his meat, but simply watched him tear it with his teeth like a caveman, telling myself that I’d just done this thing for him or that thing for him, and he can by golly manage to do this one thing for himself.

Remember the scene in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane where the mean sister, Bette Davis, brings a covered dish to the sweet sister, Joan Crawford, who’s in a wheelchair; and how, when Bette Davis lifts the lid, she sadistically displays her invalid sister’s roasted parakeet? I can still hear my mother’s gasp. The whole time David was fretting about his shoulder, I identified with Bette Davis. I didn’t channel her, but I understood where she was coming from.

When we were running errands and ran into someone we knew, they’d first ask David how he was doing, then they’d turn to me and ask how I was doing, showing unexpected sympathy for a reluctant caregiver.

“I’ve discovered that I’m a horrible person,” I answered truthfully. “I resent driving him to his medical appointments, which are an hour away, and I’m mad that ivy’s crawling up our house and trees and he’s unable to cut it back, and apparently having shoulder surgery means you’re unable to put things away or clean up after yourself.”

Appalled by my candor, they retract their sympathy from me and return it to David.

“I knew how she was when I married her,” he explained with a shrug.

We got through it and the whole process took less than six weeks, though it felt like months. David feels great and achieves a higher range of motion daily, but if he starts talking about pain in the other shoulder, I think I’m going to leave the country for a while.

David doing his physical therapy using a pulley system. Before the surgery he couldn’t lift his arm higher than his chest.

A complicated sling.

And for no reason other than she’s beautiful, here’s my granddaughter, Clementine.

The Outstanding Student

Dear Sophie,

My daughter takes clarinet lessons from a very nice man, highly recommended. He gives the lessons in the front room of his small house on one of the busiest streets in town. The lessons are costly, but she likes him, she enjoys practicing, and she’s obviously improving.

He gives back-to-back lessons on Saturday, which is also a packed day for me, as I have other children to get to their various activities. In short, dropping off one child for tennis makes me ten minutes late to pick up my clarinet player. Sophie, the clarinet teacher puts her out of the house, making her sit on his front porch on his high-traffic street, rather than allowing her to wait inside. I understand that he’s got another student in there, and that student might not appreciate someone listening to his private lesson, but turning my thirteen-year-old out has its dangers.

Your solution?

Worried Mom

Dear Worried Mom,

For those ten minutes you and the teacher share responsibility for your child. Get her an air horn, tell her how and when to use it, and explain to the teacher that if that loud noise blasts from the front, he needs to get out there and check on her. Tell Mr. Allen hello from me.

Best wishes,

Sophie

Peyton enjoys playing the clarinet and she enjoys being the best in the band. Because she practices and takes private lessons, the band director, Mrs. Kerr, shows a positive interest.

The way Peyton sees it, there are two ways to get extra attention in school—be as perfect as you can be or be a troublemaker. Anywhere in between and you’re ignored. So, because she sees value in following rules and meeting goals, she chooses to be outstanding rather than disruptive. 

Mr. Allen is a good clarinet teacher, enthusiastic about music and offering suggestions that help with breath control and support.

“Like you would with a tube of toothpaste,” he tells her. “Squeeze slowly and steadily from the bottom, pushing upward, rationing the air as you go.”

It doesn’t make sense when he says it, but later, at home, when she thinks of the air inside her as toothpaste, the concept comes together. 

On the flipside, Mr. Allen’s moustache often has creamy-looking gunk stuck in it, and his small stuffy house smells like steamed vegetables. She’s always happy to get out of there, and watching the traffic in front of his house is entertaining and educational in that she learns a lot about how careless drivers can be. She has, from the top step of his stoop, witnessed three rear-enders and the near-hit of a pedestrian. And though her mother frets, at no time has she ever felt the least bit imperiled. Also, she understands the idea of a private lesson being private. She wouldn’t want anybody else listening in during her half-hour.

Peyton’s also the best in her Spanish, English, Algebra, and Earth Science classes.

Teachers and the other students, even her parents and brothers, refer to her as “one of those people.”

Though academic success works well for her, there are two things in her life that are awful. Two things that make her dread getting up in the mornings.

One is that Ella, a girl who used to be one of her best friends, turned against her three months ago. The incident that caused the ill-feeling was just one of those things that happens—Ella had a party, and Peyton was unable to attend because her grandmother was in the hospital. But apparently Ella had seen the party as a test of friendship, and when Peyton couldn’t come, she was blackballed. When Peyton realized that she’d been cut, though she thought Ella was being small-minded, she apologized, explaining once again that visiting the hospital had been a family requirement. Ella neither acknowledged the apology nor forgave.

Influential, Ella persuaded all but the nobody-girls to cancel her; and then the nobodies, following the example of the prime clique, followed suit. At this point, Peyton has gone nearly three months without another student speaking to her, and without speaking to another student. She is fully ostracized. She eats alone, walks the halls alone, and has no one to talk to before class starts. She’s taken to arriving at school with only seconds to spare so she won’t have to stand by herself amongst the milling groups.

The rest of this year, and all of next year—that’s how long it will be before she goes to high school and meets new people who won’t hate her. She girds herself. She can make it. Also, other things are going on that are more important.

Which leads to the second complication, this one even more wretched:

Her parents are getting divorced. She’s known this to happen in the lives of other kids, and in truth, she’s not surprised. In her home there’s been closed-door fighting and vindictive whispering. There’ve been a few violent confrontations, one resulting in Mom having a black eye.

When they first told her and her brothers that they’d decided to split up, she was relieved, but her brothers, who hadn’t noticed the signs, were being big babies about it.

At thirteen, Peyton is the oldest. Cal is ten and Lester is seven. In the matter concerning her parents and their relationship, and knowing there’ll be friction, Payton has decided to follow the path of stoicism. Not so with Cal and Lester, who, now that Dad is living elsewhere, are fearful and acting out— “I hate you!” they scream at Mom. “You should’ve been the one to move out!” They kick furniture and throw books and game controls. Contemptuous disobedience is involved.

Mom: frustrated, furious, and hurt. The boys: defiant and blaming Mom. It goes on and on until Peyton feels that the devil dwells in the house, lurks in corners, and stirs up hatred.

One night, when she hears Mom crying in her room, she taps on the door and goes in. Mom’s on the bed, face down, sobbing into her pillow.

“I heard you crying,” she says.

“I’m just tired is all,” Mom tells her, wiping her eyes and cheeks.

“This can’t go on. How has everything gotten so bad?”

“It’s not your problem.” Mom sits and rolls her shoulders. “I’ve vowed to keep you of it. Your job is to do well in school, not to become embroiled in our problems.”

This is what the words say, but her expression is one of yearning. She badly needs someone to talk to and to lean on.

And Peyton, already suffering all day at school, recognizes and empathizes with her mother’s anguish and decides that she can take on this burden, too.

“From the way you and Dad have been acting the last few months, I thought this was what you wanted. I thought you both thought it was for the best. So why the tears?”

“Life. Deep unhappiness. Money. Mostly money.”

Peyton sees that Mom’s wondering whether it’s wise to spill to her daughter. And her mother not mentioning the physical abuse is a glaring omission.

“He said he wanted out,” Mom continues, overriding her misgivings. “We both did. But now that he realizes how much he’ll pay in child support, he’s decided it’d be cheaper for you kids to live with him, so he’s claiming to want custody.”

To Peyton, this is horrifying. Dad will count every penny spent on his children. Her clarinet lessons will come to an end. And his slap, hard across the face, comes often and unexpectedly. Without Mom to act as a buffer, it’d be only a matter of time before his open palm tenses into a fist.

And what she really doesn’t understand is that the boys have been the recipients of his hot slaps many times, so why are they so torn up that he’s gone? Why aren’t they relieved? Are they learning that there’ll come a time when they, too, can sling their hands with no accountability?

“The kids always stay with the mother,” she says, certain that it’s true.

“That’s what conventional wisdom says. But there’ll be the cost of lawyers and interviews and accusations. And it’ll take such a long, long time before we can move on.”

The next evening Dad rings the doorbell. Seeing him standing out there, their mother frantically orders them to stay inside. Peyton, Cal, and Lester cluster at the front window. Dad didn’t park straight and he left his car door open. Grabbing Mom by the arm, he pulls her from the porch and, stopping in the grass several feet away, takes a confrontational stance—putting his face into hers, making his shoulders large. Right there in the front yard. Is he showing the world what a big man he is? Is he proving to everyone who has eyes that he’s the boss?

And speaking of eyes, the neighbors begin to emerge from their homes. Eva and her sister, Joanie, step from their houses across the street, leave their porches, and meet on Joanie’s driveway. Gabe, the tiny man from next door, strides to the center of his lawn. Then others, too, come out. Arms folded across their chests, they all witness the huge angry man towering over their petite pretty neighbor.

Unable to tolerate the tension for a second longer, Lester races outside and tries to insert himself between his two adults. Dad’s strong hand grabs Lester by the shoulder and pushes him to the ground. Lester emits an oh! a whimper, and a sob. He curls like a threatened worm.

Seeing this, Gabe, such a sweet old guy, begins marching toward the fracas—and from the other side of the street, Eva hollers, “No Gabe!” Her call is a distraction that causes Dad to look up, look around. He sees that ten pairs of eyes are fixed on him. Shaking his head like a stunned bull, he releases Mom, stomps to his car, reverses, and with a squeal of the tires, drives away.

Leaving Peyton in charge of Cal, Mom takes Lester to the emergency room.

“His humerus is broken,” Mom says when she calls. “He cracked it on the brick border when he fell.”

“When he was thrown, you mean. Is he in pain? Will he have a cast?”

“Yes and yes. But at least now it’ll all be settled quickly.”

Peyton understands what Mom means. Dad broke his son’s arm and there are witnesses. There’ll be no custody battle. Dad’ll be lucky if he ever gets to see his children again. It’s a bleak tradeoff.

The next day Mrs. Kerr announces that, out of the nine members who auditioned, only one, Peyton, made regional band. Because they sense that the teacher expects accolades, the other students offer a brief and half-hearted round of applause.

A month later Peyton gets a Friday off from school, and then on Saturday the band rehearses all day for a concert that night. She is thrilled—mainly because she’s surrounded by people her age who don’t hate her. She’s made second chair, which, considering that she’s a year younger than most of the kids who made the band, makes her a star.

“You’re from Archer Middle School,” Lele, the third chair says when they meet for the first time. “One of my best friends from church goes there—Ella Hendricks. Do you know her?”

Within Peyton, a flame of fury ignites. Ella, who has hurt her so deeply. Ella, who plays no instrument and wouldn’t recognize a beat if it thumped her on the head. Ella has no right intruding here, the one space that belongs to Peyton.

“No,” she tells Lele with a bemused smile. “I never heard of her. Are you sure she goes to Archer?”

Denying that she knows Ella is like denying Ella’s existence, a small and private revenge; a delicious moment that’ll be enough to see her through the next couple of years.

A few days later Mom presents her with an airhorn, then tells her how and when to use it. As Mom’s obviously invested in her safety, Peyton responds with appropriate and solemn gratitude—but really. An airhorn? Ridiculous.

Happy Mother’s day to all my fellow mothers!

Singapore Revisited

When David and I found out that we’d been transferred from the UK to the US, we decided to take a quick trip back to Holland before we left that part of the world. Neither of the boys remembered Holland and they thought our sentimental good-bye to be nonsensical. Another reason for the making trip was that Holland had been the most wonderful country imaginable, so a quick visit to a place we’d enjoyed so much seemed understandable—until we found ourselves parked in a rental car outside the house where we’d once lived—an elegant three-story home on a tree-lined cobbled street.

“Why are we here again?” Curtis asked from the back seat.

“This is where we lived when you were born,” I explained once more. “We thought you’d want to see it.”

Up at the house, a second-story curtain twitched.  

“The people who live here are looking at us,” from Curtis. “They’re wondering why we’re here.”

“We’re here because our parents thought we wanted to see it,” Sam reminded his brother. “I didn’t want to see it. Did you want to see it?”

“I think the person who’s been watching is coming out.”

The door opened and a woman wearing a suspicious scowl stepped on to the porch.

Dismayed to be caught doing something outside the norm, David started the car and pulled away. Oh, the hilarity of this pointless farce! David and I lost ourselves in laughter—guffaws, tears, and gasps; snorts were involved. What had we been thinking? Flying across the North Sea for no other reason than to gawk at a house we’d moved out of five years before. Who does something like that? Even the kids, at eight and ten, had more sense. At that point we decided that we’d never again be revisitors—we’d move on and never look back.

Yet here we are—revisiting a placed we lived for three years ten years ago. Singapore is now home to our son Sam, his wife, Julia, and our granddaughter, Clementine.

As we wander through our favorite attractions, malls, and food courts, we list the differences between then and now.

The Botanic Garden: If you’re of a mind to, you can spend a full day strolling around Singapore’s Botanic Garden, where photographers, artists, and Tai Chi ancients pay homage to some of the world’s oldest and largest trees. Since we were last here, otters have appeared and Otter Crossing signs are now posted on the pathways between the water features. Also, the orchid garden has been enlarged, and new facilities and walkways have been added. If orchids are your passion, you’ll be interested to know that Singapore’s collection contains a rare tiger orchid, the blossoms of which can weigh up to two tons. It only blooms every two-four years, so arrange your pilgrimage accordingly.

Singapore is all about technology—some convenient, some not worth the effort. Tap in/tap out in the underground is nothing new, so in that area we weren’t stymied. Sadly, gone are the taxi stands. If you want a ride, use the app. We used to like stepping out of a venue and into a cab. Now we’ve got to fiddle with our phones and wait Uber-style if we need a lift.

QR menus have proven to be a problem here—for us, anyway. The restaurants are all clumped together, so it’s not unusual to scroll through fifty web addresses and not be able to find the one associated with the restaurant we’re currently dining in. This method of ordering is supposed to be expedient, but how can that be when a waiter must come and find the website for us? And then, because it’s faster and easier, he/she also taps in our order. So, no expedience for anybody.  

Ten years ago Singapore’s airport entry was a model of efficiency for the world to aspire to—and many countries have wisely followed its example. I’ve flown into four different countries in the last year-and-a-half, all of which used passport-scanning entry. I walked to a gate, inserted my passport in the scanner, a gate opened, and I was in a foreign land. Ninety seconds, tops. And this reality deserves a disgusted rant: Last year, in the US citizens’ line at JFK, we waited for two hours to get through passport control. I know, I know, you can expedite by signing up for some blah-blah pass with some bureaucratic department—but the point is that there are no such obstacles to deal with when entering those other countries, of which I’m not even a citizen. All of America should blush with embarrassment. I dread re-entering in LA.

Moving on to the reason for our visit: We’re having a great time with our adorable eighteen-month-old granddaughter, Clementine. She’s mischievous, sensitive, engaged, and curious. It’ll be interesting to see whether these are core traits that stay with her and form her in the years to come, or if they’ll fall away as she gets older.

Meanwhile, right now Clem is at play school, and Sam and Julia are working, so David and I are revisiting Chinatown, where I’ll visit the fabric floor, we’ll eat dumplings, sweat profusely, and wave back at the lucky cat statues, which originated in Japan and, confoundedly, were appropriated by the Chinese—in my opinion, an innocuous and dubious fusion of cultures.

Nothing but beautiful views in the Botanic Garden. And look how clean!

A lovely and whimsical shot of Julia, Clementine, and Sam on the way to Field Day

Isn’t she cute?