Archive for the ‘Real Life’ category

Dear Evan: Your First Spring

May 3rd, 2011

Dear Evan –

Your mommy and I had hoped — oh, how we’d hoped — to spare you the rivers of snot and various other indignities visited on us this time of year. We’d hoped you would live a life free of the daily need for Zyrtec or Benadryl. A life where you can breathe deeply and sleep soundly with nary a clogged nostril.

This past week, though, I pulled from your little button nose the biggest booger I’ve ever seen. Bigger than my own. So large I can’t imagine where it must have come from. Plus, you’ve been sneezing a bit, though not having any other trouble breathing. We think you’ve inherited our allergies to… well, anything green.

(In retrospect, it’s amazing you were conceived in March, considering our normal phlegm-heavy states that time of year.)

On the upside, you’re learning to pet your fur-brothers. Lil’ Bit will cuddle up close to you, gently, and you reach out one tiny fist, then realize there’s something soft underneath, open your hand and either close it on Bit’s fur or stroke him. He’s very patient, and without complaint accepts you even grabbing his snout, ears, whatever. La and I watch with glee, holding our breaths so as not to distract either of you. Right now, Gus and Bit are fascinating to you. No matter what they’re doing, you’ll turn at goggle at them with your huge blue eyes, lips slightly parted, entirely focused.

In other news, you’re actually beginning to giggle and laugh, something that prompts La and I to make all manner of funny faces at you. Sometimes sticking out a tongue works, and sometimes it takes more. Right now, the only thing that reliably gets a huge grin is crooning, “Yooooooouuuuu are so cuuuuuuuuute.” We may have created a monster.

Love,

Daddy

Changing spaces

April 29th, 2011

Finally, an actual good reason for my recent silence: For the past few weeks — more like couple of months, really, but who’s counting? — I’ve been doing a delicate dance with a potential new employer. The job, I should note, sounded perfect for my skillset, so after some initial hesitation I went after it. And they went for me. And so began the stomachache-inducing sequence of furtively scheduling interviews around existing time off and polishing of resume, the obsessive checking of e-mail and voicemail and the heart-pounding calls to let me know I’d move on in the process.

It’s a stressful process, even with a job already in hand, especially this time because I just wanted it so much. I may have my frustrating days, but I do enjoy what I do at my current gig. Even so, the spot was everything I liked plus one, like a huge jump up in every aspect that I find interesting.

During that time, I kept quiet. I tried to keep quiet everywhere I could, especially publicly. Part of that was discretion, so as not to do a disservice to either the current employer or the potential new one. Part of that was irrational superstition on my part, trying not to jinx an amazing opportunity. I told family, and I told a very small number of friends, and I stayed as quiet as possible here and on Twitter and on Facebook and everywhere else.

No need now. During a call for which my heart was literally pounding hard enough to hurt my head, the new employer’s human resources rep extended an offer that I accepted, and happily.

I spent yesterday and the day before telling my current employers and some fellow employees, laying the groundwork for my exit. And on myself: Mentally preparing for a shift in what had become a comfortable, if tiring, schedule; a jump to a new and unknown and intimidating workplace; a move from the reliable and skilled co-worker to The New Guy.

With the most difficult parts (at least, until my first day) behind me, I felt freed to write again. So here I am, begging indulgence from you and from Evan, who has received lots of hugging and loving to offset my obvious stress, but no letters. I can’t promise regular writing until I fully grok my new job, but I can promise more regular writing. And that’s something.

Dear Evan: Bumps in the Road

April 15th, 2011

Dear Evan:

It’s been two weeks since I wrote to you, and that pains me. My goal has been to write a letter each week, not to mention quite a bit of other content in this space, and I’ve (if temporarily) failed at both. I want to say there’s a good reason, some great upheaval that kept me from the keyboard for so long. There was not. Instead, as always happens, a multitude of minor problems bumped me along, had me thinking about what next to tell you but too tired to do it.

That happens, and seems to happen to me on a regular basis, and I hope you’ll be better at dealing with those situations. I approach problems like to-do lists and often don’t rest until they’re done. I step away from the rest of life, from writing to you or catching up on sleep or planning my next novel or… You get the idea. I was brought up by my parents to push aside leisure time when there’s work to be done. And there’s always work to be done.

I got less time with you over these past two weeks, because you made your first trip to Houston to spend time with your mommy’s family. I’ll be schmoopy here and tell you that while your fur-brothers are good and constant companions, spending five days away from you and your mommy was not the bachelor-fest I hoped for. I managed to spend a few hours playing video games, and then got bored and tackled what I could on the to-do list. The house was too empty, and too quiet, and it put me in a bad mood until you both returned.

I’m happy to say your night-time crying fits ended almost as quickly as they arrived. You sometimes still fight sleep, but that’s to be expected. There’s so much going on! You are also developing a keen interest in the television, so your mommy and I take care to make sure something educational is on during the times you look in that direction.

You’re still behind on tummy time, which worries me a little, but are holding your head up and proud otherwise. Heck, you hate being carried cradle-style any more, preferring to be held vertical so you can better look around. Your hand-eye coordination is better every day, though your mommy isn’t as thrilled that you can now grab and hold tight to her hair. She’s talking about cutting it, but it’s so beautiful, long and strawberry blonde, that I hope she doesn’t. Maybe she’ll do so and have grown it back by the time you read this.

And that’s it, a letter so mild I feel like it’s a dispatch from Lake Wobegon. (Look it up.) Bumps in the road: No great trials or tribulations in our lives, but enough disruption to throw off my own schedule. Someday, we’ll look back and not even laugh, because what’s throwing me off won’t have been worth remembering.

I’ll write more often,

Love,

Daddy

Dear Evan: Please Don’t Cry

March 30th, 2011

Dear Evan:

I wonder, while I write these letters, what our lives will be like as you’re reading them. La and I have so many plans, so many options, that it’s dizzying to try and guess which will become reality. Right now, our plans change quickly because our lives are moving so fast. Days pass in a blur; weeks blend; months fly.

If you’ve guessed that’s partly an excuse as to why I haven’t written to you as regularly as I’d like… well, you’re partly right. I haven’t done any writing as much as I’d like, because I’m caught on some wildly spinning merry-go-’round of getting up, feeding you, getting to work, coming home, sitting with you for a bit, eating dinner, doing some actual head-of-the-household crap like paying bills, and then getting to bed early enough that I don’t feel like a zombie the next day.

Even weekends are full, and as La pointed out, we don’t get to sit around any more.

So. Of all possible outcomes, this is what I hope: I hope I sell some books, and we renovate the ranch on your Mimi and PaPa’s land, and we live a life where I can write and La can open an animal-therapy counseling service and you can learn to enjoy the days instead of seeing each off as quickly as they arrive.

Enough talk about that. Let’s talk about you.

This week, you’ve come as close as ever to laughing. You’ve been smiling for a few weeks now, not just copying our smiles but getting my attention and grinning wide with a mischievous cooing noise. It’s adorable, and you get even smilier when La or I tell you how cute you are. You don’t laugh yet, but sometimes you make a “huh-huh” sound that I think is your imitation of our laughter. It won’t be long before you get it right; you’re already holding conversations with us, even if your end is mostly babble. (To be frank, so is what we tell you.)

Unfortunately, you had your first really bad night this week. Monday evening, you weren’t just crying, you were screaming. We still don’t know why, just that after almost an hour, you had a huge spit-up, calmed a bit, then began crying again. Nothing we did during that first time helped, not holding you or burping you or giving you infant Tylenol. The second time, you must’ve just been tired and maybe afraid, because I held you and walked and shushed and you fell fast asleep.

I know that won’t be the last time something bothers you that we can’t immediately fix, but I hope it’s the last time you’re in so much distress. The sight of real tears in the corners of your eyes hurts my heart.

Love,

Daddy

Dear Evan: Smiles, Family and Not Much Sleep

March 18th, 2011

Dear Evan:

I’ve told myself I’ll at least write you a letter each week, but I feel like the past couple have been flat. Too often, I think, I snap off a quick letter without connecting it to a larger narrative, or with items hinting at a bigger message but not fully connecting.

Well, buck up, because this week’s letter will be even more scattered.

Part of that is because you are — your mommy and I think — going through a growth spurt. You’re eating more. The 120-ml bottles just don’t do the trick, at least not for a full three-hour rest. More frustrating is that, as your mommy points out, boobs don’t come with a Full-to-Empty gauge. She can usually tell when you’ve been eating and when you’ve just been using her as a pacifier. Usually. Sometimes, we think you’re full, and an hour later you’re restless and making what we’ve learned is the “feed me” face: tongue flickering in and out like a cute snake.

That is, as you can probably imagine when eventually reading this, less than restful in the wee hours of the morning.

On the upside, you learned to smile — for real social smiles — a couple of weeks ago, and are amazingly close to that first laugh. I almost thought I got one yesterday when you smiled and made a “ha-ha” noise, but it was too close to your normal “talking” to tell. When you smile, your eyes crinkle, and your mouth opens and stretches wide, and sometimes you blush and turn your head. It’s ridiculously cute, which leads to a bout of tickling and telling you how cute you are. Heaven help your mommy and me when you’re grown a little and can use that against us.

You got to show off the smile this week to your mommy’s parents, and her sister’s family. Your cousin Asher, in fact, is the closest template we have to how you might turn out — blue-eyed, blond, talkative, social, very intelligent. Again, Heaven help us. Asher is always in motion, and always asking about everything, and if you pause for a second he’s moved on to something else. I make him sound ADD, but he’s not; he’s just into everything. I have a feeling you’ll be the same, the way you goggle over my shoulder or your mommy’s at anything else going on in the area, mouth open and eyes wide with concentration.

One more disjointed thought: I wondered, during my commute to work today, how early we’d be able to influence your… well, not just your personality, but I suppose that’s a good start. I want you to stay happy. I want you to laugh and blush and turn your head. I’m… well, most days I feel older than I am, and grumpy, and disillusioned, and I don’t want you to feel that. I want to strike that balance of teaching you to work hard for yourself while handing to you as much opportunity as I can. More than I had. I need to start doing that now, but haven’t had a chance. It’s frustrating.

Enough of that. The weather has turned beautiful, finally bringing spring to Texas, so here’s to a weekend of smiles from you.

Love,

Daddy

I want my hour back

March 14th, 2011

I know it was designed to help farmers or crop rotations or some such thing — I’m too tired to look it up — but I want my Daylight Savings hour back. Not in half a year, but now. I already have a drain on my precious sleep right now, thank you very much, albeit an admittedly cute one.

All you parents out there: Stop snickering. Yes, yes, I get it, you paid your dues and got your wings or whatever you want to call it while I was out staggering home from the bar. Would I be in a better situation if I’d settled down earlier in life? Maybe. No, scratch that. I don’t think so. I’m actually in better shape than I was a decade ago, and tired is tired.

Speaking of parents, it’s interesting how them being around makes us regress. La’s folks are staying with us for the week, and yesterday mine came up to visit, and we had all sorts of junk foods like potato chips and Dr Pepper floats, and then the guys watched college basketball all afternoon. I kicked my feet up, lay crosswise on one of the couches and split my time between basketball and the new Peter Straub novel. Felt like I was 13 again. Nary an organic vegetable in sight, nor anything more responsible than cooing over the Squish while he slept. Later, La and her dad giggled together over some sort of nature program.

That comes with a downside, of course, including a spat over plans my parents made for us next Saturday,when in fact that day was already full. I won’t apologize for jealously guarding my time away from the office.

I’m already down an hour, after all.

Dear Evan: Some Thoughts on Work

March 10th, 2011

Dear Evan:

I’ve been thinking about work a lot lately. This week has been hectic for me, and I worry I’ve spent too little time with you. I get my Monday and Wednesday nights, of course, while your mommy teaches, but beyond that my time home is spent trying to eat dinner, pay bills, help out as much as I can with chores and somehow relax before my eyelids start to droop.

I hope you don’t remember that. I hope that by the time you do develop long-term memories, I’ve found a better balance between home and work life.

I really hope you think about work, like I have been. That’s odd to write, picturing you as a fat, burbling, smiling infant pondering careers. (Some of how we raise you will shape that, of course, and your mommy and I have been very careful in that regard.) What I mean to write is, when you’re a little older, when you start thinking about what your life will be after college, include in that thinking this question: What do I want life to be like for me?

Some days — and oh, how I hate to write this — some days I question my choices. I chose a career I would love — writing — and pursued it. I spent an exorbitant sum at a private university and came out making $17,000 annually. I gave up niceties like job security and the ability to afford luxury items in return for the sort of exciting career that makes for great cocktail-party stories. Was it enough? I think about how to provide for your future, and while I make a nice living at the moment — enough that your mommy really doesn’t have to work — I wish your college fund, your savings, money set aside for other expenses were all done already.

People will tell you to do what you love, and having followed that advice, I can’t fault it too heavily. But still, my parents were unable to help me at times, have said they wished they could’ve done more, and I worry that I may wind up in the same boat. There should be a cushion already in place for you, just in case (and in this economy, “just in case” is a daily worry). It’s frustrating.

So what do I tell you? It’ll be so much easier to teach you to shave or kick a soccer ball or those other father-son things. I want you to be happy. I want you to do what you love. But I want you to think, too: Would I love life more by having experiences instead of possessions, and the financial stress that goes with that? Or could I grind through a boring job for a decade or two and then retire early, live the rest of my life comfortably?

I did the former. Today, I wish I’d done the latter, just so you could have an easier time making the choice down the road.

Love,

Daddy

Dear Evan: Your First ‘Star Wars’

March 2nd, 2011

Dear Evan:

I want to try and explain why I get misty during the opening minutes of “Star Wars.” And during the end, and at times in the middle.

“Star Wars” tells the story of a poor boy in a hot climate who gets to go on grand adventures and finds out he’s not just something more but something noble: a Jedi knight, an avatar of goodness. I’ve never gotten to the last bit, but when I was a poor boy in a hot climate, it felt like I could. The movie resonated with me, back when it first came out. Sure, we kids turned sticks into lightsabers and eventually saved up enough to toy around with the movie’s action figures, but to me it was something more. A promise, I think. An unfulfilled promise, it turns out, and maybe that’s why I get misty.

I’m writing all of this because this past Saturday you and I had Daddy-Evan day, our first attempt to watch the three good “Star Wars” movies back-to-back-t0-back. I brought out a foot-tall talking Darth Vader doll, dug it out from a bin in the garage, which you obligingly clutched just long enough for me to take a picture.

After that, you slept while I relived a movie I’ve watched… well, so many times I stopped counting. I laughed; I raised my eyebrows at the unnecessary additional CGI (the “special editions” are all I own on DVD); I made sure you knew Greedo shot first; I cheered Han’s return during the Death Star run. When Luke turned off his targeting computer at the end and John Williams’ score moved into a beautifully dreamy serenity, my chest tightened and my eyes stung. As always.

I do remember the first time I saw “The Empire Strikes Back.” Your grandfather took me and your Uncle Benjie for my birthday, the summer of 1980. He surprised me on the way with a toy playset based on Dagobah, the planet where Yoda hides. We still didn’t have much money, so that was a huge thrill for me.

You paid a little more attention to “Empire,” which is funny because emotionally I don’t connect with it like I do the first film. Oh, I like it an awful lot, and consider it to be superior in a lot of ways, but on an intellectual level. I don’t get misty. I don’t get choked up.

I also  remember the first time I saw the third movie, “Return of the Jedi.” That one came out in 1983, but I was late to see it. I wish I knew why. My family didn’t go out to movies a lot — didn’t go out a lot, period — but your grandfather and grandmother knew how important “Star Wars” was to us. I did eventually see it, and in the theater, but don’t remember it having much impact. I was eager to watch it again, to see how, with you curled peacefully unconscious into the crook of my left arm, the movie hit me.  We didn’t have time that day, though.

I wonder what will be your touchstone, what books or movies or television or — hell — holographic virtutainment will resonate with you from these early years until decades later. Will you write letters (or — hell — record holographic virtucommunications) to your own son about “Star Wars”? Will a piece of my childhood become a part of who you are? I hope so. I hope that teariness I feel, that longing for a goodness in the soul that supposedly personified the Jedi, will get you a little weepy when you’re cradling your own child in your arms.

Love,

Daddy

A moment of early silence

March 1st, 2011

The office is so still and so quiet — and has been for the past hour and a half that I’ve been here alone — that I wonder whether I made a mistake, came in on a weekend. (It could happen. My sleep is so lacking right now that I struggle to remember what day it is.)

It’s a delicate stillness for a day fraught with stress. In a few hours, I have a departmental meeting about the state of, well, the state’s budget and how it will affect us. I don’t anticipate layoffs; at the very least, I can see a number of places where expenses can be trimmed. I definitely don’t anticipate I will be laid off. After all, I work extremely hard, and my skillset is difficult to pick up by anyone without my experience.

That and an arbitrary amount of money will, you know, get me some sort of underpriced coffee. Or a stick of gum. You get the idea. Nobody’s ever got job security, ever. Ever again. More reason for me to pad the retirement account by getting a book out the door and into the hands of an agent.

Beyond that are mundane concerns. We need to replace the truck, and with something tall enough that La can put in and take out a carseat easily. I, meanwhile, want some magical unicorn of a vehicle, one that meets her needs while remaining fuel-efficient and inexpensive. Go ahead and laugh. No such beast exists. I’ve got a lead on something that’ll make do.

And money. We’ve put off starting Ev’s college fund, first while I paid off his hospital stay and now while I search for the Unicornmobile. That nags at me. I want to get the money set aside, get the interest rolling, remove it from my plate of worries.

The thoughts flit around me in the quiet air, and I breathe them in and let them out without taking action. I don’t want to break the silence.

Dear Evan: How I Met Your Mother, Part Two

February 23rd, 2011

Dear Evan:

One of the reasons I’m writing these letters is because memory fades so quickly. I remember the signposts, the major events that studded the story of my courting Laura, but right now, as I stare at this blank page, the order confuses me. I turn those signposts into, to abruptly switch metaphors, puzzle pieces: If I said that to her then, I must have said this other thing later, or before. You understand. Your mommy’s already corrected my memories of your early scares (it was just eight days, apparently, that you were at the first hospital, when to me it feels like weeks) so I hope she’ll be able to fill in the blurred spots in this story.

I will admit to you that I overthink almost everything. The morning after the first kiss I shared with your mother, I wondered what had happened. After all, I lived in Chicago, and she lived in Texas, and that’s a huge distance to overcome. Distance was on my mind that morning; we — the new bride and groom, family, friends — went to breakfast, and Laura showed up late. I didn’t realize then how much she values sleeping in, what an effort it must have been to even get to the restaurant. She was half-asleep, but I took it as standoffishness. No, that’s not really a word. Pretend it is.

I kept my distance, then, but later that day I did manage to exchange phone numbers with her, and then it was back to Dallas, and to the airport, and arriving in Chicago.

I didn’t forget Laura. I mentioned her in letters I sent to your Auntie Em while she (your aunt, not your mother) was going through Air Force officers’ training. I called Laura once, from a street fair, trying to meet up with your Aunt Rachel, then her roommate. What I think is most important is what happened during one of my regular trips to Los Angeles for work. A co-worker there was your mother’s twin. The resemblance was uncanny, really. I stared at the poor woman, and finally explained that she resembled my sister’s best friend. Huh, resembled. Was a clone of. I texted that to your mother, from a pretentious bar at the site of an abandoned power station, that I’d met her clone in L.A. She wrote back that there was nothing like the real thing, and that broke the ice.

Fast-forward a few months, when your Auntie Em successfully lobbied for me to fly down to float the Guadalupe River with her, your Uncle Chris, their friend Lizzie and… your mother, of course. I admit it, I was nervous. I shouldn’t have been. The weekend went great; I was charming, apparently, and your mother and I shared another kiss or three. She kept close to me on the river, holding onto my foot for some of the time, testing to see whether I’m as ticklish as my sister. (I am.) She drove me back to Austin the night before my flight back. We talked during the entire drive, stopped at one of her favorite restaurants, had dinner and margaritas. It all felt right.

She had to leave early the next day to finish her drive to Denton, so I spent the time waiting for the SuperShuttle thinking about how to get back to Texas. From that night, I knew I was done in Chicago. I was coming home.

We talked daily after that, sometimes for hours, sometimes for seconds. Sometimes only by exchanging voicemails. It didn’t matter. The universe was already setting things in motion, or had before, but I was too oblivious, too smitten to notice. By the end of that year, I’d been handed a reason to move back to Texas, and I took it. But that’s another story.

Love,

Daddy