Laboring on Labor Day

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Dashboard of our U-Haul.

Sometimes when things don’t go as planned, I have an absurd conversation in my head.

“So, how did you spend your Labor Day weekend?”

“Barbecuing.”

“Relaxing and watching TV.”

“Went to the state fair.  How about you?”

“We replaced our old water heater, which was leaking, and we hauled three quarters of a ton to the dump.”

It wasn’t how we thought we’d spend our Labor Day, but it worked out for the best.  We ended up getting a lot of work done.

Our water heater began leaking this past week.  My husband walked into the garage and found a puddle.  He had to sidestep it to ensure he wouldn’t get electrocuted because the water was coming out of a chamber with wires.  The silver lining was that we had a three day weekend to deal with the matter.

I began researching hot water heaters.  I am compulsive about finding the best deal.  My philosophy is not to skimp on the important stuff.  There is an old saying that goes something like: “I’m not so rich as to buy cheap stuff.”  Sometimes when you buy cheap stuff, you end up paying more for repairs or replacement.  (Like our washing machine that we bought at a recycling outlet last year that broke on Monday for the third time.)  So while my husband was happy to buy the cheapest possible 50 gallon hot water heater, I needed to perform due diligence.

Our leaky hot water heater.
Draining our old leaking hot water heater.

I convinced my husband on a Whirlpool which has an EnergySmart mode that monitors your water use patterns to maximize efficiency and reduce standby heat loss.  I figured the $150 difference would more than pay for itself in terms of energy consumption and it bought us three extra years of warranty on parts and another year on labor.  And, something fortuitous happened, without which my husband may not have come on board.  When I called my previous landlord, a plumber by trade, for his recommendation for a hot water heater, he told me he had something in his wallet that he has been carrying since we left.  It’s a refund for some of our deposit, which we didn’t get back when we left.  Thank you cosmos.

Problem was that we didn’t have a truck.  When I was an apartment dweller, I didn’t understand why there were so many people driving SUVs and trucks.  Now, as a homeowner and parent, I get it.  It seems every couple months we need a truck, probably because we bought a fixer upper home.  We figured if we needed to rent a truck for the day, we might as well use it to clear the debris from the blackberry bushes that have been sitting in our backyard and tear down the old fence.  There was enough to make several trips to the dump.

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Blackberry bushes waiting for the right opportunity to be hauled away.  A section of our old fence stands in the corner.

And thus, a simple hot water heater replacement turned into several big projects.

We woke up to rain on Saturday morning.  This meant that the bushes and fencing would weigh more and we would be charged more at the dump.  We tried not to let this deter us.  Pete used a chainsaw to cut the old fence and then began chainsawing the bottoms of the remaining blackberry bushes.  This went A LOT faster than me cutting them by hand, as I had been doing when I had time.  He was done with everything in less than an hour.  I raked the blackberry bushes onto tarps and prepared everything for Sunday when we would rent the truck.

We made three trips to the dump on Sunday and disposed of almost three quarters of a ton of debris.  That’s 1,500 pounds of fencing and bushes.  I can’t believe that we lifted that much.  It didn’t feel like that much, although it wasn’t always easy.

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Old fencing and yard waste.

“Our house is starting to look like someone lives here,” my husband said after we had cleared all the debris.

Polina behaved well.  She was content watching cartoons on DVD while we worked.  My only regret is that when she came out and wanted to dance with me like Cinderella, a character she reincarnates frequently throughout the day, I told her I couldn’t because I was working.  I regret not giving her the minute it would have taken to dance with her, because I really wasn’t giving her any time during that day.  Lesson learned.

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Loading blackberry bushes into a U-Haul.  It took two trips to get rid of them all.

After making the final trip to the dump at 4 pm, Pete began working on installing our new hot water heater, but why stop there?  He decided to install a pressure relief valve as well, which meant sawing at an existing pipe.  He worked well into the night getting the right attachment and fixing a leak from the pipe.  In a rare instance, for him, of self-deprecating humor, Pete said our previous landlord would have laughed if he had seen him working.  I told him if he replaced as many water heaters as our landlord he probably would have done things differently too.  Lessons learned.

I’m proud of the fact that things went as smoothly as they did with a three year old.  Proud, not grateful, because I think we as a family have matured, largely because circumstances forced us to.  I can recall times when we had less on our plate and we weren’t able to hold it together without bickering or someone crying.

Polina was being a good sport.  She even got to ride in the front seat of the truck on the way to the dump.  It was the first time she got to sit in a forward facing seat in the front of a vehicle.  She was taking it all in stride.

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Riding shotgun.

 

Taking it in stride.
Taking it in stride.

We dedicated Monday to Polina, since Sunday was all about us (working, that is).  We went to our new place for Indian buffet and then went to a nearby park that Polina loves because of the “big swing,” which she repeats often while we’re eating, lest we forget to take her there.  We were at the playground for a long time, not our usual rushed selves.  Polina for the first time hung on a monkey bar and swung by herself like some of the older kids.  She had a big grin on her face.  We came home and after a two hour nap, she asked to go to the park again.

“I want to go to the park right now.” she said politely, but authoritatively.  That is one of her longest sentences, if not her longest sentence thus far.

Pete continued to do house projects while I went with Polina to a nearby park.  She was so happy.  She is happy with the simple things in life, like swinging, or climbing a rock wall, or running.  She teaches us what is important and how to be happy, even when things don’t go our way.

Lesson learned.

Finding the Perfect in the Imperfect

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Wednesday morning for the nth time it was the middle of the week and I hadn’t made it off our property. Monday I spent several hours cleaning the house.  Our house needed it.  It started with me getting a toilet brush and cleaning the first toilet.  There I did.  The rest was easy.  Getting started was the hardest part.  The rest was momentum.

I worked hard,.  Polina watched and found things to do while interacting with me.  I noticed how much better I was handling work with her needs.  Before long it was nap time, then dinner time, so we didn’t make it out.

On Tuesday I called so-called “tree experts” to diagnose an evergreen in my yard that had lost all its needles.  It was that way when we bought the house a year ago, but now I noticed that the tree next to it was also losing its needles.  I began to worry the tree might be infected.  One expert suggested it might be due to a bark beetle infestation.  I panicked that I may lose the rest of my trees due to bark beetles.  I spent the morning worrying, emailing and calling.  The sound of a chainsaw revving outside made me nervous.  During Polina’s nap, I talked to my neighbor next door, as she had mentioned a company she had worked with in the past.  On the way back, I decided to be bold and talk to the chainsaw operator guy.  Turns out he wasn’t an arborist but has been in the “tree service” business for 27 years.

“They don’t climb trees and I didn’t read the books,” he said.

Fortunately for me, he went across the driveway and examined my tree.  He slapped it with his hand.  It sounded hollow.  He concluded that it has been dead for a while.  As for the tree next to it not having as many needles, he said this happens when trees overlap and needles don’t get enough sunlight.  All in all I felt a lot better that it wasn’t necessarily the bark beetle.  I felt even better when he gave me an estimate, which was less than I expected.  I was grateful.

A good day, but we hadn’t made it off our property.

Wednesday morning, I was set on going out.  I learned from past experience that the *right* way to do it is to get an earlier start.  Unfortunately, that morning, Polina woke me up at 6 am and continued to wake me for two hours.  Fortunately it was time for Peter to wake up, so he took over, letting me “sleep-in” for an hour.

When he left, I got ready.  I had to make a speedy exit or our trip would fall to close to Polina’s nap time.  I ate leftover dinner for breakfast.  I left the pile of dishes from the night before in the sink.  I’m learning how to throw perfection out the window.  I don’t like it, but I have to.

When we got to a park I had been wanting to visit for a while, Polina was asleep.  Another case of meaning well, but bad timing.  Parking was $7.  Seven dollars to park in a county park?  I parked near the entrance to wait for Polina to wake up.  I realized once again I forgot to bring something to read.  Why didn’t I put that book in the car I wanted to read? 

Fortunately I had the radio.  Unfortunately, a park ranger alerted me to his existence and after a brief chat about the park I offered him $7.  Driving to the day use parking lot, Polina woke up, and when we got out of the car, we weren’t on our property for the first time in four days.

While Polina decided to run around barefoot in the playground, I was cold.  I had on a sweatshirt but no reserve coat in the car (although I did bring a rain jacket for Polina.  Check.  I did something right.)

I didn’t think I could stand being in the cold and tried not to be sad about wasting $7, which, if you get paid for your work, may not be a lot of money.  But I don’t get paid for my work.

So I’m standing in the cold in the playground by the lake and I look up.  There is a clearing in the clouds.  Maybe if I wait long enough, the sun will peak out.  The best thing we had going for us is that the place was empty except for a few park rangers.  We had the place to ourselves, and there was “the sound of silence.”  I decide to make the most of our trip.  We went down to the water, picked blackberries by the shore, walked on the dock and talked with a lone fisherman.  Sometime during all this, the sun came out, and when I looked up, the clouds were gone.  Polina and I ended up spending five hours in the park walking on a nature trail, picking and playing with branches and leaves, discovering water lilies, pretending to be fishing with sticks in puddles, seeing the fish the fisherman caught and released, practicing walking on rocks, and playing on the playground.

During our drive home, it started to drizzle, then rain, then downpour.  When I took our exit off the highway I saw a giant rainbow.  We made it home and Polina went to sleep easily because it was a full day.

A cold day turned into a warm one.  What I thought was a wash turned into a 5 hour adventure.  It didn’t start off perfectly, but it ended perfectly.

Now if I can only get the dishes done in the morning…..

 

 

 

An Ode to My Computer

Apple Macbook Pro
A beautiful widow.

On May 24, 2015, my computer died.

It had been working fine just the day before.  “Fine” being relative for a computer that was eight years old, but it was still working.  Technically.

My computer was a Macbook from 2007.  Not a pro, just a Macbook laptop, the kind high schools in our area used to issue to students for free.  I got it as a graduation present for completing graduate school.  It worked great when I first got it, but in the last few months, it had slowed down quite a bit, as older computers tend to do.  Some websites I couldn’t access any more because they didn’t support my operating system.  I was told by an Apple representative about a year ago that at some point the operating software I was using wouldn’t be supported at all by the web and my computer wouldn’t support an operating system upgrade beyond two more upgrades.  I was too attached to my computer to even consider buying another one.  I decided to limit the damage by upgrading the operating system.

When my hard drive went caput last year, I took my computer to the Mac Store and spent $250 for a new one.  My husband is still in disbelief over how much it cost, considering he uses Linux and can buy an entire computer for that much.

My Macbook was my closest confidant.  I wrote my deepest thoughts on that computer, things no one else will ever read because I often deleted it.  But the keyboard knew.  It knew everything.  It knew my rough drafts.  My fingerprints were all over them.

The asymmetric round stains on the keyboard where my wrists rested were mine.  The glossy shine on the keys I used the most were mine.  Those passionate moments when creativity was flowing and I typed fervently, my Macbook and I were one.

The truth is, I probably wouldn’t have purchased another computer if my Mac still worked.   I was drawn to the Macbook after having viruses on several PCs that I owned over the years.  I was ready, even desperate for a change.  I remember the day I finally walked into an Apple store to purchase it.  I was excited and nervous at the same time, like someone taking a big step in their lives, which I was at that point.  I felt butterflies in my stomach.

“Black,” I said to the store clerk, trying to cover my excitement and the unevenness in my voice.  “I’d like a black one.”

I remember holding the bag and my brand new computer inside of it against my chest like a newborn baby.  I rode the bus back home, as I didn’t even own a car at that time.  My Macbook was my most expensive possession.  Every few blocks I compulsively checked the bag to make sure my computer was still inside.

I brought it home to my one-bedroom apartment and gently took it out of the box like a precious artifact.  It was beautiful.  I didn’t even want to take off the thin layer of foam encasing the computer like a well-fitted glove, the last barrier to actually touching the machine.  I was as nervous and excited as a boy taking off the layers of a woman’s dress for the first time.  Maybe they call it an “apple” because a new Macbook is as beautiful and tempting as Adam’s apple (the one in the Bible, not the throat.)

Everything about it was pleasant to the senses.  It looked, smelled, and felt… luxurious.  Several years later, the New York Times would report how Apple contracted with manufacturers in China that callously used child labor and worked their employees to death, literally, to build their devices.  It was, of course, awful, and I questioned whether I would ever buy another Mac.  Talk about forbidden fruit. Then I wondered whether PCs weren’t produced the same way.  It was a dilemma I didn’t want to face.

I decided that the responsibility lay with Apple’s management.  I paid full price for my new laptop, a whopping $1500 in 2007, not including tax.  If the millionaires in charge decide to allocate the money toward themselves rather than set standards and hold their contractors accountable for fair and safe labor practices, then that is on them.  My husband, disgusted by both Apple and Microsoft, uses Linux, but I didn’t want a PC.  I was in a relationship with Apple, and I felt comfortable in it.

The past several weeks I felt that my Macbook wasn’t keeping up with modern technology.  I couldn’t switch between several open tabs as quickly as I once could and some websites had blank spots where page content should have been.  No matter how many times I downloaded Flash Player, it never seemed to work.  Videos kept stopping or not loading.  The beach ball kept spinning.  I was getting more frustrated.

Even though my computer wasn’t responsive, I remained loyal.

I didn’t cheat.

On the Sunday before Memorial Day, my computer died.  I had just gotten back from a camping trip with Polina the day before and I was eager to get back to writing.

And then it broke.

My first reaction was grief.  Then denial.  Denial morphed into acceptance.  And then, oddly, relief, because  the suffering was over and the decision to buy another computer was made for me.  This quickly turned to fear because of the additional expense.

There it was, a broken computer staring me in the face.

Then I had a thought.

How badly do you want this?

What?

How badly do you want this?

Badly.

[Silence]

I had been hearing advertisements for TD Curran on my local radio station the last few months.  After looking at other places for used Macs, TD Curran gave me the best deal over the phone.  Last Saturday, I strapped Polina in her car seat and drove to their store.

While Polina twirled her pink Princess Sofia umbrella in the spacious store, I looked at two used Macbook Pros before me, a 2010 model for $699 and a late 2011 model for $799.  The sales clerk, Kenneth, suggested the late 2011 model because it is very similar to the brand new model and came loaded with the latest operating system from Apple.  It was on the edge of what I wanted to spend, but still $300 less than a new computer.  Chump change to some, but a respectable hill for me.

It wasn’t my Macbook.  For one, it was silver with black keys.  The mousepad didn’t have right and left clicks.  The part of the keyboard where my wrists touched felt slippery, owing to the aluminum material.  The connector was a different shape, though still the same size.

But it also had some positives.  Aluminum doesn’t absorb body oils like the plastic on my old computer and the keyboard therefore looked brand new.  The keyboard was backlit, which I always found attractive.  It was also fast, very fast.

The stress of making a new commitment led me to default to my compulsive, nervous state.  I told Kenneth I would get my laptop case from my car to see whether the Macbook Pro would fit.  A casual introduction , so to speak, but I also needed to get out of the store and think outside the box.

My pink nylon laptop case that I bought the same day as my original Macbook had never had another computer inside of it.  The soft black corduroy inside the case had kept my old Macbook safe for eight years.  As I carried the now empty case under my arm back to the store, the other arm holding Polina’s hand, I felt excited and melancholy about sharing this private space with another computer.  Polina was impervious to my dilemma, contently playing with her umbrella.

Maybe buying a new computer sounds thrilling to some, but that’s not how I felt.  I didn’t find this enjoyable one bit.  My defenses were up and I was tense.

I went inside the air conditioned store, grateful to be out of the heat, and lay the 2011 model on top of my case.  It fit.

Kenneth walked back to me from his computer.

“I’ll give it to you for $699.”

What?!  He had offered $100 off the machine, or the same price as the 2010 model.  Gratitude filled my torso.

“I looked at the prices for this model online.  You could buy it off eBay for $650, but ours comes with a 90 day guarantee.”

Buying from an individual buyer was out of the question for me.  I didn’t want to risk getting a virus (I’m not that easy) or have someone else’s baggage affect the computer’s performance.   I wanted a warranty and I wanted a technician to make sure the computer was scrubbed and as clean as possible.

“Thank you,” I whispered with my hands clasped to my chest, like an adoring fan.

I played on the computer to make sure everything was working.  I watched two videos simultaneously without problems.  It was beautiful, just like my old machine.  I was sold as much as I could have been under the circumstances.

Kenneth ran my card and I signed on the dotted line.  I came back two hours later to a  scrubbed and newly loaded machine, ready for my imprints.

I carried my new computer back in the pink case I had purchased for my old Macbook eight years ago.

In some traditions a man marries his brother’s widow to support her and her children. That’s how I feel about this new Macbook.  My previous Macbook died and I bought another family member.  I didn’t want to, but that’s what I did to keep doing what I’m doing.

Mazel Tov.

The Mother’s Day that Almost Wasn’t

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Our Sunday began as any ordinary day.  My daughter woke me up at 7:45 am.  I gave her a bath and we went through our normal routine to get ready for the day.  I made breakfast, washed the dishes, and did three loads of laundry.  At 11 am, my friend from Russia skyped me.  The previous day was May 9, “Den Pobedy” or Victory Day, which is a huge holiday over there.  I congratulated him on the defeat of Hitler.

“We couldn’t have won the war without you,” I said.

Because there is no Mother’s Day holiday in Russia, I didn’t receive any recognition. At that moment, I had a thought: “what is more important, the defeat of Hitler or Mother’s Day?”  I sided with Hitler’s defeat, and it made me feel slightly better.

While I was doing my chores, Peter worked on his car.  We had planned to take a trip to Big Four Mountain. He changed the oil, cleaned the air filter, replaced the brake and power steering fluids and added transmission fluid.  Frankly, he did stuff I don’t know how to do, so I’m grateful that one of us knows how to do these things. He thanked me for the breakfast, and when he saw me skyping with my friend, asked if we could skype with his mother.

“Aha,” I thought.  “He is going to mention Mother’s Day.”

Once we connected, he took my laptop to the backyard to show her our blooming rhododendrons.

I decided to take a shower. How could he remember his own mother and not wish me a Happy Mother’s Day?

Cliff at Big Four Mountain
Cliff at Big Four Mountain

The ride to Big Four Mountain was uneventful.  There was no mention of Mother’s Day.  We passed some landmarks that reminded me of a time several years ago when Pete and I rode in on his motorcycle. We got off at a spot and Pete insisted I ride his motorcycle by myself on a portion of the road leading to the park.  I didn’t even have a license to ride a motorcycle, nor was I comfortable with the weight of his bike. He was so insistent, I caved in, and I hated him for it the whole time.  I was never so happy to reach the halfway point and turn around. I was happy I pulled back into the parking lot alive.

We were getting closer to the park entrance and there was still no mention of Mother’s Day.

Pete had been talking about visiting Big Four Mountain for several weeks now.  Our weekends have been busy, but I decided to accommodate his wishes.

He never even asked me what I wanted to do for Mother’s Day.

Big Four Mountain range
Big Four Mountain range

By the time we got to the park, the thoughts in my head put me into a bad mood. The plan was to have a picnic together before walking to the ice caves. When he opened my side of the door, I told him I wanted to rest in the car.

He responded, “I need your help carrying the supplies.”

He only needs me to carry the supplies.

Pete took Polina to have a picnic.

Great, they’re having a picnic without me on Mother’s Day. Just my luck.

When Pete came back and asked again what was wrong, this time, I told him directly. To my surprise, he apologized, said he has been self-absorbed recently, and wished me a Happy Mother’s Day. He said he had intended to wish me a Happy Mother’s Day at the picnic.

And just like that, the weight was lifted. The day was salvaged and we had one of the best days of our lives this year. Since we got a later start, there were fewer people at the ice caves, and we had the entire picnic area to ourselves on the way back. (He told me he just hung out with Polina and that they hadn’t eaten without me.) We watched a robin look for worms, some small black birds (sparrows? starlings?) zig zag in the air looking for insects, and on the way out of the park, several deer jump across the road. It was a lovely evening.

We still have some challenges ahead of us and are by no means out of the woods, but I am so grateful we were able to have a nice day and spend quality time together as a family.

Here are some pictures from our trip.

Every journey begins with a single step.  The start of our trip.
Every journey begins with a single step. The start of our trip.
Interacting with nature.
Interacting with nature.

 

Polina preferred walking on rocks.
Polina preferred walking on rocks at every opportunity.
Our family together.
Our family together.
The ice cave.  There used to be several but this is the only one left on the trail.  The ice cave used to be closer to the rock we are sitting on.
The ice cave. There used to be several but this is the only one left on the trail. The ice cave used to be closer to the rock we are sitting on.
The way back.
The path back.

When a Mother’s Love Isn’t Enough

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The last week or so Polina has been having a hard time emotionally.  A really hard time.  She starts screaming at the slightest annoyance.  It could be something as simple as me putting a toy in a place she does not want or my husband correcting her placement of a puzzle piece.  Sometimes I don’t even know why she’s screaming.  It has been really irritating, to say the least.

Today, when I returned from a training in time to put her to bed, she was very happy to see me.  Then when it was time to get ready for bed, another side came out. She screamed because I took off her Hello Kitty shirt to put on a warmer shirt.  (We are still sleeping in layers and using electric blankets out here in April.)  I kept telling her that she can wear her Hello Kitty shirt over the warmer shirt, but either she didn’t understand or she didn’t believe me.  (This is a shirt Polina fell in love with at my neighbor’s garage sale last week and which she did not take off for the next four days.  I hid it in the laundry basket and finally washed it today.  As soon as it came out of the dryer, Polina put it on.)

Polina was inconsolable.  She kicked.  She screamed.  She reached for her desired Hello Kitty shirt and tried to pull it over her head.  She refused me putting on a sweat shirt.  She is one strong, willful, determined kid.

Perhaps I would have acquiesced to her demands if she didn’t already have a runny nose the past two weeks, probably from me acquiescing to her demands to run barefoot around the house. I don’t know how other people are affected by a child’s screaming, but Polina’s screams tear at my insides.  It is difficult to bear.  My mother would have left her alone to cry it out.  Peter’s mother would have spanked her a long time ago.  Neither one of these is appealing to me.

It occurred to me that there is a third way, and that is to surround her with love until she calms down.

I tried to do that.  She pushed me away.  She kept screaming.  I was at my wit’s end.  Love and irritability are not compatible.

“Please stop,”  I said.

She gave me the sign for “owie,” tapping her head with her fist.

“Where is the owie?” I asked. She pointed to me.  I was giving her an owie because I took off her Hello Kitty shirt.  Or maybe it was because I was telling her to stop.

This was ridiculous.  My child has a runny nose and I wasn’t going to let her sleep in a short sleeved shirt. I finally got her other arm into the warmer shirt, pulled out the Hello Kitty shirt and put it on.

And just like that, she stopped crying.

She got what she wanted.

“Night night,” she said calmly.  If it wasn’t for her red face and the beads of tears under her eyes you wouldn’t have known that she just had a fit.

I lay down next to her as she fell asleep.

“I love you,” I said.

Polina pointed to the ceiling and said something in her own language.

“I love you,” I said again, and kissed her head three times, a nightly ritual, and put her hand in mine.

A few minutes later, she fell asleep. I don’t know how much love it takes to quiet someone.  In the end it was the Hello Kitty shirt that quieted her down.  But I hope one day, she’ll know, and it will be enough.