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What things cost.

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

So.

This morning was my first morning at Target.  I did the whole orientation thing yesterday, which was really just watching movies and doing paperwork.  Afterward I felt pretty good- but still in the back of my head I wondered if it’d be worth it.  3am is early, and my little boy is going through a rough spurt with sleeping again.  As The Keeper of the Schedule, I wondered if I could be away so often and not see repercussions.  I wondered if the money was worth it- especially since I’d only need to do 2.5 more hours of piano a week to make up the difference.  And I’m getting new students lately.  Except that it’s never a sure thing.  I felt everyone around me barely keeping themselves from saying, “Don’t do it.”  But I think they must have known that I had to do it for myself, to figure some things out.

So I went.  I woke up at 2am, showered (rather luxuriously, actually.  I had time to shave my legs and just sit and steam for a few minutes) threw some laundry in, and ate breakfast alone in the kitchen (John made me muffins last night)  and then headed out. When I got there I approached the crowd of about 10 people at the door and said, “Hello. I was worried I’d have to stand out here all alone.  I’m new.”  And then I apparently grew 4 heads and shot a rocket out of my butt, because no one said a word.  They just stared.  And smoked.  And mumbled things to each other, the only intelligible word being the “F” word.  And no, I don’t mean formula.

We got into the building and a guy handed me a metal thing and said, “You’ll need this. Follow them.”  I was all, “Whoa…what is this?  It’s a KNIFE!”  Honestly, I’ve never had a job where they gave me a knife before.  Let me think about that…yeah.  Nope.  Never a knife.  So I followed the herd and was given an assignment…and just went about it.  Get the boxes into the aisles.  Get the stuff onto the shelf.  It was actually a pretty intense workout, and aside from the fact that I was FREAKING PARANOID that I was going to cut myself in my pocket with my knife (conversation:  “This thing makes me nervous.”  “What thing?”  “This knife thing.  It just slides to open.  There’s not safety.  That’s it.  Things slide in my pocket all the time.”  “It won’t slide open in your pocket.”  “Shouldn’t they give us a special little belt for this?  I mean, I could cut my leg AND my new pants.”  “It won’t slide open in your pocket.”  silence.  “You’re sure you’ve NEVER heard of anyone cutting their leg open?”) and that I could never remember where I set my water bottle…it was just eh.  For about an hour.  Then it got bad.

I have to tell you that I almost named this post “My Night with the Fringe People.”  Some of the people there were normal and nice, and some were not.  A lot of them were really petty, like small children squabbling over who had to do what.  I helped one guy for FIVE MINUTES and he was all glowing grateful.  That’s sad.  In my house we help each other a lot.  It’s part of what people do for other people.  It’s actually…you know…part of what life is about.  Not there.  You claim your “job” and then you do it as fast and as crappily as you can, and then you pawn off anything you don’t want to do on people who know less, who are new, or who get caught standing around looking for something to do.  One guy stood in an aisle for 3 minutes bellowing, “WHO’S AISLE IS THIS???”  Finally I said, “HOLY CRAP, I’LL DO IT WHEN I’M DONE WITH THIS ONE IF YOU DON’T WANT TO DO IT THAT BAD.”  The manager came by and said, “Hey, do you have any questions?”  And I said, “Yeah, what is all this “Who’s aisle is this?” stuff?  Aren’t we just supposed to keep working throgh them?” (I actually wanted to know.)  He laughed and walked away.

Other main topics of conversation: Child support and the lack of it, the fact that they were working this job just to “f* with” child support (apparently you max out on hours at Target around 20…which means they can tell their babymammas that they are doing everything they can while still providing diddly squat), more than I’d like to know about what young older men “team members” think that younger men “team members” do in the lotion aisle at 4am, the places they like to party, the places they like to stick their kids so that they can party…there were some hardcore crazy people there.  Then there were the super serious workers who looked down on the partiers.  They didn’t say a word to me.   And then there were the fringe people.  Some, like me, who looked uncomfortable at the surprising  juxtaposition of the Target Culture in the orientation video and the allowances made to the “Flow Team.”  Who are apparently allowed to tease each other about homosexuality, masturbation, infidelity, as well as loss of teeth, eyes and other vital body parts.

One guy was really nice, and asked me about Camper and about why I’m working and about everything.  He asked me my last jobs and about my education and my experience, and then asked, “Why are you working here?”  I said, “Because…”

As I put stuff on shelves, things that I would have loved for Camper, to decorate our home, books and music and food…I just kept thinking, “You know what?  I might be stuck, and we might be poor.  But I don’t NEED this.”  As in literally, that piece of something that I was putting on the shelf- it all seemed so…seasonal.  Cheap.  Unimportant.  More than just stuff… I want to build up a savings account, I want to be able to buy nice things for Christmas, I’d like an iphone.  I want a house and a second car.  I want to be more self-sufficient, and I want to get out of debt.  But the money for the experience- what would it cost me to work this job?  So much, it seems.

First: Sleep.  And not just mine.  John got no sleep last night.  Camper got no sleep last night.  I doubt many people got much sleep last night.  So this isn’t just my sacrifice to make.

Second: Health.  Autoimmune disorder and lack of sleep.  That’s all I have to say.

Third: Time.  I bet you a million dollars that my son will never, never remember if we buy him one thing or no things or eighteen things for Christmas this year.  (A perk of kids being born so young.  They don’t really remember that kind of stuff.)  The number of presents he opens at Christmas will in no way become a part of his character.  And that part of me that made it a part of mine is gone now.  If I have to choose between being there Christmas morning surrounded by things, or being here every morning when my kid wants to eat and cuddle and tell me his dreams…then I know where I want to be.  Here.  I have no. freaking. idea. how I got that messed up.

Fourth: Sanity.  They already started to play the game, “You have to stay five or ten more minutes.”  “Well, my husband has to go to work, I have to leave now.”  “Well, that team could use some help over there.”  (The same team that was working freaking slow all night and being super childish.)  “I was told I could leave by 8.  I did the tasks I was assigned. I’m going home now.” And then I worried about MY behavior, although THEY were the ones not being up front and honest with expectations.  I hate that crap.

Fifth: Self-respect.  It was so hard to be with those people.  And before that sounds AWFUL, let me explain.  Honestly, I can’t say I’ve made better choices than them or have a better plan.   I’m not smarter than anyone or better in any way.  We were all different and if I got to know them better I’m sure they’d all have their own strengths and talents.  But the horrible things everyone around me seemed to be saying….it was bad.   I respect myself, and I love my family.  And I act like it.  I don’t say dirty things about my spouse to my coworkers.  I don’t say dirty things to my coworkers period.  (Ok Anisa, maybe you. That one time.)  I don’t demean my child or his importance in my life, or talk about him like he’s a bill to pay.  When I do work, whatever it is, I want to do it well.  There is no kind of work that is beneath me, and if the environment had been different there this morning, I could totally see myself going back.  Exercise combined with money is a good thing. But I felt like crap the whole time I was there, half wondering if anyone had ever used their slidey knife in self-defense.  It made me disappointed in people.  And if you don’t need to have something in your life that does that, don’t.

Sixth: Flexibility. The job is not flexible.  They said it was.  It’s not.  The end.

Seventh: Time. Can we go back to time for just a second?  I don’t know how long we’re going to be struggling.  I don’t know that there won’t be a time when John and I will both have to work job on top of job to make ends meet, barely.  But right now I have time.  We have a place to live where we have minimized our costs.  We have family around that love us.  We have a son who changes more in one day than most adults do in a month.  I don’t want to miss it.  I don’t want to add unnecessary things to my life that crowd out the good.

So yes.  I learned a lot last night.  I learned that I prefer budgeting over trying to find a way to make just a few more bucks.  I learned that HOLY CRAP MY MOM WAS A GENIUS when she suggested I teach piano, and I’m going to put more effort into it.  Because I just realized that I love doing it.  I might even start taking lessons again myself to work on my confidence.  I learned that when I feel bad about myself because of what we don’t have, I am WAY off base.  We might not have money or the independence we want RIGTH NOW, but we’re working on it.  The best we can.  And I learned that I’m going to give myself like, 50 Christmas presents this year.  Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning between now and then with my kid and my husband.

The end.

Upside Down

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

Yesterday John and I spent a very nice day traveling, in the temple, being together.  I had only small amounts of anxiety about leaving my kid…which is the nice thing about live-in grandparents. (Or wait…are we the live in’s…anyway…)  They know the routine.  They know when the routine isn’t going to work.  They can both try to keep the rules and go with the flow.  I’m am confident that Camper had a very good day.

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It wasn’t until we got home that everything went pear shaped.  He woke up about half an hour after we got home and FLIPPED OUT.  Snot running down his face, couldn’t breath, couldn’t go to sleep.  Just miserable.  It took a BAP to calm him down and get him to sleep again.  Two hours later, up again.  This time the trick was some cuddle-time in mom and dad’s bed, Saturday Night Football (he was probably the only one interested in what we were seeing) and eventually, about 15 minutes of King Fu Panda.  All the while I’m trying to figure out whether this is a cold?  teething?  extreme gas pains?  He was snotty, red-nosed, drooly, congested, burpy and otherwise gassy, and just plan unhappy.  I wondered if it was because we had been gone all day?  Who knows.  I got him down again…and a few minutes later…up again.  I ended up sleeping on the floor of his room, catering to him every hour or two like a newborn, and even spent a couple of hours laying on the floor with him.  He got some sleep, I did not.  Not with the vaporizer puffing away in the corner.  All I had to do was fall into a deep enough sleep to not notice him crawling away, and we’d be adding burns to his list of maladies.  He woke up at 4:30 or 5am, like he’s been doing this week (someone, please! help me!) and seemed happier to be playing and awake.  I think it was 6 when I went in to John and asked for him to take a turn, which he did.  And I went to sleep.  And woke up at 10am.  The time church starts.

Crap.

So we missed church, which John and I were actually both looking forward to.  My Dad was recently called into the bishopric and was going to speak today- it kind of feels like we missed something special.

But we got to see some special things staying home from church, too.  Like Camper pooing in the bath.  (Inaugrual event.)  And Camper puking on his highchair tray.  (Not an inaugural event.)  You know, exiting stuff like that. I got to do laundry even on a SUNDAY because…well…SPECIAL bedding is SPECIAL.

September 002

A few naps later, and some food and water throughout the day, and he seems okish.  Still stuffy.  Maybe teething?  But let’s just cross our fingers and hope we get some sleep tonight.

Because another night of being up and another day of trying to sleep is no fun.  I prefer my life rightside up, thank you very much.

September 031

And tonight, in the position of prominence…we have the llama.

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

For about a week now my Dad’s hat has been the “item” that Camper kept hidden behind the big blue chair.  As the last hour’s madness dies down and I finally figure out how to plug my laptop IN, I settle down on the couch and realize that the llama has taken the hat’s place.  Take it for what you will.  Maybe he’s telling me he’d really like some wool soakers???

Anyway.

After I put Camper in bed about an hour and a half ago, I heard some weird coughing.  This is not abnormal for my son, who likes to choke on his own spit.  John says he gets it from my brother Jonathan.  (Seriously, this might be true.  He chokes on nothing all of the time.)  Then I heard Camper talking to himself.  If he stays awake for more than 10 minutes it usually means one thing.  Poop.  Not this time people, this time it was puke.  I went in there to find him patting it.  A little pile of weird chunky orange puke.

Yum.

So I changed his sheets, threw his SPECIAL BLANKET in the washer with the backup SPECIAL BLANKET that I bought this week and haven’t bothered to wash yet (smart), and prayed that I could find another fleece blanket in our assortment of baby blankets that rarely get used these days.  I did, and Camper and I settled into the chair in his room.  I went to nuzzle his baby hair, and got a face full of puke.  ON TOP OF HIS HEAD.  All I can think is that he was either rubbing it in his hair (I have a theory about this.  Whenever he comes across an unknown substance or something particularly goey, he rubs in on top of his head.  Maybe the soft spot is a conduit into some kind of “substance identification” ap that babies are born with. Anyway.)  or he did one of his new and almost perfected triangle head/hand/foot downward dog wannabe stands in it.  Needless to say, the bed got restripped, the blanket I found thrown in the wash along with the PJ’s he was wearing, and he got a BAP! at 6:45 pm.

So now I’m still doing laundry.  I hope he’s not sick and just choked on some spit and up came cheesy bread…sickness would suck.  Poor little guy.  He’s sleeping now, and his blankets are in the dryer.

First nighttime puking experience I’ve ever had.

First of many, I hope not.

It’s not as bad as it sounds, Interweb. I’m Just Venting.

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

I’m beginning to think that my religious life, and my whole life, by extension, is taking on a “Sorry-esque” quality. Or maybe it’s Trouble. Whichever one lets you work towards some central goal just to get knocked back to start without warning.

It seems that every time I make it through just enough non-fun stuff…every time I weather some financial storm or even just a week with no change without complaining, and even feeling some hope, something eventually happens that makes it all break down. And I get impatient and loss my cool and say something angry about how really…all the things we do in “faith” and have done aren’t really adding up. So why do them? And the ugly person that lives inside me comes out and throws a fit and makes the calm, loving, grateful me forget for just a moment in time all wonderful things I DO have. And then my little piece in the Sorry game gets bumped back to start. And then it gets dropped under the table and stepped on.

I wonder if I will ever be patient enough and get through enough obstacles that God will finally, finally say, “Ok, she’s proven that she can trust. Let her move on.”

And I’m starting to worry about how these little fits must look to the people who give me so much, and love me so much, and depend on me to be sane.

I wish I could say I’ll make it to that central goal without freaking this next time. But I don’t know how long it’ll take. And if it takes longer than one menstral cycle, I have absolutely no control over the loss of patience.

And that’s the final word on that.

Now I Know Why You Don’t Review Crap.

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

So, up until now the reviews I’ve been asked to do have been something I’ve enjoyed.  A company contacts me, I receive something to review and give away.  That’s all.  Up until now.  I got an email from ebeanstalk asking for volunteers to review toys.  I thought, “Hey, why not?”  They weren’t offering a giveaway, but I thought’d I do something without the giveaway for once, and if I really loved it, maybe I’d self sponsor one.

Mistake.  First of all, they sent me the toy to try, and THEN I got an email telling me HOW to review the toy.  Um…I’m pretty sure that if you want me to agree to some special stipulations, you better tell me BEFORE the toy gets here.  They even had an “example” paragraph of what to write, included here for your benefit:

Picking toys is not easy and there is a toy website called ebeanstalk, dedicated to selecting good, safe learning toys and baby gifts. BUT they need help from moms like me to help pick the toys. The toy they sent is called ______ from International Playthings, who makes great baby toys Here is the deal on this toy…

I KNOW it was meant to be an “example” and that I was supposed to “customize it,” but that is NOT a review.  They were asking me for a PLUG.  That’s it.  I can change all the words around I want, so long as I give them their links.  I had such issues with this little paragraph here.  So many, in fact, that I’m officially going to send the stupid toy back to them.  Camper didn’t like it that much anyway.

But it didn’t end there.  I wrote to them and expressed my lack of enthusiasm at the way they wrote a letter with this sentence in it:

Please save this email.  Here are the guidelines for reviewing your toy when it arrives …they are simple, but must be followed.

and also this sentence:

REMEMBER TO PLEASE CUSTOMIZE THE LANGUAGE AND MAKE IT YOUR OWN. THE ONLY THING WE REQUEST IS THAT FOR THE INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH, THAT YOU PLEASE LEAVE THE 3 LINKS IN.

The email also included directions for shutting down my computer and microwaving popcorn.  (Just kidding.)

I received an answer saying that I was meant to customize the paragraph (not my point) (and thanks, I read that the first time) and to please link to my review.  Um, well, I’m not writing it now.  I’m sending the toy back, because to tell you the truth, Camper isn’t going to miss it at all.  It wasn’t that fabulous.

The thing that REALLY killed me was that the email said, “we only want the best.”  If you want the best reviewers out there, you wouldn’t be asking for volunteers, you wouldn’t be sending out an “example” review that sounds like it was written by a disinterested 8th grader, and you would actually read my email and respond the the actual problem.  The actual problem being: it is insulting to be told what to write on my own stupid blog.

So there ya go, ebeanstalk, you got your link.

The Story of How I Became a Quilter

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

My Mom made me a beautiful quilt for my birthday.  She gets them quilted professionally at a cute little quilt shop about 45 minutes north of us, you can read this post on my inability to fit in with the quilters.

But anyway.  Today we drove up there to drop off my quilt top and to pick out a backing for it.  Last minute Bubby and John decided to come along, too.  Bubby seemed pretty happy wandering around the quilt shop while my Mom and I looked for a fabric to match the top we brought…when all of a sudden we heard it.  The gag and splot.  Camper gagged, and the puke sploted.  On the hardwood floor.  And on a ream of fabric.

I immediately tried to clean it up, but seeing as how it’s kind of an upscale “get your fancy fabric here” kind of store, I knew that the puke would not add to the overall pattern. And although the fabric was actually one that coordinates with his room decor (quite well…) he definitely hit some $8.95 a yard.  I don’t know about you, but if your kid throws up on some merchandise I kind of feel the need to buy it.  So I did whatever any self-respecting parent would do.  I found something that coordinated and bought a yard of each.  The lady put the pukey spot in a separate bag for me.

Then I picked out some flannels, too.  Because why not?  So now I’m trying to figure out how to get motivated to change said pieces of fabric into actual blankets.  I had a five minute thought process earlier in which I convinced myself to simply wrap the fabric around my child as is.  That could work, right?

I think I’ll look at this as an opportunity to delve into the quilter world at least a BIT before moving on.  Maybe I’ll like it, maybe it’ll turn out like scrapbooking…who knows?  I think it’s better to do it now with my Mom nearby to make sure that the fabric my kid choose all on his own at least gets made into SOMETHING.  Right?

Gingham

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

I think gingham should just go away. For ever.