Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Lost and Found

I never thought I'd see her or talk to her again. I didn't know she even thought about me or had been inquiring about me for the past 20 years. My last memories of her were a drawing she sent me of a panda or teddy bear (it was so long ago, the details have faded) and a phone conversation that lasted maybe 5 minutes. Even though she was my half sister, we didn't speak the same language; we still don't. But I thought since we lived so far away-countries away- that our relationship, like so many other things, was lost in translation.

All it took was a Facebook friend request. That's how close we actually were! I feel angry about that. I feel like I could've known my sister years earlier. Through one keystroke, a click on the "send" button, my sister found me. My older sister found me! She's not my only sibling. I have, including her, five. One whole sister, a half brother and sister from my mother, and a half brother and sister from my father.

My father immigrated here from Central America in the late 70's and married my mother in the early 80's. Little did my American mother know, my father came here undocumented and my mother was his ticket to a legitimate life in the United States. My father believed, as many immigrants do, the streets here in the US are paved with gold. Coming here is a way out of the very real misery and hardships that exist in their home countries. They believe they will have their whack at a piece of the "American Dream". But for many, they strike out. They spend their days toiling and working until their knuckles, knees, and backbones are worn to slivery remnants of the youthfulness they initially possessed. My dad fared somewhere in the middle.

He was a factory worker and worked just hard enough to maintain a paycheck. I don't know what he does now for a living. I deliberately stopped knowing about 15 years ago. That's when my father relocated to Arizona with his new very young wife and stepson, and essentially became a "phone dad". I got a call for my high school graduation. He said he didn't have enough money for a plane ticket but very soon after, sent me pictures of his vacation to the east coast. He called to congratulate me on graduating college (with honors might I add) and an empty promise that he'd make it for this one. He didn't, nor did I expect him.

I stopped caring about him long ago.  He wasn't present in any part of my life and more importantly, he had sexually abused my older half sister (his stepdaughter). The only thing he has ever been good for is inflicting unnecessary pain. I'm not sad he's absent (a somewhat mutual decision) from my life. The only thing that saddens me, is in his absence, my sense of culture and belonging and family was usurped. I lost half of my extended family. No paternal grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers, sisters, neices, or nephews. The potential to know them, counted as collateral damage from my father's mayhem.  And then I get that Facebook friend request.

Thank God my husband knows Spanish! My husband is also half latino. He was fortunate enough to have lived with the parent who spoke Spanish. He is much more "latino" than I in that sense. My older sister and I spoke that night. I was in shock I think and said very few words. Husband was like "what do you want to say to your sister?" I was like "uhhhhhhh". I mustered "te amo mucho". That means I love you a lot. She said the same. We giggled like little girls. No translation needed. She didn't have a web camera but we wanted to see each other. We decided to try to video chat the next day. She would go to an internet cafe. We must have said I love you in English and Spanish a hundred times.

I spent the next hour uploading photos of my family onto her Facebook page. Kids and me and Husband. I was so happy to share! I looked through every picture of her's and mulled over every mundane detail. The color of the walls- lime green. Very latino. Always a tank top, never a sweater. Dewy skin and sun-kissed noses. Brown and fair hues of pigmentation in the same family. Curly hair and straight hair; all ebony. Authentic latino food. This is what I longed for and here it was staring back at me in photos, and these were my family's photos.

The next day she called again. The first time, I rejected the phone call. I think it was too much. I was overwhelmed. It's funny. I know she's my sister because she did just what I would've done. She called back a second time right away. My husband gently encouraged me to answer. After about half an hour of technical difficulties, (texting and messaging and failed Skyping and grainy FB video chatting with no sound) I saw my sister's face. I saw bits and pieces of me in her. We made the same funny faces and we both had curly hair. I got to see my niece and it was like looking at an exact replica of my younger sister here in the States. I belonged.

We talked for almost 2 hours. My husband stayed nearby to translate. And inevitably the topic came up of our father not teaching me Spanish (which in latino culture is a big deal). I explained to her he left when I was 5. He didn't have time to teach me. She cried because we each shared a common story. He left her when she was 8months old. She still talks to him. Every month she calls him and every month, absolutely unsolicited, he tells her he has no money. She's not asking for money. She just wants to talk. She cried again. I tell her he's not rich but he's very comfortable. He's lying about not having money. We used to hear that lame line too. "Daddy, can you take us to the amusement park?" "No money. Lo siento." Cheapskate to the max.

Then a question popped into my mind. Years ago he used to tell us he mailed money and clothes and other helpful things to them. I asked my sister if he actually did this. She said she never got it. I cried. Her life was harder than mine and I feel a little guilty. After my father abandoned his first family, my sister's mother couldn't deal with it. She was sent with the equivalent of a  hundred bucks to live with her grandmother. Twice rejected. "Duro", the Spanish word for hard was the life she was given. She told me how, over the years, she asked for us often and my father always came up with an excuse as to why she couldn't contact us. There was no excuse worthy of keeping me from my sister! We both cried. I realized very quickly that you can't catch up on 20 or more years in one fell swoop. This is why our lives are, God willing, long. This is why some books possess 200 or 300 pages. This is why TV mini-series exist! You can't squeeze 20 years into 2 hours.

Yesterday she added me as a "sister" to her Facebook page. I almost melted into a puddle on my couch. Instead, I joyously confirmed that status change. Yesterday I shared a picture of my oldest son on her timeline. He lost his first tooth. I had to google translate how to say that phrase because my husband wasn't around. This relationship is going to be work :) I need Rosetta Stone! She liked the photo and said how handsome he was "que guapo!". I brimmed with an emotion I'm still trying to figure out. Somber joy; sweet with a bitter end.

I was reminded of the story of Job in the Bible. Job's life was obliterated by the Devil. Everything was taken from him except his life. But the beauty of this story is, because of Job's unrelenting faithfulness, God restored Job giving him twice as much as he had before. I grew up without a father; thinking for many years I would always have this splintered and disjointed family life; only knowing a few shallow layers of my family history. I totally felt like a historical orphan. But here, after many years, God has restored what was withheld from me. It feels like a double portion of family! My husband joked that the number of overtly latino names popping up in our friend suggestions has increased exponentially since accepting my sister's friend request. Some of the names are familiar- I know them to be family and I am happy for now I can rest in the comfort that my family is not lost, but actually found.    

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

A Dream

I'm a vivid dreamer. I always have been. There are seasons where I dream very little and then there are seasons where I dream often. Sometimes they are nightmares or plain nonsense. Sometimes I feel like they are messages from God; encouragements, or warnings, or messages for others. I've woken up in cold sweats, tears, and in states of pure joy and bliss. I had a dream this morning and it left such an imprint on me I had to write it down: 

I was preparing to take my son on a fieldtrip. Like usual (as in the conscious world) I was rushing to get things done so I could leave but I was late. I only had a couple of minutes to leave but decided to turn on the TV and check the weather channel to see if my choice of clothing was weather appropriate. On the TV screen I see the weather man reporting on a lightning storm happening in another part of the city. What I saw was stunning. The beautiful bolts of lightning looked as if they were searching for something to strike if only to create its intense light. As I watched, the lightning intensified and the bolts became more frequent and concentrated. The sky was a cavernous indigo with flaky edges of eggplant purple. I stared and was rendered immobile at what my eyes saw.  This reverent fear crept into me. The lightning bolts were more powerful and shone brighter than me. Their existence was enviously simple: just because.
The color of the sky deepened and the lightning bolts luminescence intensified exponentially. It was almost unbearable. Eventually the lightning bolts became so dense they began to swirl around each other; creating this twisting helix of bolts but narrowing into this one intense point of light on the ground. The bolts created this interesting tension between beauty and danger and I couldn't turn away. And then it happened. It's as if the earth couldn't take the intensity the lightning bolts offered, so the earth had to respond to what it was given. The ground sparked in intense colors I had never seen on earth. The sparks flew with flecks of debris into the indigo air. And poised against that sky flew oranges and golds and neon pinks and colors I have no name for. I gasped in awe and wonder but still felt scared. 
The lightning didn't relent and neither did the earth. And then I saw the shockwave. It had become too much and a great explosion on the scale of an atomic bomb impact commenced. The TV camera capturing this footage shook and from a remote location, the Weather Man hollered "Are you getting this?!?" I could hear the utter terror in his voice and it triggered me to snap out of my hypnosis. 
In my home, far away from this occurrence, my face met the wooden planks of the floor. I was trying to brace for some imminent impact that would eventually reach me. But before I could truly enter into a state of panic and fear of utter annihilation, my 3 year old woke me up holding a sports bra asking me why I left it in his room.
This is as close to what I saw in my dream as I could get
   

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Ponderings on the Fierwife Sub - culture

So, I'll admit. I'm new to all of this. My husband has been an official fireman for almost 4 months. He had 7 months of training so he's nearing a year of doing "fire-manish" things. I have no problem admitting that I am acclimating myself to this brand new chapter of our life. It's different but I don't feel traumatized or emotionally damaged by this experience. If anything was traumatic, it was academy. I thought that would be the easiest on our family but I was wrong. Academy was horrible. They worked the hell out of my husband physically and mentally and then he would easily have 3-4 hours of studying when he came home. So a typical day for us was him leaving waaaaaay before the sun rose, me handling the household, him returning home around 4 or 4:30, him leaving to his "office" (ehm, the bedroom) to study, then me constantly hushing the children so he could study. I definitely was ready for him to be done with academy. When he wasn't studying he was soaking, icing, bandaging, or putting a heat pack on some part of his body. I dressed an incredible amount of bloody knees, elbows and injured body parts. Now I know why a lot of firemen marry nurses- they're always beat up and it's easier to have at-home health care. At times he felt culturally out of touch being a city boy (a BIG city boy) in a room full of country boys.  But, graduation came, (one of the proudest days of my life) and left, and the 24/48 shifts started with no fanfare. He was a fireman.

During the academy process, a friend of mine from church (who ABSOLUTELY coincidentally happens to also be married to a fireman) told me to check out some of these firewife websites. I googled them and discovered this strange world of "firewife-dom". It is a subculture of women who devote their websites and blogs to fire-wife support, encouragement, and talking about how heroic their "firemen" are. Seems admirable. But as I read some of those blog posts, something rubbed me the wrong way about them. I kept reading logs of their days and it all seemed mundane to me. Nothing eventful; just typical. But what truly struck me as odd is how they had seemingly put their husbands on some fiery, charred pedestal. Some referred to their husbands as "My Fireman" or "My FF". They shared about frustrating days with children and step-children, calls from their husbands, and problem-solving tasks that appeared mundane. Wives freaking out because of lost batteries and husbands debating wether or not to come home to find the batteries..........This is what I stumbled upon. I wanted to know more about them and less about the deification of their husbands. But to be honest; in some unhealthy and deviant way, I couldn't get enough of it!  I poured over and trolled for blog after blog and there was no shortage of sappy prose. It was hilarious to me! I couldn't relate in any way to any of these women. If it did anything more for me than be my personal internet literary Real Houswives (totally watered down), it brought up questions about myself and where I fit in this lifestyle.

Do I not relate to these women because I am Christian?
The FF life is not my life; it doesn't define me. I try very hard not to deify my husband. I could care less if I never had a fire-wife friend. I like the friends I have and I don't need a "firewife" to identify with the issues that exist for me as a wife and mother.  I strive to live my life for Christ; trying my best to follow Him. But I have observed, in my husband's short tenure thusfar, that many people live for this culture. All of their friends are fellow firemen, and all of the wives friends are fellow firemens' wives. These women wear cutsie gear that brands them and attend firewife conferences and join firewife forums and become members of firewife websites. They put on formals (like a return to high school) and many other things I'm sure I've not been made privy to just yet. But, many fireman and their families are Christian. So, I'm not sure if following Jesus is the separation I feel from these women.

Is there something wrong with me because I don't pine over my husband when he's on his 24?
The women whose blogs I read seem to worry incessantly about their husbands when they're on shift. They miss sleeping in the bed with their husbands. They don't watch the news because of the stress of seeing a fire their husband may be fighting and possibly hearing/seeing bad news. Ok. Those things are legit and there is definitely an element of danger to a fireman's job. But I love hearing my husband's stories! Some are funny, tragic or heart breaking. I can see the grief on my husband's face when he tells me of a cardiac arrest who didn't make it. How he was straddled over this man pointlessly doing chest compressions because this poor soul was more than dead. My husband was visibly pained describing the look on the patient's coworkers faces as they rushed him out of the office building where he had just arrived. I'm sure that man didn't think he'd be leaving so soon.  

I like being there for my husband to listen to his stories; I don't want him to bottle those things up or feel when he gets home he has to put on a front about his emotions. So I stand in the kitchen (that's where we usually end up in the mornings when he gets off shift) and laugh with him when he talks about "my foot hurt" stories and give him a hug and let him be sad when he tells of cardiac and stroke patients that didn't fare well.

Regarding the whole bed thing, I like sleeping spread eagle in my bed when he's on 24. That's all I got to say about that.


 I don't worry about my husband. I don't fear his profession. I don't spend endless nights up thinking about if I'll see a fireman other than my husband meet me at my door with bad news. I can't do that. 

If I'm being honest, the fears I have are little creeping fears in the future. Will my husband have a healthy back or knees in 15 years; or will he be considering cortisone injections or surgery? What about the increased likelihood of prostate, thyroid, or lung cancer? How many firefighters deal with those issues?  I worry that my husband, after a long and successful tenure at the fire department may one day have a heart attack at a desk. Those are the types of fears I have. But I pray (just to clarify, not those sappy recycled prayers I see plastered all over those FF wife blogs) for my husband's long-term health and our long-term marriage. I pray for well-adjusted children and against cancers and heart attacks and worn-down bodies. I pray for my husband's mind. I pray he won't be traumatized by what he sees. I pray for good solid men of Christ to come around him when he's on shift and that when I'm not around he's being encouraged and encouraging others about the freedom Christ has supplied in his life.

Are there others out there like me?  
We are all searching to belong. Even me. I don't belong to this subculture. I don't feel folded into this community. I don't feel alienated but I don't have much in common. I know my one ff wife friend is similar to me. We've actually had dramatic readings of other FF wife blogs and laughed until we were pink in the face then laughed some more. She gives me hope that there are more of us out there but I've yet to meet them. Please, let me know if you exist. I'd love to chat. If you are similar to the firewives mentioned above, I'd love to chat with you too and understand you better. 


Fiery Wife 

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Something Was Not Right

I was grateful my husband had Mother's Day off. I was really appreciative that he cooked me dinner and mowed the lawn and overall just had a servant's heart toward me today. After good food and great friends and family, we were preparing to drop off a couple of college kids (2 young gentlemen Husband is spiritually mentoring) back at their apartment. I knew this was going to be a cooky night because just before leaving home, I realized I left my purse in a friend's car and had to go in the opposite direction of our college-aged friends apartment. Yes the purse was an inconvenience to fetch but ever so often I tend to leave very important things in very inconvenient places. It happens. 

So, after picking up my purse, we stopped to get some gas and used a gift card to put $20 in the tank. We made our way toward the college student's apartment when we see down the road a ways, a woman pushing and steering her disabled car. Naturally, my husband pulls over to assist. Our 2 friends helped also. After pushing her car around a corner, Husband talked to her. She was quite upset; and shared she needed gas for her car. 

She produced a gas can and we took her and her gas can to the gas station just around the corner. I would not encourage anyone to do what we did but seeing as she was outnumbered 4-1, the odds of her successfully doing something stupid were close to nil.
She was very quiet and when she spoke, it was in near inaudible whispers. She didn't have a place to stay and had run out of gas. She said she pushed her car almost 2 miles by herself. She had no phone. It was quite sad. I gave her my business card but scratched out my personal number. Something told me to do that; not to divulge that information to her. But I did write all of our church's info on the back. She took the card almost reluctantly and I truly felt bad for her situation. Husband came to the car door and told me there's a zero balance on the gift card. Well crap. I realized at that moment that the previous gas station must have put a hold on the card. I thought gas stations stopped doing that though......... I pulled out another card; our bank card with less than $10 on it and in faith, give it to Husband to pay for this stranger's gas. Husband got in the car with the gas and we drove back to Stranger's car. The fumes from the gas can were nauseating. I usually really love the smell of gas. It's a dangerous smell but that evening, the fumes tangoed with the dull headache that was beginning to swirl around my temple causing a dizzying effect.

We returned to her car and Husband got out to put the gas in her car. As she got out, I asked if there's anything we can pray for her about. She said, "Only if you can make food fall out of the sky!" and abruptly left. I watched through the tinted back window of our minivan as this woman did a 180 on my husband and began to snap off on him. She doesn't want the gas and "me and my children will suffer together!" Husband put the gas can down and walks back to the van. Another car stopped to try and help her. We drove off. And as we drive off, we pray for her. Something was not right. We just wanted to help.

We dropped friends off and drove back the way we came. We decided it would be a good idea to call the police because this woman was potentially going to cause an accident and get herself or someone else killed by her erratic actions. As we passed by where Stranger was again, she was on her 3rd set of helpful people, I heard the screech of tires on wet pavement. The car barely missed everyone. We called 911. Weird. Just plain old weird. What else can I say.

Friday, May 9, 2014

Oh......I Music Video Referenced Paula Abdul :(

I really appreciate the support my husband gives me in all of my musical endeavors. I'm starting up a private lesson business (voice and piano), I am the worship director at the church we attend, and I've started writing songs. I could have never done any of this without his blessing and support and I am forever grateful for the support system he's been for me. I need time to practice for Sunday mornings, write, and prepare for lessons. He's been more than gracious about the time I need to devote to these huge aspects of my life. He also keeps my artsy fartsy head out of the creative clouds when I need to and should be focusing on our family. 

His career has facilitated the opportunity for me to pursue aspects of my musicianship I would've never been able to tap had I continued my typical 40+hr/wk teaching career. I am in the summer of my creativity. I am writing songs, and essays and blog posts and reading books and playing music and painting canvases and doodling pictures on the sketchbook app on my phone. I feel more vibrant than I have in 6 years (that's when we started having children). 


One of my doodles. I call it "Swirls"
It's difficult for artsy-fartsys to maintain a healthy and viable family life. Our craft can be so self-centered and our choice in spouse is one that can empower or destroy a family. I am also not oblivious to the fact the divorce rate is significantly increased among firemen. So, our marriage is something we try to keep in focus and consistently strive (and sometimes fight) to maintain healthy lines of communication amongst each other. This is something we are presently learning to do (fyi, we are nearing year 8 of marriage) but have yet to master.  

My husband is not an artsy-fartsy. He loves working out and fighting fires and playing basketball. He barbecues (he indoor cooks also) and drinks beer and cooks with beer :) He's a man's man. And I love it! I deliberately decided to not choose a spouse who was a fellow musician. I wanted someone different from me in every way. I wanted someone who would fill in my gaps and I the same. He's the cherry on top of my sundae and I like to think I'm the peppery watercress in his way too healthy salad. 

My husband is your typical Type-A personality; very regimented and disciplined. He wakes up at the same time each morning. Everything has its place. Disorder frustrates him.  For me, everything can go in any place. He makes the bed and I mess the bed and leave it. His side of the closet is compartmentalized by length of sleeve. All short sleeves together, all long sleeves together. Pants stay with pants, sweaters are folded and placed on the top shelf. His sock drawer is truly a sock drawer. 
My sock drawer, is anything but a sock drawer. Hell, if we're being honest with each other, I don't need a sock drawer, because I can never find a match so usually I go sock-less. My side of the closet..........looks like the clothes dryer projectile vomited my wardrobe from floor to ceiling. When he was in basic training, he had a side job ironing fellow soliders' uniforms. Irons are agains my religion. 

But, I truly appreciate my husband because he is my gentle reminder that the clothes dryer cannot projectile vomit all over the bedroom and that going sock-less usually makes for corn-chip smelling feet. He encourages me that practicing music is a valuable skill but so is cooking and eating the food that's cooked. My children cannot live on corn flakes alone (I saw a Bizzare ER about a toddler whose parents only fed him oatmeal. It wasn't good. There was weak legs and mouth sores involved......). 
My husband makes me better and he's told me I do the same. 

We ain't perfect that's for sure! We have our share of troubles and woes. I don't want to ever give the impression that I'm trying to put on airs. We argue about dumb stuff and have made poor parenting decisions and poor financial choices. I just pray we haven't yet made childhood wounds that will require our children to seek counseling sessions in the future. I've been nasty more times to my husband that I'd like to admit and he'd agree. But I can say this: we attempt to love more than we choose to lash each other with our tongues. We try to support rather than frustrate; talk (even when it's hard) rather than zip our lips and turn our backs. We try to be intimate rather than have make-up sex. Sometimes we're gainfully successful in these endeavors and sometimes I feel like that Paula Abdul music video with that animated Cheetos lookalike cat.............you know- 2 steps forward, 2 steps back. I think it's time to stop; seeing as I just referenced Paula Abdul.      

Friday, May 2, 2014

Waaaaay Too Long Prayers and Thousand-Leggers

Sooo, today was a rough day and by rough I mean, it truly wasn’t rough at all; more interesting than anything. It’s hard not to take my cue from all the other firewife blogs I’ve read and believe that everything bad will happen when your spouse is on duty. Well, my husband was indeed on duty on my “rough” day.

The morning started out with my 6yr old waking up at 6:45am telling my husband he peed the bed. I was still sleeping but heard the exchange between him and my hubby.

Hubby: ok bud, take your clothes off so I can put you in the shower. You smell like pee.
Son: Ok Daddy
5 min later
Hubby: Ok son, brush your teeth and put your clothes on.
Son: Ok Daddy
Hubby: Where’s your book order form? Wife, where’s his book order form?
Wife: Huh? Afoadfncjnifnjdsna.
Hubby: Ok.....
Son: Good morning mommy!!!!!!
Wife: Huh? Asofmsofmasonfsf.
Hubby: Wife, the little one soaked through his pull-up. I took his clothes off.
The Little One: (he somehow made it to my lap) Hi mommy.
Wife: Huh? Hi little one. Where are your clothes?
The Little One: I peed in the bed. 

Son: (with a smile) I peed in the bed too!

And so my day began.....Let the dog out in the back yard. She’s in heat. We were supposed to get her fixed last week but there was a schedule blunder at the vet’s and in one week’s time, yup, blood on the floor. Really?!? Penicillin,Honey Bunches of Oats, Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal, Amoxicillin. Milk and socks and toothbrushes and poopy underwear. I’m sorry’s, rubber band bracelets, lunches and backpacks. It’s not yet 8:30 but we make it into the van and to Oldest Son’s school by 9:02. Whew.

It’s raining but I’m trying to get the word out about my business. So here I am dodging raindrops with the little one, tacking up business advertisements in my local area shops.  I was excited to do that. I wouldn’t put that in my “rough day” category. Aside from the rain, it was exhilarating. Starting up a business, much less a music business, is tough stuff but exciting. Right now I’m five months in and have 2 customers. I have faith more will come; the wait is just excruciating!

We get home and the little one keeps asking for his medicine.
The Little One: Mama, I need my medicine.
Mama: You had your medicine.
The Little One: I need my medicine.
Mama: You had it. This morning. You cannot have it again until bedtime.
The Little One: (through tears) I have to take my medicine.

I’m through. The Little One was diagnosed with a form of Sickle Cell Disease at birth. He’s never had any pain crises (Thank You God!) but takes Penicillin twice daily to back up his immune system. Just to bring you back from toddler-dom, he did indeed have his medicine in the morning and I don’t know why he was so insistent on taking another dose. Then it dawned upon me. It was time for a nap. The tears and illogical requests made perfect sense.

Naptime came and I got this genius idea to change the face of Facebook with an insightful post. Not worth repeating. Ummmm......in retrospect I don’t know how insightful it was, but you gotta have a good laugh at yourself and Facebook said 179 people saw my post.

The rest of the afternoon went fine. Homework, bow and arrows, running, running, running in my house. Disney channel. Pee right in front of the potty. Dirty dishes, crying dog, crying son, crying little one consecutively. Pizza dough. Kneading pizza dough. Mozzarella cheese on the floor. Pineapples, slices of ham, and jalepenos. Mmmmmm. Baths, more penicillin, more amoxicillin (Older Son’s strep) and then I heard a crack. I looked out onto our back patio to see the wind had taken the table and cracked the umbrella my husband left open the other night. I couldn’t leave it out there so I had to figure out how to close a broke patio umbrella. Not rocket science, but all I wanted to do was sit down. My fix involved snapping metal and using a wrench that I didn’t use as a wrench. Bedtime was postponed and Older Son helped me out. Thank you son! OK. 8:30 bedtime for real. Prayer. The little one insists on inventorying his entire day to God. The first 2 minutes are always cute then I’m trying to fit in a closer.

Mama: in Jesus name! .....
The Little One: Mommy! I’m not done! (pause) Jesus thank you for my friends........
Mama: in Jesus name......
The Little One: Wait! I didn’t pray for brother!
Mama: Yes you did.
Son: (rubbing my arm consoling me)
The Little One: OK. In Jesus name. A-men!

Kisses all around and I'm just glad no one asked to speak to Mr. Finger (I'll fill you in about him later). My hubby and I texted back and forth. I really love him! His night has been quiet and I’m thankful. That’s a blessing even though he wants to work. And I sat to write this. I let the dog lay next to me (on top of an old crappy blanket) on the couch. She seemed to appreciate that. She laid her head in my lap seemingly exhausted. Maybe I’m just projecting my own crappy feelings on this dog. She cracks me up when she farts. She farts then looks at her butt, surprised it escaped her. Oh my. And finally, I just killed a thousand-legger. I beat it with my shoe and then finished this sentence. Goodnight.
    Fiery Wife