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Kristen Anne Glover

Five in Tow

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My Pagan Deity of Choice

 

Sun, the shameless self-promoter

If I were an ancient pagan, I’d worship the sun.  In my opinion, none of the other ancient deities comes close to being worthy of the same amount of reverence.

Who would worship the moon?  It’s not even made out of cheese.  Cheese could change the equation, but it’s just a lie promoted by mothers who want their children to become astronauts.

Earth?  In the lineup of ancient deities, earth is the redneck cousin from Alabama.  Don’t hate me.  Religion is a polarizing topic but we can still love.

Wind?  Wind never really stood a chance because of all the jokes made about it in the pagan deity locker room.  It’s hard to feel reverent toward a deity that reminds prepubescent boys of gastrointestinal malfunctions.

Fire?  Before the invention of the S’more, fire was not even a contender.  So it burns things.  Big deal.  Lightening does that.  Insensitive boyfriends do that.  Sun does that.

Fertility?  Eh.   Seriously, what have you done for me lately?

Help me! My feet are so tiny!

No, Sun is where it’s at for me.  Here in the Pacific Northwest, the sun is distant, aloof, and fickle, just like any good pagan deity should be.  You can’t depend on it for anything, and if you try to predict it, you’ll just end up sounding like the Channel 5 weatherman who puts little clouds over every sun in his forecast, just in case, and then tries to makes it sound like “high cloud cover” and “sunshine” are synonymous.

They’re not.

Vicious little clouds…I’m on to you

Nothing can compare to the sun.  When it makes an appearance, the whole world comes out and stands on the sidewalk with arms raised to shield humble eyes from the glory.  With one voice, worshipers chant words of adoration and awe.

“Wow, it’s so bright!”

“It’s making my eyes hurt.”

“Where are my sunglasses?”

“They’re in your other fleece.”

“Oh.  If this keeps up, I might have to mow.”

“Did you know we have a view of the mountains?”

Mommy, that ball in the sky hurts my eyes!

We put on special worship attire like tank tops and shorts and try not to stare at each other’s white legs and remind our husbands that they should take off their socks before putting on their Birkenstocks.  We bask in the knowledge that it could be a good hair day.

The I-5 corridor clogs up as the faithful pilgrimage into the glowing orb bearing sacrificial lattes and liquid Vitamin D.  They squint and drive slower and put down their visors because they know that mere minions can never look directly into the face of a god.  Traffic reporters, who are sun worshiping apostates, try to contain their disdain.

But those of us who are believers send our children out to play and wash the flannel sheets and consider planting roses where the moss is growing in the back.  We stop envying our friends in California.  If the sun stays out long enough, we also stop hating the other 45 states that get more rays than we.  That’s the transformative power of the sun, and that’s why it’s the ancient pagan deity for me.

I’m assuming, of course, that the ancient pagans didn’t worship coffee.

Ancient pagans, you missed the boat on this one

*I am not promoting pagan worship, even if it includes coffee, but I am completely enamored with the Son.

Fiction, Humor, Uncategorized 17 Comments

The Dun-Gym

CE Budd School

No one could hear the screams...

Chapter 3 in a series, beginning here.

If C.E. Budd School was a castle, the gym was the dungeon.  Sunk below ground level, it was cold and dark and filled with various torture devices like the heavy knotted ropes which hung from the ceiling, metal balance beams, and suspicious lengths of volleyball netting.   A kid could scream as loud as he could in that room, and no one on the outside would hear.

Three times a week, we were forced to endure unspeakable punishments in that gym, things like basketball and tumbling and various forms of running and stretching and jumping rope.  It was hideous, and the worst part was, the parents knew all about it and didn’t do a thing, using excuses like, “I had to do it when I was a kid,” as if that made it any better.

Even my teacher was in on it.  When it was time for gym, Mrs. Henry made us line up at the door in reverse alphabetical order.  She thought this was creative and educational, but all it did was make sure Jessica White was first and I was last and everybody else just memorized who they had to stand next to and never thought about it again.

Mrs. Henry held up her finger like we were still in kindergarten, and we all quieted down and copied her. You can’t talk if you have your finger in the air.  It’s like a law or something.

Once we were all lined up and quiet, Mrs. Henry led us snake-like through the halls lined with students’ papers and colorful bulletin boards.  We walked single-file down the steps into the belly of the school where the lights grew dim and the painted walls changed to colorless, glossy subway tiles that reflected our eyes back to us.

The lunch room was on one side of the dark hallway.   Here, the smells of Salisbury steak and overcooked peas mingled with the smell of Pine-sol from the janitor’s closet.  We were so quiet with our fingers up in the air, we could hear the lunch ladies chattering about the latest development on The Young and the Restless, which was a show about people kissing each other and then running around and kissing other people and getting all mad about it.

We filed past the band room where Miss Watkins was trying to teach five boys how to play brass instruments.  Their cheeks were puffed and red, and she had the look of woman who was trying to have more patience than she really had, like the way my mom looked when we were acting up in church and she couldn’t do anything about because God was watching.

The next door opened to the dun-gym.  On the other side, Mr. Peterson would be waiting, and next to him, Ms. Miller.  Mr. Peterson liked it when we called him Coach.  He wore his Loudonville Redbirds hat every day, even inside, which was against the law, but Coach didn’t seem to know about it.  He carried gum in his pocket, and sometimes, right in the middle of gym class, he’d shout “Free throw!” and everybody had to rush for a basketball and make one shot.  If you got your shot, Coach gave you a piece of cinnamon gum, but you had to spit it out in the locker room before you went back to class because Mrs. Henry didn’t understand about free throw gum and she’d make you sit in the hall if she caught you with it.

Ms. Miller didn’t understand about free throw gum either, even though she was the assistant gym teacher.  She was the only teacher I had ever known who wasn’t a Miss or a Missus.  I didn’t even know there was a third option, but I kind of thought Ms. Miller made it up for herself because she was getting too old to be a Miss but hadn’t quite made it to Missus yet.   Ms. Miller was some kind of angry in-between.

Coach called us kiddos and pinched our arms when we came in the door.  Ms. Miller blew her whistle and herded us into the locker rooms where it was her responsibility to make sure we girls changed into appropriate gym clothing and wore shoes that didn’t scuff and left our bangle bracelets in a locker.   Ms. Miller thought bangle bracelets were an affliction, and she felt it deeply.

That's a fierce Cardinal...um...Redbird

Our gym shirt was stamped with a picture of our school mascot, the Redbird, which isn’t even a real bird.  Blue birds are real birds.  Redbirds are not.  By fifth grade, you know that.  We had to run around the gym under a cartoonish painting of a giant red bird and act like we were proud of having a mascot that wasn’t smart enough to be called a Cardinal.

In the winter, when it was too snowy outside to do much of anything, that red bird watched us learn to square dance.  Ms. Miller told us to do-si-do and promenade, even though you could tell she didn’t think dancing was real gym.  It wasn’t even half-way agonizing like real gym should be, except that you had to hold hands with a boy, and Ms. Miller didn’t remember what it was like to be agonized over something like that.

But in the spring, when the weather turned warm and the dandelions started to bloom, Ms. Miller got all the real gym she wanted because that was the time of year when we all had to take the President’s Physical Fitness Test.  Nothing made Ms. Miller happier than a test on physical fitness.  It was the only time she smiled all year.

“It is our goal that each one of you passes,” she stated, “and earns one of these special badges.”  Ms. Miller held up a large, official-looking patch.  I wouldn’t care anything about it if it wasn’t for the fact that it was an official-looking patch, which is exactly the kind of thing a real spy needs to get into top-secret buildings and things like that.  It was a badge of honor for anyone who had survived the torture chamber of the dun-gym.

“Just do your best,” Coach added, “and you’ll do fine.”  He was picking at his fingernails and thinking about what he was going to grill for dinner.

Ms. Miller glared at him over her glasses.  “I have printed copies of the requirements and I expect each of you to practice at home so you can do your best,” she said, whipping her thin ponytail over her shoulder and passing around a stack of photocopies.   “You have two weeks to get ready!”

When I got off the school bus, I dug the crumpled sheet out of my backpack and handed it over to David, who scanned it quickly and declared himself my personal trainer.  We met in the fort for our first consultation.

“Sprints, easy.  Sit ups, piece of cake.  Flexed arm hang, are you kidding me?  All you have to do is hang there?  Girls have it so easy.”  He looked annoyed.

“What about the mile run?” I asked.  The thought of it made me queasy.

He looked at the chart.  “You have 11 minutes and 22 seconds to run a mile.  Stop whining.  You could walk it that fast.  Herbie could walk it that fast. ”

Herbert was the fattest kid in my class, even though Mrs. Henry said we should never call another person fat.  “Pudgie” made him sound like a puppy, and “rotund” made me think of the something I saw at the state capital when we were on a field trip.  So I just didn’t talk about it.

“You’re totally overreacting,” he concluded.  “You owe me fifteen Skittles.”

I counted them out, thinking about how I could have paid Michael half as many Skittles to get the same amount of help.   But you can’t very well ask your younger brother for advice about anything.   It’s a matter of principle.

Coach decided to spread the test over three days, which only prolonged the agony.  On the third day, we were scheduled to do the flexed arm hang and the mile run.  I had muddled my way through the sit ups and the flexibility test and even survived the sprints.  But it was hard to be happy about it when I knew a mile run was in my future.

I barely slept the night before the test, and when I did, I dreamed about being chased around the school by a giant bumble bee that looked like Ms. Miller.  I woke up with knots in my stomach.  I poured myself a big bowl of Lucky Charms and picked a few extra charms out of the box for good measure.  I wished I had lucky socks.

“You’ll do fine,” my mom said when I said I might throw up.   It was her standard mom-reply to every childhood crisis, no matter how large or small.

“Mom, I’m about to swim through shark-infested waters!”

“You’ll do fine.”

“Mom, I’m about to run with scissors!”

“You’ll do fine.”

“Mom, I’m about to fight a fire-breathing dragon and then perform open heart surgery on the hamster!”

“You’ll do fine.”

Once, just once, it would have been nice to hear her scream, “Oh my goodness!  You’re probably going to die or at least embarrass yourself so much that you can never go back to school ever again!”  But she never did.

The gym was colder than normal, and my skin looked purple and splotchy under the giant fluorescent lights which hung like eyeballs from the ceiling.  Coach took the boys to one side of the gym and sent the girls over to the other side where Ms. Miller was waiting.  She stood under a horizontal bar with a clipboard in her hand.

“Today, you’ll do one of the easiest parts of the President’s Physical Fitness test.   All you have to do is grab on to the bar and hang for at least eight seconds.  Jessica, why don’t you come up and demonstrate.”

Jessica always got called on to demonstrate things for Ms. Miller because Jessica was going to be in the Olympics.

Jessica smiled and hopped up on the chair under the bar.  Her skin didn’t look splotchy at all.  She was still tan from swimming in the ocean during spring break.  She grabbed onto the bar and as soon as Ms. Miller counted down “3, 2, 1, go!” Jessica dangled from the bar like she was part bat.  She looked over at Ms. Miller and smiled.  “How am I doing?”

“Great, Jessica!  Just great!  It’s 20 seconds so far!”

It looked so easy; I started feeling better.   Over a minute passed before Jessica dropped to the floor, still smiling.  “I could have gone longer, but I got bored,” she shrugged.

Ms. Miller patted Jessica on the back and made the rest of us line up.  One by one, the girls took a turn, and we clapped and said encouraging things like, “Good effort!” and “Way to hang!”

Soon it was my turn.  I stood up on the chair and Ms. Miller counted “3, 2, 1, go!”  She looked up.  I was standing next to her.  “Kristie, you’re supposed to be up on the chair so you’re ready to go when I say go.”

She had been so busy looking at her stopwatch that she hadn’t seen my attempt at the flexed arm hang, in which I lifted my feet off the chair and fell to the ground so quickly, I barely had time to contemplate  my complete and utter lack of upper body strength.

“Did you fall off?  Hop back up there and wait for me to say go,” Ms. Miller instructed.  She repeated her countdown, and I repeated my noteworthy performance, only this time, I knocked my chin against the bar on the way down.  The girls giggled, even Jessica, who was supposed to be my best friend.

Ms. Miller looked at her stop watch.  “Did you do it? “

“Yes.  I mean, no, not really,” I said feebly, rubbing my chin.

“Well, I can’t count that!  The watch didn’t even start!  Try it again.  I don’t think you’re doing it right.”   She placed my hands on the bar and pulled the chair out from under me without even bothering with the stop watch.  My arms gave out immediately and I landed on the gym floor with a thud.

“I don’t know what to do with you!”  Ms. Miller threw up her hands and ran off to consult with Coach.  He came over and took a look at my chin.

“Had a tough time with that one, huh kiddo?”

I nodded and tried not to cry.  “Well, just put her down for eight seconds, Miller.  I’m sure she could have done it if that bar hadn’t clocked her one.”

Ms. Miller gave an audible gasp.  “I will do no such thing!  I am not going to defraud the government!”

“Ms. Miller, it’s a gym test, not your state taxes.  Just write it down.”

Ms. Miller pushed her lips together and wrote down the number eight so hard, her pencil broke.   I thought that my muscles must be made of Silly Putty, and if that was the case, maybe I could just melt right into the wall while the rest of the girls took their turns.

But before I could, Coach’s whistle blew and he waved us outside.  The air was warm and smelled like spring and a cool breeze blew across the school yard.  It was a terrible day for a run.

“Alright, everyone, a mile is almost exactly three times around the school,” Ms. Miller was saying.  “You can walk if you absolutely have to, but you should run as much as you can or you won’t make your time.”

“Just pace yourself and do your best,” Coach added.  Ms. Miller glared at him again.  She looked like she was having the worst President’s Physical Fitness Test day ever.

Three times around the school didn’t seem that bad.  I remembered what David said and hoped for the best.  We lined up and Coach blew his whistle.

The boys tore off at break-neck speed while the girls trotted off at a more sensible pace.   I stayed with the pack at first and congratulated myself on the fact that my legs were not as wimpy as my arms.  We made it around the school one time before the faster girls began to pull ahead, with Jessica in the lead.  My lungs began to burn.

In the distance, I could hear Ms. Miller calling out the times of some of the fastest boys, who were already finishing.  My throat was sandpaper and I was pretty sure someone was stabbing me in the side, but when I looked back all I saw was Coach running next to Herbie, urging him on.  All the girls who had started with me began to pass me, one by one.  They were a lap ahead, and not one of them looked tired.

Somewhere during the second lap, I determined that the President’s Physical Fitness badge was not as cool as I had once thought.  It looked cool at first, but I had been blinded out of all sensibility by the savage looking eagle and gold trim.  No one was going to believe it was a real spy badge anyway.   I slowed down and started walking, holding my side.  I didn’t even want one, even if it came from the President himself.

I was right in the middle of this thought when I heard someone behind me.

“How’s it going, kiddo?” Coach asked, trotting along next to me.

“It’s okay,” I puffed, and tried to run next to him, matching his pace.

“Whose idea was this, anyway?” he asked.

“The President’s,” I moaned.

“What a stupid idea.  No wonder I didn’t vote for him.”  Even Mr. Peterson was breathing hard, but he kept talking.  “Back when I was in the Army, I had this Drill Sergeant who used to make us run until we threw up.  I seem to remember it taking longer than a mile.”

I did not want to talk about throwing up.  I was regretting every single Lucky Charm and was significantly concerned that I might be seeing them again very, very soon.

“You know, the thing about being a gym teacher is that you don’t actually get a lot of exercise during school hours,” Coach was saying.   “A mile seems a lot farther now than when I was your age!”

We spotted Ms. Miller up ahead.

“You got this in the bag, kiddo!”

“What?”

“Don’t tell me you were having so much fun running, you lost track of the laps!  You’re in the home stretch!  Just run it in.”

I crossed the finish line in disbelief.

“10:25, Kristie.  Good job,” Ms. Miller said as I collapsed into the grass.

10:25?  10:25?!  “You mean I passed?”

“Yep, with almost a minute to spare,” Ms. Miller smiled.  She was actually kind of pretty when she smiled.  I decided to try extra hard not to throw up on her grass.

Three months later, a package arrived in the mail from Washington D.C., addressed to me.  I tucked it under my shirt and walked into the house as nonchalantly as possible, just in case my Soviet-spy neighbor was watching.   It was my badge and a letter from the President congratulating me on my achievement.  I had survived.

“Wow, that’s awesome!”  Michael breathed.

“I thought it would be bigger,” David said, but he was twelve and wasn’t allowed to think anything was cool.  But then he added, “You’d better get Mom to sew that on quick.  I saw a black car in the neighbor’s driveway and I think we need to check it out.”  Everyone knew bad guys drove black cars.

I looked at my new spy badge and smiled.  The very sight of it would strike fear into the hearts of evil-doers everywhere.  I shoved it in my pocket and grabbed my binoculars.  Duty called.

Badge of Honor

Badge of Honor

Fiction, Humor, Mohican Memories 15 Comments

The Fire Truck Cart of Evil

Beware the evil that lurks beneath!

“Please can we ride in the fire truck cart?  Please, please, please, PAH-LEEEZE?”

It was only the second time I’d been out of the house by myself since bringing the boys home, although technically speaking, I wasn’t alone at all.  I was outnumbered five to one, and the only reason I had gone out at all was because I was out of half-and-half.  I can survive without a lot of things, but in those hazy days with newborn twins, I was pretty sure I would die within five minutes of waking if I didn’t have coffee.

On this particular day, when the half-and-half container ran out before my first cup was sufficiently creamy, I decided it was time to venture out to the grocery store, with five children under the age of six.  It sounded like a good idea at the time, although I failed to account for the way the maternal hormones were playing with my reasoning skills.

I realized my mistake when I spotted the fire truck cart standing guard over the grocery store entrance. A single fire truck cart had the power to turn an ordinary trip to the grocery store into a scene from a zombie apocalypse movie.  But my kids could not see the evil that lurked beneath the cheap plastic exterior.

“Please can we ride the fire truck cart?”

“Guys…” I stalled, trying to think of just the right way to formulate my rejection of their proposal so they would think it was all their idea.

“You said we could,” my oldest said.

“I did not!”

“Yes you did.”

“When?”

“The last time we were in the store, you said we could ride in the fire truck cart next time.”  At what point did my children get old enough to remember anything I said?

“Why would I say that?”

“Because you love us,” Jonathan said, smiling.  “And you like to make us happy!”  All three grinned at me.  They were playing dirty.

“Oh, alright…” I conceded.

“Yippee!”  Jonathan squealed and climbed into the driver’s seat.  Kya got shotgun.  Faith dangled off one side, making the whole thing tip precariously.  The twins, snug in their car carriers, were stowed in a metal cart where I pulled them behind me like two little outcasts.

I backed the fire truck cart out into the aisle.  “Greeeeeeeeee!”  It protested loudly.

“It has a siren!” Jonathan exclaimed.

I looked underneath to see if I’d run over a squirrel.  The two front wheels spun in midair, hopelessly useless.  They pounded “thubthubthubthub” when I pushed the cart forward a little.

I stopped.  Five happy faces beamed at me.   There was no going back now.

With one hand on the fire truck cart and one hand on the babies’ dinghy, I attempted to maneuver in a straight line toward the produce.  The Neanderthal barely moved.

“Push, Mommy!  Push!”  I felt like I was back in the delivery room.  “Go, Mommy!”

I dug deep into my repertoire of sumo wrestling moves and pushed into the fire truck cart with my shoulder, using all my energy to bully it into the aisle while dragging the second cart behind me.  I prayed no one was watching me on the security cameras.

“You did it, Mommy!  You did it!”  The children cheered me on, although I barely heard them over my excessive panting and desperate gasps for breath.

“GREEEEEEEEEEEthubthub!”  The cart screeched even louder now that we were going forward.  An older lady, who was wasting a decade of her life picking out three perfect apples, glared at me over her bifocals.  My two-year-old waved.   She was a princess in her very own carriage, riding in her very own parade, pushed by a haggard mother who could very well collapse at any moment.

We maneuvered through the aisles with all the skill and dexterity of a real-life Hungry Hippo.  Bread…gobblegobble…peanut butter…gobblegobble…milk…gobblegobble…bananas…gobblegobble…

“Mom!  There’s a free sample!”  Faith called from behind me, where she’d taken up the job of steering the babies after it became apparent that my ability to multi-task had not magically improved since having twins.

“We can’t stop now!”  I yelled back.  “I don’t want to lose momentum!”

Given the fact that I had nearly burst my spleen getting the big lug started in the first place, I was unwilling to dawdle.  I had plateaued to a reasonable agony now that we were rumbling through the aisles.  Free coffee could not deter me from my singular mission of getting out of the store without stopping.

“Grab some pasta!” I commanded.

“What kind?” Faith asked.

“Doesn’t matter!”  I yelled back.  She threw three boxes of orzo into the cart.  Interesting choice, I thought.  Kya clapped.  I knocked in a couple cans of tomatoes as we whooshed by.

“Okay, we’ve got a turn coming up.  Everybody hold on tight!”

“GREEEEEEEEEEEEE!”  The cart protested.

It soon become apparent that whoever designed the fire truck cart flunked basic geometry.  The turning radius of t cart far exceeded the width of the aisles, which I proved by bashing into a cardboard display of Oreos.

“Mom, you hit some cookies,” Jonathan observed.

“Thank you.  Yes, I know.”  I backed up the truck  and tried again.  The Oreo display, not being smart enough to move, got hit a second time.

“Did you mean to do that?” Jonathan asked.

“Not really,” I said through clenched teeth.

“Then why’d you do it again?”

Sweat beaded up on my forehead.   I wondered if I could get an epidural for this.

“Let’s try it again, Faith!”  I called.  She tried to guide the caboose as I ventured out into the roomy aisle by the hot dogs.  Out of the corner of my eye, I spotted a wiry little woman.  She was coming right toward me, and she wasn’t stopping.  Neither was I.

“Oh my goodness, don’t you have your hands full!”  She cried.  I gained more weight during my first trimester than she weighed soaking wet.

I tried to ignore her.  Don’t stop, don’t stop, don’t stop, I chanted under my breath, desperately trying to turn before I ran into the chest of sale-priced bacon.  But she was persistent.

She put down a shopping basket full of Lean Cuisines and grabbed Faith’s cart so she could peer in at the boys, who were now wide awake.  “Are these twins?  I always thought I should have twins.  Oh, they’re not identical!  I think identical twins are so cute.  You know, they’d look more alike if you dressed them alike.”

My cart had stopped.  Stopped.  The two front wheels spun idly until they stilled.  A silent tear slid down my cheek.  The boys began to whimper as the stranger poked her head into their space.  “Where are their pacifiers?”

“They don’t take pacifiers,” Faith answered.

“What?”  My new adviser took this as a personal offense.  “Well, I’m sure I’d give my children pacifiers before letting them scream in the store.”  She waved her hand in the air and said with a snort, “Better you than me!”

She sauntered off with her dainty little basket and left me with my beast.  I imagined what she might look like with her twiggy legs sticking out from under a fire truck cart.  It could look like an accident.

“Mom?  The boys are getting hungry,” Faith said, interrupting my daydream.

“Oh!  We’re almost done, my boys,” I exclaimed, leaning into the cart with my full postpartum body weight and channeling the dread of nursing twins in public into a heroic burst of energy.

“GREEEEEEEEEEEthubthubthub,” the cart protested.  It was much heavier now, loaded down with groceries and diapers and about thirty pounds of chocolate, which seemed like a good idea at the time.

“I think we should just take what we have and check out,” I shouted back to Faith.  She had the concentrated look of a race car driver trying to maneuver her way through the course without hitting a wall.  “We’re in the home stretch, sweetie!”  I said.  But, I had forgotten to look where I was going.  I turned around just in time to see the front end of the fire truck cart on a collision course with another shopper.  The Hungry Hippo honed in on its prize.

“Watch out!” I yelled, trying to stop the cart.  But the momentum could not be harnessed.  The fire truck cart sped on ahead, its front end swaying menacingly back and forth while the useless front wheels spun madly.

The lone shopper looked up just in time.  She jumped out of the way at the last second, but her pathetic little wire cart could not be saved.  We rammed into it at full speed.

“Oh, Mommy…” Kya exhaled.  She had never seen a metal cart fly through the air before.

****

My little wheels have no purpose!

The acne-flushed young man who escorted us to the checkout was both morose and apathetic, two qualities I suddenly found quite charming.  He did not care how many children I had or how old I was or whether or not my twins were dressed alike.  He did not mention the clean-up on Aisle 9, nor did he question me when I opened a bag of white chocolate truffles and began to consume them two at a time.   He silently plunked us down in the check-out lane and sloughed off to the next menial task in his meaningless job.  I wanted to hug him.

But the checker was tapping her fluorescent orange fingernails impatiently on the register, so I hurled groceries onto the belt as quickly as I could.  Beep….beep….beep…  The scanner kept time until the cart was empty and she said, “That’ll be $236.57,” and cast a look at my four-year-old, who was staring at a picture of Dolly Parton on the cover of a glossy magazine.

“Honey, don’t look at that,” I said as I lugged my diaper bag up to the counter, wondering how Dolly Parton was still making the covers of magazines.

“Mommy, that lady has really big…” he paused, searching for the right word.

“Yes, yes she does.  Don’t look at them.”

“I mean, those are some really big…hips.  I don’t think I’ve ever seen a lady with such big hips.”

The checker smiled in spite of herself.  I dug through the piles of diapers for my wallet.

“She probably had lots of babies,” he reasoned.  Kya nodded.

“Uh-huh,” I said, distracted by the panic rising in my chest.  For the life of me, I couldn’t find my wallet.  A line of impatient shoppers watched as I emptied out a burp cloth, diaper rash ointment, a bag of Cheerios, diaper wipes, and five matchbox cars.  No wallet.

I could feel the cashier staring at me through her blue mascara.  “I don’t have my wallet,” I nearly sobbed.

The cashier blinked.  She had scanned and bagged over two hundred dollars of groceries while my children caressed the candy bars and put brown paper bags on their heads and crawled on the floor on all fours and pushed all the buttons on the credit card scanner over and over again.  She looked at me from across the conveyor belt.  We shared a moment.

“Isn’t there any other way?”  She asked.  “Do you have a debit card?”

“It’s in my wallet.”

“Oh, right.”

We both stared at each other, silent and thinking.  “I don’t think there’s any choice, really,” I said slowly.  This was harder than a high school break-up.

“You could come back?  I mean, I’ll wait for you.”

“No, no, the peas would be all melty by then,” I paused.  “Besides, there will be other customers.  Look, they’re already lining up for you.”

“I don’t care about them!”  She was taking it hard.

“I’m sorry,” I said, looking at the cart full of neatly-bagged groceries.  “I wish I could put everything back the way it was.”

“It’s okay.”  She was trying to be brave, I could tell.  “Just go.  Go…”

I turned away.  I wanted to look back, but sometimes it’s best to make a clean break.  “Come on, kids.”

“What about the groceries?”  They shouted over the rumble of the cart as we headed to the car.

I tried to explain, but they didn’t understand.  Their questions ran together like a mantra.

“MomwherearethebananasMomwedidntgetanyfoodMomwhatarewegoingtoeatMomIwantabanana

MomwhatarewegoingtohavefordinnerMomimsohungryMomMomMommyMom!”

“Listen!” I said sternly, my heart still broken from the way things ended.   “I need everyone to be quiet for just one minute, okay?  Just get in the car and be quiet!”

The three older kids scampered into their seats without another word.  I put my head down on the steering wheel.   The small of my back was still sweaty and I had pulled a muscle I didn’t even know I had.   Worse, I was out of half-and- half.

The car was strangely silent except for the sound of a baby sucking on his fist.  Then a small, tremulous voice ventured into the stillness.  “Mom?”

“Yes…” I answered in a tone that said I wouldn’t bring up bananas if I were you.

“I have a dollar.”  Jonathan was holding out the dollar he had earned weeding Mrs. Smith’s driveway.

“And I have some dimes,” Faith added.  She searched in her pocket for the four dimes Nana had given her for collecting snails in the garden, a penny per snail.  “Is that enough?”

“Oh, guys,” I began, but Kya interrupted me.  She was too young to understand what had just happened, but she knew when a collection was being taken.  She held out a small paper cup filled with stale animal crackers from the church nursery.   “I share, Mommy?” she asked.  “I share?”

“Oh…”

“We’re sorry you had to leave the groceries.  We don’t need bananas,” Jonathan reassured me.  They all nodded solemnly.

“We’re not even hungry,” Faith added.

It took me a moment to regroup, to realize that only a wealthy woman could be so inconvenienced.  Only a rich woman could be hassled by driving a fire truck full of groceries around a store only to discover she had left her wallet at home.  I had been blessed with children to feed, blessed with food in abundance, blessed with money to pay for it.  What a small thing it was to have to drive back home and feed my beautiful children with the “nothing” I had in my pantry.  What a small thing it was to go without coffee, or to have to make a second trip to a store that had everything I needed and much that I didn’t.  Only a wealthy woman could complain about such trivial things.

Only a wealthy woman needs to forget her wallet to remember how rich she truly is.

Battle Scars

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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