Thursday, April 22, 2010

WARNING (MORE) FICTION!

O what a heaven is love! O what a hell!
-Thomas Dekker

Luz reported that she hadn’t heard a peep out of Christian since Mouth had left. Considering Noticias Miami was blasting from our living room, I’m not sure she would have heard a category five hurricane. I left Mouth to thank her and slowly crept upstairs.

I had to peek in on my baby boy. The door to his room was wide open, and the hall light cast a soft glow just bright enough to reveal the tiny, perfect features of his face.

I loved Christian’s room. I spent months overseeing its creation- a bit of revisionist history in its execution but a perfect design. His walls are faux-finished with sixteenth century maps of the routes of Ponce De Leon, seeking La Florida from Puerto Rico via the Bahamas. Three of Dade County’s most talented art students painted the Santiago, the San Cristobal and the Santa Maria de la Consolacion making their way From Saint Augustine to Biscayne Bay and the Florida Keys. Stories of Leon’s sometimes mis-adventures are told through the art, right down to the poor San Cristobal’s accidental discovering of the Gulf Stream as it was swept out of sight of the other ships for days. So enamored with this story I have two retired ship craftsman from Cuba hand carving a toddler bed to resemble the tiny vessel as we speak.

The fifteen-foot ceiling’s exposed beams, the bedroom and closet doors, and three toy boxes were all painstakingly restored or installed using recovered Dade County Pine original to the house. Lets just say I created a surplus as I demanded Travertine for my entryway and kitchen floors. Finally, who could forget the look on the electrician’s face as I asked him to wire the hand forged nineteenth century spanish iron chandelier. A gift from grandma, from Christie’s.

The wall facing Christian’s crib boasts a rendition of Lucas Cranach the Elder’s Fountain of Youth, a reminder to my son that an earthly paradise just may exist. As I peer at Christian’s peaceful face, I imagine him wanting to dive in. This was Christian’s nest, and a night hasn’t gone by that I haven’t marveled in its beauty or its inhabitant.

As I pivot to face our bedroom, a creak in those terrific pine floors sets (what is left of) the evening’s events in motion. I’ve awoken the beast. And trying to recreate the eclipse that motivated a seventeen year old Tycho Brahe to map the heavens (painted in gold leaf on Christian’s ceiling), I closed my eyes as tight as possible and prayed.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

WARNING! FICTION! (PG 13)

Here is an excerpt from my latest project... of FICTION! See my earlier blog entry for (sort of) an explanation.


If you're going through hell, keep going. -Winston Churchill

“Hey James!” I yell around from the back of the line to the rental attendant who is a former student. I point down at my flip flops which are his cue to stuff a pair of new socks in my size nines. A wink and an extra five dollars buy me a ticket to my own personal Xanadu. I can’t lace my skates fast enough.

Paradise Skateway was my church these days. I didn’t care if 70’s Nite was mostly filled with middle-aged posers who just wanted to be seen in clothes that needed to be left in Nordstroms’ juniors department. I had ridden with exhibits a, b, and c for godsakes. Even though I did have a hard time getting the smell of feet out of my hair on Wednesday mornings, I loved every minute of the skating experience. There was something so freeing about circling the rink over and over, fast and mindlessly. Shit I even liked the pizza. While certain alumnae mingled sans wheels at Miami’s hottest night spot de-jour, I was in my own little world and could not have cared less.

In one fell swoop I pull my ponytail loose, shove the black band on my wrist, and roll on to the rink with a confidence that eclipsed what Olivia Newton John must have felt, gyrating in the Shake Shack. I am home. My normal routine was to skate as fast as possible and enjoy the rush of freezing air hitting my face while internalizing whatever song happens to be playing. Once I’ve taken in the soundtrack I create a fantastic movie in my head starring me looking and acting fabulous, tackling my day with the greatest of ease. Sometimes it’s a simple scene I conjure- beautiful Christian embracing me, saying “I love you so much mommy,” while my tan, gorgeous hubby Brad Pitt looks on. Other times I envision upcoming events I would normally loathe, and imagine embodying the picture of grace every girl envies. I do realize that fantasizing couldn’t be all that healthy, but two months of skating my high school reunion in my head did wonders. Rehearsing how hot I would look to an ex boyfriend resulted in a real life satisfaction that made my entire year.

Tonight, on the other hand, though the worn dark wood floors clearly labeled my circular path I was feeling a bit off course. I had no complaints for the deejay as he was playing an excellent extended version of Stomp, but for some strange reason I couldn’t get the filmstrip in my head to quit from splitting. What the hell? Maybe I had been starting at that disco ball too intently. Maybe it was the stellar company tonight. I instinctively look toward the arcade area to be sure Magda hadn’t seduced my student nor had Violet beaten anyone half to death with Cat’s new Louie Zuitton. Great. It appears Cat is cursing out some chick in two languages to the point of confusion. Please God play a good song so I can script my way home with three new friends.

And like the screeching of a needle across a record my mind completely shifts gears. I begin to think. Why is it that for some reason it took more and more Bee Gees to put me in my happy place these days? Things with Mouth were fine, I guess. His morning show was South Florida’s highest rated amongst those who remembered FM was still out there, and his schedule allowed me to go back to teaching part time. I could not be happier about that part. While my Omega pals can’t imagine for the life of them why I work at all, I feel like I really make a difference at Gables Heights. Without getting all I believe our children are our future-ish I can honestly say that when I am on stage (literally, I teach in what used to be the drama classroom, complete with a built in stage) I am in heaven. Funny I don’t even need the Village People to get me going on the days I know I will be in the company of Dante, Milton, Shakespeare, and a great group of teenagers.

Christian, my nearly two and a half year old, continues to be the light of my life. God he is gorgeous, and blindingly so. Maybe it’s his growing impatience with the world around him that has me feeling off kilter. “Terrible two from month two,” as my mother would say. What does she know? She had girls. And nannies.

I’ve killed my own mood and decide there wouldn’t be much wrong with cutting the night short; I could take a cab home if the menagerie threw a harmonious hissy. I feel the Couple’s Skate coming on anyway. That damned announcement evoked the gangly, pasty, friendless thirteen-year old in me every time. The deejay may as well have been calling me by name with: “It’s a couple’s skate only Alison, so go ahead and hop on your Holly Hobby bike now because there is no way on God’s green earth any boy would ask you to skate with him. No offense though; you seem super cool.”

Pulling my hair back up into my standard ponytail, breathing in as much of Rock Your Baby as possible, I glide to the rink’s opening. All I’d have left to do was follow the sounds of wild beasts and I was a song away from excusing myself for the evening. Cradling an air baby, humming “take me in your arms and rock me” I roll up to the strange coven undetected.

“So Mags, how is the party planning coming along? My caterer does a mean arroz con beans. Need the number?” I hear Cat inquire. Magda’s ex-husband’s stepson was celebrating his confirmation and she was planning a tacky to-do. I remembered her concern that (a) Easter was really screwing up her plans and (b) the after party be off church grounds so she could “really party.” Oh happy, unholy day.

Without batting an eyelash Violet contributes “I hope you weren’t planning on inviting Ali’s little hell raiser Christian. The only mood swings I plan on attending to that day are my own. P.S. does anyone have a Xanax? That stupid disco ball is giving me a seizure.“

“Seriously Magda, someone is going to have to tactfully alert our friend that the word ADHD stands for ‘Ali, Denial, Hello!, Duh!’” said Cat.

And as if the deejay announced that Elvis had permanently left the building I lose my footing, tumbling backward while grabbing for anyone and anything to help break my fated fall. Reaching for Cat was a mistake. She lithely coiled back in an effort to save her fake nails from chipping. In slow motion I see her check her polish before I even hit the ground. Magda and Violet growl something unintelligible that reeks of “how dare she make us look like fools,” and I am on my bottom.

“Oh my God Ali, you may have just busted your ass!” Violet pointed and began hysterically laughing.

Cat was less amused. As if she could see into the future, mine involving a hospital stay and hers a buffet she pounces “I thought we were going to La Carretta after this! You know how much I love ‘The Wheel’- their ham croquetas are practically calling my name. Will you please get up Ali?” She was actually angry; her fake tan reddened. And I swear Violet held her breath to appear as if she were equally furious.

My vision blurred from a combination of tears and rage, all I could muster up was “Violet, you’re turning Violet!” Her bestial visage was the mortified look of a Willy Wonka character on crack. Was I going to have to crawl my way to help? I’d better speak up.

“Girls I can’t get up. Can you please stop acting like animals and call Mouth for me? Oh, and you might want to move me out of the path of the other exiting skaters.” I said. I was in total disbelief. And agonizing pain. “And for the record you heartless bitch, ADHD is a fucking acronym, not a word. Duh!”

Honestly.

Okay let's be honest. I am posting to my blog just so the most recent entry isn't dated June 2009. Shameful, I know, but I haven't written much since then. That's NOT to say our lives have calmed down one bit.

J.R.'s little brother has added tons of fun to our lives. It's amazing to see J.R. interact with Jackson, even if it is in the form of "NO JACK NOOO!!"

Even though I haven't been blogging, it doesn't mean I haven't been writing. Maybe (just maybe) I will spice things up and post some of my fiction. Note to self: label future "fictional" posts as such ... because your real life is just strange enough to be confused with it.


Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Memorial Daze

For the Memorial Day weekend my husband surprised me with a trip to… clean out our attic! Yes, the attic, the ultimate stay-cation destination… NOT! Don’t get me wrong, I’m a neat freak at heart and totally get off on completing such important job as alphabetizing sock drawers and tossing out year-old tax documents, but on Memorial Weekend?! I JUST bought a new bathing suit for crying out loud!

This would be a learning process, I told myself. Mainly I learned to bite my tongue because my life could be a lot worse. Coming in at a close second was the realization that I AM old enough to own items that SMELL old. How is it that my box of college mementoes smells like moth balls? This is our attic, not my grandmother’s! Hopefully the strong scent of grilling emanating from the backyards of those actually ENJOYING their holiday masks my bedroom’s eau-de-pissed off.

As we each went through our own boxes of memories we found lots of incriminating photos taken in the 80’s (if you were my friend then, check Facebook now and plan to be embarrassed). Courtesy of my mother in law’s oh too convenient archiving skills, my husband got to enjoy reading through no less than 200 letters from his ex girlfriend: the pretty, rich one that got away- just my luck. That awkwardness aside, we enjoyed exchanging stories and basked in the feeling of nostalgia this housekeeping chore evoked.

All of this reminiscing (and viewing of photos that featured way hotter, tanner versions of ourselves and our exes), had me wondering if MY HUSBAND was wondering what I was wondering. What IF I ended up with one of my childhood pals from Venezuela (unlikely)…or if Tim hadn't let the "good one" get away? What would our lives be like then?

In the background, J.R. is chanting “the computer needs batteries the computer needs batteries the computer needs batteries the computer needs batteries the computer needs batteries the computer needs batteries,” while Jack is SWIMMING in a box of you know who’s female fan mail. Before I can scream Calgon (and no that’s not the name of a former flame) take me away, I realize that I wouldn’t trade my life for anything.

As much as raising a child like J.R. makes me want to turn back time and run like hell, I know in my heart that he was not meant to be a Jaime Roberto. Life in our house is no Memorial Day picnic, but I just can’t imagine our lives without getting to observe the following:

J.R. singing the words to America’s Ventura Highway, including “doo, doo; doo, doo; doodo…”

J.R. and Jack having KNOCK DOWN, DRAG OUT fights like typical brothers would.

J.R. telling me “that’s not right,” after I screamed “for F***’s SAKE JACK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

J.R. wanting to sing Happy Birthday to Jackson every day since May 17.

J.R. getting better and better every day.

To honor this weekend of remembrance, I plan to shelve the beta version of this blog. It’s way too angry and I don’t want to think of J.R.’s childhood in this way any more. But considering the writing is a true reflection of how I felt at the time (and because I think I’m so freaking hilarious and entertaining), I will republish select entries for my diehard fans…just as my husband and I are going to spend time scanning more quality photos tonight to put on Facebook. The moral of the story? Looking back CAN be fun, but not nearly as inspiring as looking forward.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Take Two Placebos and Call Me...

This just in: stem cell treatment WORKS (to drive a parent batty).

My husband I and had promised each other weeks before our trip that we wouldn’t allow the placebo effect to set in once J.R. had received the stem cell treatment. If I had any delusions I could actually walk around without electron microscope strength glasses observing J.R.’s every last move, they were quickly tossed aside after J.R. yelled out “mommy, my boobies are getting wet in the pool” the night of his last treatment. Had J.R. noticed his boobies before? Did I really just write that last sentence?

Because I knew there was no possible way I wasn’t about to NOT park myself, pad and pen straight up J.R.’s rear, I tried my best to control the less psychotic influences in his life. I was not about to inform his teacher and therapists that we were seeking stem cell treatment; they were bound to see something in J.R. that was not really there if J.R. performed a classroom miracle (i.e., taking more than one obligatory bite of his lunch). To distract these professionals from noticing their tiny prodigy would be absent for three weeks, I told them we would be taking a dream vacation and bringing J.R. with us. Ok let’s face it, I’d be dreaming if I thought I would actually get any vacation for the next ten years, so I hadn’t stretched the truth all that much.

Of course as any “Kristi” laid out plan would proceed, the scheme had a few flaws. Number one I think I emailed the blog address to his ABA therapist by mistake. Oh yeah, hi Ms. Carolina; keep up the good work. I also realized that J.R. would only be spending about another month with his B-E-L-O-V-E-D Pre-K teacher. No stem cell parents have reported changes in their child in less than two months, so why would I keep this amazing experience from Ms. W?

It’s all good, because on the homefront the placebo effect is well, to quote 80’s rap, in “full effect.” To add to the fun, my husband and I have developed a “look” that we exchange every time we observe J.R. doing something “out of the ordinary”. Okay who am I kidding, the kid farts and the looks fly, which translate into “STOP THINKING WHAT I THINK YOU’RE THINKING WHICH ONLY STARTS ME THINKING…WAS IT THE STEM CELLS…? PARKAY? I CAN’T BELIEVE IT’S NOT BUTTER!”

We just can’t help ourselves. Put yourself in our shoes (Reef Sandals)…imagine purchasing a big ticket item on Ebay knowing that it may or may not turn out to be the Prada (oops I mean product) you were expecting. Oh yeah, and you sent the seller cash in the mail. Tell me you wouldn’t be all over your package delivery provider like white on rice!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!* Okay I’m pretty sure that analogy made zero sense, so be sure to read the disclaimer below.

Dr. Seuss warned us; we’ve found ourselves in the Waiting Place. Do I make myself clear now? If not I have a reading assignment for you.

My point is that the placebo effect is impossible to control. Can we attribute any of J.R.’s following behaviors to the stem cell treatment? Who the freak knows. What I do know is what I’ve thought all along- J.R. has been involved in so many interventions, so we may never figure out if there’s that one magic bullet (or if it will ever hit him). We know we are just infinitely lucky we have the opportunity to try such treatments.

Ok here it goes- the Top 10 Things J.R. Has Done to Prompt The “Look”

10. He uses the word “another,” as in “Jack, find another car to play with.” Then again, he’s named his favorite Lightning McQueen car ‘Nother Car.

9. He learned how to ride a Razor scooter in 3 minutes flat. He’s got 6 gashes to prove it and tolerated a Band Aid (which we thought would stop the hemorrhaging) for a full 12 seconds (a new record).

8. He uses all the nicknames for his little brother that we use, understanding that they all mean “Jack.” “Tons of Fun” is not one of them, so we think that J.R. may be developing his sensitivity chip.

7. He says “cheese” and smiles for the camera. Need I remind you I recently paid a small fortune for a professional photographer to capture one of FIVE photos I own of J.R. making genuine eye contact (see blog pic). I can hear him half way down the block, on his Razor, calling out “cheese.” I hope he will soon figure out he has to remain in FRONT of the camera for the photo op to become an op.

6. He asks where his brother has gone, to mean "mom, get your head out of your ass and start parenting." Inevitably my two year old will wander off into the neighbor’s landscaping the minute I turn away; J.R. answers himself with a stock “into Bob’s bush,” but hey at least the kid finally acknowledges his brother’s existence!

5. He climbed to the VERY TOP of the Burger King playground habitrail. He has never done this. Jack followed him right up, instantly loaded his pants, and clogged the line causing me to have to weave MY sweaty self all the way to the top and rescue J.R. from certain death by noxious fumes. You should have heard the parents applaud.

4. He calms himself. We’ve longed for J.R. to develop coping mechanisms- his anxiety can be through the roof. Now he says things like “it’s okay, it’s all better, it’s gone, etc.”

3. As we speak J.R. is battling a temperature, and today he told us that he wanted to feel better. WOW!

2. He exceeded a professional’s expectations. Last week his ABA therapy supervisor observed him actually reading (vs. recalling from his freakish rote memory) 4th and 5th grade level words. My husband watched her jaw drop via closed circuit TV. Priceless. Actually, pricey but who's counting?

1. He told us what he did at school. Last Friday J.R. came home (in his $40 shirt) covered with silver paint. We are trying not to speak for J.R. or prompt his answers, so instead of saying “did you paint today?” my husband said “what did you do today?” J.R. quickly responded with “I painted an octopus at school today daddy.” Imagine my surprise when on Monday he came home with a silver octopus (which I am getting silver plated).

--------------------------------------------------

*this scenario in no way, shape, or form resembles my experience trolling for Michael Kors bags or Highwayman paintings on a certain popular auction website.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Oh The Places We've Been

Last night, Dr. Lara called our room and gave Tim an offer we just could not refuse. He was going to be administering Steve-O's PETRIFIED little girl a double dose of stem cells on Thursday so she would not have to return Friday. Were we interested in the same deal? I could barely make out the conversation and still I was signing an emphatic HELL YEAH!!!!!! from bed.

Not wanting to jump the gun, Tim asked if he and I could discuss the proposal first and give ICM an answer in the morning. Dr. L agreed that would be okay. Right away I informed Tim that my opinion did not count because my mind was clouded by the idea that if we finished the treatment on Thursday morning we could enter the pool a whole 24 hours earlier.

Doubling up on the regular stem cell dosage has already been done with some patients, and since J.R. had no adverse reaction to the first two injections, Dr. Lara thought it would be perfectly fine to combine days 3 & 4's doses. Tim and I feel the entire process is a complete leap of faith anyway, so we said "what the heck, let's do it." We were over the moon.

Besides J.R. having a bit of difficulty sitting DOUBLE the amount of time, the treatment went well. To be honest even though the injections couldn't possibly be causing J.R. any pain, I was done seeing him become upset. And after all was said and done J.R. high-fived the nurse, Steve-O, Steve-O's mom, and confidently walked right outside into the van telling everyone in his path that "it did not hurt"! The rest of the day's events involved tons of sunscreen, chlorine, and cokes.

J.R.'s favorite book (this month) is Dr. Seuss' Oh The Places You'll Go. Most of the time he reads at night with his dad, so I had really only mindlessly read him a few pages here and there. Ironically last night J.R. asked mommy to read. I had to hold back tears at its poignancy, encountered especially in these lines:

You can get so confused
that you'll start in to race
down long wiggle roads at a break-necking pace
and grind on for miles across weirdish wild space
headed, I fear, toward a most useless place.

The Waiting Place...

Waiting for a train to go
or a bus to come, or a plane to go
or the mail to come, or the rain to go
or the phone to ring, or the snow to snow
or waiting around for a Yes or No
or waiting for their hair to grow.
Everyone is just waiting.

Waiting for the fish to bite
or waiting for wind to fly a kite
or waiting around for Friday night
or waiting perhaps, for their Uncle Jake
or a pot to boil, or a Better Break
or a string of pearls, or a pair of pants,
or a wig with curls, or Another Chance.
Everyone is just waiting.

Parents who seek stem cell treatment say the hardest part is the waiting. Waiting for something to click. We hear it can be downright maddening, yet J.R.'s affection for this book has brought us some peace.

J.R. is always saying "NO! That's not for you," and now we know why. We thought he was just reminding himself out loud to not touch or do certain things. He's actually reciting the words that come next in the rhyme. They are:

NO!
That's not for you!
Somehow you'll escape
all that waiting and staying
You'll find the bright places
where Boom Bands are playing...

We can only pray that waiting will NOT be for him, and that he will be one of the lucky ones who will, according to Dr. Seuss, "succeed...98 and 3/4 percent guaranteed."

Tim and I have tried a lot of different types of interventions with J.R. as any parents would. Some will say that people like Dr. Lara and his staff have no more business practicing what they do than Dr. Seuss. Our solace lies in these lines (which just so happen to be J.R.'s favorite):

...be your name Buxbaum or Bixby or Bray
or Mordecai Ali Van Allen O'Shea,
you're off to Great Places!
Today is your day!
Your mountain is waiting.
So...get on your way!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Turtles & Squirrels & Iguanas...Oh My!

Today's treatment was at 10:30 a.m. and J.R. wasn't at ALL thrilled about it, but the best part is that it takes a total of five minutes.

Too busy blogging about our hotel (P.S. the toxic smell came from the complete renovation of our floor that was completed in a matter of 8 hours...they needed to impress the President of El Salvador), I went into little detail about J.R.'s actual treatment.

J.R.'s injections go as follows...

First he is given a a shot of saline to be sure the catheter is in its proper place. Next he is given two vials, back to back, of the stem cells. The amount seems small. Then one quick shot of heparin (a blood thinner) before a final push of saline to be sure those suckers don't clog in the line. The whole process takes five short (try describing them to J.R. as short) minutes.

The funniest part is that at the first treatment I had no idea how many injections he'd receive nor how long it would take to administer them, yet to distract J.R. I'd say "okay let's count" at the start of each.

"Oooooooooooone, twooooooooooo, thrrrrrrrrrreeeeeeeeeeee..." I counted slowly.

"Onetwothreefourfivesixseveneightnineten" J.R. counted OVER me and was on 10 before I hit 2. I just love that little boy.

After today's treatment we were off to our planned excursion to the Zoo which included a traditional Costa Rican lunch and a stop at a souvineer sweatshop (oops I meant factory). J.R.'s version of a traditional CR lunch was picked up on the way at El Burger King. To give you an idea of traffic, we could throw a rock at BK from the clinic, but after having to "serpentine" (which prompted lots of "look kids, Big Ben, Parliament jokes") it took 20 minutes before we had J.R.'s "cajita" (kidsmeal) in hand.

Our driver's name was Esteban, and Tim prompty calls him Steve then tells "Steve" that I speak Spanish. Great! I did NOT want this trip to be work! Interestingly enough I am encountering LOTS of people just like Esteban here in Costa Rica whose English is about it good as my Spanish. We end up having the greatest conversations! I can't tell you what great exchanges I've had, talking about what it's like to learn a foreign language and how difficult it is to retain without practice. Every person I spoke with is (happily) studying very hard, which is respectable I have to say.

Don't ever take a tour with us, because inevitably every tour guide we've used takes a pre-destination side trip to his home town and points out about 200 points of disinterest adding 50 minutes to the ride. Point in case: we left Kauai, Hawaii not knowing it was once a massive pineapple plantation but got to see where Lana kept her goats during the rainy season.

I really like Costa Rica. I can't stress enough how genuinely nice everyone is, and I honestly didn't mind seeing Esteban's elementary school, te prometo.

The traditional lunch was at a neat shack made to look authentic for tourists. The food looked and was, according to Tim y Esteban, very tasty. I simply ordered a batido de fresa because I had nervously downed J.R.'s BK fries on the trip over.

As for the Zoo...it was very lush and just J.R.'s pace. For my hometown friends, let's just say it's the Costa Rican version of Flamingo Gardens...just riddled with conservationist slogan-filled signs (oh yeah and cardboard cutouts of animals that may be asleep). I think Tim actually attempted to pet a two dimensional tapir.

The highlights included Tim and I nearly getting clipped by a Toucan (darker in color than Toucan Sam from what I saw), and J.R. coming an inch from getting his ass torn off by a peacock. As if this were not entertaining enough, an exit sign warned that it was not very eco-friendly to harvest turtle eggs for Viagra production. !Que divertido! (...o horror)

The Zoo is famous for its birds, but I swear more effort was put into providing a habitat for its turtles, squirrels (no I am not kidding) and (two) iguanas. I wanted to ask if I could help build the population by letting the zookeepers visit my BACK YARD! LOL!

I'm off to fight the VP of Chile for the last piece of sushi at the concierge spread. The bomb squad thinks J.R. is cute so I may have an in!

Peace!

K