matching tracksuits

fun in threes, sometimes fours

Routines

Having children necessitates it, one would think. Perhaps they're not so much necessary as inevitable, for even the worst parents I would imagine fall into some kind of routine partially dictated by their children, even it if it is simply to neglect them cruelly. That of course is not our story. Our family runs on routines, pure and simple. We don't even question them; the only question is who will do what, and habit has largely answered that question for us. There are morning routines: the Boy, for instance, must -- simply must -- have his Cheerios before all else. He will insist on wearing a soggy diaper from the full night's sleep if there's any question of putting him on the potty chair before his first bowl of Cheerios. As for the Girl, she has to have a blanket wrapped around her to keep off the morning chill, even when it's summer and there is no morning chill. There are afternoon routines involving snacks. There are the standard evening routines, who puts which child to bed, who supervises the bath, who straighten's up the day's messes. There are travel routines, fussing routines, play routines, shoe routines, bathroom routines. We even fall into meal preparation routines.

The thought of abandoning all those routines for a weekend would be tantamount to suggesting that we try not to breathe through all of Thursday morning or not get up on a November Monday morning. And yet, in celebration of ten years of marriage, we decided, with a little help from Nana and Papa, to drop all the routines and just breath for a weekend.

A small cabin on the banks of the French Broad River in Hot Springs, North Carolina (Population, according to one resident, about "Oh, I don't know, six-twenty, six-thirty") was just the place to do just that. To walk on the banks of the river,

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to stroll by the railroad tracks looking for spikes to take home to our train-obsessed little boy.

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This was the plan. And this was, it seemed, what all the stars in the heavens aligned against -- if one believes in such things -- as we tried to make our way there. First, there was the flood. It was supposed to keep raining all weekend, and Friday morning at four, as I was trying desperately to keep the water from spilling from the storage half of the basement to the living half of the basement, it seemed unlikely that we would be able to make it.

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On the way to the cabin -- about a two-hour drive -- we encountered an accident in the road that stopped traffic from going both directions. Not an insurmountable obstacle, but we both joked about it. After a few minutes of waiting and checking the GPS for alternate routes, we decided to try what so many other cars were trying and do a U-turn in the median. We got all four wheels in the median, wet with two days' rain, and the front wheels started spinning. Visions of what it might take to get us out were just forming as I shifted into reverse, caught enough traction to back up to the pavement, then tried again, successfully, after gaining a bit more momentum. Three efforts to stop us, all failed. Still, what else might be waiting, we wondered.

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Granted, an incredible, modern cabin made from wood of a hundred-year-old cabin brought from deep in the mountains awaited us. A cabin so perfect that we found ourselves saying things like, "This is what we need we retire."

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That little slice of perfection waited, but there were a few more obstacles first. Like being unable to find the cabin despite following instructions that matched both the GPS's monotone directions and Google Maps. When you head down a narrow mountain road that soon becomes a gravel road, which crosses a railroad track -- all according to direction -- and leads to an enormous abandoned house that looks like something from the horror story William Faulkner never wrote (granted, from a certain point of view, that's all he wrote, but that's another literary argument). When you get through all this and overcome the visions of mindless zombie hordes flooding out of the abandoned structure and manage to pull away, when you make it this far and decide that, despite the late hour, you must call the owner, there's only one possible outcome: no bars. None. T-Mobile has been the object of my hatred and vitriol from the start (why did we switch? but that's another horror story), but now my hatred became white-hot. We drive back to town, found an open shop, and asked for directions.

"I know where the road is," the attendant said, "but I don't know that exact address." He looked back at the slip of paper I'd given him and then said, "Come on." We went out to the young man sitting in front of the store and the attendant asked, "Hey, do you know where Harold has his cabins?" Small town -- they know the owner by name. We didn't yet know just how small and just how inevitable such an exchange would be.

He gave me directions; I replied, "That's where we went."

"Yeah, but you've got to turn before the tracks. Did you see that little gravel road beside the tracks?"

We had indeed seen that road, and started down it before deciding it couldn't be right.

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And so back we went, down the the rail-side tracks on a road that came so close to the tracks that my heart thumped when K asked, "Can you imagine being at this point of the road when the train comes?"

We later shared this with the owner. "Oh, I do that on purpose. It's quite a rush."

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But finally, we'd made it. Everything faded away as we slipped into the hot tub on the front porch, listened to the crickets and cicadas, and marveled at how utterly dark it was in that secluded place. The stars provided enough light to see the clouds passing by overhead.

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Next morning, we headed to town after a short walk along the tracks, surprised at how quickly and effortlessly we'd made it through the transitions. No kids to feed; no E to worry about potty training; no L to worry about moments of panic exaggeration; no car to pack. We simply ate our breakfast, took our walk, and said, "Well, let's just go head to town."

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We had a relaxed lunch without fussing about food this one doesn't like or about getting more of this or that food that the other is on the verge of breakdown about. No trips to the bathroom afterward to clean an incredibly independent but not quite coordinated little boy's enthusiastic eating.

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We just ate lunch, paid the bill, and left. No routine.

"What a marvelous change," K said. Or was that I who said it? Or both?

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We headed over to the grounds where the Bluff Mountain Festival is usually held, trying to place where the stage was, where we usually sat, where the clogging area was -- mindless chatter.

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We went to the hot springs for which the town is named, soaking in a hot tub filled with hot mineral water that made our skin tingle and our muscles relax. We went on a short kayak trip with no one panicking at the rough water (L) and no one begging for more (E).

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We went for another walk when we got back to the cabin,

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talked about how thrilled E would have been to be standing there as a train crawled by then stopped, waiting on the siding for an opposite-bound train to pass by and stop to wait for a third train to go by.

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There was no one to complain about how long our by-the-train photo session was taking.

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There was no one to ask just how many times we would take the same picture.

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There was no one to be utterly thrilled with the multiple deer sightings.

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There was no one to complain about hunger when we returned to the cabin, no one to get upset about us going back into a hot tub for the third time in twenty-four hours, noone to put to bed.

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In other words, it was absolutely and blissfully peaceful while being all wrong. Those routines, new and old, are what make us a family, and being a family is what makes us us. We are greater than the sum of our parts, and we are less than two individuals when we're alone.

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So when we got back to Nana's and Papa's and took the kids swimming, it was all as it had been before. The routines returned; the exhaustion of a return to the everyday settled.

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And we were happily complete again.

Ten

I am currently away with my lovely bride, celebrating our tenth anniversary.

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Flood 2014

The Boy woke up this morning at four. Well, that's what time it was when I finally looked at the clock. We finally got him calmed back down, we were back in bed, and the thought occurred to me: "It's still raining." It had gushed all day, with enough of a deluge in the morning that the drainage creek at the back of our backyard had overrun its banks again. Not nearly as badly as last year, but still a substantial amount of water.

"There goes our mulch," I said, but it miraculously survived.

The basement was another story. It has flooded before, but K and I were hopeful, with all the dry weather we'd been having, that we wouldn't have that problem. At four, I thought, "Better go check the basement."

Probably three inches of water in the storage room. The crawl space was worse.

Lowes opens at six; I was there shortly after six. By around six forty, the newly-purchased pump, which pumps up to twenty-six gallons a minute, was at work.

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Two hours later, it was still sending water gushing out.

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Another hour later, it was a trickle but still going. So if we had an average of ten gallons of water a minute (a very conservative estimate, I think), that would be 600 gallons of water an hour. At three hours, that would be close to two thousand gallons. Is that possible? Two thousand gallons in the crawl space alone? It doesn't seem possible.

But after looking at what happened in Amherstburg, Ontario, I realize how fortunate we were.

Waiting Surprise

A silly idea I had, probably born of exhaustion and paint fumes. I did it after L went to bed, and K and I have decided not to say a word about it. We’ll just see when she notices it.

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Transformations

The Girl likes blue. When we told her that we would be moving her into the computer room, which is just a touch smaller than her room, she was distraught — until we told her we would repaint it and she could choose the color.

Monday we worked on the trim. Yesterday, I roughed in the walls, painting the edges so I could attack it today with just a roller.

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Of course there was a temptation, and I did succumb to said temptation…

Wondering

I’m out mowing, mid-morning. The Girl, who is taking care of E, sticks her head out the door and says, “E was wondering if we could have some of those peanut butter-filled pretzels.”

Sure.

I can just see our two-year-old son sitting on the couch, watching his favorite cartoon, The Littlest Pet Shop (no coercion there), and turning to L to say, “You know, I’m just a little hungry. Know what I’d like? Some of those peanut-butter-filled pretzel thingies. And you know, Daddy’s just right outside there, mowing the front yard. Maybe you could just, I don’t know, stick your head out the door and ask him. I mean, we could try to get it ourselves, but I think we’d probably be better off if we ask permission.”

Yes, that’s probably how it happened.

Helping, Redux

Today we embarked on the most time-consuming aspect of our little house project: painting. As we always do, we misjudged — or rather I misjudged — just how much more work we had to do before we could begin painting, and I was confident we would end the day with the first coat on both the trim and the walls.

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First and hopefully last, for we bought paint that the clerk swore required only one coat, and no primer necessary even when changing a wall from a dark earth tone to a light blue. Still, I was hoping that even if we had to use a second coat, we could have the first one on today.

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By the time we took a watermelon break in the late morning, we still hadn’t cracked open a paint can. By the time we do get painting, the Boy is in bed, the sun is high and hot, and the prospect of painting glossy white paint in blinding sun necessitated not only a hat for the head but sunglasses to protect the eyes. And since I’m not sure about the quality of L’s (which is a shame to admit), I gave her a pair of my old sunglasses and my hat — and suddenly she looked older.

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As with yesterday’s helping, the Girl’s help in turn required some help. Still, fewer runs than the deck painting session.

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Back inside, K and I worked to finish all the white in the house. I know this is the second photograph I’ve taking of K in this very position, but I was unable to find the first. Were we painting the living room? Repainting the living room? Painting the study-soon-to-be-L’s-room? They all seem strong possibilities, reminding me once again of the cyclical nature of working about the house.

Helping

Some of my earliest memories, when I was just a toddler, involve helping my father. The first house I lived in with my family was a brick ranch with a sizable lot behind it that was mostly overgrown and wild. At some point my father decided that leaving it fallow was a waste and that he must put the land to work. If I recall, the plan was to plant peanuts. But that involved clearing the land, and lacking any heavy machinery for the job, he did it by hand, with me “helping.” My helping is not such a clear memory, but I’d bet it was mostly getting in the way. I know I was most effective as a messenger, asking my mother to prepare a cup of coffee for Dad as well as a cup of “coffee milk” for me. Or maybe I just remember that because I heard my parents tell the story so many times. Such are first memories.

A few weeks ago, it was the Girl’s turn to help. She was actually quite helpful. Sure, I had to go back and correct some places where she’d put too much stain on and created runs, but that was easier than doing all the work myself, and the joy she got from helping was all the more priceless.

Today, as I got material ready for L’s big room change, the Boy comes down the stairs with his careful step, sitting on the bottom and watching me for a moment before rising and asking the question of the day.

“Help you, Daddy?”

What can a two-year-old do that’s truly helpful? Nothing. What can I do to help him feel helpful? Everything.

I give him a sealed bag and ask him to open it. He struggles for a while before asking, “Help me Daddy?”

In the end, I find some extra parts and a pair of needle nose pliers and ask him if he can pick up the spare parts with the pliers.

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It keeps him occupied and filled with joy for at least twenty minutes.

Musical Rooms

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The Games We Play

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