We have a chipmunk and Matt named him Alvin. (Startlingly
original, I know.) Alvin lives in an old hollow stump just outside the downstairs
floor-to-ceiling picture windows and every day we grow more and more attached
to him. Often these days I wake up, burning hot at 4:30 AM, and can’t go back
to sleep. Today I gave up trying shortly before 6 and went downstairs where
it’s warm (we keep the heat up downstairs, the air cool upstairs) to read and
have some breakfast. I finished reading the thoroughly readable and amusing The
Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place and then got myself some cereal.
I walked to the windows and noticed Alvin was also having his breakfast, standing
on the edge of his stump munching contentedly on a nut while he gazed out over
the woods. (He doesn’t like to eat indoors; he pops out for his snacks and then
dives back in to go back to sleep.) I stood behind him eating my Honey Oaties
and did the same. We contemplated the leaves and the rising sun together. There
is no profound moral to this story, it was just a lovely moment I didn’t want
to forget.
As you may have gathered by this point, I kind of love that
I’m having a baby right at the turn of one season into another. (It goes
without saying that I’m also loving being somewhere where you can actually see
and feel this happening.) It’s soothing to join the rest of the natural world
in the waiting for a force beyond any control to sweep in and do what it will. The
wind blew pretty furiously the other night and the trees were noticeably
nakeder when morning arrived. Fall will soon be winter, and my party animal
baby should be here just in time to show off his good looks at all of the holiday
parties he’s hoping to be invited to. I hope it snows before we leave.
Matt and I attempted to teach ourselves a ye olden card game
last night. It’s called Piquet, and though once considered the granddaddy of
all card games, most people have never heard of it these days, much less know
how to play it. It seems deceptively simple but actually is somewhat like
chess, you realize as you wade in deeper—it requires a ton of forethought in
strategizing, planning ahead several moves, and an excellent memory. No wonder it’s
fallen out of fashion—it’s hard. People these days prefer Spoons and Slapjack
for obvious reasons. Piquet is so
hard that it led to a whole discussion about how much dumber people have
gotten. Back in the fifteenth century people didn’t have iPhones, laptops,
Netflix, cable, Xbox, or even very many books. All they had to do all day was
use their brains, for everything, fun and profit, all the time. So they all
played this game like crazy over their mutton chops and ale and had a madcap
good time of it and you didn’t have to be considered a genius or a scholar to
play it, either. I was ashamed and exhausted by the realization of how little I
actually use my brain when I’m not in school being forced to do so, so
naturally my solution was to put the game away and go watch The Wedding Planner on Netflix.
Another thing we (and by we I mean Matt) did was put
together baby’s little newborn bed, the Rock N Play sleeper. I wanted it to
have plenty of time to air out, and it’s fun to look at, sitting in wait next
to my side of the bed.
I’m officially one week from my “due date” and finally my
belly is satisfyingly large. It still looks weirdly small when I look down, but
the profile doesn’t lie. There is very definitely a small human living in there. See this iPhone self portrait here.
However large I may appear, my belly button ring is still
hanging in there, and my belly button itself remains unpopped.
The baby continues his hard work at scooting further and
further down, giving me cramps and sharp round ligament pain as he digs his
little feet into my ribs for traction. It scares me because I don’t want my
water to break before labor begins and I always wonder how on earth it doesn’t
when he pulls this circus trick, but that amniotic sac is stronger that you
would think. He just has to hold on for about 30 more hours for Grandma to get
here, and then he can do whatever he wants. I have no idea what to expect
anymore, given the various stories you all have shared with me about your first
spontaneous labors and the fact that I have never done this before. I could go
tonight, I could go three more weeks. I have no clue. I’m hoping for at least
another week so I feel more ready, but as my friend Myriam wrote to me after my
last blog, there is no such thing as “ready” anymore. That was surprisingly
comforting. It’s good to have friends who know you well enough to know what you
need to hear.
Tomorrow we are venturing into Nashville for a day trip
before picking my mom up at the airport, so probably it will be tomorrow. My
water will break dramatically in the middle of Broadway in front of Taylor
Swift or Toby Keith or someone like that.
My grand plans of learning to use my sewing machine before
giving birth have been thwarted by my failure to remember to bring any fabric
with me. My grand plans of making baby a beautiful scrapbook baby book have
been thwarted by my laziness. And still, the time here is flying by. This last
month of pregnancy has been anything but slow. Of course, I could still have
three weeks to go, and if that’s the case I bet it will start to feel slow.
Also, Matt and I are watching our way through The Office
(his first time, not mine), which is a great stress and anxiety reliever.
I’m reading Althea and
Oliver by Cristina Moracho now, and it’s extremely good which is a huge
relief since I only like about .5% of the YA I’ve read since graduating from
VCFA and the rest just pisses me off and I quit. The only way to explain it is
that the writing is either too much or not enough. This book is just right.
When Matt read the jacket he asked me warily, quoting one of the blurbs, “Dazzling
prose?” And I said, “Don’t worry, not that kind of dazzling prose. Not like the
glitter that gets trapped under your eyelid and cuts your eyeball.” Side note:
the jacket also calls it a “whip-smart” debut. Matt pointed out recently that
“whip-smart” or "smart as a whip" are actually kind of really sexist terms. It implies condescension, a shock
or surprise at the intelligence. I propose that 99.9 % of the time it is only used in reference to pets, women and children. Something to think about.
Tonight we made coconut rice, jerk seasoned
broccoli and sweet potatoes, and cumin lime black beans. A surprisingly fast and easy Caribbean
style feast.
And that’s all the news that’s fit and unfit to print today.
Stay tuned for more of the cozy, the wondrous, the mundane, and eventually, the
baby.
Ah, a card game that's like chess? I can't take it. You're right we're all so dumb. I need to go read a book now, so I can feel like I'm at least making more of an effort to be smart.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait for the baby!