The Laundry Maven: Up in Arms... Again

The Laundry Maven is up in arms. She’s lost control of her domain. It all started with the family week-long ski trip to Smuggler’s Notch in Vermont over February break. Before we left for skiing, garments and gear were strategically laid out for each person on a dining room chair. Ordered chaos reigned. After each person checked off items, including duplicates as necessary, on his or her list – ski gloves, wool socks, balaclava, goggles, helmet, snow pants, snow boots, ski boots, ski jacket, long underwear top, long underwear bottom, and sweatshirts – he or she packed his or her own ski bag. Bill made sure each skier had a set of skis and poles in the van. The system hummed.

Adults and kids each packed separate cases for indoor clothing: sweats, long-sleeved t-shirts, socks, pjs, jeans, underwear, sweaters and the like. The Laundry Maven tucked in the Malcolm’s special chemical-free laundry detergent, just in case a load of laundry would need to be done. Honestly, she made sure there were enough clean clothes packed that the family could get through the week without her help.

Skiing conditions were a little challenging: rain in the air resulted in ice on the slopes. The boys were troopers; they skied every day but one. I skied two days, plus one run the third day. On that run, my confident muscles seized up as my skis ran over ice chunks on my green runs. It was like skiing down a gravel road where fresh gravel had been dumped and left thick to settle. At the bottom of the run, I kicked off the skis. I was stunned, unsure what to do next. I had watched one tall man take a huge fall and drop his pole 10 feet uphill from where he landed. I thought I should help but knew that if I tried to scoot his pole to him I would land on him. His ski buddy was gingerly pecking her way down the mountain to him – better she land on top of him than me. I texted Bill: I’ve taken off my skis and I’m going to the bookstore in town.

The unit we stayed in had a long, wide entryway and was covered in Berber carpet. We would eject the ski boots first just inside the door, together with gloves and helmets; then we would meander toward the wall hooks and hang up ski jackets and ski pants. From there, layers of ski clothes were dispersed throughout the living room and the bedrooms. Wet stuff, if lucky ended up near the fireplace to dry overnight.

After the first day, I noticed how much easier it was to get this crew together this year. Our first February break ski trip was three years ago. Since then, Will has joined a ski club at school so is now quite capable of putting on his own gear. He was independent in the morning preparing to go out. With Liam, we worked out that he needs to be kept cool and comfortable until the last possible moment: carrying his helmet like a basket with balaclava and gloves tucked inside, unlike the other three of us who fully geared up before taking the shuttle to the mountain.

In all my mountain splendor, this is me and the black thing covering my face continues as a tight fitting hood under my helmet -- it's a balaclava. Sometimes that comes out baklava when I try to say it. Totally different items.

On the last day, we needed to clear out of the unit before 10 a.m. which was when the boys’ lessons started. Bill took the boys. The Laundry Maven grabbed the two suitcases. Instead of dividing clothes between adults and kids, luggage on the return trip would be divided between clean and dirty. She had left one open suitcase in the closet of each bedroom for dirty clothes to be deposited throughout the week. In wonder, she discovered a few pair of dirty underwear and one pair of black socks in the boys’ suitcase. That’s all. A search through their bedroom – under sheets and the dresser – only shook out two more pair of black socks. A swing through the bathroom rooted out more: swimsuits, sweats, and shirts.

The abundance of clean clothes still in the dresser drawers was… numerically incorrect. Particularly eight pairs of clean black socks. But never mind – they had been very independent young men on this trip. The fact that they had worn mostly the same clothes for five days… This was a ski holiday. In Vermont. Not Vale.

Back at home we unloaded the van into the hallway, an entryway a bit narrower than where we stayed in Vermont. All ski gear and wet, wet outer wear went to the laundry room. It seemed like a good idea at the time, for the Laundry Maven thought it best to wash everything that had been worn on the slope, outer and inner garments. Even spraying foot deodorizer in eight pairs of boots and washing goggles in warm soapy water.

With the first load coming out of the washer, the Laundry Maven unfolded the wooden rack and blocked the hallway with it.  Nobody likes the wooden rack in the Malcolm house.  However, since the Laundry Maven was washing wool and other thick garments, it needed to come out, so we are trying to be patient.

But on Day 4 of being home, we are all getting a little fed-up with the drying rack. And the Laundry Maven. She’s grumpy, and she’s not getting the job done very efficiently.

Thank goodness it's Hump Day. Maybe she'll have it all together by the time the weekend rolls around, and Bill returns from China. Now that's the man who genuinely dislikes the rack; perhaps it's a cultural thing. In England, these big wooden creatures are generally kept in the airing cupboard.

(How well the Laundry Maven remembers doing laundry across the pond... The English Laundry Maven.)

Three White Rubber Eggs?

While I waited for the Laundry Maven to run my bath this morning, I descended on two small cardboard boxes that were tucked behind the side table in our bedroom. They had been there since Christmas time. Remnants of wrapping presents on Christmas Eve. I had hauled a card table upstairs to our bedroom and set it up in front of the TV. Christmas cooking shows sounded like good company while wrapping gifts. For three hours. I had scoured the house for gifts that I had squirreled away. Much like the rodent, surely, I had forgotten where several of these excellent hiding spots were. In February, I’m still looking for the cutest talking Minnie Mouse that I know I ordered by mail for my niece in Iowa. Minnie is 16 inches high. And still hibernating in some cozy, save corner. (I ordered a replacement Minnie and had it shipped directly to my niece.)

One of the cardboard boxes behind the table contained coconut shells carved out to hold tropical drinks. Alas, that box has actually been hanging out behind the table since July when we hosted our Midwest Bed & Breakfast friends at our house. I had used the coconuts to decorate each of their bedside tables. Cardboard hula girls glued on straws rounded out the bottom of the box. I returned the coconuts to my great-grandfather’s trunk and tossed the rest.

The eclectic nature of that trunk would make my great-grandfather’s head spin. Twelve coconuts; two coconut bras – one Bill made & one I bought; a pair of satin pajamas my uncle brought back from Vietnam for me when I was perhaps five; Grandma Murphy’s favorite pair of purple satin pajamas she wore into her late 80’s; and a blue boa – that’s just what’s visible on the top layer. They all lie in wait for the next opportunity to emerge and to be useful.

The second cardboard box was small and stout in weight for its exterior size. Peeking in, I knew immediately why I had shoved this one behind the table: three solid rubber chicken-size eggs in an unopened plastic bag, with packing bubble, packing slip, and return slip all intact. I let out a very audible groan.

My sister and I had commiserated about a week before Christmas: We are nearly done shopping, but we had both gotten caught up in a flurry of nonsensical questions: “Is it all equal?” “Did we buy enough?” Both of our kids are at ages where they want bigger gifts – not lots of smaller ones to fill space under the tree. For my sister, this was her daughter’s first year of wanting a bigger gift. My sister confessed her struggle not to add to the pile. I knew exactly what she was talking about as I too had the same anxiety over the impending last-day-to-order-on-line-for-free-delivery quickly approaching. I curbed my anxiety by ordering a few more things from a catalog the boys don’t even look at. But in my book, they would be fun gifts – just to round out the tree skirt.

Up to those last minute purchases, I had kept inventory of my Christmas present purchases. In my daily notebook, I had a section written in the equivalent of Egyptian hieroglyphs. So intensely coded that I it took me a few looks to unravel them myself. When this episode of binge-buying hit, I jotted nothing down, for I didn’t need to because I was so near the end.

That wrapping session felt a little like Christmas morning to me as I opened all the cardboard boxes that had arrived over the past few weeks. Then, I opened the rubber eggs. I thought I had opened a box delivered to the wrong address, but there my name was in black and white. I indeed had ordered three rubber chicken eggs. Sadder was the fact that I didn’t know what I was actually missing. I still don’t. And here the eggs are… still in my house.

Many retailers give us through January to return merchandise that doesn’t fit or that is the wrong color. I need through the end of February to return stuff I just feel embarrassed about ordering. And now, with their story told, they can be returned – hopefully. If not, I’ll be looking for creative ways to use rubber eggs. I am dreading that possibility.

My bathtub nearly overflowed with the rubber egg distraction.

P.S. Have you met the Laundry Maven?  She's a character near and dear to my heart: The English Laundry Maven.

Living Up to Your Full Potential... On Skis

After a four-day weekend, anchored by a snow storm last Friday and this Monday, I believe today is Hump Day. Or was it yesterday? Snow days trick the mind and mess with the schedule a bit – but the snow was a welcome sight! We skied at Crotched Mountain in New Hampshire over the weekend. With temps in the 50s last Thursday evening, we weren’t sure there would be snow, but thankfully, Friday’s storm swept across the mountain and dropped a few inches of fresh powder.

Both days were glorious – temps knocked at 40’s door while the sun lit up the mountain as well as the view from the top. For most of the skiing last year, we were hunkered down in below zero air, snow squalls swirling, with not a speck of skin showing. Now, our cheeks were pink from the sun rather than from the wind.

Friends went with us; none of the three kids had skied before that day, so they started off with an hour and a half ski lesson. At the end of the lesson, the instructor suggested, with the help of two other adults, he show them how to get on and off the two-person chair lift so they could move to green runs on the mountain. End result: the 12-year-old boy and 9-year-old twin girls skied until five o’clock that evening. After one lesson. They have amazing potential with the sport.

That was Liam’s catch phrase for the weekend. For me. “We just want you to live up to your full skiing potential, Mom.” For my family, the sport is about coaxing. Bill coaxed me to ski when I was 23 years old. The hills in Wisconsin and the U.P. (Upper Peninsula, Michigan) were my training grounds. Ski across the mountain. Stop by making a pizza wedge. Getting up from a fall? Turn your skis perpendicular to downhill and push the poles into the upside of the mountain to return upright. I skied greens and blues, and I would usually end a weekend of skiing with one black run.

We coaxed Will into lessons at Pico Mountain in Vermont when he was closer to the ground, probably around 3rd grade. At that age, or rather size, confidence is easier to hone on a slope. It’s like a bush in a hurricane as opposed to a full-size maple. Closer to the ground, the bush is sturdier and compact with fewer branches to catch in the swirling wind. With unstable strong movement, trees fear crashing to the ground or at least limbs breaking off. A tight little bush might lose a few leaves. Now, Will coaxes Liam to follow him on tougher runs.

As for Liam, he never wanted to ski. He still doesn’t want to ski. Frankly, with Liam, if it isn’t his idea, he doesn’t want to do it. For anyone watching a Malcolm pre-skiing episode, it appears that we are beating our heads against a brick wall, forcing a child against his will to put slick boards on his feet and turn them down a mountain. For Liam, the idea of skiing is repulsive. The layers of clothes and heavy boots make his skin crawl. I imagine it would be like putting a layer of wool clothing next to my skin under the ski gear. I cringe at the thought.

Finally, on this trip, I dig out the prescription cortisone from his dermatologist. A half hour before we go out, I smooth on a thin layer all over his body to numb those sensitive nerve endings. While the rest of us hitch on ski pants at the hotel, we pack Liam’s in his ski bag. He will put his on at the last-minute to avoid over-heating. All this amidst, “I said I DON’T want to ski!!!” Once up the lift, he’s the first one to zip to the bottom of the mountain. Skis turned downhill and poles tucked under his elbows.

Bill, who has maxed out on his full skiing potential, skis with the boys. Growing up in England, he either skied on fake green turf in England or traveled to the Alps. Here, Bill and the boys usually have blues and blacks, medium and difficult runs, on their agenda. We meet for lunch at the lodge. Bill looks like he has been through a war zone. Liam greets me.  “Mom, it’s time you do a blue! We know you can do it!”

And the thing is, I too know I can do a blue. And a black. However, that doesn’t mean I need to do it. I have met my full skiing potential: I learned to ski nearly 25 years ago, and at nearly 50, I’m still strapping onto my feet smooth boards that have no other purpose than to slip on snow. And with those securely anchored to my feet, I’m flying up mountains 2,000 feet high on a chair lift.

And at the top, I stop and look out. The scene is exhilarating. I meander on gentle, easy, wide, green slopes and stop at turns to take another look at the vista. I’m grateful for my coaxing coach who made this sight possible through my eyes. The scene is euphoric. I catalog it with sunsets over cornfields, lying directly under fireworks on the 4th of July, and blown sand dunes covered in wildflowers at the beach.

On a couple runs, we all skied green together. I was the last one down the hill. My ski-life coach, Liam, is waiting for me, “Where have you been? We’ve been down here for ages!” True, my ski party of seven stood at the entrance of the chair lift.

I’m an oak tree that has seen a few hurricanes, and I know how I want to live to my full potential. Now, when I fall, I don’t try to use my poles to push off the mountain to stand up. I click my skis off, stand up, and put them back on. I take runs slowly so that I inhale the views. Because I know a photo will never do them justice.

I stand firm on my slippery boards when I answer Liam. “I’ve been skiing.”

Is that you, Chewbacca?

I’m floundering this week. I’ve written a lot today, but it feels like cobwebs being dealt with rather than anything I would send out into the universe. I’m getting tripped up by photos. I often take pictures to spark my memory for writing ideas. The photos are effective tools, but they are also making me stumble. Today, I’ve spent too much writing time reflecting on this: I feel like I’m writing essays that will be validated by the photo I post along with it. And today, that scrounging around for a visual stole the grit from my essay and the time I had dedicated to writing.

The words were rolling along. Then they stopped. A black technology hole sucked me in. I wanted to prove in media what I had tried to show in words, and I couldn’t link six video clips together on my phone – not enough storage space to make an iMovie. Then, I looked for similar clips on my computer and fell into a rabbit hole that meandered aimlessly through videos from early 2014. Finally, I pulled my choke collar.

Some people get a Hump Day Short sent to their in-boxes. Other readers, find me via Facebook and Pinterest, occasionally Twitter. And to draw readers’ attention on these visual social media avenues, I need to publish posts with an alluring piece of eye candy.

Take for instance, last week’s "Six Year Post-Chemo" piece. Desperate for a photo, I had Bill take a picture of the back of my head before I got a few inches of hair cut off. Being one of my steadfast readers, Liam glanced at my post on Facebook.

“Why do you have a picture of Chewbacca on your Facebook page?”

If you take a look you will see it: Turn the photo so the upper left corner is at the top, and there he is, complete with a wide forehead, inset eyes, and a big snout. Even the hair color appears Chewbacca-accurate.

I’m not a photographer or a videographer. I’m a writer. And while some of my quick snaps might be worthy of accompanying my writing, I’m going to bust out of this ever-present need to force a photo into my writing.

No idea how I will put this piece on Facebook. Probably re-post my Chewbacca head shot.