Since school will be ending soon for summer vacation I thought this excerpt from my memoir, A Dead Tomato Plant and a Paycheck, most appropriate. This is from the chapter titled: Summertime Blues, Swimming Does Count as Bathing. Enjoy….
Once all the kids were in school full time, summer time took on a whole new dimension. When they were all little and underfoot, seasons streamed one into the other without much impact on family life. We continued doing what we always do, just changed clothes to suit the weather.
That all changed when the kids were all gone for most of the day during the school year, then suddenly, summertime came and there they all were, cluttering up the house. Every last one of them. Every day. All day.
Often, as the end of the school year drew near and I looked ahead to the days of summer vacation stretching endlessly before me, I had a feeling of impending doom. Maybe that was because we usually failed miserably on the first day of summer vacations. Sort of like time trials in car racing. If you make it through without a mishap, you’ve got a chance at the race.
I would barely make it through the first two hours of:
“I’ve been waiting all winter to watch this show. You can watch your dumb show tomorrow.”
“That’s not fair! You can’t watch TV anyway. You didn’t do your work.”
“What are you? The resident policeman?”
“I’m just trying to help. Keep things running smoothly so Mom won’t get upset.”
Meanwhile I was in the other room suffering from terminal motherhood, expecting all the fuses to blow any second. I had visions of that kid walking through the entire summer in a black and white striped shirt with a whistle in his mouth.
Maybe I should have just let him have a go at it.
As the fight over the TV would increase in tempo and volume, I would have definite impulses to do violence of some sort. And just in case that went beyond the impulse state, I had a defense plan prepared.
By reasons of insanity: “Your Honor, no one in their right mind would ever throw a toaster at their own television without provocation.”
Things went steadily downhill from there, and I questioned whether I would make it another day. Already I had laryngitis and I think I ruptured something in my throat. God wouldn’t do this to me, would He? He wouldn’t expect me to stumble through the summer without a voice to yell with?
I might have made it through that first day by sheer force of determination, if it hadn’t been for this little kid who kept following me around asking me when we were leaving on summer vacation.
“We are on summer vacation!”
“No we’re not! Vacation is going somewhere, and we’re not going anywhere.”
I wonder if a one way ticket on the next space shuttle fits the criteria of “going somewhere?”
Lovely. Lovely. Lovely.
Karen
Good Luck. Summer school?
Thanks so much for your kind words, Karen. Made my day to come over and see your comment.
Love the title A Dead Tomato Plant and a Paycheck. Based on this excerpt, I would LOVE to read the entire memoir!! Thanks for posting this.
I had to stop laughing at the title so I could read the post.
Battle fought like a true mom. Sadly, also lost like a true mom. LOL
Maribeth
Giggles and Guns
Maribeth and Ann, so glad you like the title of my book. Now if I can just get an agent and editor to like it as much. The title actually was just temporary until I found something better, but as I worked on the book, I decided the title fit, so it is staying.