Posted by: Dylan Stafford | January 4, 2010

Monday after Christmas

It is 5:30am and I’ve already been awake for half an hour. I sat in the living room wrapped in two blankets, one for my legs and one over my head. I stared into the quiet and the darkness and watched the digital minutes on the cable box silently change. When I was awake enough I headed through the house to start the coffee and turn on the laptop.

Now I’m on the back porch and I hear the coffee bubbling from the kitchen. I left the blankets in the living room and it is chilly out here. I need a fleece but I can’t find one so I am wearing a ski jacket, sitting in the dark and typing.

It is Monday morning after Christmas vacation. I am in that “between” space. Between 2009 and 2010. Between vacation and work. Between night and day. I’m half new year’s resolutions and half general nervousness. I’m 50/50 ready to go and I don’t want to go all at the same time.

My job will be busy this month because I have a deadline to meet in early February. There is something important happening every Saturday this month at my job at UCLA so I am planning to work Tuesday – Saturday and take Mondays off. Marisa is OK with it. She only asked me if I thought it was really necessary. While I sat on the couch this morning I was trying to make sure it was really necessary, that I’m not just trying to hide. 

Our son Jackson got a lot of Christmas gifts this year. The amount of gifts caught me off guard. We had to buy two big plastic bins and fill them with all his toys to get them back home to California. We flew Southwest so “bags fly free”, but I think they may re-visit that policy after seeing us. I think Jack has every toy he needs to open his own daycare now.

Last week I was on the internet at my sister-in-law Bonnie’s home looking up a movie time and I clicked on a link to “What would Jesus buy?”. The link took me to a website where you can watch the entire movie and I did. The movie follows a performance actor, Reverend Billy, and his “Stop Shopping Choir” as they tour the country in a bus and stage commando church services in malls and Wal-Marts and finally Disneyland. They wear red robes and sing Christmas songs with the lyrics changed, encouraging people to slow down.

They know they aren’t going to get people to stop shopping. That is not their goal. They want people to be more conscious about it. To slow down and experience.

That is what I want for 2010. I want to slow down and experience.

I stuck my foot in my mouth about the gifts. We were at the kitchen table at Bonnie’s and Marisa asked me, “What do you think we should do with all Jack’s gifts?” What she meant was “How do you think we should ship them back to California? UPS or on the airplane?”

“I think we should give half of them to charity.” I said instantly. “We can probably find a Toys for Tots or something and donate them. Remember we have a small house.”

I wasn’t trying to be a jerk. It was honestly what I thought was the best solution. I thought this was way too many toys for one little toddler and we weren’t going to have any place to put them when we got home anyway. Marisa didn’t see it that way. Later that night when we were alone she said, “Dylan, people spent their hard-earned money for those gifts. It would be rude to give them away.” 

“Don’t you think about it being too much? About factory workers in China or Bangladesh cranking out all these plastic gizmos?” I asked.

“No.” was Marisa’s reply.

I apologized to Bonnie the next day.

“Bonnie, I just want to say I’m sorry. I wasn’t trying to be unappreciative about all the gifts Jack got when I said we should give them to charity last night. I just got overwhelmed by the amount of gifts Jack received and I honestly don’t know where we are going to put them all.”

“Oh that is what Gary was talking about this morning.” Bonnie replied. Gary is my brother-in-law, Bonnie’s husband. “I was reading my book on the couch when you guys were talking about that and I guess I didn’t hear the conversation.”

“Oh.” I said, feeling slightly silly. Nothing I like better than apologizing to someone who doesn’t know what I am talking about.

My wife’s family is imminently practical. Marisa is one of five kids. Because they are from New Jersey they speak a lot more directly than how I was raised in Texas. Bonnie hadn’t heard the original conversation, but even when Gary mentioned it to her she didn’t have any problem.

It’s 7:00 am now. The pink sky is peaking over the little hill in Culver City that I can see outside my window here on the porch. I’ve polished off the half pot of coffee as I have written. Marisa came through and went for a walk in the park. Jackson is still sleeping.

I’m better now than I was when I woke earlier. I’m up to sixty percent new year’s resolutions and only forty percent “I don’t want to go”. That is enough to start the day.

Posted by: Dylan Stafford | December 29, 2009

Christmas 2009

We’re travelling for sixteen days for Christmas. We are leaving California for Texas, Rhode Island and New Jersey. Jackson is 32 months old and he weighs 36 pounds. He has a ten minute attention span, max. This is either a great idea or we are slightly crazy.
 
Marisa booked the tickets back in the summer. My wife would have been a great travel agent. Anticipating Christmas as an adult sometimes means creating something to get excited about. I have been looking forward to the trip since then. For kids, the excitement is all built into the process. Jack and I have been playing the “look for the Christmas lights” game for the last several weeks on our way home in the evening. He’s seen Santa at least two times. And yes, we do actually go to church now and again. They seem to talk about Christmas there too.

Jack will get to see family. As we drive home we go through the names of all the family we will see. People and pets are all in one category to Jack.

“Are we going to see Grandma and Grandpa in Texas?” I ask.

“Yes. And Dottie Girl and Boogie and Butterscotch and Gigi.” Jack replies. These are names of all the dogs in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex associated with either my parents or my brother and sister. They are just like people to Jack.

I am looking forward family babysitting. Our problem living in Los Angeles is that we don’t have any of that easy support from having family close by. We have great friends and neighbors who help us care for Jack but nothing beats grandmas and aunties and cousins. For the two weeks of Christmas we will get to have some of the most appreciative babysitters imaginable. The alternative, staying home in LA and entertaining Jack for two weeks, is more than I can imagine. I am usually worn out after a regular, two day weekend with him. I love him–and he wears me out.

A few weekends ago I was in a grumpy mood. Marisa asked what was wrong and I said I was tired from babysitting all weekend. She looked at me and said, “Dylan, it isn’t babysitting. It is parenting.” She was right and I knew it but it didn’t make me feel less grumpy. I have thought about it several times since then and it has actually made it easier to parent. Somehow “parenting” seems more valuable and worthwhile than “babysitting”.

We landed in Dallas where mom and my brother picked us up at Love Field. It is the smaller airport and is almost old-fashioned compared to the bigger DFW. Texas is the first leg of the trip.

My mom was born very close to Christmas and usually it is a bum deal because you get combo-gifts that are supposed to cover both events. This year for a change it worked to her favor. If it weren’t for Christmas, we wouldn’t be with her for her birthday.

Two weeks ago I got a voice message on my cell phone from my mom. It was actually half a message. She started off chipper but half way through the message she choked up. I asked her later what had happened to make her hang up. She said she was just happy that we were coming to visit and that it had hit her unexpectedly while she was trying to leave a voicemail. She said little children are really what Christmas is all about and she was grateful that she would be seeing Jack this year.

My mom retired from teaching years ago and then became a full-time church lady, serving on committees and giving her time. On Sunday we went to the early service in the new hall at her church. The hall is a round, modern space and everyone is proud of what it adds to the church community. It is open and airy with big windows that look out across the Trinity River. I watched birds flit in the nude branches of the dormant trees during the service. I liked the combination of nature and worship. I knew it would make my mom happy to show us the new hall and also show off her grandson.

I also liked hearing some Christmas music in church, not just in supermarkets and on the radio. When I was growing up as a preacher’s kid, I heard a full Advent season’s worth of Christmas music every year. It was an important part of the buildup to Christmas. The five Advent candles slowly counted down and the season seemed to take much more than a month. As an adult, it seems to take about twenty minutes between Thanksgiving dinner and Christmas morning.

The 9:00am church service was almost full and we sat on the back row surrounded by a big extended African family. I think they are refugees adopted by the church congregation. Jack made friends after the service with a little boy named Alex. We wriggled out of our coats and Jack got comfortable on Marisa’s lap.

We stood for the first hymn and at the end of the row in front of us I saw a tall, red-headed teenager with braces on his teeth. I saw in him a future-version of our own red-headed son Jackson and my eyes filled with tears. It was like I had multiple thoughts all at the same time: Jack will grow up; his childhood will end; he will be a teenager; he will become a man someday; I will be much older then than now; my parents will change; I will miss these days when he is little. The thoughts weren’t one after another but more like one on top of another, and therefore amplified and stronger.

Marisa looked at me crying. She knows I cry sometimes and it was quiet in church so she couldn’t ask what was going on. She squeezed my hand and smiled.

My whole Christmas happened right then. All the Hallmark moments I am always hoping for, all those warm feelings that I see people have in the movies, all those were present for me in that moment. We have two weeks together and there will be all the laughter and drama of travelling and family but the best of it was distilled right then. I was seeing my toddler and my future teenager and my own old age all at the same time. I was sitting in a church with my mom and dad on one side and my wife and son on the other and it was a perfect Christmas moment.

Posted by: Dylan Stafford | December 14, 2009

That was embarrassing (I & II)

I hate email. Flat out. Whoever invented email is torturing me. Email multiplies like rabbits—one goes out and two come back. I get barraged by them at work and it doesn’t help that I sometimes can’t read.   

Last week I got an email inviting Marisa and me to a Saturday night holiday gathering. My good friend Elizabeth was having a party. Marisa thought it sounded fun and she arranged our friend Jen to babysit after her work.   

Elizabeth sent a second email asking if we were coming because she had to buy the food. I skim emails and miss key details. That should have been my clue. If she needed a headcount then we probably better be on time. I knew we were going to be late because of Jen’s work schedule, but because I thought it was a big tree-trimming event with lots of people I didn’t think our lateness would disrupt anything.   

Jen came and we did the babysitting handoff with Jack. Marisa was still blow-drying her hair and Jack was playing Legos in front of the fireplace while I was watching an ESPN documentary about University of Miami football in the 80s and 90s. By the time we were in the car it was 8:00. Marisa was fighting a cold and she said, “Let’s make sure we leave by 10 tonight. I want to get a good night’s sleep and not push myself.” I replied that we would do that.   

While we were driving Elizabeth called to check and see where we were. She was super sweet but after I hung up I started wondering if I had missed something. This was a tree-trimming party and she was supposed to have a houseful of people, so she wouldn’t step away to call us would she? And didn’t it sound kind of quiet in the background?   

We arrived at her home and walked into a warm living room that smelled like cinnamon and candles and Christmas. Instead of people everywhere there were only two other couples. Instead of a half-decorated tree there was a dining room table fully set with centerpiece and crystal and show plates. I looked at the well-noshed trays of appetizers with the sinking realization that I had missed some more email details. This wasn’t a tree trimming party. This was a formal dinner party and we had made our host wait over an hour. My heart dropped as my embarrassment rose.   

Elizabeth never gave the slightest hint of annoyance. She graciously hosted the evening with toasts and courses and gifts. The other couples were longtime friends of hers. One couple was Jewish and in honor of Hannukah Elizabeth served potato latkes with apple sauce and sour cream. The green salad had blackberries and blueberries and strawberries as well as cream cheese and nuts. The main event was a sweet potato casserole, seasoned green beans and chicken breasts with rosemary and citrus drizzle. Desert was a platter full of creamy calories. All this, plus gifts and stories and it was 11:50 when we left.   

Driving home I was upset to the point of not knowing what to say. Everything should have been perfect after such an exquisite meal but I felt like a loser for both showing up late and now leaving late. I had inconvenienced Elizabeth at the beginning and Marisa at the end. Marisa was tired from her cold and she wanted to get a certain medicine but we missed the closing of the drugstore by 5 minutes. I sped off from the pharmacy parking lot as my emotions came out in my driving.   

“Dylan, it is ok. I’ll be fine.” she said. “You don’t need to speed.”    

I held the wheel with both hands and didn’t say anything. In my mind everything was dark. The thoughts were coming fast and bitter. “Why can’t I pay attention? I can’t even read a damn email right. Why am I always in such a hurry? The one night I’m in charge of our social life and I screw it up? How are we going to get to Orange County in the morning if we are out this late tonight? When did we tell Jen we’d be home? I bet I made her angry too. She’ll never babysit again and now Marisa can’t get any medicine.” Bang, bang, bang my mind was firing its accusations.   

I slowed down my driving and silently prayed for intervention, “God, please remove my defects of character.” I wasn’t specific. Any defect would do. I couldn’t distinguish between impatience and intolerance and being judgmental. I tossed the prayer up, Hail Mary style, hoping for any relief.   

I couldn’t quit thinking that I had pushed my wife too far when she wasn’t feeling well. My mean brain was throwing guilt and shame at me like the food fight in Animal House.   

The last chance for cold medicine was the liquor store down the street and they did have some night time medicine that could help her get a good night’s sleep. We came home and hugged Jen and heard about Jack’s bedtime. Jen was on the couch watching an old Western and all was well with her. She said he had a good evening but every now and then he would remember mommy and daddy were gone and get upset. Jen was fine that we had stayed until midnight. She gathered her coat and left. Marisa and I went and brushed our teeth quietly. Jack was asleep in his bed, his body cocked up at a funny angle on a pillow with his blue-striped fleece pajamas keeping him warm.   

We crawled into our bed and I gave Marisa a kiss on the cheek. “I love you love.”   

“I love you too.”   

The next morning Jack came into our bedroom at 7:00 rubbing his eyes and requesting mommy. Marisa gamely got out of bed to go play with him while I slept a little longer. When I got up there wasn’t much time left.   

Every month Marisa and I go to a breakfast salon with a group of friends. We eat and drink coffee and try to solve the world’s problems by noon. We rotate houses and this month our friend down in Orange County was hosting. The salon starts at 9:00am but I needed to leave by 8:00 to make it on time.   

“Do you want me to make you some coffee?” Marisa asked.   

“No, there will be coffee there and I’m already running late.” I replied.   

Marisa dressed Jack while I took a shower. We bundled him up and into his car seat and I kissed Marisa on her cheek. She was still fighting her cold so she was staying home to rest.   

Sunday morning is when I imagine what it was like to live in Los Angeles before it got crowded. The traffic flows freely and the air is clear and the mountains are easy to see. That California cliché about being able to snow ski in the morning and surf in the afternoon makes sense on Sunday mornings.   

Jack and I made good time to Orange County. We were only about fifteen minutes late to the salon. I greeted my friends and explained to them that Marisa was congested and had stayed home. Our host Kay had prepared a feast of a breakfast with both meat lover and vegan options. Her daughter is vegan and Kay is learning new recipes. I started with coffee to get my caffeine back up to my normal levels.   

In recovery meetings people say, “If one is good, then five must be better.” I don’t think that way about alcohol anymore, but these days you might say I am powerless over coffee. Why wake up to just one cup when I can have a half pot to myself? I prepare the coffee maker at night and in the morning hit brew on my way to the shower. I have my warm-up pot at home and then drink more when I get to work.   

To drink less, I have to wean myself slowly. If I change my caffeine too quickly I get a solid headache in the afternoon. I was afraid this might happen today, since I was having my first cup of java three hours later than usual. While we had our salon, talking about life and love and politics, I sat on the floor against the couch and sucked down coffee like there would be hell to pay if I didn’t catch up to my daily dosage.   

The salon lasted until 1:30 and it was almost two when Jack and I headed home. My plan was that Jack would fall asleep in the car and get a long nap while I drove slowly in the afternoon traffic. I might even drive beyond our house if he was still sleeping. My Dallas Cowboys were playing the San Diego Chargers and I planned to listen to the game on the radio.   

Often Jack is asleep in minutes but today he was in his car seat chatting away about the morning and the muffins and the doggie and the trucks on the highway. He was wide awake and the traffic was moving well and my nap plan was falling apart. My fear was we would get home too soon and Jack’s nap would be too short and he would be cranky the rest of the day.   

Fifteen minutes later he did fall asleep, quickly, like a light switch going off. Maybe it was the monotony of the radio football or maybe he was just tired. The traffic slowed and I felt better that he was getting his nap. But I also started to feel something else. I started to feel like I had to pee. Apparently I had overdone it trying to catch up on my coffee. Plus, adding to that pee feeling, the caffeine headache I had been trying to avoid was happening anyway. My head was starting to pound and the bright California sun amplified the pain between my ears.   

I love Stephen Colbert and his Colbert Report. In one of his mockumentary episodes he railed against the evils of trucker bombs. With dramatic music and slow speed close ups he showed, strewn along the highways and byways of America, discarded plastic Gatorade bottles full of amber colored liquid, a liquid distinctly different from the original contents.   

It turns out long haul truckers like to get paid and part of how their salary gets calculated is how fast they make deliveries. Instead of losing time pulling over to pee, they keep the engines of capitalism humming by relieving themselves into empty plastic bottles to keep on truckin’. If they are civic minded, the bottles will get emptied out later. If not, they get tossed out the window into the ditches of America to add to our litter, thus trucker bombs, the demon in Colbert’s mockumentary.   

Jack was asleep in the car seat. The Dallas Cowboys were playing painful football on the radio broadcast, not doing well at all. My headache was pulsing and my bladder was bursting and the sunshine was making it all seem loud. I started going through my options. If I pulled over and went into a restroom, I would have to take Jack with me and his nap would end. Jack would be cranky the rest of the day and Marisa would be disappointed. If I kept driving he would sleep, but I might have lifelong kidney damage.   

Maybe I could pull over on the shoulder but keep the car running so Jack wouldn’t wake up? Sure. Good plan. On the freeways of Southern California in the blazing sun it would be like taking a leak on the fifty yard line during halftime. I had to keep going.   

Another TV image filled my mind, erasing the Colbert memory. This time it was those public service announcements warning against drinking and driving. Each time the officer knocks on the window of the drunk driver sitting in a car full of liquid. Each time the driver rolls down the window and the liquid comes sloshing out. It is supposed to be beer or wine but today in my mind it was pee. My kidneys had failed and the pee had filled my whole body. All I could think about was peeing.   

The only grace was that Jack continued to sleep. We were up to forty minutes now and he was still sleeping. If I could only hold on for twenty more minutes we would have reached the magic hour mark. Anything over an hour is a success for a weekend nap and usually enough to ward off the evil crankies. But twenty more minutes for my bladder seemed like too much.   

I started to imagine pulling off on the shoulder anyway, peeing in the full glare of the afternoon light with people honking at me as they drove past. Worst-case outcomes ranged from getting a ticket to getting rear-ended and perishing in a giant fireball, a fireball that faintly smelled of burning urine.   

The traffic was moving and we were coming up to our exit. It wasn’t an hour. We were at fifty minutes of naptime. The exit ramp had a red light at the bottom and I had to stop. Jack twisted in his car seat and in the rear view window I could see his eyes starting to open, slowly, like a dinosaur coming out of a bog. He’s a toddler now and he doesn’t wake up crying, but kind of mumbles as he gets his bearings.   

“We home?”   

“No Jack. We’re almost home but not quite.”   

Don’t think about an elephant.   

Don’t do it. Don’t think about an elephant. I mean it… It’s hard to do isn’t it?   

Well that’s where I was with the pee. All I could think about was pee. We were about five minutes from home but I had to pee so badly. If I made it to home and ran in the door to the restroom and left Jack alone in the driveway in his car seat, that didn’t seem like a very good parenting. I didn’t think I could make it anyway so I started looking for someplace to pull over. There was an empty Gatorade bottle in my car and I was about to make my own trucker bomb.   

I pulled behind a restaurant in an alley but there were two old guys standing around a small grill. Dammit. I circled back and parked on the side of the restaurant. It wasn’t private but it was better than the highway and the fireball.   

“What daddy doing?” Jack asked from the back as I maneuvered.   

“Jack, daddy make peeps.” I replied, definitely feeling like father of the year at this point.   

“Why daddy make peeps?”   

This conversation was going nowhere. “Everybody make peeps Jack. That’s what people do.”   

“Why?” He asked again but he wasn’t really interested. He was looking out the window at the men at the grill.   

The relief was blissful as the bottle filled and my bladder said thank you. The only question was whether the bottle was going to be big enough. I could see the pee slowly creeping up the sides. It was going to be close. The bottle wasn’t big enough. Whatever that inside muscle is that makes pee stop, I flexed it. It worked, sort of. I put the cap back on the bottle. My bladder cried thank you. My headache wasn’t better and my Dallas Cowboys were still losing. But I didn’t have to pee anymore and Jack almost got a whole nap.   

Somehow the domino effect from that email had led me to this, too much coffee and peeing in a parking lot. If I would ever slow down when I read emails maybe things like this wouldn’t happen. But then what would I have to write about?   

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