Ok....For those of you who have read my last post and are patiently waiting for the next post (where I confess that I spent most of my Southern California childhood wearing nothing but bubbles and face paint.....)
You're gonna have to wait.
I need to back track.
I skipped something that happened here in CURRENT Emily Land.
My Battle Buddy came home.
Yep. Jayson is baaaaaaaack!
September 14, 2011
This is how my morning went:
He's not getting a flight home today.
I'm going to work.
He's getting a flight today.
I'm not going to work.
He's not getting a flight today.
I'm making a drink.
He's getting a flight.
I'm making another drink.
He's not getting a flight.
I'm drunk.
He's getting a flight.
I'm making another drink.
So, in all my nervous glory, I showed up at the Idaho Falls hangar with enough vodka in me to fuel a small forest fire.
Water. Must....drink....water.
So, I did. I slouched on a leather couch, drank water, and people-watched.
I saw whole families walk thru the door - aunts, cousins, grandparents, mom, dad, and siblings all there to hug their soldier.
I watched countless women come in, struggling to walk in the "cute" outfit that they had probably spent DAYS obsessing over in order for it to be JUST RIGHT for that moment when their soldier steps off the plane. (Good thing I was drinking when I got ready, or else I would have been stumbling around in hooker shoes, too.)
My favorite part of people-watching that morning....?
Seeing the MOMS.
Seeing the frazzled, stressed-out, stroller pushing MOM struggle with the door while being dragged down by 2 leach children clinging to her like dryer sheets. All the while, dropping juice cups and Cheerios and pacifiers and looking as though she'd already been committed to the Mental Ward of the local hospital, but had planned her escape just right so that it would coincide with TODAY. Today - the day she's been waiting for since September 21, 2010, when the other half of her life, the other half of her heart, the other half of her SANITY left. This mom knows that TODAY there will be a moment - a moment when she will know that EVERYTHINGS GONNA BE ALRIGHT. (Thank you, Bob Marley, for always helping me find the words.)
During my people-watching, I figured two things out.
#1. If my 11 and 12 year-old hung from my body EVER, I would disown them.
#2. My EVERYTHING was already alright, and the plane hadn't even landed yet.
My EVERYTHING was just about to get BETTER.
HAPPY TRAKS!!
WITH JAYSON HOME FROM IRAQ AND THE LAST YEAR BEHIND US, I COULD EASILY STOP WRITING. BUT THEN HOW WOULD I TELL YOU THAT MY HUSBAND CAN'T GO TO THE BATHROOM WITH A SHIRT ON AND THAT I USED OUR KITCHEN SCISSORS TO TRIM THE GRASS THIS SUMMER? So, for YOUR sake, I will keep writing. (You're welcome.) I SHOULD WARN YOU: OUR LIFE ISN'T ALWAYS "CLEAN". SO, BE PREPARED FOR PLENTY OF FOUL LANGUAGE, DISGUSTING HUMOR, AND WAY TOO MUCH INFORMATION.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
E is for EMILY (The Early Years)
Emily (em-uh-lee) noun
(as defined by Dictionary.com)
- a female given name; from a Latin word meaning industrious
Emily (em-uh-lee) noun
(as defined by my memory)
I was born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1979. That was when high-waisted, tight-ass pants were still cool, men wore bandanas tied around their thighs (you never know when you're gonna need a tourniquet), and station wagons were the shit. I was blessed with a first name that I've always loved...and a last name that prevented me from ever being all-the-way-cool. I tried whispering it, but then I was asked to repeat it louder...and spell it. D-I-C-K-M-A-N
Since it didn't look as though my modeling career would ever flourish in Arizona, my parents packed up our wicker furniture, our braided rugs, and all of our bandanas and we moved west to Southern California. In true hippie fashion, we took up residence at a Camp (not of the nudist variety). My dad was the caretaker, my mom threw pottery and cleaned cabins, and I made friends with the neighbor kid who always seemed to be in a full-body cast. My dad carried me around on his shoulders a lot, which I don't understand the concept of - Who is that fun for, anyway? And my mom liked to dress me in nothing but a frilly apron with a bandana folded in a triangle and tied over my head. (My dad must have had extras that he wasn't using for tourniquets.)
Somewhere between killing rattlesnakes and pushing water out of our flooded Camp House carpets with flip flops, my parents decided that the Dickman Team of Three would be more effective if we spread our forces. In other words, Mr. and Mrs. Dickman got a divorce. Since I was only 4 at the time, I don't remember much about the whole process. I can only assume, though, that they said something like this, "Emily, we are getting a divorce. Mom and Dad will live in different houses and take turns seeing you. We still love you." And, this is what I probably heard, "Emily, we are getting a dog that looks like a horse. Mommy and Daddy will live in different houses because the DogHorse will be too big to only live in one house. We will all take turns riding DogHorse. We still love that you suck your thumb. Feel free to continue doing so until you are 6. DogHorse will buy you braces."
I only remember one trip to the courthouse for the DogHorse Case. After which my mom and I left in search of her van that held a coveted 2 pound bag of peanut M&M's. (Bribery? I don't know. Maybe.) Unfortunately, as we learned that day, peanut M&M's make your big, giant '70s era van invisible. That's right - invisible. As in, it doesn't matter how many hours you spend wandering around downtown San Diego looking, you will NOT find your van. Well, at least until the 2 pounds of M&M's are melted. THEN you will find your van. So much for bribery. That was the last time I let someone lure me with peanut M&M's. (Ok. That's a lie. I allow my life to be dictated by peanut M&M's all the time. Except the red and blue ones. Those are gross.)
I don't know if it was the idea of being responsible for a DogHorse or if he had simply worn a hole in his last bandana, but my dad finally left the Hippie Life behind. He moved into an apartment and bought me a bunk bed and a play kitchen!!!!! Oh happy day. I spent my nights cooking fake food and washing dishes in a sink the size of my eyeball. Of course, that was how I unwound from my hectic days at Preschool. Playing with LightBrights and pretending to be the Boss of all the Four Year Olds was tough. The only way I could keep my energy up during recess was to eat sand out of the sandbox (the one with the least amount of cat poo) and pilfer doggie biscuits from the storage shed behind the preschool. Nobody could have possibly lived off of snacktime alone. I mean, really? An apple slice and an Oreo???? Puh-leaz. I'll supplement with dirty sand and Milkbones, thank you very much.
I think my naughty snacking era coincided with the period in my life when I discovered how truly far I could push my mom's patience. That was when I discovered bubblegum, but lacked the ability to blow an actual fucking bubble. My mother let me keep trying, tho.....every morning on the way to preschool in the '70s era van, the woman ENCOURAGED me to try again and again to form a BubbleYum bubble until there were more wads of gum on the floor than in the damn gum package. Is that normal behavior for a mom?? If so, then I failed epically with my kids because they're almost teenagers and I wouldn't trust them to blow a bubble in the middle of a dirt field, not to mention huck their slobbery wads on the dash of my Escalade.
I wonder if I ever came home to my dad's apartment with gum in my hair. That would explain our daily hair-brushing-dance. While I may have been bald and fat (and bald) until I was 2, I more than made up for it by age 5 with curly thick hair that hung to my cute little butt (Let's just go with the thought that it was cute then because it sure as shit isn't now.) Everyone thought my hair was soooooo pretty. I thought they were all idiots and should, just once, experience having it brushed by my father. Do you remember what it was like to brush Barbie's hair? You'd use that itty bitty brush and pull on Whore Barbie's hair until her head was touching her butt. (Sometimes her head would actually pop off.) But, you'd make Barbie endure this because, damn it, if she was gonna be out whoring around with Ken and turning her beautiful locks all a-fro, this was the price she was just gonna have to pay. Yep. I was Barbie (minus the whoring around and minus the boyfriend named Ken - my boyfriend's name was David). My father was the kid with the itty bitty brush. It's a miracle that I have any hair left. What's even more amazing, tho, is that I didn't grow up to be a circus freak with the ability to put my face in the crack of my own ass.
Just the thought of that talent being a possibility for me is really distracting. I have to go see if I can do it. I'll write more later.
HAPPY TRAKS!!
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