• 02Sep

    I seem to have overcome my unproductivity, and am working diligently again on stories, reading a lot of great stuff, and feeling good about it. We’ve been in London a full year now, and although I still find this city unbelievably vibrant and exciting, I find myself often thinking, with uncharacteristic fondness, of the US. I feel out of touch with the election. I miss Trader Joes. A lot. I miss the ease of suburban life, the personal space, the expansive blue sky and cheap electronics. Staring down the long grey tunnel of another English winter I am missing beautiful, sunny (SUNNY) California. I didn’t go swimming once this summer. For the first summer in my entire life I did not submerge my body in water and soak up the sun.

    But, at the same time, I’m not ready to go home for good, not yet. I’m just getting some real things going here. I’m working on an important project for English PEN, and hallelujah, they are paying me. The kids are starting their second year of school here, and we have a social life, with interesting people, that I am enjoying. I haven’t been to Italy, or Amsterdam, or Portugal yet. So I’m feeling caught between worlds a bit right now, and just trying to get through the melancholia day-by-day, doing the work I need to do, and dreaming of December, when I can be in California again, if only for a little while.

  • 22Dec
    Categories: Moving, writing Comments: 0

    Lost:

    And Found:

    Yay.

  • 27Sep
    Categories: London, Moving Comments: 0

    Watching, originally uploaded by texasgurl.

    Our things arrived today.

  • 09Sep

    Angelbwweb
    estrange [i-streynj] verb (used with object), -tranged, tranging. 1. To turn away in feeling or affection; make unfriendly or hostile; alienate the affections of: The quarrel over their mother estranged the two sisters. 2. To remove or keep at a distance: Her move overseas has estranged her from her family. 3. To divert from the original use or possessor. [Origin: 1475-85; <MF, OF estranger; c. Pg. estranhar, Sp estrañar, It straniare <ML exstrãneãre to treat as a stranger. See STRANGE]

  • 06Sep

    After school. And she made a friend, but as predicted, not the assigned one.

  • 03Sep

    Carepkg

    Today my doorbell rang at 7:30am (it’s what time my mail arrives) and Rod went down and retrieved a girnormous box from the Postman. In it were clothes for Babe-ish, who has outgrown almost everything I packed for her due to the delay in the arrival of our things from California, a cute outfit for Boyish, a cute outfit for Girlish, and for me: two gorgeous new pans. The perfect pans. The kind of pans you can never have too many of. I can’t wait, can’t WAIT to cook with them tonight. Girlish and Boyish stripped off their pj’s and got dressed in their new clothes immediately. Everything fits. Especially the pans. They look really really good on me (dontcha think?). Thanks, Mom! Thanks, Bella!

  • 28Aug
    Categories: Me, Moving, writing Comments: 7

    Sorry for all the not-posting, everyone, but I have been busy. I am applying to grad school. Again. Not because I didn’t get in the first time, but because unexpected events meant I couldn’t go. See exhibit A:

    In the Park Near the Travelodge

    Then, my planned deferral for this year got derailed by our decision to move to London. I posted about that here.

    And I thought, you know, that I’d wait awhile before trying to do something again. Maybe take some photography courses in the meantime. But as the deadlines for the low-residency programs at Bennington and Warren Wilson rolled around again, I couldn’t get it out of my head. I dabble in photography and blogging is fun, but a personal essayist I am not (ask Ann) and my photographic skills are pretty mediocre. Fiction is what I do best, and even if it’s not good enough I’m still better at that than anything else. And so I have to give it a shot. To see what I can do if I REALLY focus on it, and give it the time and attention I never seem to be able to otherwise.

    Really, no matter what it costs, I have to try. Because nothing else is as important to me–except maybe my chickens. And sometimes not even them.

    Tags:
  • 16Aug
    Categories: London, Me, Moving Comments: 0

    My pans. When oh, when will my pans arrive? Fiona left us a couple of pans, a few dishes, a mixing bowl, 2 cookie sheets and some flatware. Some odd glasses and mugs. I favor the one with sketches of Pooh Bear, not because I love Pooh, but because it is the largest. The pans are crap. I would have left them behind, too. They heat up, in like one spot, exactly where the burner is touching them, and despite the nonstick coating everything sticks to them and I have burned more in the last month than in the last ten years.

    I miss my mugs. I miss the small brown clay one, round like a ball in the palm of my hand, with its rough exterior and carefully finger-painted stripes, its smooth green interior. I miss the blue clay one, with its faded suggestion of a dragonfly on the side, the one that feels as if it was made for my hand, fatter and thicker at the bottom and more narrow at the chipped rim, so my tea stays warm.

    I miss my teapots.

    My pans are Calphalon, by the way. They are thick and heavy and they get hot fast; they heat evenly.

    I know I’m rambling but I also miss my clothes. I thought I brought enough to get by with Babe-ish, but she has outgrown just about everything in her drawers. And I miss our drawers.

    I miss putting my children to sleep in their beds, and I wish I had their furniture so I could set up their rooms and put out their toys and make them more at home here.

    I miss my books. My god, I really miss my books. I have a list of them that I use to make sure I’m actually reading all the books I buy, and today I was looking at that list and wishing I had any one of those books here so I could read them. I am working on a story about mental illness, told in the second person, and I need my Lorrie Moore, my Julie Orringer, my Mark Haddon.

    Because I have been feeling this way, I have been calling the movers, trying to get some sort of status report on our things. I called before we left for Germany, trying to talk to “Dave,” some guy who was supposed to know how to help us. Dave was out, but he’d be back around 2:00. So I called back at 2:00, and Dave was busy, could he call me back? Sure, I said, leaving my California number–we have, via the marvels of modern technology, ported our old number so that it rings in our house in London. It couldn’t be easier, really for Dave and his people to call us back. So, of course, he never called.

    When I returned from Germany, I called. Because of the time difference, I was able to call the night I got in, after taking one plane, three trains and a cab to get to our house. Dave was unavailable, could he call me back tomorrow?

    I called on Wednesday, and Dave was—you guessed it—on the phone, and could he call me back?

    Today, I had no illusions, really, that Dave might call. I called him, but I was prepared to tell Andy or Joe or whoever happened to answer the phone that I had called three days in a row, and twice last week, and I was prepared to wait for Dave to come the phone. Tell him it’s me again; tell him I’m waiting, please.

    So, I talked to Dave just now, and he told me, yeah, he needed my address so he could send me a FedEx with some paperwork they needed.

    I gave him the address and asked what sort of paperwork? “Oh, copies of your passports, a couple other things, then we can ship your stuff out.”

    “Okay,” I said, not getting it, “Has it arrived in London, then?”

    “No, ma’am,” he said, “It’s still sitting in our warehouse in Oakland.”

    * * *

    I could go on, obviously. I could tell you exactly what I said to him, about why no had one called me for 60 days to let me know they needed some “paperwork,” about how I had FedExed them money to expedite the shipment and had called them repeatedly, and was never told anything about “paperwork”; about how I was practically camping in an apartment with 3 children in London, waiting on our things, and even, about how my baby was fucking outgrowing her clothes waiting for them to arrive, and could he please, rather than making me wait on the international mail, just tell me what they needed, and work with me to expedite it so that our stuff could leave the mother-fucking dock, like, yesterday two months ago?

    I am trying to get my head around this. I am getting ready to write some letters. I will not. Cry. I will not cry. I won’t.

  • 24Jul
    Categories: London, Me, Moving Comments: 0

    Winged Sunset, originally uploaded by texasgurl.

    I had big plans to do a sweet self-portrait of me and my chickens tonight, reading a story by lamplight in their sparsely-furnished bedroom—maybe in black and white—and write about how I am trying to help them regain some normalcy after all our travels. I wanted to say that I am trying to feed them earlier, and put them to bed on time, and settle into something of a routine again, because I love them and take good care of them and I am such a fantastic mother.

    You know how this story ends, right?

    So, since we landed in our new digs, Boyish has determined to discover what exactly will happen if he seriously injures his baby sister. He has pushed, kicked, and pulled her over onto the floor, the bedframe, the wooden train tracks strewn about the living room. The way I figure it, it’s only a matter of time until he discovers the stairs.

    So while I’m setting up our portrait, he saw that Babe-ish had his toothbrush (which he never uses) in her fat little fist. So he snatched it away, making her cry. I snatched it back, explaining how snatching is wrong, and gave it back to the her. He then grabbed some dental flossing thing that Girlish had gotten out and left on the floor (we’re really into dental hygiene around here) and began poking the baby on top of her sweet little head.

    She is only 9 months old—she still has a soft spot there, and what I do not need right now is a freak accident and a brain-damaged baby. Or my son psychologically scarred for life because of said freak accident and potential brain damage. So, since I am gunning for Meanest Mother of the Year, I grabbed his arm and yelled at him. He cried. She cried. I sat on the floor and tried not to cry. While they both climbed all over me, wailing. It was a Kodak moment.

    I read earlier, here, that jet-lag makes a person irritable. Who knew? I thought it was just the personal upheaval and transatlantic move. Honestly, I mean, it makes perfect sense—I can’t sleep; I’m utterly exhausted for a thousand reasons—the person I should be putting to bed early, apparently, is me.

  • 11Jul
    Categories: Moving, Texas Comments: 0

    On The Porch At Grannie’s, originally uploaded by texasgurl.

    And just like that it’s over. We are driving away from my sister’s house, she is standing in the yard, crying, and I am confined to our rental car, already out of reach.

    “I’m not that far away,” I said in her ear as we hugged goodbye, and she sobbed, then laughed as if I’d said the most ridiculous thing she’d ever heard. And up until that moment, it didn’t seem that far–it’s a smaller world than ever, now, and I imagined that we could call and email and chat online just like we did when I was only a thousand miles away in California. But in reality, she is right. It is more difficult to call, more difficult to send things to each other, and it is hours and flights and an ocean away.

    She has understood this from the moment I told her we were moving overseas, but I swear it didn’t hit me until this moment: I have said many times that I want to be closer to my sister, and here I am, moving further away again. It has warmed me, these last few weeks here, to watch my baby light up and reach for her from my arms, to see my daughter grow closer to her cousins, and to hear my son say, “Can I spend the night at Auntie Sara’s?”

    Oh, god, I feel like we wasted so much time. Why wasn’t I with her every minute? Why do we fight when all we really want is love? These last few days she has held herself apart from me; she has kept her distance and guarded her heart. Perhaps rightfully so. But what I keep thinking is that every time we visit, we end up laughing about something until we cry.

    But not this time.