How’m I doin?

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The Golden Goose and I just spent a week in beautiful Exuma, in the Bahamas.  I know, poor me.  All that spare time caused me to do three things, drink too much, get too much sun and think.  While I should have been enjoying brain dead time gazing at the florescent blue water, my mind whirled.

One night, I awoke at 3:00 am, the time when everything in the world is wrong.  Suddenly, I needed to know that my kids, who were free wheeling at home alone, were okay.  For years Cricket has been in charge of The Boy.  My friends who travel with me joke that I’ve been leaving The Boy home alone since the 7th grade.  This isn’t strictly true.  Cricket has always been in charge and has been fully able to run a small country since the age of 6.  I never worry that things will run smoothly when she’s in charge.  The Boy, however, tends to go AWOL, ignore texts, failing to email or check in.  Thus, I suddenly panicked at 3:00 that I was a terrible mother.

I prodded The Goose and asked him if he was awake.  I told him I couldn’t stop thinking.  This produced a sarcastic laugh and he told me he thought he smelled smoke.

“Am I a terrible mother?” I wailed.  “Have I gone wrong by being so trusting?  I mean, what could a 16 year old boy get into while home alone?”.

So The Goose and I got to talking about mothers.  The Goose was left to walk himself to school in Kindergarten.  He got himself ready and took himself to school.  I, on the other hand, was driven door to door in an armored car.  That’s the difference in a 4th child and an only child.  We have long exhausted the subject of my happiness with my own perfect mother as well as my delight at finding such a groovy wonderful birth mother.  This subject has been inspected, turned around, talked about and diagrammed.  I just have happy mother issues and am covered up with great mother feelings from all sides.

Things moms say make a big dent in who we become.  My mom never went to the grocery store without full make up and lipstick.  Because of her, I know what’s tacky, what’s acceptable and what’s “done right”.  I know children shouldn’t say “yeah” or “huh”, that legs really should be crossed at the ankles and that if an artificial nail comes off in the cotton candy at a school festival, one should look the other way and pretend it was someone else.  I know from her that the we are in a constant war with germs and should be ever vigilant with the Lysol, that there are peeping toms waiting around every corner and that women who color their hair bright red usually can’t be trusted.  Cricket recently had shoes that hurt and when she started to complain about it she held up a hand at me and sighed, “I know, one has to suffer for beauty.  You’ve been telling me since I was a toddler”.  I had no idea she even listened and my heart swelled because I’d passed that one right on from my mom.

The Goose’s mother was decidedly different.  Although she had many great qualities, she wasn’t a lovey-dovey mother or grandmother. “Did you feel properly mothered?” I asked him.  The Goose answered that he was perfectly happy with his mom.  Although she was not a very loving person, he always felt as if she would be there if he needed her.  Maybe this is what counts, having kids secure enough to know that there is someone there to be their safety net. The Goose’s mom had several important pieces of wisdom to impart.  Frequently, when he was a teenager, she would say to him “a penis has no conscience”.  When asked how she felt, she would often answer with “well, I feel like I do now better than I did when I first got here…but don’t tell anyone” or some convoluted version thereof.   She called having a bath a “Clara Barton” and named her end table “Abnot”.  These oddball sayings have become dear to us since she’s been gone and I find myself thinking about the quirks she had and how they helped to form the great Golden Goose that I have now.  Surely she was the perfect mother for him.

ImageThe other day I wrapped my arms around The Boy and asked him if he felt happy with me as a mother.  Did he feel he could always depend on me?  This caused him to laugh and say, “Well, Mom, you ARE a total pushover but you are a great mom.”

“What about all those Bible songs we listened to in the car when you were little? That was pretty darn respectable. Remember how much we read and how we played in the creek?”.

“I remember you read “Are You My Mother” over and over to me because you thought it was funny that it made me cry.”

“Okay, but I was strict enough with the rules that you are a good kid now”.

“I remember when you whacked the daylights out of my head with a giant sucker” he replied.

How long I’ll pay for that particular miscalculation, I don’t know.  They never forget.

“Well, what about when I was your room mom?”

“Sure, that’s back when you were allowed in the school.”  This referring to the fact that I am, mysteriously, not asked to sub anymore.

“Uh, huh, well, I gave you my great car.”

Finally, then I received a hug and some reassurance that he was, indeed, happy with me as a mom.

Both moms and dads shape who our kids will become.  Cricket never walks into the house without The Goose yelling “you da bomb, baby!”.  She, in turn, rolls her eyes.  Every single game of The Boy’s life, whether he does well or fails, I have told him, “you were definitely the cutest one out there.”  While there have been groundings and spankings, plenty of yelling, mainly over math, and several slammed doors and temper tantrums, my kids  never have to guess how much they are loved.

And so, I sought out The Boy, who had so recently called me “a pushover” (which I very well may be), looked him in the eye and told him that after much introspection, I feel that if all he has to complain about is being hit on the head with an all-week sucker, then I must have been an okay mother.

But really,  I have to thank my great kids.  No matter how “mommy” I might not have been, I still walk around in the world, connected to these strange two people about whom I know their quirks and fears.  Whose fat, wrinkled necks and Johnson’s baby shampooed bald heads I can still recall, who wrote on the back of my baby blue linen chair with a green marker, who brought a garden hose, turned on full blast, through my house while coming in to get a popsicle.  Those toddlers with deep husky voices who would climb out of their beds, come down the stairs, get as close to my face as possible and yell “MOM” to see if I was awake.  Two loonies, one of which recently put on a pair of size one jeans and called herself fat.  I know what they will eat, what they won’t, who threw up in a baseball hat and cried because I threw it away, who can sing and who shouldn’t.  I know both of them love school supplies, thrift stores and sour gummy candy.  These are the kids who changed all my passwords to Penis.  The idiots who have caused such disruptions in churches that we have a list to which we shouldn’t return. Almost grown children who hold true to their Christian, animal loving, chaotic hippie homed, vegetarian values. Two individuals who can catch my eye and burst into wild laughter at inappropriate moments.  These two humans whom The Goose and I whipped up, from scratch, who understand us, share our scary humor, love us and one who might take care of us when we’re old. These two oddballs, without whom I wouldn’t have the great and inexplicable joy of calling myself mother on Mother’s Day and everyday.   Happy Mother’s Day to every mom who finds her children to be the very best, no matter what weirdos they actually are.

My Long and Intense Blog in Which I Reveal My Fascinating Beginnings

Okay, so I’ve been AWOL for about a month.  What makes me happy is that I’ve gotten A LOT of messages, emails and calls about why I’m AWOL. I know it’s not natural for me to be quiet.  I’ve even been quiet inside my head, and I tell you, when my inside voice isn’t talking, it’s damn scary in there. It’s good to know someone reads my stuff and everyone isn’t sitting around hoping I’ll just shut up already. 

I answered each person who asked with “I’ve just had something going on” and then I got questions about what, exactly, I was talking about.  Was I sick?  Was I up on charges for something?  Was I on a bender?  My answer was no, but my “issue” has been of such a personal nature to me that I’ve been extremely quiet, for me. 

This is going to be a long one, so get comfortable.  

Anyone who reads my blogs knows about my great love for my mom, The True Southern Lady.  I’ve written of her manias, her rules and her ever abiding love for me.  I hear her voice in my head daily telling me my shirt needs another button buttoned, my earrings are a touch too much or just that she loves me.  Both of my parents gave me such great love and confidence and were so close to me that anyone who knew us probably never guessed that I was adopted.  

It was no big deal.  I was a baby, I always knew about it, and frankly, there were lots more interesting stories in my life.  My mother, in her typical way, told me about being adopted by telling me that yes, there were plenty of people who made dresses at home, bless their poor hearts, but she preferred to go to Lord and Taylor and choose the finest one they had.  She varied on this theme now and then and substituted homemade coconut cakes versus the ones made by the bakery at Rich’s, which everyone knew were the best.  For some reason I got the picture in my child’s mind that they picked me out from the low lying, horizontal freezer section in the A&P on the corner of Clairmont Rd. and Briarcliff Rd. in Atlanta, though I’m fairly certain she never mentioned that.

So my folks were my folks.  My mom, I swear, had a psychic link with me always.  She found me in more bad situations than I care to remember.  Many times I would be cruising as a teenager and look over and there would be her big blue eyes, glaring a hole in me.  She was my friend, my confidant and my mother.  My dad, too, was everything a dad should be.  Loving all of the time, but with a constant brewing disappointment at my inability to throw a ball. 

So, I never looked for my birth mother.  My only thoughts about her were vague, hippy filled fantasies wherein she morphed into Joni Mitchell.  My mother, being who she was, baked a pound cake for her friend, a judge, and had my records opened.  Of course it was illegal, but no one stood a chance when Frances asked for anything.  She told me as a teenager that she had more information for me, but I was too busy doing everything I could get away with and some things I couldn’t and just wasn’t that interested.  If it wasn’t a boy in a sports car, I really couldn’t have cared less.  We spoke of it occasionally over the years, but truly, I just had all the family I needed.  

When Mother died, she left a big file of stuff for me.  Suddenly I had my birth mother’s name and long letter, written to me from my mom, with other details.  Still numb with missing her, though, I just let it go.  

So, the years passed and meanwhile I signed up to be a bone marrow donor.  In early March I was notified that I was in a narrowed down group and was asked to provide more information.  Of course, I had none.  This is something I really feel led to do and it killed me that this would hold me back.  While it wouldn’t actually keep me from donating, it would keep me from matching the most lists.  

So, quietly, without telling anyone, I wrote to my birth mother, drove to the post office and mailed the letter.  

You know how, when you take Dayquil and drink a cup of coffee you feel like you’re not real?  That’s exactly what it was like.  I put more thought into mopping my floors than I did in that letter.  I know there’s a thing called automatic writing that happens during seances, and it was kind of like that. Some part of me wrote it and the rest of me looked the other way in abject horror.  Looking back, I feel someone, God maybe, who knows, just did this for me. 

Once done, I came home, had wine, went on with life.  

During the night, I awoke in a sweat filled panic, went to the downstairs bathroom and was desperately sick.  I thought about terroristic threats to the post office.  I plotted whether I could intercept the letter.  I prayed the mail man would be drunk.  

For two more days I walked around hoping I’d have a stroke.  I cried when I couldn’t find socks that matched.  I shouted at The Goose because he snored.  I called The Boy horrible names. It just so happened that Cricket was home all week for spring break and I’m sure she worried (more than usual) about my sanity.  I went to see a movie with her and had to leave the theater frequently to have panic attacks.  

On Cricket’s birthday, three days later, after two rockin’ margaritas, I sat in my living room watching her open her presents.  I casually opened my computer to check FB and email and opened one I didn’t recognize.  The first line was one of the sweetest lines I’ve ever read in my life and, sadly, caused me to run to the bathroom, once again, and be ill.  Without disclosing something that’s very private, it started out “I never knew I wasn’t breathing for 48 years…” and suddenly, it was very real and I realized that I was dealing with an actual human being, not the Joni Mitchell from my imagination.  

Cricket saw me run to my room and came after me to find me curled up on the floor, keening like a harpooned seal.  Looking back, it was another humorous moment in my family but, at the time, felt like unanesthetized dental surgery.  She ran and got The Goose, who began flapping around me asking what was wrong.  None of them knew I’d sent the letter and fully believed I’d gone around the bend, once and for all.  “Issomethingbrokenareyoudyingdoyouhaverabiesissomethingonfire”, the questions came at me, strung together and meaningless.  I just pointed to my computer and The Goose began to read.  Then he had to sit down.  He had to read with his lips moving because it was just too much.  He’s been begging me to contact her for years (because he believes he is always right about everything). 

“What is wrong with you?” he kept yelling.  “I don’t know what to do with you like this!  I’ve never seen you act like this!”.  There was a TON of confused shouting and I was crying, which is practically unheard of.  I believe at one point I tried to slither under my bed.  

What killed me is that, in my heart, I felt like a traitor to my parents.  No matter how many times The Goose told me how happy they would be for me, I ached for them and knew that I could never allow anything to diminish how much I loved them.  

Then a very wise (and stylish) friend said something to me that changed everything.  What she said was “you didn’t stop loving Cricket when you had The Boy.  Your love grew.  When you light a candle from another, the first doesn’t go out, silly, you just get more light.”  From that moment on, I put the guilt away and tried to find a place to put all this new.

I don’t remember what happened after that.  I know her letter was amazing.  My main fear in this whole thing was that her family would find out about me and she would be embarrassed.  I sent her the letter disguised in a card in hopes no one else would see it.  

Turns out, they all already knew.  

I made it to a first meeting, before which I discovered half a lint covered pain pill in a drawer and swallowed it with vodka to make sure I didn’t bolt from the car along the way.  

When she met me for the first time on the steps of her glorious antebellum home, I thought to myself, “Well, damn it, who is this woman?  Are there other people here?” because she looked to be about my age.  A truly beautiful woman with a sleek blond bob, tiny and wearing a green sweater that could have been plucked from my closet.  I could hardly bear to look at her, it was just that intense.  And so, I turned to her husband, a clone of The Goose.  Both 6’4”, wearing blue shirts, they looked to be the ones related.  Her lovely husband wrapped his arms around me and said something like “I was one of the first ones to hold you” because he was her friend at the time of my birth and I felt truly at ease.

Just like that, my fuzzy head started to clear up and I realized that these people were not afraid I’d intrude into their family and ruin things.  They really did want to meet me and, over the next few hours, I discovered just what incredible, loving people they really are.  Also, looking at her beautiful self, I am thanking the gene fairy.  Darn, she is one really cute woman. 

Throughout this month, I’ve met her daughters.  They are super intelligent, beautiful women, but that’s not the half of it.  What they are is cool chicks.  Girls I’d pick for friends.  Girls that wouldn’t hesitate to misbehave with me. Girls I wish lived next door.  I’ve met their pretty children.  My kids have met them all.  In fact, my kids have been so supportive of me that I absolutely do not care if The Boy fails Latin.  He has hugged me and told me he loves me more since this started than any other 16 year old around, and those of you with 16 year old boys know that’s saying something.  Cricket has been right there, talking me through everything.  The Goose, always a know it all, really has known it all during this.  While my brain has been on DEFCON 1, with sirens and flashing lights, he has talked me down off the ceiling, calmed my fears and debunked my guilt and lunacy.  Although I cannot allow him to know he’s been right, he really has been my rock, just like always, and gotten me through this great but scary time. 

I only told one or two friends, The Trophy Wife and Peaches, my running partner.  They kept a daily vigil with me, monitoring my feelings and allowing me to be alternately happy and crazy. God bless those two girls because I almost talked off their pretty ears.

On the way to take my kids to meet the entire family, my two swore repeatedly that they would hate their 16 year old cousin on sight.  Within 10 minutes, they’d all fallen hopelessly in love. They cannot wait to see him again. We had wine, played cards and there was lots of trash talk and laughter.  Kids ran amuck, men watched golf and naps were taken.  Cricket’s kid pheromone kicked in and she was, within an hour, being sat upon and stroked by a myriad of little girls, braiding her hair and playing with her earrings. Some played a tipsy game of badminton, but I don’t think I was one of them.  I can’t picture a more perfect day.

This has been a lot to wrap our heads around for all of us.  My family has no frame of reference for family.  I was an only child, I never knew brothers or sisters or even aunts, uncles or cousins. My kids adored my parents, who were omnipresent in our lives, living only three miles away, but grandparents can only fill in so much.  My kids did have extended family on The Goose’s side, but, sadly, they were not the kind of family anyone would want. They, except for one sweet, long distance aunt, were the stuff of nightmares.  The Goose is truly the Golden Goose to be so wonderful and come from that nest of vipers. So my kids didn’t understand the beauty of a real family, complete with cousins, aunts, uncles and filled with familial buffoonery.  On the way home from our incredible day, The Boy said, “Holy smoke, is that what a real family is like?  I love it!”.  

So, this is our new reality.  Every time I see her, my birth mother and I laugh and say, “Can you believe this?”  I look forward, every day, to seeing an email from her.  She is nothing short of a delight. The awkwardness is almost gone and, as Cricket says, I am hardly on good behavior with them anymore.  I love it that her girls have embraced me, not minding sharing a little bit of their mom with me.  I revel in the fact that one’s 16 year old son friended me on FB.  It makes me feel cool. 

I know most reunion stories don’t go like this.  I’ve heard that most of them don’t. I guess that’s one reason I never planned for one. In my wildest imaginings, I never thought we would meet, much less that I would meet her family.  It all still feels a bit unreal, like Christmas morning.  What we have here is like an arranged marriage.  It is now up to us to make our relationship.  But we have so much in common, likes and dislikes, love of antiques, hatred of the cold, that I can’t see that it will be difficult. 

There should be a better name than birth mother.  It sounds cold and clinical and doesn’t translate what I owe to her and what I feel.  What she did for me was to protect me, at great cost to herself, and provide a wonderful home for me.  She gave me a life and then allowed me to have a fabulous life. It is the most selfless, generous thing I can imagine.  All the while, I felt she was loving me from a distance, just as, on special days like my birthday or Mother’s Day, I would pray that her life was just as happy.  It seems as though it has been.  Maybe this is why we can come together now as something more than friends.  

I know that my parents can see me and, as usual, they are happy with anything that makes me happy.  Honestly, viewing us from Heaven, my mom is probably more worried about the fact that I am still wearing a bikini at the age of 48, shameless hussy that I am, and my Dad is most likely more focused on The Goose’s golf game. They are bragging on their grandchildren, playing celestial bridge and Mom is disgusted that my cat sometimes gets on my counter.  Their love is, as ever, unwavering and abundant.  There is never a day that I am not thankful for all the love and confidence they gave me and so happy that things went the way they did. 

And so it seems that love is the easiest thing to multiply, even for a math idiot like me.  As the Goose and I lay in bed the other night he turned to me and said, “How is it, that with all the horrible mothers out there, you ended up with two this great?”  I’d like to come back with a flippant answer like “well, I always recycle” or “because I don’t step on spiders” but I realize that I am beyond blessed with this and I feel almost guilty for the sheer happiness.  I know I don’t deserve all this but I’ll certainly take it. 

 

 

And now, that I’ve gotten all this off my chest, I can get back to writing about serious subjects like squirrels and pigs.  Thank you all, who wrote to me and cared when you thought I must dying, otherwise, how could I have been so quiet.  I might point out, though, at no time did ANYONE offer to bring me a casserole or bake me a cake.  

Ghostly Insight

Those of us who have lost someone we love know that there are times when missing them is like wearing a giant lead hat.  It’s so bad sometimes that you just feel like if you think about it hard enough, you can change the reality of things.

I’ve lost three people I truly loved.  Losing one’s parents is a normal part of life.  Luckily, I have my own little family, and really, it’s natural for parents to go on before us.  I believe they are somewhere else, they are whole and things are good for them. Seven years after the fact, I’m in a great place and really just miss them in that hard, hurtful way only once in a while.  Mostly I remember their funny sayings and all the happiness we had.  We really did have a great life together.

That’s why what happened to me last week was so WEIRD. I’m not a superstitious person, nor am I experiencing any particular longing for my parents.  I haven’t been thinking about them much, life is busy and I am darn happy with my life, except for the misery of winter.

Thursday, I was at the doctor.  I walked down the hall to use the loo and I went through a giant cloud of Oscar de la Renta perfume.  My mother smelled so strongly of this that it was sometimes hard to share the oxygen in a car with her.  Her clothes, fur coat and things that I kept still reek of it.  So, I figured there would be some nice little old lady that was nearby and I just breathed in and smiled.  No, no one was in the hall.  No one in the loo.  No one ANYWHERE.  So odd, just ghostly silence.

I then went down the street to the grocery store.  Not my grocery store, but Ingles, which is bad enough in itself, but I was meeting The Boy for a sports physical nearby.  When, out of the corner of my eye, I spied my dad.  Really.  My brain went “oh, there’s Dad”, because, before he died, we would often run into each other at the store.  It took a minute for my brain to catch up and realize it couldn’t be him.  I looked more closely and  darn it, it was him.  I whipped my bascart (allow me to say here that words such as bascart, communiversity, fantabulous, guesstimate and craisin make me cringe.  These are not real words.  I do, however, like “cremains” for some reason.  As in, “we picked up Memaw’s cremains from the funeral home”.) anyhow, I whipped my buggy around and followed him.  Same Member’s Only jacket, same pants, same black shoes, same gray hair and hair cut.  Same walk, same time spent gazing at the ice cream section.  I stalked this man.  I mean I stalked the living hell out of him.  I followed him when he went to the bathroom, I watched him up and down each and every isle and managed to get just ahead of him in line.  I’ll have to admit that I was all teared up and sniffy by then.  I ran to my car and I waited for him in the parking lot, snapping pictures surreptitiously all the way.  I am ridiculously inept with my phone and the pictures are all fuzzy but I was able to convince my family that I am not crazy.  I have never seen such a “dead ringer” (yes, I know this is terrible humor, but fitting) for my dad.  I have noted his car, surprisingly, a red Corvette, and tag number and next time I’m going to work up the nerve to just hug him.  You might read of this in the crime scene blog in the county paper. Middle aged woman in cute sweater molests older man in the dairy isle.

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That night, I dreamed that I received a check from my dad, with a long letter, but in the dream, I couldn’t read the letter because it was too dark.  When I awoke, I had a call from my parent’s good friend, telling me of a possible problem with their estate that I needed to look into.  How weird is that?  Are they still looking out for me? Last year, I got a small dividend check from my mother on my birthday.  Of all the days of the year, it came then.  Just enough to cover a big extravagant lunch where I wished she were there.

Do I believe my sweet parents are trying to tell me something? Do I think they’re still watching out for me?  In some ways, I hope so. I always feel their love and approval, just like when they were here.  In others, I hope they don’t see me in my grouchy moments, or my angry ones. I surely hope they don’t hear my language when I’m driving!  I hope my mom doesn’t know that I sometimes wear jeans to church and tipple a little bit.  I do hope they see how wonderful their grandchildren are.  My mother would be so proud she would brag her friends’ ears off.  Cricket would be despised by Baptist women everywhere just from conversation oversaturation.  My dad would love to see The Boy playing lacrosse.  He was still just a little baseball player when he left and he would be baffled by the game but so proud of The Boy, who would now be taller than his Grandy.

Maybe it’s just a big ol’ bunch of coincidences, most likely it is.  It sure was a discombobulating 24 hours though.  Maybe we get these little love notes from them when we most need them, even if we think we’re going along fine on our own. This morning, I turned on Pandora radio to the opera station and there was my mother’s favorite song, that she played relentlessly on both the piano and violin.  I just laughed and said thanks.

…and a ‘possum in the dishwasher

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I can pull it off pretty well in public, being normal.  In my real life as a designer, I seem okay.  My big southern hair is usually in place, I often wear lipstick and matching clothes.  I like to wear shoes that cause other women to rethink their entire lives.  I like earrings sparkly enough to make Amish women sin in their hearts. All normally goes well until I’m consulting with a client, slip up and something like this tumbles out, “I LOVE dark stain on a floor with a high gloss finish.  I have that myself.  It usually looks great but yesterday, after I mopped, the stinkin’ oposum climbed up in the dishwasher, got her feet all wet, and tracked it all over the floor”. Uh huh, that awkward silence that lets me know this was outside the parameters of what my clients were expecting when they contracted for design services.  What I do in my “other life” has crept into my big girl life and I’m getting that look from a volvo driving client who is over her head at home with just her goldendoodleschnitzapoo.

Several years ago, I got my wildlife rehabilitation license from the GA DNR because people just kept bringing injured animals to me just because I have a barn, opossums among them.  And it’s true, we did have an opossum who lived in our house for years.  I retrieved her on a rehab call with her bottom jaw stuck in a fence.  She was so glad to receive my help that she snapped and growled her appreciation throughout the entire removal process.  Although I knew I should probably euthanize her, I worked on her for weeks.  She lost a good portion of her lower jaw giving her an overbite and a lisp that would have made Drew Barrymore proud.

Glamorously named Jawbone, she refused all attempts for release and found every possible way to get into the house.  Periodically, I would look up to find her reclining on my 18th century living room sofa with the $200 yard velvet, with her tail curled provocatively around her while she opened up a $6.00 truffle I refused to let my kids eat unless a special occasion rolled around.

My daughter was in high school at the time and threatened law suits, emancipation and/or dressing me polyester and not plucking my whiskers when I get old if the secret ever got out.  Once, when she brought a new boy home and he was standing in the kitchen Jawbone sauntered through the dining room behind him.  There was a moment of panicked filled eye swearing while JB continued through the kitchen, daintily plucked a treat from the cat’s dish and continued on in what I can assume was an errand of the utmost importance.  The boy never knew what happened, although I have put aside money in a special fund for epilation after age 65.

I love opossums.  I can’t understand why they are abhorred by people everywhere.  They could be the mascot for the south. They’re not rodents, they’re marsupials, just like a kangaroo, the only ones in North America.  They don’t carry disease, they’re slow and steady and eat all the garbage in the world.  I love anyone who will clean up after themselves and have yet to train anyone one or any animal in my family to do so.  They’re slow, I admit, but cause no harm and only hiss and drool because they’re afraid. They almost never bite and will occasionally do that really cool thing and get quiet and play dead, a great talent for anyone.

Great southern women have big hearts for all living things.  Southern women are not namby pamby, scardy cats who faint when a ground hog climbs up on our porch.  We don’t hesitate to get out of our cars, in our high heeled shoes and move a turtle across the road, flippin’ our hair while we save a life.

Show me a woman who is afraid of an opossum and I’ll bet she’ll be the same woman who will refuse to dress up in a prom dress after a glass or two of wine.  Give me a woman with an opossum in her house and I’ll show you a woman who will blurt out something at a party that will cause her mother to alert the prayer chain.  Now, that’s fun.