20th year teaching

Thanks for all the feedback on my last post. I do think people feel the hosting expectations of boom club have ramped up considerably and want to tame them again. Evidently the only one I went to was especially extravagant which means my only point of reference was not representative of actual expectations. No one told me that until they saw my spread last weekend.

We covered our kitchen in tin foil and it made no difference in our crazy cat’s behavior. We’ve been telling our cat to get off the island for months and he clearly doesn’t care or isn’t learning so I doubt just saying no and putting him down will help. I guess double sided sticky tape is the next step.

Today is our final staff day before students come tomorrow. I think I’m ready. Someone asked me how long I had been teaching and I realized this is my 20th year. My husband remarked that soon I’ll have been teaching for longer than I was alive before I started teaching. I didn’t love that idea, but all in all I’m happy with this profession. I fell into a position that ended up working well for me and I’m very grateful for that, because I wouldn’t have known to search it out.

I met my student teacher and she seems nice. We have kids of similar ages. She has been working, in different capacities, at a charter school nearby for many years so I think she’ll be great in the classroom. I’m feeling a lot better about that commitment at this point.

I taught my first adult class at the dojo last night. Now that I’m a blue belt it’s expected that I teach the Basics class every 4-6 weeks. My first attempt was not stellar, but with the help of a friend I got through it. I do love the community of the dojo. I have fallen into a very supportive cohort of mid-high belts and I’m starting to feel like I really belong there.

The weather has been weird this week, warm and kind of muggy. I guess we’re getting some ambient Hilary vibes up here. I just hope it’s not too hot in our classrooms for the next few days.

I hope everyone who is managing back-to-school in some capacity is having a decent time of it. It’s definitely can be frantic time of year for me.

Feelings of Inadequacy

I hosted book club on Saturday night for the first time. I am new to the book club and have only gone once, but no one else could host this month and I figured it would be better to get it out of the way, because the fall is always really busy. So I offered to host it and I spent a lot of the week cleaning up the downstairs and thinking about what to serve for dinner. But then Friday afternoon rolled around and I started melting down. The space wasn’t clean enough. My meal plan was incomplete. I wasn’t sure how I was going to get everything done before 5pm on Saturday.

Luckily my husband was willing and able to take the dinner planning and most of the prep off my place. If he hadn’t done that I might of had to cancel. I spent most of Saturday spiraling, wondering why I can’t host a simple meal for what ended up only being four people total (one got covid and the other cancelled because she was tired). Everything about hosting feels beyond my capabilities – getting the house clean enough, preparing food people actually want to eat. I’m horrible at the two skills our culture values most in women. And it’s not like I didn’t see my parents hosting all throughout my childhood. My mom’s house is always spotless and they are incredible in the kitchen. Someone how I just didn’t end up picking up either skill from them.

I wanted to come here after thinking more about it and have something insightful to say. But I don’t. I still feel shitty that I’m such a horrible host. I don’t feel as bad as I did for accepting so much help from my husband though. At least I got over that part.

I’m also fighting feelings of inadequacy about being a master teacher this year. I know I’m a good teacher, but my student teacher is a native Spanish speaker and I am not. And while I’m more than fluent enough to teach the low level language required in my classes, I have lost some of my higher level language capabilities over the years, because I just don’t use it enough in regular conversations with native speakers. And frankly, my Spanish proficiency at this point, is the result of me jettisoning goals I held for a long time to take a Sabbitical and live somewhere Spanish-speaking for at least one school year while me kids were young. So yeah, I’m having to face those feeling of inadequacy as well, which frankly sucks. I’m going to have to do a lot of soul searching this year as I wrestle with expectations that I set for myself. I don’t know if I’m up for the job.

On a similarly negative note, our cat, the one who caused so much trouble this summer, can now jump on all the kitchen counters. He used to only jump on the island, so we could prep food on the very limited counter space without worry. Now he jumps on to every counter, and the top of the fridge. I even found him walking the edge of the stove top, which is obviously incredibly dangerous. I have to admit, it’s leaving me feeling pretty demoralized. I love this cat, but he’s making my life impossible! I really don’t know what to do, other than locking him out of the kitchen most of the time. If anyone has any tips for crazy cats who want to be on the counters no matter the situation, I’d love to hear them.

Serval on Pride Rock.

Last Day of Summer Break

Both kids had their well visits this morning. They are both very tall, and they are even catching up in the weight department. The flu vaccine wasn’t ready yet so they didn’t get those (bummer!) but the pediatrician had checked with the pharmacy about filling my daughter’s ADHD meds and they were finally getting them in today, so she cancelled the request I put in last week at another pharmacy and put in a request there. AND I JUST GOT THE TEXT THAT THEY FILLED IT! I’ve been trying to get her meds filled for six weeks but the shortage is so bad right now. Even after they changed her Rx I still couldn’t get it filled. I’m so relieved she can start school tomorrow with her medicine.

At home they both had to clean their rooms and organize their desks to play some video games (a special treat for the last day or summer). They both did a good job.

I finally took the shower curtain off the kitchen island and decided to oil and wax the wood block while it was clear. I don’t think we’ve ever oiled or waxed it in over 10 years and it really needed it.

After video games they were spinning their wheels a little anxiously so we walked to the library and got boba on the way home. One of the cats did something horrible in one of the boxes so I did the big clean on both of them.

I got the kids’ new backpacks out and they made their lunches. I washed the new clothes from Target and my daughter chose her outfit. They are ready to go!

And now I’m on the bus headed to the dojo. I am relieved to be out of the house and away from the kids for these final hours. I definitely need a break. Tomorrow I’m taking them both to school, then running some errands. I was going to go down to work but I think I’ll stay home and enjoy the final hours of my summer break there. Thursday I’m officially back on the clock.

An ode to early morning runs

I don’t generally run in the early mornings, and never before work. But today my son and I were up at 6:20am at my parents’ house and I knew it would be too hot to run after my work meeting (and extra day for extra $), so I got dressed and headed out. And it was beautiful and cool and the park was empty and I was so stoked to be getting my run in before the day started. I wish I could run more before work, but I just can’t do it before commuting at 7am. I know many people can manage that, but I just can’t.

Today was a decent day. The meeting wasn’t that bad and it ended early. I got my daughter a bunch of clothes at the 30% off Women’s Apparel sale at Target (and was even able to buy some stuff I got last week on sale, and then return it with my full price receipt). I stopped by my classroom and my floors looked amazing AND they had put all my furniture back where it goes. Usually it takes me a whole day of moving stuff back, but not this year! It feels like I won a time prize.

The kids had a great time at the water park with my parents. We got In-n-Out on our way home. Tomorrow they have their well visits in the morning and then they get to lounge at home for their last day of summer. Wednesday they start school. Thursday is my first official staff day. Our summer vacation is over.

And that is fine. We had a fun, full summer. Now it’s time to get back to real life.

Musings on memory and reflection and the stories we tell

I’m struggling to stay focused this week. I’m struggling to get things done. At home, at work, even on this blog. I am managing to spend way too much money though.

I’m distracted by the fires in Maui, partly because I was just there and know those areas so well. Partly because our friends are still there (not in the Lahaina area thank god, but on the island).

Things between my husband and I better. We’ve had some interesting conversations lately. One was about our relationship and parenting and how our dynamics changed during the pandemic. In my mind, the pandemic fundamentally altered our marriage (for the better!). My husband started stepping up around the house and with the kids in ways he never had before. I recognized and appreciated everything he was doing (because I was there to see it!) and much of the resentment I felt previously melted away. He also started feeling overwhelmed and wasn’t happy. I remember thinking, they always suggest ways to get your husband to help more, but they never mention that once he does he might be unhappy and resentful himself. At some point, the pandemic made his dream job into something he hated and he started feeling a lot of despair around that, so much so that I think he forgets that originally it was stuff at home that was making him unhappy.

I brought up my thoughts around all this delicately, but even when I eventually said things bluntly he just didn’t recognize my narrative at all. He doesn’t think the pandemic has anything to do with where we are now as parents or as partners. He thinks other, subtler changes led to all the ways we grew together over these past four years. I find it fascinating that we have such different understandings of that time, that our narratives of the same events diverge so completely. I guess this is why it’s so important to recognize the stories we tell ourselves, because they are ultimately stories, and even when two people are experiencing the same things, they can be understanding them in vastly different ways.

This reminds me of one of the only actual lessons I remember from high school. In 9th or 10th grade history, our teacher staged an outburst in class. Only the kid who was a part of it knew it was staged. I forget exactly what the pretext of the outburst was, but I remember there was yelling and the teacher slammed a textbook on the kid’s desk for the finale. Immediately afterward we were told to write down what had happened. And then we shared what we had witnessed.

Of course everyone had different understandings of what had taken place. The students closest to the altercation heard what was being said, or parts of it. Those of us farther away added a lot of conjecture, because we had missed key moments. Some people included what a neighbor mentioned seeing or hearing in their own account. It was clear that even in that small room, with so few people witnessing the moment, we would be hard pressed to agree on what happened.

Then we talked about how history is made up of incomplete accounts, and even if you strip away the biases and motivations of the people who relate it, it can never be an honest interpretation of what transpired, because it will always be just that, an interpretation. I was so naive back then, because while I knew that what we should question certain topics, like our country’s treatment of Native and Black people among other things, I hadn’t ever thought that the even uncontroversial history we learned might be incomplete, or straight out incorrect. I’m sure if someone had explained to me how and why it was I would have understood, but learning it like that, in real time with an actual experience, drove the lesson home.

And now I’m learning that lesson again, because history is not just what we read in textbook about the world, it’s also being written in our own homes. Every day we experience moments together that each of us processes different. We tell ourselves stories that we think are common knowledge, but that really no one else shares. And yet we go about our business assuming they do.

When my daughter turned 12 last year I was fixated on the fact that my most salient memories start from my 13th year. I have plenty of memories before that, but my guess is they are based on photos and family lore. Once I turned 12 though, I stored more and more memories that we’re mine alone, that were not caught on camera or shared later during family gatherings. I have watched my daughter this past year, wondering what she is taking with her from this time, into the future. Surely so many memories with friends, and probably a lot with us, her family. It’s crazy to think that even the memories we “share” have probably been stored in ways that would make them unrecognizable.

I also wonder what I will remember from this time. I have this blog, and tens (hundreds?) of thousands of photos. I even have thousands of videos – snippets really, but enough to jog my memory. But I have all that from when they were younger too, and mostly when I look back at them I’m struck by how little I remember from those first years of their lives. Even their voices are foreign to me – if I heard them out of context I don’t think I could I identify them. And on the rare occasions that I look back at my first blog, I’m struck by how raw the posts were, and how the narratives present in those posts have morphed for me over time. Probably just the retelling of my life, on my blog, has changed the way I remember it.

There are actually memories from before I was 12 that I remember well – and they are memories of Hong Kong. My best friend and I both moved away when we were 12, and we wrote each other long letters mostly recollecting our time together in a place that was so different from our homes in the US. I think it was that reminiscing about out time together in Hong Kong, in the years immediately following, that have allowed me to retain those years of my life so saliently.

Similarly, I have talked a lot with other women about the pandemic and how it changed our family dynamic so dramatically. I’ve processed it through those tellings and retellings, refining it into a highly polished understand of what happened. I highly doubt my husband has ever participated in a similar kind of conversation with his friends. I wonder too how that has added to our divergent understands of that strange time we shared.

I hope all of this reflection will help me to be very mindful about the stories I tell myself, and all of you. In a way, I’m making a memory every time I hit “publish.” It’s up to me to decide which stories withstand the test of time.

Unpacking

After a weekend of doing pretty much nothing (except watching Guardians 3 as a family), the kids started camp for their last full week of summer.

I cannot believe I was even considering pulling them from camp this week. By 3pm on Saturday my son was out of his mind bored, and driving everyone crazy. Also, his friend (the one who went to the KOA with us) is at the same camp, so he is happy to be there (or happier than he would have been). My daughter is super stoked to be at painting camp. She was up and eating breakfast without me having to remind her this morning.

I spent the day getting some stuff done. I unpacked all the kids clothes and most of my own and put away all the luggage in the shed. I also excavated deep into the stack of plastic containers in the back corner of the shed and grabbed some towels and sheets that I bought for when we AirBnBed the house several years ago. I realized my daughter has been using the same sheets since she graduated from a toddler bed, and I have two sets just sitting in there, not being used. A bunch of towels needed to be replaced too, after the cat fiascos this summer, and I had a ton of barely-used white towels in there for guests.

Speaking of which, Serval is doing a lot better now that he’s eating completely chicken-free. Which is impressive since we changed both his wet and dry food right as he started refusing to take his anti-diarrhea pill (he just eats around it no matter how we present it). He’s still not back to normal, but he’s going exclusively in his box and that alone is a huge improvement.

The house still smells weird. And I keep finding little dried stains that were missed in initial cleanings. I will be steam cleaning all the floors this week, but a lot of the stains are on other things, the leg of the workout machine, the couch bed platform, the bag with the blankets, the cat scratcher. I really hope we can get this place smelling good again. Or at least neutral. It such a bummer to come back upstairs and realize it’s still not quite right up here.

I donated all the left over food to the SPCA today, and stocked up on more of the new chicken-free kind. I also did an epic Costco run. So many of our household staples were on sale – and I got us a new trashcan for the kitchen. The old one has been so gross for so long, and it periodically stops working. When it does work it makes this weird sighing sound whenever it closes. I have hated it for many years, but replacing it was expensive. They had a trash/recycle duo at Costco for half of what replacing the old trash can would have cost, and it fits in two different spots. The recycle part is awesome too because the cats are always trying to knock over the old recycle bin, and despite the hook I installed, sometimes they do.

Tonight I’m heading to the dojo for the first time in over a month. I’m going to the Basics class, which I need to teach in a couple weeks, despite not having gone in probably years. A red belt is teaching it tonight, so she should know what she is doing. And I’m also looking forward to getting out the house.

The truth is I’ve spent A LOT of time with my kids this summer. Which is amazing in so many ways. And also exhausting. I need to be ready to welcome 120+ middle schoolers to my classroom in a couple weeks and getting a little alone (or no-kid) time, will help me be ready to do that.

The final piece of summer fun Tetris

I cannot think of what to title this post. I guess I’ll see what I end up writing.

It’s Thursday. We got home from Hawaii late Monday night (really it was very early Tuesday morning). And by 1:30 Tuesday afternoon I was driving my son and his friend up to the Petaluma KOA.

It’s been a summer. I’ve taken advantage of our time off, that is for sure. This trip to the KOA with friends is the final piece of summer fun Tetris – I swear each trip, and each week of camp, fit together with almost no margins.

My daughter and her friends met us at the KOA. One of the moms brought them up, unpacked them and some food, and headed home. Just me five kids up here for three nights.

The first night was rough. I reserved the wrong kind of cabin, with no bunk bed room, just a pull out sofa bed for the boys. My son was so disappointed. It was the only cabin available so at least I didn’t have to be mad at myself for picking the wrong one. I just wish I had known so I could manage the boys’ expectations.

Since the boys were in the main room, we all woke up when they did, at 6am. I had barely fallen asleep at 2am when my son came in asking for something and I cried at the prospect of falling back asleep again. It took a while. So a 6am wake up was not welcome. Yesterday I was kind of a mess.

And then my husband called freaking out that the cat was shitting all over the house again. He had to catch him and bathe him and clean it all up. He almost cried. And I knew that feeling. It’s not good.

I was pretty upset. I hate being away for that kind of stuff – I’d much rather just deal with it myself. But he managed and he even called the vet late and they were open and suggested the cat might have a chicken allergy. They had already told us to only give him salmon wet food but hadn’t mentioned why, or asked about his dry food, which is also chicken based. He eats a ton of dry food.

So now my husband is keeping the dry food away from him (not easy when it’s all the other cat wants to eat and she likes to nibble at it all day) and we’re both feeling really hopeful that maybe a solution exists for this problem that has hijacked our whole summer. If it’s a food allergy it will also mean it’s not about us leaving. That would be amazing.

So cross your fingers that my cat is allergic to chicken. I sure am.

Yesterday the boys stayed at the pool for several hours. The girls just hang out mostly. They require no energy or supervision. It’s the boys I need to manage, and the interactions between the two groups. Keeping the boys at the pool for as long as possible helps with that.

The boys met another kid they have been biking around with and that also helps.

Last night we were all asleep by 11:30pm and no one woke up before 8:30am. It was divine and just what I needed. Then I took a little run around the KOA grounds and now I feel almost human. I even found chicken-free dry food to pick up on the way home.

Tomorrow we have to check out by 11am but I’m hoping we can stay at the pool for a bit (not technically allowed, but there is never anyone in here to monitor bracelets). Hopefully we’ll be home before the traffic gets bad. And then I have nothing planned for the whole weekend.

I’m so excited to do nothing.

I decided to keep the kids in camp. I just don’t want to deal with the bitching and moaning about screen time and being bored. They are getting their chill time right now, and with their friends in a fun place.

And then it’s a long weekend until their school starts. We’re officially at the end of our summer.

It was a really fun summer, but I can’t say it was restful or relaxing. Between the cat and my daughter’s ongoing health issues (which have been mostly more annoying than concerning and have require multiple phone calls with doctors and even picking up a new Rx at Maui’s Kaiser), it’s been hard to fully enjoy the amazing places we’ve visited. I’m just not good enough at compartmentalizing. And I’ve been the one managing all the people who were managing our cats. It’s just been a lot and I don’t feel ready to jump into a new school year. But I guess that doesn’t matter, because it will start regardless.

My best day

Yesterday was the best day. We got word that the pill form of the meds we’d been giving the cat were working and he seemed much better. I also got a massage (gifted to me by our friends for my belated birthday). At the house we’re staying at. On the “linai” (a partially walled in patio) where I could hear actual waves breaking in the background.

And finally, I got to swim with sea turtles.

You may remember that last year I was on a mission to swim sea turtles. I did end up getting to, but it definitely felt like everyone else was having an easier time of spotting them than I was.

This year I wasn’t as obsessed with the prospect, but knew I would be thrilled if it happened. So yesterday I asked to be dropped off at a spot that is known for sea turtle sightings, while my family scratched my son’s coconut cream pie itch.

The spot I picked was close to another spot where we snorkeled. I didn’t know much else about it. When I walked out to the water, I found a finger of lava rock jutting out into the ocean, and one family fishing off it. The surf was breaking hard on the rocks and there wasn’t anyone in the water anywhere. If my family hadn’t had driven away, I probably wouldn’t have gotten in.

But I had an hour and I could see the snorkeling would be beautiful so I went for it. And almost immediately I came upon two sea turtles, munching on coral in a long, slender strip of water along the shore.

At one point I was filming one and then turned around to see where the other one went and he was right behind me. He just floated there and we regarded each other for a long time. It was the most amazing moment.

I wish I could post the actual video. Maybe when I get home and have my computer.

The other snorkeling of the day was also great. The spot we wanted to go to was closed (locals said a monk seal was molting there), so we went to a nearby cove and liked it better. The water was less choppy and there was so much to see.

This last guy swam right up to me, just staring into my camera. Most of the fish are darting away from me, so I really loved this encounter. The snorkeling this year has been so great.

Today is our final full day. We had a long drive and a big hike planned, but we think we’re going to scratch that and hang out at the property with friends instead. I’m sure we’ll head out on some smaller adventures, like Ululani snow cones in Paia.

Tomorrow our flight is at 4pm so we’ll have time to hang out in the morning too. Which is wonderful, because I never get tired of this place.

This is where I’m heading right now.

Maui (a mostly photographic post)

I made it without any problems on Tuesday. My family picked me up from the airport and we went right to a snorkeling spot. It was cloudy but we could still see a lot.

Wednesday we were supposed to go to Io Valley, but it was raining on that side of the island. Instead we went to Twin Falls. It was raining when we reached the falls, but it stopped quickly and we had a ton of fun. We even climbed down to the lower falls and my daughter and I jumped off the little cliff a couple times.

On Thursday, it was clear in Io Valley so we made reservations and headed over. The park is small and the walk is short, but I must say, the views are amazing.

After visiting the park we headed to another spot, which was also beautiful, and which had a locals swimming spot in the river. The water was pretty cold but the kids got in and jumped off a little cliff a bunch of times.

Thursday we got home with some time to spare (my husband and several other adults went to a brewery), so the kids and I walked along the water.

Thursday night we grilled at the house and the kids and I hung out in the hot tub and then ran into the ocean over and over again. It was a lot of fun.

Today (Friday) we went to the pool (again for the rest of my family) and now we’re watching a movie with another couple’s kid so they can go to lunch out alone. My husband and I hope to do that another day too.

Things at home with the cats were going pretty well, but it’s getting bad again. We considered my husband going home a day early but we think if my parents come in the middle of the day (on top of my in-laws coming in the mornings and friends coming in the evenings), he can come home with us on Monday. We also got more antidiarrhea meds in pill form, which hopefully will be more effective than the liquid meds he was struggling to take.

Last night I was really stressed out, I couldn’t really sleep and when I did I had horrible stress induced nightmares. It was not good. I hate this situation and I’m trying not to spiral about the fact that our cat unravels like this when we’re away. I’m trying just to enjoy where we are, and be thankful that people are willing to deal with literal shit for us so we can be here.

What a week (and why I’m not yet in Hawaii)

Oops! I did not mean to be gone from here for a full week. And what a week it was! Such. a. week.

But before I get into that, I wanted to thank everyone for the kind words on my last post. My husband and I aren’t doing great right now, and I’m really hoping our time together in Hawaii allows us to reconnect in a positive way, because honestly, I’m kind of struggling.

Now back to this past week. As I mentioned before our cat Serval had some tummy trouble during our St. Louis trip that my in-laws had to deal with right before my husband got home. He came home and dealt with it some more, but it seemed to clear up. And then we all got home late on Sunday, and by Tuesday it was clear we were dealing with more cat tummy trouble. It ramped up until there was several days in a row that required extensive cleaning up of very foul smelling and disgusting messes.

On Thursday I was able to make an urgent care vet appointment for the following morning. I took him in and they ran some tests and $1200 later they determined didn’t have parasites, an obstruction or something else more serious, and sent us home with anti-diarrhea and antacid medicines, which he had also gotten via IV that day.

Saturday morning I woke up to the worst mess of all and after sobbing in a heap on the floor, I was able to concede that one of us had to stay home for a few more days because we couldn’t ask anyone to deal with this shit (literally). Luckily, we were able to change my flight to Tuesday without incurring any fees (we actually got a $65 credit!) and while I was really sad to miss part of our Hawaii trip, I knew it was the right thing to do.

And it really was. Saturday was a packed day for me and I got pretty much nothing done on Friday because of the vet visit. I was actually feeling really panicked on Friday night because I knew there was no way I could see Barbie with a friend in the morning and go to a concert that night with my dad, and still have everything ready for our 9am flight the following morning. Getting the extra 48 hours allowed me to enjoy Saturday (the movie was great and the concert was amazing), and gave me some much needed alone time at the house. And honestly, I wasn’t sad to miss Sunday at all because it was just a “wait in line at the car rental spot” and “get groceries for the kids” and “unpack and get settled day,” which I’ve already done with them a bunch this summer. I was happy to hand that off to my husband for once (he never does those things, he shows up after I’ve already done them). I was a little sad to miss today, but they just went to the pool, which is definitely fun, but I’ve also done that with them a bunch this summer so I’m fine to have missed it.

Instead of being there for those things I got to have the house to myself for a blissful 48 hours. I can’t remember the last time that happened, and it’s never happened when I didn’t have to work. I read 300 pages of my book (and finished it! I’m so happy because I started it before the last trip and didn’t want to travel with a giant library book, so I was bummed to have to wait another week to get it done) and binge watched Silo on AppleTV+ (I’ll be finishing it tonight).

I also picked up the house, found the spots that were still smelling and cleaned those (it was SO HARD to find them all!), finished a bunch of laundry, took books back to the library, cleaned (like actually cleaned) the cat boxes, wrote new cat feeding + medicine directions, founds ways to protect some of the furniture in case of another episode with the cat, emptied all the trash cans, took the bearded dragon out for his “bath,” and more! I even got to hang out with my friend yesterday, and I haven’t seen her all summer.

It really was the best way to spend 48 hours at home that you’re supposed to be spending in Hawaii, but had to miss because of literal shit. I’m trying hard to think of it as a reason and opportunity to better appreciate the days that I’m there. In the end I’ll have only missed today, because I gain hours tomorrow and land at noon, and my family is going to pick me up and take me straight to a snorkeling spot. All I’m missing is breakfast and packing food for lunch (and probably some fights about screen time – no thank you!) I just hope my flight is on time!

Oh and after 48 hours of nothing, Serval did finally go to the bathroom in his box. Twice! I even remember to get the requested stool sample and brought it into the vet today. I’m so glad I was here to make sure he’s okay, so I can worry less about how he’s doing while we’re gone.

And now to finish those cat feeding instructions, which I mentioned above but are not, in fact, done.