The Relatives are Quarantining with Us

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Congested, crowded, over-capacity are words that currently describe my situation.

So far this week I have learned that extending the bubble is an act of courage, there is a mysterious pain in my jaw, and for reasons unknown, I’m channeling Oscar Wilde.

Here’s the deal, we’re all living in quarantine, but some of us are choosing to scan for the positive, I don’t know who these people are, but I believe they’re dangerous, keep your social distance!

If it’s true, what you see and hear depends on where you are standing, and what sort of person you are, then I’m off my game, landed in hot lava, and feeling a little flustered.

Don’t click off, it’s poor etiquette, stay the course.

My son-in-law Nic, and daughter Julie, recently sold their house in Willow Glen, and their family of five are now residing with us until they finish remodeling their new home, conveniently located across the street. They’ve taken over the guest quarters, family room, and half the kitchen.

We have discovered that our internet is not sufficient to allow for five people on conference calls at the same time, not to mention access to one’s blog, or publicizing on twitter. In addition to this requirement, writers need quiet, Bahaha.

Kelley, my younger daughter, arrived yesterday from Boston, her fiance is covering the NBA games in Florida, and Kelley has decided to hang out with us while Tim is away. She’s taken over the mermaid room, her stay is indefinite, and her special power is the ability to spread herself evenly throughout the house. It’s an art.

I was bullied into doing a ten-minute ab workout with Kelley, I can’t describe the agony that was enacted on my body in 600 seconds, there will be no belly laughing in the near future, or smiling.

My son Tony is stuck in Portugal due to COVID travel restrictions, he scored a cool job with a start-up in Lisbon, and it’s our hope he’ll be able to jump over to the states for a visit soon. We have the living room reserved for him and Thalita, with a  plush couch, and big-screen television. What’s not to like?

Dante, my youngest, has a permanent room in the front of the house, it’s decked out with a dozen or so high-end speakers (not great for my nerves), he’s converted his walk-in closet to a bar, managed to fit two lounge chairs into the tight space, a queen bed, a gaming station, and large oak desk from Mom’s estate. It’s what we call an eclectic look, but he only stays here about six days out of the month, as he travels for work, so when he’s out of town we keep the door closed, and this is calming for everyone.

I still have my sanctuary in the back of the house, a room with a view of the patio, and luxurious bath, praise be to God, although it’s become a popular hangout for the relatives. Yesterday the twins decided to host a tea party in my bed, things went south rather quickly, and somehow an entire pot of water spilled on Nono’s side of the bed. He was not pleased. He made an overarching dictum that no one but Grammie is allowed in his bed.

At least Nono has an entire office to himself with a sofa sleeper when necessary!

There’s this new program on Netflix called Floor is Lava. It’s become an overnight sensation for millions of Americans sheltering in place. It’s a simple concept, they set up an obstacle course, and participates are challenged to cross the hot lava field using recklessly placed stools, ledges, and pyramids without falling in the “hot” lava. Yes, let your imagination go wild. I have no idea why Julie and Nic introduced this concept to the children? They have taken to crossing from one end of the house to the other without stepping on the floor. It’s mayhem. They recruited Dante and I found him balancing precariously on the hallway shelf, while Audrey yells, “Grammie you just died.”

And ended up in hell!

When things get crazy I send everyone to their assigned spaces, which doesn’t really help as they tend to overlap, and no one listens to me anyway.

There are eight cars currently in need of parking spaces, the garage is stuffed with Julies’ belongings, we were able to create a path to the beer refrigerator, so calm the hell down. The cars have been situated on the driveway in a complicated matrix and now it takes an engineer for me to get my car out. God forbid we run out of milk or toilet paper!

I posted a no vacancy sign on the front porch and pray the COVID patrol doesn’t think we’re hosting a rager.

The first order of business is setting up beds for the littles. I put three twin mattresses in the family room for the grandchildren. It looks like a jigsaw puzzle, add in 50 pairs of miniature shoes, shorts, shirts, dresses, bathing suits, books, stuffed animals, and “special” blankets, and I think you get the picture.

My calamity Janes have landed.

I think it’s fair to ban scooters from the house even though Cora claims, “the halls are very long Grammie.” We’ll have to paint when this is all over.

The kitchen has become a hot spot, as one would imagine, I can’t seem to keep the refrigerator full, or the sink empty, and besides no one is hungry at the same time, so it’s become a pandemonia express around here. Mangiamo!

We’re still pretty buttoned-down in California (a COVID hot spot), and I’ve been managing with wine, but there are limits to that sort of therapy.

What I need is retail therapy, a real store with things I can touch things, clothes I can try on, and trinkets to tempt me. I want to browse, grab a coffee, carry bags to my car! Is that asking too much?

I didn’t think so.

Here’s my current philosophy, when the going gets tough, the tough go shopping. Thankfully I was able to convince Jeff to restore my Amazon priveledges or God knows what I’d resort to. Etsy?

I want to be totally transparent, my name is Cheryl, and I’m an Amazon addict.

I need parental controls!

The other day I learned that Spanx makes swimsuits. I know, Spanx, the tummy flattening line. Who knew?

I got so excited, I immediately checked my Amazon account (even though I was stretching the internet, no bun intended), and yes indeed they carry the swimsuits. Not that I wear swimsuits all that often, it’s more about the idea of a Spanx bathing suit hanging in my closet, but let’s not muddle the issue with endless details.

After putting three very stylish suits in my cart, you’ll be happy to know I did not proceed to checkout, I’ve enacted a self-imposed 24-hour hold on all purchases. We’ll see how long that lasts?

It’s the intention that counts.

This morning I returned to my blissfully full Amazon cart, and decided on one style of bathing suit, which I believe will complement my mature figure, and had it sent to the lake house. When I have things sent to Lake County I save a ton on interest. Well, not a ton, but like two percent. It’s something, I saved $1.16, and now I can put my guilt to rest. Of course, I put the rest of the suits in the “save for later” file, with the 300 other must-have items I have stashed there.

I don’t know about you, but there is always something to clean out in my life, now it’s my “save for later” cart. I’m such a Kondo fail.

But let’s not dwell on the negative. Oscar Wilde says anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination. He also said I can resist anything except temptation. Bahaha, I think I’m his reincarnation.

Let’s talk about Looney’s shopping fails, shall we?

It all started with a silk pillowcase I received for my birthday from my age phobic children who now all happen to live with me. They claim this one pillowcase will keep me cooler at night (a plus for postmenopausal women), my hair will stay cleaner (interesting), and it prevents wrinkles (no one has explained this phenomenon but let’s assume it’s a cogent claim).

One damn pillowcase and let me quote my Dad here, “when it seems to good to be true, it’s too good to be true,” but Oscar adds the truth is rarely pure and never simple.

Anyway, this got Larry thinking about the current state of our pillows, subpar is a good description. They are atrocious, overly loved, flat, and lacking any discernable appeal. I can’t explain why ALL our pillows have collapsed at the same time, it’s like the stock market, only I’m not losing any sleep over it.

So we’re watching Ozarks one night, and in between episodes this ad comes on claiming to have “the best pillows in the world,” or your money back (too good to be true?)

Larry says, “I going to order those pillows right now.”

“Honey, I like to squish my pillow before I buy one, what if it’s too hard.”

“We’ll never know until we give it a try.”

“It does have a money-back guarantee?”

He places an order without the 24-hour waiting period, do you see how the rule applies to only a select few?

After weeks of anticipation (pillows being a non-essential commodity), and endless shipping delays, the pillows finally arrive. We’re giddy with excitement, Larry rips open the packaging, and out pops a bushel of new pillows. I squish one. They’re bigger then they appeared on television and lumpy as no-knead bread. I’m not convinced.

I gently unwrap my silk pillowcase and reverently slip it over one of the new pillows.

That night I slept for a total of three minutes. I have a kink in my neck, and my jaw is sore, but I’m willing to give the new pillows some time to settle down. It might be the death of me but as you know I already died in the hot lava.

Days go by, my jaw continues to deteriorate, I think I’m clenching my teeth all night because I’m so uncomfortable? I can hardly chew or talk (Larry’s chalking that up as a win), and I haven’t slept since these lumpy monstrosities arrived. Irritable might be a good word to describe my current mood.

I’ll give it one more night because I’m an optimist under normal circumstances.

Night three, it’s 2:00 am, I’m wide awake, and tired of playing solitaire on my iPhone. I get up, tiptoe down the hall as not to wake anyone, and rummage through Larry’s office in search of my old pillow. I find the blessed, flat, overly loved headrest, the one I’ve dreamed upon, and slobbered on, the one I was about to throw away. Unforgiveable, I toss the “best pillow in the world” across the room, slip the silk cover gently over the old one, and fall into bed.

Bliss, miraculously the pain in my jaw has eased, I can speak again, and the kink in my neck is yesterday’s news.

I hear Larry on the phone the next morning, “yes, I ordered four pillows and want to return them all.” There is a pause.

“No, I do not want to try the condensed version.” Another pause.

“We prefer feathers. Thank you.” I love a man who knows what he wants and sticks with it.

More news about the new roommates, snakes, spiders, and fireworks coming soon, but for now we’re congested, crowded, over-capacity, staying loyal to our middle-aged pillows, and looking forward to celebrating the 4th at the lake with the extended Oreglia clan and my swanky new Spanx bathing suit.

Here’s to our lady, and the beauty of independence, let’s hope the irony is not missed on my children!

I’m Living in the Gap, catching up on my sleep while not wrinkling, one-word silk.

What words currently describe your one precious life?

Anecdotes:

  • “When women are depressed, they eat or go shopping. Men invade another country. It’s a whole different way of thinking.” Elayne Boosler
  • “Buy what you don’t have yet or what you really want, which can be mixed with what you already own. Buy only because something excites you, not just for the simple act of shopping.” Karl Lagerfeld
  • Be yourself, everyone else is already taken. Oscar Wilde

My Husband is Wearing a Headband?

BERJAYA

You might think you have everything figured out, you’re batting a thousand, then life throws you a curveball, and no matter how fast or slow it comes at you, you have to decide in a split second how you’re going to manage the play.

I tend to bunt.

I used to think nothing will ever change. You know what I mean? I’ll never finish grading papers, I’ll never get all the laundry done, the dishes finished, the house in order, lesson plans updated, the food shopping done, a blog written, or respond to a mountain of email piling up in my inbox. Forget about it.

When I finally look up from my predictable, and well-ordered life, I realize nothing is the same.

And I mean nothing.

This is not good for Cheryl Lynn.

I’m what you call slow when it comes to radical change, I feel as if I’ve been thrown in a damn blender, and now I’m macerated by some overzealous osterizer. Don’t judge me, I tend towards the dramatic, but I think I’m not alone here.

I became an elbow bumping, unmanicured, zoom specialist overnight, all the while some sort of aggressive tarter has taken my teeth hostage, I’ve purchased more books then I’ll ever be able to read, and I’m pretty sure the UPS guy thinks I’m a hoarder, but that might be TMI?

My only source of entertainment is Netflix and heavily buttered popcorn?

Speaking of which, have you watched the Netflix original called Ozarks? They’re not paying me to advertise, but the Byrdes (the family that the drama is centered around), live in constant turmoil. It makes my life seem relatively uncomplicated in retrospect. It’s their own damn fault, their ability to make rational decisions was limited by their first decision, which was to launder money for a Mexican cartel. What could go wrong?

Marty, the main character, just keeps going. It doesn’t matter if the cartel is pulling out his toenails one by one, someone is shooting at him, or blowing up his dock. He stays calm and does the next best thing, which is debatable under the most lenient standards, but seems rational to him. Marty Byrde, “sometimes people make decisions, shit happens, and we gotta act accordingly.”

It’s absolute mayhem, which makes for some nail-biting entertainment, but I’m exhausted by the end of each episode. This is how I  feel about my own life, my hair is restive, zoom is exhausting, and my elbows are sore.

See, if I were to star in a sitcom (not that they’re calling), it would be about some sort of turtle, who enjoys remodeling her shell, but only comes out when it’s safe to do so. I’m sure it would be a hit.

I thought the appeal of Ozarks had something to do with watching people make one bad decision after the other, but against all odds, they manage to stay alive. I suppose it made me feel better about my own tawdry mistakes, but now I believe I may be attracted to anxious lifestyles befitting of my own?

Marty Byrde says, I’m just saying that any decision made, big or small, has an impact around the world. Ain’t that the truth. Think about how iPhones and youtube have changed the world. “The bite of the apple was not the original sin. Lucifer’s fall was, says Mason Young. Like the Byrdes, every decision we make is limited by the first one.

That has huge implications but I can’t quite figure it out. Moving along.

On a recent weekend at the lake, I woke up one morning, wandered into the kitchen for a cup of coffee, and wham…curveball.

Me, “What the hell is on your head?’

Larry, “A headband.”

“Is that really necessary?”

“Yes.” (Please don’t expand)

‘Where did you get such a god awful thing?”

“Cut the arm off my t-shirt.”

“It seems a little girlie don’t you think?”

I get the look as Larry unpacks a breakfast burrito from Country Kitchen in the Oaks. This means he went out in public, “haired up like a summer pig” (Ozark slang for being unshaved, hair unruly), and for reasons unknown this makes me giggle.

So this quarantine thing is taking us places we never thought we’d go. I talking uncharted territory, mapless, and no mom to call.

What’s next, hoop earrings? I’m at a loss for words.

The truth is Larry’s hair is unruly, man can not tame what God wishes to be wild, it matches his personality, and his motto on life for that matter. If he insists the sleeve of an old t-shirt helps to keep his unbarbered locks out of his eyes so be it.

I think a man bun is our next pandemic hurdle? Lord have mercy.

It wasn’t until we were having dinner with my brother and sister-in-law (Larry adorned in ragged beard and t-shirt headband) when Rachel observes, “I think the headband thing is sexy.” (that was after a liberal glass of wine so keep that in mind)

If anything will force me to rethink the “girlie” comment is someone putting the word sexy in the same sentence with headband. David Beckham and Sergio Ramos certainly know how to pull one-off? So maybe it’s a matter of perspective, most things are, and all you have to do is see it with new eyes.

Yeah, it’s still girlie.

Anyway, Larry is a type A for those of you who don’t know him well, I’m a C. Bahaha

Makes for interesting quarantine mates, arguments over programming choices abound (Ozarks vs Modern Family), and of course, debates about our next COVID project. See, “I sit on my ass for hours doing nothing (Larryism),” but Larry would pull his own toenails out if forced to do so, and so we have the classic tortoise and hare controversy.

Who wins again?

Snuggled in my favorite chair at the lake, it’s early morning, laptop on my lap. There’s a cup of steaming coffee next to me, I’m lost to the sound of my fingers gently hitting the keys, words emerging on the page, thoughts turning into sentences, total bliss. When I hear, “Cheryl, could you come here?”

“Honey, I’m introverting, go away.”

“I need your help.”

Nevermind the world is coming to an end and I have a self-imposed deadline I going to miss again. Charles Swartz reminds us not to worry about the world coming to an end today. It’s already tomorrow in Australia, which comforts me in a weird way, because I know Mic and Lynelle are holding the front line. Good on Ya.

Larry has decided this is going to be a project weekend, I suspect a type A and C conflict in the near future, but what can you do? We scored some shiplap from my niece Tammy and we’ve been deliberating how exactly we want to use it. We finally settled on shiplaping (is that a word) one wall of the lanai room, Larry and his headband are anxious to get started, which means he needs help clearing the room. Why do his projects always take precedence over mine? Back to Byrde, and the consequences of every decision, big, or small.

As I’m carrying out a luggage rack he says, “Are you going to stay in your pajamas all day?” It’s a quarter past 8:00 in the morning, but now that he put the idea in my head, I’m thinking these duds are really comfy. I’m sort of stubborn, part of the C personality, I think we have a plan, folks.

I say, “maybe,” in an effort to appease, because the ingredients of health and long life are great temperance, open-air, easy labor, and little care says Philip Sydney.

We start breaking down the bed, moving side tables out, bedding, mattresses, and lamps. He has arranged his compressor, saws, and nail gun alongside 14 boxes of shiplap, and various tools. This is my queue to exit the scene or get sucked into the vortex of his project. I back away slowly as not to be detected and return to my chair, laptop, and cold coffee.

By noon my husband and headband are covered in sawdust, the wall is two-thirds covered in shiplap, small pieces of boards are scattered everywhere, tools abandoned where they were last used, it looks like a project gone mad. “Sometimes you find yourself in the middle of chaos, and sometimes in the middle of chaos, you find yourself,” says Boonaa Mohammed.

He looks up from his saw, a freshly cut piece of shiplap in his hand, and says, “you’re still in your pajamas?”

“Hey, you’re wearing a headband?”

I get the look.

“I love this shiplap, it’s gorgeous.” (distraction)

“Yeah, it’s coming out nice. We have enough to do another wall, any suggestions.”

I start walking around the house looking for possible locations when something catches my eye. “How about the front bath?”

He has to inspect, measure, consider, “that’ll work. Are you going to get dressed today?”

He’s persistent, I’ll give him that.

Sometimes you just have to ignore the thoughts of others, thank God he found something else to do, I’m back to the pages, and my chair. As Bill Copeland notes, I’m a turtle at ease in my own shell.” Oh, that is so fitting.

By evening we have two new looks going in the lanai room and the front bath. It’s fresh and clean. He did a great job headband and all.

He’ll be stove up tomorrow.

Yes, I’m still in my pajamas, it’s how I bunt.

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I’m living in the Gap, rocking the pajamas, thinking of asking Kelley to make a headband for her Dad.

How’s your quarantine going?

Anecdotes:

  • “You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem, smarter than you think, and loved more than you’ll ever know.” — A.A. Milne
  • “No matter what happens in life, be good to people. Being good to people is a wonderful legacy to leave behind.” Taylor Swift
  • “Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don’t resist them; that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.” Lao Tzu