Know what Polly Pockets are? If you are a small girl, or parent or relative of a small girl, I bet you are more than well acquainted with the diminutive perky plastic bimbette -- to your cost!
For those who don't know, Polly Pockets is a tiny doll about two to three inches tall, made of hard plastic. She has an oversize head with a perky ponytail (also hard plastic) and she comes with soft rubber clothes and hard plastic accessories.
Sounds kinky, doesn't it?
The soft rubber clothes are molded in one piece with a strategic slit in the back - a doll's version of the special clothing made to dress corpses in coffins. Dressing Polly is not unlike dressing a corpse. You have to pull, twist and manipulate tiny pieces of rubber. It isn't easy. It isn't easy for the Princess' tiny four-year-old fingers, and it definitely isn't easy for my middle-aged sausage digits. As soon as she is dressed (and the clothes are truly horrible colors and shapes), the Princess rips the outfit off and starts wrestling with another.
This may not sound too bad to you, but remember the doll is only two to three inches high. Imagine the shoes. Imagine the rubber blouses. Imagine the teeny tiny hard plastic accessories. Everything is tiny and ends up scattered across a wide area. I've found odd pieces in the dog bed, under the sofa, between sofa cushions, in shoes, in cups, in the cat food, and I think I saw the Princess "mailing" some through a heating duct.
I used to hate the small pieces of Lego that I inevitably stepped on with bare feet first thing in the morning, but now I hate Polly Pocket more with a pure heart. She and all her accessories should be flung into outer darkness where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth. As I can't conjure up a fate of biblical proportions for her, I lie in wait with the vacuum cleaner.
Whoops! Take that Polly's shoes, bag, vile rubber blouse! You may not be biodegradable, and you may last for ever, but sucking you into a swirling mess of dust and dog hair is extremely satisfying.
Now, all I have to do is make some excuse to the Princess...
Out of Alignment
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Not a Matushka - not even close
It isn't easy being a priest's wife (or indeed being a priest's children). Quite apart from the fishbowl effect, or people assuming that we are a direct conduit to my husband, or having to watch what we say because anything we do say can reflect on or be attributed to my husband, there is also the problem of THE NAME.
There are many different Orthodox Christian churches owing allegiance to various jurisdictions, usually identified with a core ethnic group and particular set of traditions and practices. There are four ancient patriarchates: Greece, Jersualem, Antioch, and Alexandria. There are also more recent (and recent is a very relative term) patriarchates -- Russia, Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, and Georgia. There are also Oriental Orthodox Churches, including India, Armenia, Ethopia, and Eritrea. It's a set of complex global relationships.
What does this have to do with my not being a matushka?
Let me explain.
Matushka is the term usually used of a priest's wife in the Russian tradition. It means "little mother" and designates a specific role for the priest's wife within the parish. This is an unspoken, undefined, and totally assumed role.
Some matushki love the term - can hardly wait till their husbands are ordained and then claim it as their right. That's fine and good for them. I am not one of them.
I don't like the term because it is not what I am. I am a priest's wife, true, but a priest's wife in an English-speaking community among ten or more other priests' wives (I don't live in a parish but a seminary, so if you throw a stone hard enough on the seminary grounds you will probably hit a priest or a matushka).
Why should I be called matushka? My husband is called "Father X". Why do I have to answer to a tradition and a concept which is not mine? Try calling me "Mother X" and you can see how silly it sounds. I am not the "mother" of the campus community, nor frankly do I aspire to be so. I am not Russian (that's my husband's heritage). I don't need the title for status or to identify myself in some way: I have many other legitimate titles that people can use -- Mrs X, Professor X, or Dr X.
Also, there are nebulous expectations associated with being a matushka. Warmth, for one. Practical skills, for another. A willingness to step into the breach (church school, choir, coffee hour). Being cautious. Being self-effacing. Being sweet. Being dowdy seems to be another. Having an excessive respect for clerical hierarchy is assumed too.
I don't fit the bill. I am not warm (though I do care). I don't volunteer for church school, can't sing for toffee, resolutely refuse to have anything to do with organizing coffee hour, and, though I don't set out to embarrass my husband, I have a big mouth, my own opinions, and style of dress.
I do go to church. I do believe. I try (and often fail) to be a Christian.
I am a priest's wife. I am not a matushka.
There are many different Orthodox Christian churches owing allegiance to various jurisdictions, usually identified with a core ethnic group and particular set of traditions and practices. There are four ancient patriarchates: Greece, Jersualem, Antioch, and Alexandria. There are also more recent (and recent is a very relative term) patriarchates -- Russia, Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, and Georgia. There are also Oriental Orthodox Churches, including India, Armenia, Ethopia, and Eritrea. It's a set of complex global relationships.
What does this have to do with my not being a matushka?
Let me explain.
Matushka is the term usually used of a priest's wife in the Russian tradition. It means "little mother" and designates a specific role for the priest's wife within the parish. This is an unspoken, undefined, and totally assumed role.
Some matushki love the term - can hardly wait till their husbands are ordained and then claim it as their right. That's fine and good for them. I am not one of them.
I don't like the term because it is not what I am. I am a priest's wife, true, but a priest's wife in an English-speaking community among ten or more other priests' wives (I don't live in a parish but a seminary, so if you throw a stone hard enough on the seminary grounds you will probably hit a priest or a matushka).
Why should I be called matushka? My husband is called "Father X". Why do I have to answer to a tradition and a concept which is not mine? Try calling me "Mother X" and you can see how silly it sounds. I am not the "mother" of the campus community, nor frankly do I aspire to be so. I am not Russian (that's my husband's heritage). I don't need the title for status or to identify myself in some way: I have many other legitimate titles that people can use -- Mrs X, Professor X, or Dr X.
Also, there are nebulous expectations associated with being a matushka. Warmth, for one. Practical skills, for another. A willingness to step into the breach (church school, choir, coffee hour). Being cautious. Being self-effacing. Being sweet. Being dowdy seems to be another. Having an excessive respect for clerical hierarchy is assumed too.
I don't fit the bill. I am not warm (though I do care). I don't volunteer for church school, can't sing for toffee, resolutely refuse to have anything to do with organizing coffee hour, and, though I don't set out to embarrass my husband, I have a big mouth, my own opinions, and style of dress.
I do go to church. I do believe. I try (and often fail) to be a Christian.
I am a priest's wife. I am not a matushka.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Circles of Hell 3: Dog Hair
We have the sweetest dog in the world. She is loving and leaning.
Loving because that is just how she is. Leaning because her back legs don't work very well together so she tends to lean heavily against us.
She is also very old and not very smart (whoever thinks all German Shepherds are clever should meet this one!).
Did I mention how sweet she is?
BUT (and you knew that was coming, right?)
She sheds. All German Shepherds shed. They could shed as an Olympic sport. Summer. Winter. The time doesn't seem to matter. Balls of fluff adhere under furniture, cling to clothes, and appear in food.
Our house has sticky rollers like other houses have potpourri.
We brush her. We vacuum. We don't have rugs anymore because it is easier to get the pet hair off wood floors. It doesn't matter. You could weave a new dog out of one week's shedding.
My husband wears black all the time - not as an affectation - it is job-related. He can't stand pet hair on his clothes. The dog is old, so he has been suffering for quite a while. He has been asking about her life-expectancy since she was five.
The hair continues to pile up. I sometimes think that it will continue after she dies. A phantom dog will shed deliberately and lovingly in our house just to let us know she cares.
(I have not shared this idea with my husband)
Loving because that is just how she is. Leaning because her back legs don't work very well together so she tends to lean heavily against us.
She is also very old and not very smart (whoever thinks all German Shepherds are clever should meet this one!).
Did I mention how sweet she is?
BUT (and you knew that was coming, right?)
She sheds. All German Shepherds shed. They could shed as an Olympic sport. Summer. Winter. The time doesn't seem to matter. Balls of fluff adhere under furniture, cling to clothes, and appear in food.
Our house has sticky rollers like other houses have potpourri.
We brush her. We vacuum. We don't have rugs anymore because it is easier to get the pet hair off wood floors. It doesn't matter. You could weave a new dog out of one week's shedding.
My husband wears black all the time - not as an affectation - it is job-related. He can't stand pet hair on his clothes. The dog is old, so he has been suffering for quite a while. He has been asking about her life-expectancy since she was five.
The hair continues to pile up. I sometimes think that it will continue after she dies. A phantom dog will shed deliberately and lovingly in our house just to let us know she cares.
(I have not shared this idea with my husband)
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Circles of Hell 2: Single-ply anything
Are you mean? I am.
I hate spending extra for brand-names, fake colors, and anything that smells like manufactured apple or citrus. Most of the time, my family goes along with my miserly habits. But there have been some justified rebellions.
There is no more one-ply anything in the house. No more raspy toilet paper that disintegrates at inconvenient moments and scours all one's tender areas. No more single-ply tissues that shred around the fingers as one tries (vainly, of course) to stem the tide.
My husband made some eloquent pleas for expensive paper products. The kids backed him up with facts and figures - so many pain-free wipes per roll.
I caved. There have been moments when I have regretted spending extra (like the times that one of the cats takes the toilet paper and deliberately drops it into the toilet, or uses the roll for clawing practice).
But right now, I am glad that I did.
I reach for probably my 100th (no joke) lotion-infused tissue. It still hurts but it hurts a lot lot less.
You can call me Rudolph but, over this at least, you can't call me cheap!
I hate spending extra for brand-names, fake colors, and anything that smells like manufactured apple or citrus. Most of the time, my family goes along with my miserly habits. But there have been some justified rebellions.
There is no more one-ply anything in the house. No more raspy toilet paper that disintegrates at inconvenient moments and scours all one's tender areas. No more single-ply tissues that shred around the fingers as one tries (vainly, of course) to stem the tide.
My husband made some eloquent pleas for expensive paper products. The kids backed him up with facts and figures - so many pain-free wipes per roll.
I caved. There have been moments when I have regretted spending extra (like the times that one of the cats takes the toilet paper and deliberately drops it into the toilet, or uses the roll for clawing practice).
But right now, I am glad that I did.
I reach for probably my 100th (no joke) lotion-infused tissue. It still hurts but it hurts a lot lot less.
You can call me Rudolph but, over this at least, you can't call me cheap!
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Circles of Hell 1: Apostrophe Abusers
Apostrophe abuse. Doesn't sound very significant does it? But, if I were the judge, all persistent apostrophe abusers would be flung to the outmost circle of Hell - to cringe and grovel in fire and darkness and perpetual misery.
What am I wittering about? People who persistently confuse it's/its and don't know their possessives from their plurals.
Why does this bug me so much? These are the reasons I can identify most clearly:
Apostrophe abusers are not just abusing that poor little punctuation mark by shoving it where it should not go, or refusing to acknowledge its existence at all. The abuse is more widespread than that.
Those careless writers are abusing the English language. They are abusing me.
And I refuse to be a victim. To Hell with them all!
What am I wittering about? People who persistently confuse it's/its and don't know their possessives from their plurals.
Why does this bug me so much? These are the reasons I can identify most clearly:
- It's a simple rule, not hard to follow. Most students encounter it in second or third grade (maybe earlier).
- Apostrophes can be used to indicate that letters are missing. E.g. There's = there is, don't = do not wouldn't = would not, you're = you are, and so on.
- A good example of this is IT'S. It's is a contraction meaning "it is" - it never means anything else.
- Apostrophes indicate possession for nouns not pronouns. (So, no apostrophe for his, hers, its, theirs, yours or ours).
- For a possessive singular noun, put the apostrophe after the noun and follow it with an S. E.g. Cat's tail = tail of a cat.
- For a possessive plural noun, put the apostrophe after the s that marks the plural. E.g. Cats' tails = tails of cats.
- Plurals do not need apostrophes unless they are possessives.
- It's (note the contraction!) not just an error in punctuation but meaning.
- My Life's Work has been reading and commenting on other people's writing, which has had a weird and souring effect on my character. Focusing on small details all the time has made me petty and obsessive. Furthermore, mechanical errors leap out at me, haunt me, stalk me everywhere I go.
Apostrophe abusers are not just abusing that poor little punctuation mark by shoving it where it should not go, or refusing to acknowledge its existence at all. The abuse is more widespread than that.
Those careless writers are abusing the English language. They are abusing me.
And I refuse to be a victim. To Hell with them all!
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Males And Laundry Hampers - what's the point?
What is it with males and laundry hampers?
We have them in each bedroom (two in the room my sons share). Large white open laundry hampers (very cheap from Ikea should you be wondering).
So, they are not hard to find. They are not shy, retiring, animals whom you have to stalk with infinite patience or can observe only if you lurk, quietly and disguised, beside a known watering hole. They are not apt to move nor do they camouflage themselves cunningly.
In fact, they are extremely easy to find. They are the tall white open (no lids) empty containers surrounded by a foot-deep circular pile of dirty clothes and well-worn underwear.
It's not only my sons who cannot fathom how to put clothes into a hamper, either.
My husband - in almost every respect a prince among men - lobs clothes at the hamper (wicker with a lid) and will even drape items casually on top of the basket. Put dirty clothes into the hamper? Not a chance!
What to do? I have a couple of (fantasies) ideas. Perhaps I could gather up the clothes (using tongs, if necessary) and stuff them into my sons' pillows? Or dump all the electronics and the guitars into the hampers (might as well use them for something)? Or heavily spray some very floral fragrances around the room to "cover up" the smell?
Or I could have a meltdown - and they'd listen. Once.
We have them in each bedroom (two in the room my sons share). Large white open laundry hampers (very cheap from Ikea should you be wondering).
So, they are not hard to find. They are not shy, retiring, animals whom you have to stalk with infinite patience or can observe only if you lurk, quietly and disguised, beside a known watering hole. They are not apt to move nor do they camouflage themselves cunningly.
In fact, they are extremely easy to find. They are the tall white open (no lids) empty containers surrounded by a foot-deep circular pile of dirty clothes and well-worn underwear.
It's not only my sons who cannot fathom how to put clothes into a hamper, either.
My husband - in almost every respect a prince among men - lobs clothes at the hamper (wicker with a lid) and will even drape items casually on top of the basket. Put dirty clothes into the hamper? Not a chance!
What to do? I have a couple of (fantasies) ideas. Perhaps I could gather up the clothes (using tongs, if necessary) and stuff them into my sons' pillows? Or dump all the electronics and the guitars into the hampers (might as well use them for something)? Or heavily spray some very floral fragrances around the room to "cover up" the smell?
Or I could have a meltdown - and they'd listen. Once.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
10:00 Opening Time - Why? Why? Why?
It's caught me twice in two days, so it's risen (like scum) to the surface of my bubbling lake of daily irritants. And I need to vent.
What is it?
Stores and other facilities that open at 10:00am. In this neck of the woods, that means everything except the 24-hour super supermarkets and the bodegas.
In the abstract, it doesn't sound too bad, does it? "Oh look, Maude, the stores don't open till 10:00 - so we've got time to really enjoy breakfast before sallying forth for a spot of shopping!"
However, it is truly irritating in practice. Take yesterday....
I dropped my younger son at school (a bit late unfortunately) and set off to get all colors of printer ink (now there's another possible rant!), pay in some checks, check out the local bookstore, which is closing down, and return books to the local library. I was looking forward to all this -- trips undertaken without children, who have to be lifted in and out of the car, who demand lollipops with menaces, and who have to use the bathroom in every single location, are trips that I'm going to relish. But I hadn't factored in that I live in the land of lotus-eaters.
First ,at 8:40am, I struggled with the ATM at the bank. It would only take checks and nothing else, so I left knowing that I'd have to come back when the bank proper is open. Never mind, 9:05am and off to the library...
And the library is closed until 10:00am. I can drop the books in the book drop but that's it. OK, time to wander through the closing-down bookstore and enjoy a cup of coffee there before backtracking to the library and the bank. Nope. Bookstore doesn't open till 10:00am.
Thank goodness for an unnamed office supply store, which was open at 9:20 and had almost all the vastly expensive printer ink cartridges that I needed.
What does this 10:00am opening say? That business people are at work and don't need stores to be open? That noone else wants to shop or has a day that starts before 10:00am.
I guess I'm the only one. GRRRR
What is it?
Stores and other facilities that open at 10:00am. In this neck of the woods, that means everything except the 24-hour super supermarkets and the bodegas.
In the abstract, it doesn't sound too bad, does it? "Oh look, Maude, the stores don't open till 10:00 - so we've got time to really enjoy breakfast before sallying forth for a spot of shopping!"
However, it is truly irritating in practice. Take yesterday....
I dropped my younger son at school (a bit late unfortunately) and set off to get all colors of printer ink (now there's another possible rant!), pay in some checks, check out the local bookstore, which is closing down, and return books to the local library. I was looking forward to all this -- trips undertaken without children, who have to be lifted in and out of the car, who demand lollipops with menaces, and who have to use the bathroom in every single location, are trips that I'm going to relish. But I hadn't factored in that I live in the land of lotus-eaters.
First ,at 8:40am, I struggled with the ATM at the bank. It would only take checks and nothing else, so I left knowing that I'd have to come back when the bank proper is open. Never mind, 9:05am and off to the library...
And the library is closed until 10:00am. I can drop the books in the book drop but that's it. OK, time to wander through the closing-down bookstore and enjoy a cup of coffee there before backtracking to the library and the bank. Nope. Bookstore doesn't open till 10:00am.
Thank goodness for an unnamed office supply store, which was open at 9:20 and had almost all the vastly expensive printer ink cartridges that I needed.
What does this 10:00am opening say? That business people are at work and don't need stores to be open? That noone else wants to shop or has a day that starts before 10:00am.
I guess I'm the only one. GRRRR
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