Category Archives: Parenting

Learning to Fly

It’s been pretty well established on this blog that I spend most of my time sitting. That’s been true for about four years now, and as you may have read in any number of reputable publications, sitting all the time brings with it many health complications. Let me be more clear: I have a hemorrhoid. I apologize to those who feel this is too much information, but my little bottom feeder and I have been together for a while, and I named him yesterday so I thought I should introduce him. Not visually, don’t worry.

His name is Vance.

Web MD says that hemorrhoids are swollen veins, and that entire sentence makes me want to throw up. I think I just object to the words swollen and vein in such close proximity (both to me and to each other). Right about now, I’m guessing that those of you who were thinking I wonder when Sarah will write a new blog post are instead thinking Wow, I wish Sarah had kept this one to herself. But I simply couldn’t keep the wonder that is Vance from gracing the electronic pages that will live on after I’m gone. Read More>

Mom’s Week Off

It is Day Four in San FrancIsco without Scarlett. In many ways, I’m doing better than I thought I would be. I’ve been sleeping in, which never happens when the small human is present. And Rob and I have been having very mellow evenings, with no one popping out of bed 17 times because they “have to pee/get water/hug Otto/learn how the BiPAP works/look in the refrigerator and consider the following day’s breakfast.”

We’ve even been able to watch HBO’s The Defiant Ones at a volume loud enough to hear, without worrying about a little voice calling from bed, “What are you watching? Did that person just say fuck? Why did he say fuck?” And you know the answer “Because he’s Dr. Dre.” probably won’t suffice.

Parents who are smarter than me, and there are many of you out there, probably already knew that having your kid away for a week can be relaxing. I have intense moments of missing Scarlett, and a couple of nights I’ve had dreams that she is a toddler and we are dancing together, buzzing like bees inside a preschool room that I have never seen in real life. I wake up desperate to hold her. But there is stress relief in knowing that your child is well taken care of, and that the responsibility for her resides entirely with someone else, if just for a few days. I have, for example, not even considered grocery shopping. Read More>

Lake Archibald

When I was a kid, my uncle and aunt and my grandparents bought a house in northern Wisconsin, on a lake surrounded by woods. We would drive six hours from Chicago to get there, pulling into the gravel driveway and unloading our week’s supply of bathing suits and summer clothes. There was a small tub of water by the front door to rinse off sandy feet, and the screen door was a bit rickety from all of the slamming as kids ran in and out of the house. Inside, it was small. Two bedrooms, and a bathroom that wouldn’t fit three people, let alone a wheelchair. Not that any one of us had a wheelchair in mind all those years ago. We slept on the floor, on couches, some of us got beds, but I don’t remember how that worked itself out. We watched VHS tapes on a very small old TV in the living room, and played dice and Yahtzee at the big wooden dining table. There were Friday fish frys in the nearby town, and trips to the sweetshop, and later to a winery on top of a hill, where everything basically tasted like grape juice.

We went every year when I was growing up, and I even went up a few times in college. I announced my pregnancy to my grandma and grandpa at that wooden table. When my grandpa got sick, we continued to go to the lake. He could still shuffle down the stairs and the winding path to the water, even with his oxygen tank, but he had to take a break halfway down, so someone (my uncle?) built him a bench. My sister got engaged on that bench. Read More>