Ikea has the cheapest breakfast outside of the home. In fifteen minutes we can be at the table, dunking french toast sticks into a bowl of maple syrup (not ideal, but Ford’s ideal, which he serves up himself) and feeling the warm sunlight pour through the floor-to-ceiling windows, penetrating the pores, the caffeine from the Swedish coffee slipping instantly into your bloodstream as if by DMSO. The eggs are synthetic but oddly satisfying, since we are always starving and they are always served steaming hot. There are beads of syrup on the table, collecting on their t-shirts, smeared between fingers. I sit there, across the table, sipping my coffee and wondering how they can stand their filth. Judging from the quiet, they couldn’t be more content with it.
yeah, yeah, the Dare
Nobody made me do this. But Christina encouraged us to do this. Normally, I have a hard time taking myself seriously.
Bring on the crow’s feet, laugh lines, age spots! They’re merit badges for being a Mother of Boys.
xoxo
I am the first thing in the morning. He reaches over and rests his arm on my shoulder, to know that I am there. I am a companion in the bathroom when he pees, because there are monsters; well, there really aren’t monsters, they’re just pretend; just in case, I’m there.
I’m groom, running through the house with a long black comb, chasing small blonde dreadlocks. I am master chef, with a stool by my side. I am wrong sometimes. I’ve also been called stupid. However, I prefer to be called “Mommy,†because it sounds so sweet from the voice of a two year-old, and because that voice will no longer say “Mommy†when it turns eight, I imagine.
“Mommy?†I hear Chas calling from his bedroom. In the kitchen, I call back,
“Yes? I’m in here,†and listen.
Barefeet patter down the wood hallway, through the laundry room and onto the kitchen linoleum, I brace my knees to avoid injury, and he slams into the side of my legs, nevertheless throwing me off balance, and I put the wooden spoon on the countertop.
I bend down and he jumps up, embracing me and squeezing every fiber of me within his moment, catching his breath to tell me something important.
“Mommy, I love you more than meets the eyes!â€