This weekend we did something we rarely ever do. We had guests. We hosted not one, but four people in our
hobbit hole apartment. Strike that, our un-air-conditioned apartment. B.’s pregnant sister, her husband and two
toddlers of 3 and 1 and a half years all somehow found floor space with us for
the holiday.
It took some getting used to and after two days of the
apartment staying above 80 degrees well past 9pm we finally had to succumb and
buy a fan. Then at least the 83-degree
air was moving.
We had a great time visiting with them and catching up. Plus, babysitting, or even helping babysit is
healthy for us. A good dose or parenting
practice helps keep the baby-fever away for a while.
We also just love being a part of the kids’ lives. Being the oldest in my family, nieces and
nephews are a relatively new concept for me; children with a return policy –
brilliant. We went to the zoo, we hiked to
a waterfall, and we escaped to window shop in the industrial air conditioning
of the mall.
For the 4th we set off fireworks in the driveway to amuse
the kids as the sun went down and then screamed at the hoodlums launching
illegal bottlerockets in the parking lot 50 feet from our house. Our house with sleeping kids. B. thoroughly chewed out the obviously drunk
pyrotechnician.
She’s hot when she’s
angry.
Not long after he left, someone else began launching their
own private explosives in almost the same spot.
It was pregnant sister-in-law’s turn to chew someone out.
She’s scary when she’s angry.
B. called the cops. We
returned to our overheated basement to try to sleep through the warzone outside
that always happens when grocery stores sell fireworks like candy.
We visited family a lot, either going to see them or hosting
them down below. We saw numerous
cousins, both sets of grandparents, aunts, uncles, and anyone else who hadn’t
seen niece and nephew in a while. We
took pictures and tried our hardest to avoid getting crammed underground like
sardines.
Something my sister-in-law said has been ringing in my
ears since they left Sunday.
My brother-in-law is a fix-it man. In addition to his experience as a welder, a
foreman, a rancher, and essentially an all-around cowboy, he spent years
working on cars with my father-in-law.
When we mentioned in passing our recent car trouble as they were preparing
to come up to stay with us, he borrowed a $5,000 diagnostic automotive computer
from a colleague to help pinpoint the problem and with luck reset the
troublesome sensor. When that didn’t
work he made some calls to get estimates for the parts we would need. When grandparents came to visit us and we all
opted to hang out in the front yard, he adjusted the water pressure in our
sprinkler system. Amidst all of these favors
and repairs, my sister-in-law cried in exasperation:
“Just once I
would love to go on vacation without you trying to fix everything!”
I laughed. B.
laughed. She groaned. And he gave his trademark wry grin before
jumping back into his repairs.
He could have been looking for something to do to avoid
diaper duty. He could have been trying
to “earn his keep” while staying with us (we had to push him away from doing
our dishes). He might have just been
bored. But my money’s on something else
entirely.
We might have been sardines in that apartment, but we all
have a purpose. An itch we must
scratch. A task that we must complete
before ever hoping to get to sleep.
B.’s had a tough transition getting out of school mode. She’s not a homebody like yours truly. I can stay in my apartment for days simply
because I do so much work there. She
goes crazy if she’s there more than four hours.
More than that, she has been studying and hitting the books at top speed
for so long that to do anything else without the same level of neurotic
commitment is unsettling to her addictive personality. Hence her mastery of SuperMario in the past
48 hours. She was eying a book of
trigonometry practice problems in Barnes and Noble the other day. She’s always been a natural student; she has
to read, to study, to do homework.
As I try to gain more of a following on social media,
establish my presence online, and pinpoint a marketable “style,” I spend more
and more time in front of my computer at home.
It’s the middle of summer, neither of us are in school, our work hours
are more manageable than ever. We should
be relaxing, right? No! While B. practices trig and storms Bowser’s
Castle I sketch and sketch and ink and color and post and share and vomit my
images on tumblr, facebook, and my website.
We should be sleeping in, but we work late and rise early just like any
other semester.
My brother-in-law’s a fixer.
B.’s a student. I’m an
artist. For people who have that itch,
there are no vacations. There is only
that driving, purposeful task that we must practice, study, and master.
What's your itch?
S
Drawings have always just spilled out of you. That's why I hoped you could become an illustrator, because the privilege of doing for a living what you naturally love to do anyway, is a rare and precious one.
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-- Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon becoming Assistant Secretary of the Navy