Saturday, 12 November 2011

A Tale of Two Suppers

1. A rubbish meal

We’re on an economy drive, trying to use everything in the freezer. It’s one of Husband’s peccadilloes. He says we use the freezer as some sort of food purgatory until it’s too old and we throw it all away. And he has a point.

I go along with it for a quiet life (I go along with a lot of things for a quiet life), and now we’re down to the last few chicken breasts. Husband is getting ready to go to an evening work thing while I decide how to cook the defrosted chicken.

There are some vegetables kicking around but not much else so I decide to fry the chicken in red onions and peppers, then I lob in some tinned olives along with some stock and a bit of fresh thyme and some lemon and garlic and seasoning and it’s all coming together rather nicely. At the last minute I add a bit of leftover cream cheese I found lurking at the back of the fridge and have a taste. It’s bloody marvellous. I decide we’ll have it with pasta. I’m feeling pleased. Husband will love this when he get back from the do.

But as I’m filling a large pan with water I hear a strange popping/groaning noise coming from the hob. I ignore it (big mistake) and as I’m carrying the pan over there’s a very loud bang and the glass lid on top of my wonderful chicken concoction shatters into a million tiny pieces. I freeze, staring at my lovely dinner. The lid is still in one piece but now there's a fragile crazy paving barrier between us and the food.

Eldest and Middle One arrive. Eldest pulls gently on the metal handle and we all watch, horrified, as the shattered glass rises up and back again like bendy plastic. We can’t get the lid off like that so instead I use a pallet knife to gently slide it away as Eldest and Middle One, and Youngest too (who has just arrived to view the spectacle), bellow contradictory instructions. I manage to get the lid off and on to the worktop - but have any tiny bits of glass gone in the food?

Eldest and I run our fingertips across top and bottom: it feels gritty. I stare lovingly, you might even say wistfully, at the dinner... then throw the whole lot out and spend £26 ordering pizza. The boys are delighted, and at least there’s no washing up.


2. Cauliflower cheese

It’s early Sunday evening and I’m making cauliflower cheese to go with the roast. Eldest has requested it. He loves cauliflower cheese. But before I start I have to clean up his pancake mess from earlier. I’ve asked him to do it three times and can’t be bothered to ask again as it will involve climbing three sets stairs to his room where he’s busy ‘doing his homework’.

I’ve forgotten what a faff cauliflower cheese is, there are so many processes. I get on with part 1: steaming. Eldest bounds in. “Where’s the Pritt stick!” he thunders. “There’s never a Pritt stick in this bloody house! I need one for Art.”

“It’s wherever you left it last time I gave it to you,” I say, looking for the flour somewhere in the back of a high cupboard.

“You didn’t give it to me, we had some old ones but they’ve all run out. We never have a decent Pritt stick.”

“No, I bought a new one, a big one, in W H Smith this week. You can’t have used all that already.” I’m well into part 2 now: melting butter…

“I have.”

“I don’t think you have.” Adding flour…

“Where is it, then?”

“It was in the Perspex pencil box on my desk last time I looked.” Some milk and a little grated cheese… “Where I keep it.”

“In the what?”

“The Perspex pencil box.” And now a bit more milk…

“What the hell is a ‘Perspex’ box?”

“Perspex is a type of plastic, you know what it is; it’s see-through.” I’m becoming increasingly frustrated as I stir the sauce. I season it and add more cheese. “I bet it’s still there.” I prod the cauliflower with a knife: it’s done. I take it off the hob and look for a large oven-proof dish to put it in.

“Well I can’t find it, “ he says, “and I really need it for my Art homework.”

“Oh God,’ I sigh, arranging the vegetable in the dish, “Just give me a minute and I’ll come upstairs and look.” I add more milk and turn the sauce down, very low, and stamp up to the office with Eldest behind me attacking the stairs several at a time.

He’s right of course, there is no sign of the Pritt stick in my Perspex pencil box. “Well it was here, ” I say, rooting around. “Someone has had it.”

“Not me,” says Eldest, folding his arms.

“Really?” I tramp up to Eldest’s room. He is hard at my heels, forcefully protesting his innocence. He hasn’t had it, he doesn’t know where it is; someone has obviously taken it... I push things around on his desk - it’s an absolute tip - all the while ranting and moaning and complaining about pancake mess and cauliflower cheese and things never where they should be and then I see it, the Pritt stick, large as life, the one I just bought in W H Smith last week, sitting under his art folder, the art folder he has just been using.

I yelp. I scream. I am so frustrated that I really want to hit him - especially when he says he didn’t put it there - but I mustn’t so I jump up and down and shout, very loudly (it hurts my throat) and he laughs. He actually has the nerve to laugh so that I have to laugh too, just a bit, despite myself.

Then I leave the room to go back to the kitchen, to my burning cheese sauce, and I hear him muttering, “You. Are. So. Mad.”

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Help!

“Help!” Comes an urgent voice from upstairs. I can hear water running. “Help! Mum! Dad!" It’s Eldest in the shower. What’s happened to him? Is he scalded? Has he slipped and broken something? A thousand different disasters flash through my mind, I’m nothing if not imaginative when it comes to possible catastrophes to befall my children. Home a bit late from school? Obviously abducted by one of those drunks who hangs out by the dried up pond on the common - no matter that they don’t have the coordination to pee in a straight line, let alone to steal a child. Still asleep at an unnaturally late hour on a Sunday morning? It’s one of those rare older child cot deaths, or meningitis - like with Michael Rosen’s son (so unbelievably tragic).

No, I’ve guessed it: he’s got trapped somehow, like my father did all those years ago. He was just taking a shower at home prior to flying off somewhere to a conference. He was alone in the house and the shower door jammed. Imagine it: naked and freezing with a sheet of impenetrable glass between you and freedom. I think he remained like that for some time until he managed to scramble his lanky six-foot frame up and over the top, squeezing between the tiny space and the ceiling with the knowledge that it could all crash beneath him at any moment. It didn’t, thank goodness.

So, lying in my bed first thing this morning, clutching the cup of tea Husband has kindly brought for me (as usual) and listening to the whole world going to hell in a handbasket on Radio 4 (as usual) that’s what I decide has happened to Eldest. He’s trapped in the shower. But hang on a minute - it’s an over bath shower up there, there’s no door…

“Help!” Comes the desperate voice again, “I need help! It’s urgent!”

“What!” Husband calls, dashing to the rescue as I scramble from under the duvet, grabbing at the dressing gown strewn on the floor (can’t appear naked in front of eldest son any more, he’s 15). I get to the landing just in time to meet husband coming down again from the top floor. There's a grim look on his face.

“What’s the matter? What is it? Is he okay?”

“He’s fine,” he says. “He’s run out of shampoo.”

Monday, 17 October 2011

Death of a pet (s)

One of the gerbils has died. Thank god it’s Cinnamon and not Emily. Emily was named after one of Youngest’s favourite classmates.

I had my suspicions last Tuesday when Cinnamon failed to stir at feeding time, confirmed the next evening with the discovering of a tiny rigid corpse. Middle One sobbed. I thought he might be immune to pet deaths by now - there have been so many.

First the tropical fish, we killed a lot of those, not quite sure how, they just kept disappearing. We’d go to bed with a tank full of pretty fish and wake up to fewer. Sometimes a lot fewer. That was after the night of the Tiger Barb massacre. We’d just bought some lovely stripy specimens from the Morden Hall Aquatic Centre. Turned out they weren’t so lovely. When we got up next morning all the other fish had gone. Vanished. Vamoosed. Foolishly we thought Tiger Barbs got their name from the stripes.

Then the hamster died. This was a few years back now and Middle One was distraught. We did all the right things: talked about her a lot, held a funeral, buried her in the garden, drew pictures, even baked cakes for the wake. Still Middle One’s nightly sobbing continued until, by day seven, I snapped. “Enough already with the hamster grief. It’s dead, it’s sad, now move on.”

With Cinnamon it’s Groundhog Day all over again. Or should that be Groundgerbil Day? Much crying and wringing of hands. Not that anyone actually does anything with the poor little thing. She just lies there in the bottom of her cage quietly decomposing because I’m too busy to deal with it. Emily seems oblivious. Seems oblivious…

Finally, after two days, I summon up courage, snap on a pair of Marigolds and dig around in the sawdust. It’s a gruesome task but someone’s gotta do it. All I find is a tail with some matted fur attached. Gross. Perhaps Cinnamon and Emily weren’t as close as we thought?

We bury Cinnamon in the garden in a cardboard box as Youngest and Middle One cry.

Then on Saturday Eldest comes downstairs with a strange look on his face. “Lee’s dead,” he says. Lee is his Leopard Gecko. “Oh,” I say. I imagine Eldest will be secretly quite pleased about this, he is 15 now... Eldest, that is, not the gecko, although he might have been too, he was old and had lately become, quite frankly, something of a burden. What with the constant internet orders for more live crickets and the regular hassle of finding a non-vegetarian to feed them to him every time we went away.

But what am I thinking? These were our problems. Eldest, whose pet it actually was, did virtually nothing. He took no interest in the creature at all. So we’re rather surprised when he sheds tears too.

Still, no one’s actually taken the trouble to bury the lizard yet: he’s lying outside the backdoor in an iPhone 4 box. It’s the perfect size for his coffin.

Thursday, 29 September 2011

Starbucks

“You don’t even know how to order coffee,” Eldest hisses, as we stand in the queue in Starbucks.

“Er…I think I do, actually,” I reply.

“You are so embarrassing!” chips in Middle One.

My crime? I’ve been handed a small hot chocolate with caramel for Youngest and I didn’t order him a small hot chocolate with caramel. I merely ordered a small hot chocolate. I’ve just pointed this out to the barista – politely, I think – and while I was at it reminded her that we are still waiting for the cappuccino, and the two lavish frappaccinos with cream that the two older boys added to the order...without asking me first.

“Look,” I say, “I am just asking for what I have ordered. I’m not being rude. Don’t tell me what to do, I’m an adult.”

“But you don’t know how to do it!” he repeats.

“No, you don’t!” adds Middle One.

“I think I do. Believe it or not I was ordering coffees long before you two were even born.”

I can’t believe I just said that, that’s the sort of thing my mother said to me when I was 15. OMG, I’m turning into my mother.

A discussion ensues, between the barista and me, about the hot chocolate. I insist that I couldn’t have asked for one with caramel because I had no idea such a drink existed. She claims that I did, even though she is not the person who took the order; she is the person who makes the drinks. I say that as we are in a hurry (we are at a service station on the M4, trying to get to Wales for a surfing weekend with friends by lunchtime) I don’t mind having the hot chocolate with caramel on this occasion, as long as I won’t be paying extra for it, because I didn’t order it. It is all quickly resolved.

“You are a nightmare,” says Eldest.

“Listen,” I say, as we begin to walk away. “You cannot speak to me like that, especially in front of other people, it’s outrageous. Put yourself in my shoes, I had this baby and that baby knew nothing, he was completely helpless and vulnerable. He relied on me entirely for everything, for his very survival. I fed him day and night, I changed his nappies – lots of them. Fast forward a few years, okay 15 years to be precise but to me it feels like five minutes, and now that baby is standing next to me in the queue at Starbucks, while I buy him a very expensive sugary drink, telling me how to order hot chocolate..." That’s it. That’s my case. I have nothing more to say. I’m rather pleased with myself. We are walking across the car park now and I look at Eldest for the light bulb to appear above his head. It doesn’t.

“I don’t care,” he says, “You cannot boss that girl around, she is serving coffee to people, you have never served coffee to people!“

“Actually, I have,” I interrupt, “when I was at university I had a part-time job in Norwich, at a cafĂ© called Mange Tout and…” but Eldest isn’t interested in my colourful past. “You still can’t tell her what to do because she has a job,” he says, “and you don’t.”

That’s it. I snap. My reasonable self floats free from my body like a departing soul from a dead person, I grab the expensive sugary drink from Eldest’s hand. “Right!” I say, “you apologise to me for that remark or you won’t get this back.”

He doesn’t, and so he doesn’t, and we’re only at junction 16...it’s still a long way to Wales.

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Post holiday blues

I wake, and it's as if I can feel the weight of the house bearing down. All those bricks, all those walls, all those rooms with so many things in them. So much stuff. Why do we need it all?

Instead of light and space and warmth there is darkness and clutter and cold, and it happened overnight, all it took was a ride in an aeroplane. Now, the sounds that had become so familiar between sleeping and waking - light footsteps on gravel, the creak of a shutter - are replaced by bin lorries and sirens. I open my eyes to a room that is dark, oppressive, no warm tendril rays feeling their way through the cracks, no mountains to marvel at after I rise and push back the shutters, only mountains of dirty washing in dark piles across the floor, whole ranges of them.

How did we live this life BH? Before Holiday, that is. I can’t remember. What were our habits? What used we to eat for breakfast before there was hot chocolate with pastries under the loggia starring out at the breathtaking view?

On this first morning we struggle to find our places now that one of us is missing, gone to work. How did this happen before? What did we do? All seems too busy, too much, too indoors. We slink off to converse with machines instead of each other, televisions, computers, dishwashers...to watch, to load, to surf, instead of to swim, to read, to eat.

I stand alone in the kitchen, cold tiles beneath my feet, sideways rain clawing the windows. There are so many jobs to do I'm inert. I close my eyes and I’m there again: warmth on skin, church bells ringing, the call of cicadas, a splash from the pool.

I leave the cheerless kitchen with its unloaded dishwasher and a lunch to be made, piles of grocery bags to be unpacked, and go upstairs to find my friend, my salvation.

Within minutes keys are clicking furiously under my fingertips: "I wake, and it's as if I can feel the weight of the house bearing down…"

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Positively not negative

Is this negative? I asked and I included a link to this blog from last week. Well, it is a little, came the reply.

Right. That’s it. My blog is too negative. That’s what I’ve been told. Not that I’m over-sensitive or anything but I took that to heart, “a little.” So here goes, I’m going to be positive…

Okay, wait a minute, just before I do this I was thinking…there are hundreds of things to be positive about. In fact if I count my blessings (and I do this in bed at night, just before I close my eyes) there couldn’t be more. Really. They’re all lining up to be counted, like little sheep. Loving husband, beautiful children, nice home, wonderful friends, good work, we all have our health, blah, blah, blah. Couldn’t be better. But that’s not very interesting, is it? And I don’t want to crow because, well, you know, it’s not very British. So generally I concentrate on things that go wrong: stresses and strains, petty frustrations, being a mother of three, living in south London, trying to do a bit of work and keep all the plates spinning, you know. And sometimes I even try to be funny. But happy isn’t funny. Bad is funny.

Positive just isn’t as entertaining as negative. It’s not. Admit it. What do they say? All drama is conflict? or, all conflict is drama? something like that. But anyway, just to please you I’m going to do it…now…I’m going to write all the positive things that happened this week…in a minute…just hang on a second…

I’m certainly not going to write about all the stress of going away filming in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire this week with Year 7s and 8s in secondary schools with a crew I’ve never met and a Spanish teacher who had a nervous breakdown in front of me on camera. No.

Or the inevitable anecdote about Youngest in the school play (no bones broken this year! You see, I’m being positive). The hassle of getting him there and back all those times, or that I was cooking pizza (for five kids) and a whole roast chicken (for Husband and Eldest), while heating up left-over chili (for Mother, who came to stay to help, did I say that? That was positive!), while making a batch brownies all before getting them to the play on Thursday evening. Not that.

No, I can do this, really. Hang on...

So, I’m also not going to tell you the boring story about Eldest who was meant to babysit youngest from over the road, just for half an hour to bridge a gap between parents evening and the play, but got stuck in central London (hadn’t put enough on his Oyster card) so my Mother had to stay at home and nearly missed the start of the play and then Eldest rang, just as the play was beginning, as I was perched uncomfortably on one of those low benches waiting for Mother, desperate for the loo, and he was accusing me of being “useless” because I didn’t have the exact number of the bus he needed to get on the tip of my tongue. Definitely not.

And I won’t drone on about how Mother had to rush off straight after the play to get the train home, that I’d left her luggage in the car for her, in the playground, so she could grab in on her way but the car mysteriously re-locked itself so she had to battle back through the audience coming out down the stairs, as she was going back up the stairs and it was really stressful…I’ll reject that one.

Or, that the next morning there was a premises meeting at school, which I hadn’t prepared for (I’m Chair) because I’d been away working. And that the school rang me in the middle of it, as I was sitting in the Head’s office, to ask if I could please bring Youngest’s trainers because he’d forgotten them. I couldn’t of course because I was still in the building. No, so that’s no good either.

And certainly not that there are so many plates spinning that Eldest actually dropped one on the kitchen floor last night while they were all mucking about and shouting and driving us crazy. It shattered into a dozen tiny pieces (and that’s not a metaphor, it actually happened). No, no, no, no, no.

And I absolutely, definitely will not mention the best worst bits, that I was so stressed I went out for a whole day without my phone and left my car keys in the ignition.

No, I’m only going to say this: I have a loving husband, three beautiful children, a nice home, wonderful friends, good work and we all have our health.

Happy now?

Saturday, 9 July 2011

The Tube

I’m standing in the school line at 8.45 am with Youngest. He's crying. He says he’s ill. Again. I have a lot of work to do today and my mobile is ringing.

“I really don’t think he is ill,” I'm saying to the teacher as my mobile clamours for attention. "He was running around in the garden with his brothers yesterday evening."

“Tell him to come to me if he feels poorly,” she's replying. “On Monday, when he was sent home in the afternoon, he just crept down to M's room and I knew nothing about it...”

“Thank you,” I say, glancing down at the phone. Eldest’s name is flashing on the display. “Excuse me, I just have to take this.”

“What the hell do you think you’re doing, Mummy!” he shouts.

“Pardon?”

“I need more money! For the tube, to get to work, you just left the house!”

Eldest is doing work experience at a friend’s production company in Soho at the moment. For two weeks.

“How is that my fault?” I reply.

“Well, you should have given it to me. You just left!”

“Actually,” I say, “I called up the stairs while I was getting Youngest ready but you weren’t up. You said you’d get yourself up this morning, remember…”

“Well, what do you expect me to do now? I don’t have money for the tube.”

“I’ll come home,” I say.

I drive home. Quickly. I pick up Eldest and drive him to the tube because he is so late. I give him money. He jumps out. I go home. I walk into the empty house. It’s a tip but I don’t care. I breathe a sigh of relief and start working. After lunch I get a phone call from the primary school. You guessed it.

I go down in the car and pick up Youngest. He says he really doesn’t feel well. He doesn’t look well either. I feel awful. He falls asleep in my arms as we sit together on the sofa. I fall asleep too, for twenty minutes, it’s delicious. Then I get up and go and get on with my work.

When Middle One comes home I go downstairs for a while to talk to him, then I go back up to work as he slumps in front of the telly. Much later the phone rings...

“Er, I have a problem!” shouts Eldest.

“What is it?”

“There’s no tube. How do I get home?”

“At Oxford Circus?”

“Yes.”

“It’s because it’s the rush hour. They close the entrance sometimes, because of the crush, you could wait or walk down to Tottenham Court Road, it’s…”

“I know where it is!” shouts Eldest. He hangs up.

I get on with some work. A short while later the phone rings again.

“There’s no tube at Tottenham Court Road!”

“Are you sure?”

“Of course, I’m sure!”

“Well…you could try walking down Charing Cross road to Leicester Square or get a bus. You need to walk south either way.”

“How the hell do I know which way is south!”

“Are you near Centrepoint?”

“Yes! I'm in front of it.”

“Well then, if you are looking back across at Oxford street…”

“What the hell are you talking about, ‘if I’m looking back at Oxford Street’? Are you mad!”

“If you are looking back at the street you just emerged from, then, when you came out of that street, Oxford Street, you needed to turn…”

“Mummy! What the hell are you talking about?”

He hangs up. I get on with my work. A few minutes later the phone rings.

“I’m at Cambridge Circus.”

“Good.” I say. “That’s good, you’ve walked south down Charing Cross road, you are very near Leicester Square. You can pick up the Northern line from…”

“I know! I know!” he shouts. He hangs up again.

About half an hour later he appears home.

“You made it then.”

“Of course I made it,” he says. “I knew where I was all the time.”

“Right, I say. “Did you have a good day?”

“Great. It’s fab. I love it.” He flops down on the red leather armchair in the living room and tells me about his day. He's very enthusiastic and animated. “And did you know that T is working at Sainsbury’s as a security guard!” he laughs. (T is one of his friends from school.) “He’s such a loser! He should have got something better than that!”

“Er, didn’t I sort out your work experience for you?” I say.

“Yeah, well…” he says.

He has one leg over the arm of the chair, he’s swinging it backwards and forwards, surveying the room like a King. “When I get my own place, I’m going to need some of this furniture.”

You might need to be able to get yourself up in the morning, find a job and learn to get around London first, I think to myself. But I don’t say this.