My internet is no longer running with snails. It’s not back to it’s former glory yet, but I have high hopes for next week.
Author: Robin Chartier
Introducing . . . Zeki
So You Think You Can Dance
Our internet has been horrid this past week. Our internet company is in some battle with Saudi over their frequencies interfering with the frequencies in Saudi . . . or something like that. What it means is our company has had to dial back the strength in their towers while they try to negotiate a solution. What that looks like on a practical level is very intermittent, very slow speeds, tons of refreshing, and loads of irritation. Good times. I’ve started loading a show in the middle of the day in order to have something to watch at night, but that doesn’t always work because the signal will drop out and then it looks like it has finished loading, but freezes part way through the show — usually at the most exciting part.
Another week of school down, many more to go. It hasn’t been the easiest week, figuring out class schedule changes, calling to complain about the bus dropping the kids off at the wrong time, getting in a drawn out phone “discussion” over the bus route, futilely trying to explain to the non-English speaking bus drivers that they were driving the route the wrong way, then glowing in the thrill of victory when on day 5, the kids finally got home on time. Sometimes you just need a Marine (to have a long, loud phone conversation of his own).
We ended the week in a whirlwind of sports and activities: Basketball tryouts, youth group, water polo, and ballet lessons all in a span of 3 hours. Thanks to my Sister Wife (my dear friend who lives across the street and has 4 kids around the same ages) I only had to do half the driving. She dropped them all off, and I headed to base a few hours later to bring Camille to ballet class, bring the boys from youth group to basketball, and then bring them all home after.
I never thought I’d be the mom of a ballerina, but here I am. She has the music in her.
This story is much better with accompanying video, but blame it on the Saudis — no videos today!
Bumping up
I’ve been fine lately. Fine. Really just fine. Functioning fine. And sometimes I’m FINE!! But I’m not where I should be. Instead of waiting until the hole gets deeper, I’ve decided to up my meds. The island broke me and I need some patching up.
Actually Josh is the one who yesterday said, “You need to up your meds” after I started tearing up while talking about this mall that we aren’t allowed to go to and I have no desire to actually go there, but I felt uncontrollably sad about it for some reason?!? It’s always easier to have someone on the outside who is an accurate judge of what is normal and what is not. And for me, that was not normal.
At the same time I switched crazy dog (said lovingly because he is not crazy like he used to be) over to Prozac because though I am very happy with how he has improved on Zoloft, he still isn’t relaxed enough to chew on a toy or a treat while he’s in his crate. He just lies there stiffly and when we’re not home he must claw at the gate because he has almost worn through the front plastic wall.
The boys are doing great (and thankfully not on any meds) and enjoying the start of the new school year. We’ve managed to get up on time 3 days in a row, though this morning Caleb crawled back into bed after his shower and fell asleep. Carter found him right before the bus came and we threw a piece of fruit at him and ushered him out the door with still-wet bedhead.
All three boys start basketball this week. They just hired a youth sports coordinator at the base and I am thrilled that they are providing athletic options for the kids: water polo, basketball, dodgeball, soccer, baseball, etc. Since we don’t have a yard, organized sports has been the only way to keep them active.
Now that we’re in year two, the wait begins to find out where we’re going next. The first round of options was released last month, but we were not on that list. A draft of second round possibilities came out this weekend and there is one location available where I could envision my life as a happily ever after, retired with my backyard vegetable garden, but it’s a long shot. A very long shot. There are a few other possibilities, but nothing else that sings to me like that one. We should know in a few days if it’s even an option and then begins the process of negotiation, dodging bullets (there are a few that we do NOT want), and begging.
letdown
My phone rings today and I see the base number on my caller ID and I get happy thinking that Josh actually found a spare minute in his day to give me a call. Nope, it was a kid from the base health clinic telling me that his records show that I’m delinquent in getting a pap smear. Seriously?! They call you for that? I can’t even get a call about the results of my biopsy (negative, by the way, after I went in and asked for the results in person), but they track speculum avoiders?
First of all, I’m not delinquent. It’s an every 3 year kind of thing now and Camille just turned 3 and I had one after I gave birth to her. Do I have a copy of that paperwork? Does everyone else carry around results of their lab tests? I sure don’t. But sure, I’ll look around for it and when I find it (probably about the time there is peace in the Middle East) I’ll bring it to you.
The kid (I can say that because these corpsmen are barely older than Calvin) wasn’t easily discouraged and wanted to schedule me right then for an appointment “any time in the next few weeks. The schedule is wide open.” On a day when the printer isn’t working and crumples every sheet that feeds through it and the 3 year old only wants to watch TV and dissolves into tears if I suggest anything else, I was not interested in signing myself up for anything other than a Mentalist marathon and a cappuccino.
I’ll get back to you. Maybe when I’m actually delinquent.












