There are certain advantages to living by yourself, or at
least to being the only adult in the house.
I get to decide what to make for dinner without anyone
complaining. I don’t have to worry about other people’s clutter – sure, the
kids have clutter, but I can bug them about it without an adult getting snippy
or accusing me of anything. I also don’t have to worry about my clutter getting
in anyone else’s way.
I decide how loud the music is, the temperature of the thermostat, and if the bedroom window is open or closed.
I decide which side of the bed to sit on, and how the
kitchen table is angled.
I decide when to turn out the light, when to turn off the
TV, and in the morning I don’t have to worry about waking anyone up if I need
to find my socks.
But there are drawbacks to living alone, too.
Yesterday I was having a grand old time with Andrew. I had
removed the air conditioner from the window in the den. It’s 30 degrees in the
mornings and the room was frigid as the window was basically wide open. It took
me a little while to figure it out, and a lot of lifting, pulling, maneuvering…
that thing is really, really heavy. I tried to turn on the heater (the house
heat isn’t hooked up to that room, which is over the garage) but the heater
wouldn’t turn on, so I used the electric heaters on either side of the room.
This required pulling the ugly white couch – which came from Steve’s old house
and is currently stained yellow and brown from a dripping something – away from
the far end of the room so it wouldn’t catch fire. I took a look around the
room and though about how I was going to change it. The couch would go along the wall currently
occupied by the DVD’s. The DVD’s would go between the other windows. The
cabinet would get filled with board games and other things…
Anyway, I had a lot on my mind.
At some point I ended up walking into the toy room, one day
possibly Nate’s room, and sifting through the blankets and stuffed animals left
on the floor.
I have to describe this room. It is a small room. Once there
is a bed in there, the space will be even more crowded. But Nate likes it
because there is a long, narrow hallway to nowhere along one side, with a
slanted ceiling. It’s the perfect nook. Unless, however, you are tall, as in
over 5 feet tall, and you are bending down to pick up blankets and stuffed
animals and toys, and then you stand up thinking you are out of the hallway,
only a lot of your head didn’t quite make it, and instead of bumping the top of
your head, you whack the side of your head, mainly your ear and the spot right
behind it, parallel to your ear canal if you are looking straight forward.
I went from being a normal human being to sobbing on the
pile of blankets and stuffed animals in less than a second. But not until after
I screamed how I hated this stupid house and hit the slanty part of the wall
with my fist, knocking a chip of red-painted plaster to the floor.
But that’s not the scary part.
The scary part came hours later, after I had taken a nap and
started dinner. I was in the parking lot at the karate dojo, trying to write,
and I realized I felt ill. And also that I had a really bad headache. When I
turned my head to speak to Andy, I realized that I had a pain behind my ear,
and when I touched it, I felt an extremely very
tender lump the size of a large jelly bean.
I felt like I was going to throw up.
I had a concussion once, and the thing that made it really
bad, aside from not being able to read anything printed and no one letting me
sleep, was that I was throwing up all over the place.
And I immediately started freaking out about possibly having
a head injury. What if I had a concussion? What if I needed to go to the
hospital? What would I do, with the boys all at home? How would I manage? Who
would I call? I could call Steve, but he was away for the weekend, and even if
I called him, I’d need someone to take me to the hospital. I wouldn’t be able
to drive myself.
And what if I ignored it and something happened to me later
What if it was really late at night and suddenly I stopped being able to read
and was all alone with the boys? They would be so scared! Would they remember
how to call 911 if I didn’t wake up in the morning because I fell into a coma
during the night?
In the end, I drove home, took some advil, made nachos and
ice cream sundaes, and we watched a movie. Then I went to bed, fell asleep, and
woke up. I was fine. But it did make me think about how I needed to add a few
more numbers to my phone list. I should have some neighbors I can call in case
I really do fall off a ladder and the boys need help.
1 comment:
Good idea about enlisting neighbors! Make sure the boys know about 911. It ain't easy living alone fer sure, sister!
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