Never Take Candy From a Stranger: Halloween Madness

There I was this morning, minding my own business, getting ready to drive my kid to her 6:45 am volleyball practice when my daughter popped out from a dark corner and yelled "BOO!" at me.

I just about crapped my pants.

Well, you know, if I were wearing any pants. Which I wasn't.

I screamed and immediately wanted to murder my child. I tend to react that way when the dickens is scared out of me by an annoying human before I've had my morning coffee.

"Guess what Mom!" my kid hopped about, grinning from ear to ear, oblivious to her imminent death.

"What?" I growled, as my heart beat raced out of control.

"It's HALLOWEEN this weekend!"

Lucky me. I will admit it. I don't get Halloween. Sure as a child, I see the allure. Free candy and the chance to run around the neighbourhood scaring old people. But as a grown ass woman, I am not seeing the charm. I don't want to navigate through the throngs of over-excited children and weary parents just to bang on some stranger's door so my kid can have a piece of cheap candy tossed into a pillow case.

I've never been a very good Halloween mom. I dread having to think up costume ideas for my children so I avoid thinking about it and suddenly it's the night before Halloween and I'm standing in a small town drugstore looking for cheap costume ideas and sifting through the rejected remains of  two bit hooker polyester costumes and an assortment trashy looking psycho masks.

Between all the cute little princesses and goblins running amok on the streets, well I kinda want to kick them. And the grown-ups in costume? They annoy me even worse. Bunch of over-achievers. Harumph. Way to make us lazy parents look even douchier than we already feel as we teach our children invaluable pan-handling skills.

Halloween has never played a big part in my family's history, mostly due to Bug. He wasn't able to eat candy and he abhorred being stuffed into any type of costume so after two years of trying with him, I called it quits. We became a none Halloween'ing family and not because we are too Godly for it, but because I was too lazy for it.

I'm screaming behind my mask of smiles. Really.


I bribed my children with bags of purchased candy and we sat in front of the television screen and I forced them to watch scary movies with me. For years, it was perfect. My children still had their sugar rushes and I was able to cuddle my little monsters in the darkened confines of my house.

And then my son died.  And there went my reason for not letting the older children trick or treat. I no longer could use their little brother as an excuse to avoid all the irritating aspects of this obnoxious holiday. I either had to pony up a real reason (sorry kids, I don't want to go out in public because people annoy me) or just admit I am a lazy ass.

So it was back to standing in a drugstore at the last minute trying to convince my son why it was perfectly acceptable for him to wear a cheap Marilyn Monroe wig because that was all that was left on the shelves.

Fric and Frac have gotten a few years of trick or treating in since their little brother died and I'll admit, I had hoped they would come to the dark side with me and come to believe that walking around in the dark, outside in the cold and begging for candy is stupid and silly when they have a mother pleading to throw as much candy as they want at their feet if only they would agree to stay home.

My children, the willful little buggers they are, refuse to see the light. They simply refuse to be brain washed into my way of thinking. No, instead they mock me for my common sense and then request garishly complicated hand-stitched costumes because they like to poke their mother bear with a large pointy stick.

I had hoped with the addition of Jumby in our family, I'd be able to once again use the 'disabled, tube-fed, non-mobile child' as a reason to once again banish the festivities from our house (I can feel your judgement just typing out this sentence but I refuse to bow down to peer pressure) but not only have my children grown taller but they have apparently gotten smarter over the years as well.

They are devious.

"But Moooom! Jumby loves to be around other people! He'll have so much fun! And it'll be great for the community to see him out and about!"

"But Mooom! You don't want to deprive Jumby of a quintessential childhood activity! He's been through so much already! He deserves this!"

"But Mooom! We can take our little cousin too because he is finally old enough to go trick or treating!"

They look at me with their hound dog eyes and bat their big baby blues at me and suddenly I'm wondering what I did to deserve such Halloween lovers for children. So I'm back to arguing with my children about whether or not we are heading into town to knock on a bunch of doors so that they can stuff themselves silly with candy given to them by strangers.


I think Fric and Frac are too old at 14 and 13 years, respectively. But when I asked Twitter a few weeks ago, the response was split. Some people think they'll be all right as long as they are in costume and have Jumby and my four year old nephew, the Worm, with them and others are curmudgeonly and grinchy like myself and say, no way, they are too old.

For the record, I really love the curmudgeons. They warm the cockles of my blackened Halloween-hating heart.

So what I want to know, is what do you think? How old were you when you last went trick or treating? How old is too old? I'm going with public opinion on this one because my husband refuses to chime in. ("Whatever you decide is fine, honey." Wishywashy weenie.)

Also, am I the only Halloween-hating human on this planet? Can I really be the only person around who thinks decorating your house for a three hour event once a year is not only a waste of money but insanely tacky as well?

And lastly, someone please explain how I morphed into a geriatric old man hiding in his basement with his house lights all off, while muttering under his breath about crazy young whippersnappers. I became my damn father. And sadly, I have the chin whiskers to prove it.

Tethered to Today

Five years ago I thought this day would get easier. I pinned my hopes on that thought, clutched it tightly to my fractured soul and used it to mop up the tears seeping down my face.


Five years ago I would never have been able to comprehend the fact this day wouldn't just mark the end of your life, but would also mark the birth of the brother you never got to meet, the son I didn't yet know existed.


But here we are.


It's been five years.


It's a difficult day, to mourn the loss of one son, while celebrating the birth of another. It is a day that can never completely be one son's day, a day where joy tugs with sorrow and my heart is ripped to shreds all over again and I stand breathless against the tidal wave of pain while clinging to the love which surrounds me in the hopes this day will get easier.


I see you sometimes Bug. Standing there in the sunlight, with your head thrown back, laughing. I see you in your siblings eyes, reflected back to me in their big blue eyes. I see you sometimes in the way your little brother holds his head against mine when we cuddle.


I feel you everywhere.


I wonder who you would have been if you had survived. It haunts me. I wonder who Jumby would have been if he had been born to me? Or if I had found him sooner. Haunted.


I wish upon a thousand stars I could make things right for both of my boys. That neither of you had to suffer the way you did. That I could make you both whole, heal you with our family's love for you. That I could have saved you both.


Sorrow clings to me like a second skin, itches like an ill-fitting sweater.


Five years ago I was lost.


Five years later I have a reason to celebrate this day.


It's not enough, it's too much, I'm grateful for this new love, I'm broken for my lost love.


I never thought I could love someone this much. You did this to me. Both of you. The four of you. I'm who I am today, all  joy and pain and heartbreak and hope because of you. My children.


I'm so lucky to have had the chance to love this much.



I will light a candle tonight for one son as I help another blow his out.



Happy birthday my sweet Jumby.

You are missed my sweet Bug.

You are both so very loved today and everyday to come.

The Boys' Room Reno Revealed

It's birthday week around these parts, with Frac's 13th birthday this past Saturday and Jumby's birthday this Thursday. This means one thing. Room renovation time. And birthday cake. Which I suppose is two things but whatever.


Since I busted my arse last month to redo Frac's sister's room for her 14th birthday, my son had the expectation that I'd do the same thing for him and his little brother. Something about impartial parenting and equal love distribution. I don't know, I'll admit I sort of tuned him out after he prattled on. It's not like I'm up for any parenting of the year awards here, people.


However, a promise is a promise and I promised. Or so my kid reminded me every darn day since his sister's birthday. Apparently he was just as sick of his bedroom as I was.



The army green just wasn't working for me. The room was dark and dingy and it drove me nuts to go in there. Of course, that may have had something to do with only having one 40 watt lightbulb in the ceiling. It's only been five years and it never occurred to me to check out the bulbs in the ceiling light. I don't even want to think about what that says about my intelligence level.


I don't have any pictures of the boys room with all their crap in the room, mostly because I tended to avoid their room like the plague. Between Frac's dirty clothes strewn everywhere, Jumby's medical equipment and memories of Bug haunting me, I will be honest and tell you the boys room was my least favourite space in our home.


That's all changed with some new paint, a bit of sweat and a boat load of tears.


And for the record, trying to decide on how to decorate for a teenaged boy and a severely disabled soon to be seven year old boy was no small feat. There isn't a lot of common ground between the two kids.



I went with an aviation theme for the boys. My brother flies gas fueled hobby planes and Frac loves them. The boy's bed has been a life saver for my back because it's just tall enough that I don't have to bend to put Jumby into his bed and the bottom bed slides away out of sight, which helps save space. Frac pulls the bed out at night and calls it his man cave.


Since no child climbs the steps up to the bed, I've used them as shelves. The paper mache airplane was Frac's birthday gift, hand crafted by his older sister. The flash drowned out the picture above the bed, but it's a lovely drawing I bought on Etsy.



Apparently one is able to wire ceiling lamps in with out turning the breaker off. Or so I discovered. My husband is still mystified how I didn't manage to electrocute myself when I put it up. I figure I must have horse shoes shoved up my arse. The spinner and propeller on the wall was donated to the boys by Uncle Stretch, my big brother and my handy dandy husband managed to hang it on the wall so that the boys can actually spin it.



Of course, I tried to get a picture of it in motion to show y'all how it spins but I forgot to slow the shutter speed down. Or speed it up. Or whatever. I'm not a photographer. Can you tell? (Don't answer that.)


This is a terrible shot, but when I took the pictures I had my flash on and it washed out the true colour of the walls and made them seem much more aqua bluish than they really are. In real life the walls are a smoke blue with lighter blue accents. It's not nearly as Blue's Clue's as it appears in some of these photos. I went with orange accents because that is Frac's favourite colour and since Jumby is blind, Frac gets to choose.



Since Frac can't manage to put his clothes away in a dresser without ripping the drawers to pieces, I thought I'd try something different. The Ikea shelves and bins actually hold more clothes than the dresser drawers do and I don't really care if he stuffs the clothes in the bins unfolded or not, as long as they are off the floor.


I'm not holding my breath though.


All the teddy bears above belonged to Bug and nobody was ready to let those go just yet, so they stay.



Frac wanted a desk. Apparently he wanted it so that he could drape his dirty clothes over it as I discovered this morning when I went into the room to take these pictures. I'm not bitter or anything. I just love assembling Ikea furniture so that my kid can use it as a laundry hamper.

Argh.



My favourite part of the room has to be the giant aluminum airplane I found in the city and the two amazing prints I bought off of Etsy. It wasn't until I found these pictures that I was sold on the airplane theme.


My Etsy addiction looms large.



Of course, no kid room redecoration would be complete without the heart painted by the door.


I tell them I paint a heart for them so they know I will always love them, always.


But really, I hope they see it as a reminder that I'm always lurking.


Maybe it will help them keep their rooms clean.


Probably not though.


Dammit.