Oh the scent of sweetly toasted
warm coffee on a morning filled with chilly whispers. Here they were, Pam and Sicily, two young things from
opposite atmospheres to the one they now found themselves in. Nashville.
“Mind if I turn the heater
on?” Sicily asked a sleepy Pam.
“Sure.” Pam responded only half aware of how cold it actually was
and more concerned with not being able to get more adequate rest.
“I’ll turn it off in a few minutes
since the heat usually lingers a while”, both girls were acutely aware of the
significance of such an action.
“Do you work today?” Sicily always asked.
“Well, I work later around 3, but I
wanted to get some homework done before that. Don’t know if I’ll actually get around to it, but that’s the
plan.” Pam rummaged through the
fridge hoping to find something that wasn’t there before. A hearty meal.
“What are your plans for the day?”
she asked still searching hopelessly as reality and the lack of culinary
ambition became more apparent to her now awakening eyes.
Sicily stood leaning against the
wall of their small kitchen, holding her oversized mug of hot earl grey tea and
sighing rather loudly against her ego.
“I’m going to spend the day not
thinking about what I should be doing and actually do what I know I came out
here to do. Write.”
She took another sip of her tea and
withheld another dramatic sigh.
Pam reached for a bowl and spoon for the inevitable routine
breakfast. The two girls went
about their mornings quietly and thoughtfully, one occupied with the immediate
attention of homework and work, the other conflicted by her freedom and mental
prison of a staunch lack of prioritizing her legless ambitions.
6:18pm
Sicily had made it past 3 hours at
a quiet café downtown; 3 postcards, 18 text messages with her mother and Pam,
one with a boy she barely knew but kissed, one larger than life cup of
cell-torturing coffee that took about 2 hours to consume, and several apathetic
stares at her fellow constituents later, she was headed back for the
apartment. 3 postcards. That’s better
than nothing.
It felt daunting, her inability to
utilize her time the way she envisioned herself too when she was too busy with
work to actually do so. It was a
dynamic combination of nutrition, social interaction, and pure
self-centeredness that inhibited her feeble ambitions from avoiding atrophy in
their legs. She sighed again. So much sighing. All day sighing. It made for a better alternative to
staring or despairing. The
insignificance of her troubles brought about a silver lining, a small but
honest chuckle to herself. Tomorrow is another day, I can start
tomorrow. No more dilly
dallying. Did I just say dilly
dallying? Another honest
chuckle.
“Hi Sis.” Pam said softly as she fumbled through the door, relief to
be home very much apparent on her countenance.
“Hello. How was work.”
An automatic reply.
“Oh, it was ok. The kids were weird today. I don’t know, maybe they were just
cooped up for too long, but Liam was not listening to me and Rachel had a weird
attitude all day. Bailey, oh gosh,
he just has these mood swings. He
kept kicking the door because the other two were playing a game without him.” Pam imitated an angry six year old
pouting and kicking the door, nailing it with her facial expression of ferocity
and discontent at the hardships of being six.
“I know, Jakey was being a butt to
me the other day when he spilled his chocolate milk all over the table and I
told him to clean it up. The look
of shock and disgust! He wanted me
to clean up his mess, and I told him I’d put him in a time out if he didn’t
clean his mess up right away. Of
course when he consented he just grabbed a paper towel and half-heartedly
dabbed at his mess doing little to soak up the mess, and when I asked him to
wipe it more thoroughly he said ‘What?
You’re making me clean it up twice?!’ I told him, ‘Jake I’ll make you clean it up 8 times if
that’s what it takes’ and I tried to sound firm. He still gave me a hard time, but I let it go.”
“Kids.” The girls made empathetic eye contact with one another
followed by a sarcastic grin.
“Well, Carol said she might start
going to kids counseling for Bailey, his anger issues are getting out of hand,
and she thinks it’s got something to do with herself as a mother.” Pam held a look of disbelief. She knew Carol was a great mother, and
it was just another layer of stress to heap such self-deprecation on the poor
woman.
“Look at us,” Sicily stated,
“What?” Pam asked curiously.
“We were once those bratty kids,
telling our parents to shove off in our own mischievous ways and thinking we
were being short handed in life.
Now looking back it’s like a fog has lifted and we see just how unfair
mothers really have it. Carol
shouldn’t beat herself up for what every kid is bound to go through.”
Pam nodded in agreement. “I don’t know, I mean it’s normal but
maybe counseling could help. It
doesn’t hurt to try. Bailey does
have a real bad handle on his anger, Carol’s tried making him do laps around
the house in order to help him get it all out, but still, she’ll find him a few
minutes later kicking the door to the garage like a mad man. Then Liam, I mean he’s three now so he
shouldn’t still be using a pacifier or biting people, so she started telling
him that she will bite off the tips of his pacifiers whenever he bites
someone. She’s already cut 4 of
his pacifiers up telling him that she bit them off in order to show him how it
feels to be the victim of biting.”
The girls both smiled at the clever
maneuver. Carol was a great mom,
she was just a mom of three kids born without much need for anything, and that
usually meant they were bound to find their outlets of desire through
absurdities like kicking doors and biting people.
“I’m starving.” Pam was once again unable to pinpoint
what exactly it was that she was hungry for.
“I’ll make us a nice hearty kale
and lentil stew, tomorrow.” Sicily
chimed, a bit afraid of the commitment that came with such an offer. She knew she needed to make stew. She needed the practice, and she needed
to feed Pam, it was a gesture from a part of her that she wanted to exercise
more; goodness. It was a grasp she
often found slippery and cruel despite her good intentions.
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