Thursday, February 16, 2023

Juggler


                                                 

              The alarm jerks me awake. My day starts now.

            What’s for breakfast? What do I pack for the kid’s lunches?

Maybe a bagel and a smoothie for breakfast. My daughter likes the bagel with cream cheese, and my son likes his with butter. They both like smoothies, so that's a relief. My daughter doesn’t like bananas, and my son doesn't like melons so I’ll make a berry smoothie. I’m set for breakfast.

When I pack a salad for lunch, I have to remember my son won’t eat cucumbers and my daughter tomatoes. My daughter likes only thin baby carrots. I have to pick them out from the pack. As for sandwiches, one doesn’t like cheese or mayo in it.  My son likes fried frozen samosas. My daughter will not eat anything with onions.

  I fill the water bottles. One needs ice in it. The other wants no ice. I put this aside first. 

  Today I have to leave to work along with the kids, so I have to make something fast that suits all. 

I put chicken wings into the toaster oven. Into one box I place blue cheese. The other can’t tolerate blue cheese.

I look at my watch. It’s time to wake my kids. I run upstairs and stand in the upstairs foyer announcing its time to get out of bed.  My son says his usual "one minute" and goes back to sleep, and I rush downstairs. I pass the waking up baton to my husband. Within a couple of minutes I hear my husband trying to wake our son again. This process repeats itself everyday.

My daughter wakes up to the first call.

It’s varsity season, and we have more grocery shopping to do and more meals to pack both for lunch and for the evening before the matches.

I pack their lunch boxes with the chicken wings, nuts, pop tarts, and a mandarin orange along with the other fruits they each like. One wants only the cinnamon and brown sugar pop tart, and the other only the strawberry tart. 

We all get ready and gather for breakfast.

“Do you have your flute? Your saxophone? Homework?” I remind my kids. “I will not take them to school if you forget.”  

But there are many days I still have to drop off a forgotten lunch box, a tennis racket, the bake sale goodies, a signed sheet, etcetera.

"He wears all my socks and makes them large. " My daughter complains. She is a size 8 and my son a 12. He's the younger one. “And Amma, yesterday you forgot to pack my chocolate milk.” my daughter says as she finishes her smoothie.

“It was in my box and I brought it back,” my son adds.

“Uh oh. It went into the wrong lunch box.” I laugh.

The school bus is here, and they grab their bags and instruments and run. I quickly clean the kitchen while processing what I’m going to have to juggle for dinner. 

It’s just not juggling with my kid's food preferences.

I think we all are jugglers through life.





Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Declutter in Winter

                                                      Declutter in Winter.

       It is too cold to play hoops. It snowed about an inch yesterday, and it’s below freezing. It has been so for the last month.

       I dribble my ball on the wooden foyer that looks out into the icy driveway. The door leading into the hallway has windows on either side. The foyer has a large picture window just below the ceiling, where I shoot my basketball.  A Schefflera plant that Mom has been nurturing, since we bought the house nine years ago, occupies the foyer entrance in a large earthen pot. It was a tiny plant in a cup size pot then, but now it covers half the stairs leading to the top floor. There's a large mirror with a wooden frame.                     

     My mother reminds me to watch her plants, the window panes, the mirror, and the chandelier. She always says she’s positive I will not break anything but she warns me anyway. I see the UPS van backing into our driveway. I love it when we have a delivery. 

     “Looks like your Dad has ordered something.” My mother too is looking out the window. She doesn’t seem too happy.

       The UPS driver takes out a huge package and leaves it in front of the garage.

“Let’s get it into the garage. I wonder what this could be? We don’t need anything,” Mother says. 

      My sister, who has been sitting on the couch, joins us near the window to look at the package. My mother opens the garage door, and my sister and I run out to drag the parcel in. It’s freezing outside.

      “Watch out for the ice. You don't want to slip and fall.” Mother is hugging herself with her hands. She’s positive we will not hurt ourselves, but she tells us all the same.

       “It’s a sawing table, Mom,” my sister exclaims. “Dewalt job site table saw with stand. Wonder why Appa has bought a sawing table?”

       “ Looks like he wants to finish the basement on his own.” I say, remembering Dad saying that. My sister closes the garage and comes inside.

       “Finish the basement?” Mom asks. ”I’m not sure he can do that on his own. He has never done any carpentry work before.”

       My father loves to  accumulate tools from Home Depot. The garage and unfinished basement have more tools than one could ever need. I can see my mother is slightly annoyed.

      “Even a small repair around the house calls for a trip to Home Depot, and sometimes the work is accomplished without the tool. The brand new tools remain cozy in the Home Depot bag, and slowly, along with the bill, make it to the basement and stay there never used and add to the clutter.” My mother sighs.

      My mom goes back to the kitchen, my sister to her reading corner, and I to my basketball.

      The home phone rings. I run and answer it. 

      ‘It’s Appa calling,” I shout out. The phone is on speaker.

      “Hello! How’s your day been so far, Chinna? Just called to tell you to be ready in the evening. We have to go to Home Depot.” 

     “Why Home Depot? Your new saw table has arrived, Appa.” I’m looking at my mom.

     “To buy wood. We’ll make a dresser for Amma.”

      “Yay! Home Depot.” I'm excited. My sister just looks up from her reading and at Mom.

      Our minimalist Mom sits down on the kitchen stool. We see a small scowl on her face. She’s not amused.

      “Finishing the basement and building a dresser may help us declutter this winter.” Mom is positive that the sawing table could be a solution for the clutter.














Monday, December 23, 2019

Priorities


                                                      Priorities
     This was way back in fall 2002.  My daughter was in Pre-K and my son was a toddler. We lived in an apartment complex in Beacon, a city in the Hudson Valley. We couldn’t see the Hudson River but knew it was just beyond the woods. Several children from our neighborhood went to J.V. Forrestal Elementary School. Several were in the same class. 
      We mothers stood chatting as our children played together in the neighborhood park or played by the brook in the woods. During weekends and winter holidays, the kids were in and out of each other’s houses. We, mothers became very good friends. The school district would send warnings home to keep our children safe whenever local child predators were recently released from the Beacon Correctional facility. Even that never stopped our kids from playing outside or running to one another's houses. 
     Our priority as parents was to watch them carefully. We never took our eyes off them.
     From 2002 to 2005, we chaperoned several of our kids’ school field trips. We’d volunteer for every opportunity.  We walked the Beacon Main Street to the art museums for book signings and gatherings with artists. We escorted them to the Hudson River picnics, and the Glass Factory lodged inside an old firehouse to watch artists demonstrate the glass blowing. Along with my kids, these field trips introduced me to American culture.
      Memories of Beacon’s Main Street are plenty, but never for it’s aesthetics. The exception was Mount Beacon which stood tall, guarding one end of the street. 
      There were many dilapidated buildings strewn on either side of the main road. The waterfall at the end of Main Street was hardly in view back then. The walls which surrounded the waterfall had definitely seen better days. The estate that once housed a lawn mower factory was overgrown and in a sorrowful state. The Main Street was definitely in the decline. 
     Still, that did not matter. The joy of chaperoning the tiny, lively group was too overpowering.
      Beacon had several hat making factories in the 1920s. The brick buildings that once housed these successful factories were now falling apart.   Every year, to date, the town celebrates their hat making legacy with a hat parade down Main Street. I’ve even participated in the parade wearing hats my kids made in school: paper hats, straw hats, hats made of twigs, all such creative hats.
       Dia, a museum with a collection of art from the 1960s to the present, opened while we were still living in Beacon, and the Main Street saw a further surge of artists putting up their art in galleries which sprouted up and down this long road.
     Every Saturday I’d take my daughter to Yanarella School of Dance for ballet class. Afterwards we’d go to the Howland Public Library to borrow books, read some, and then go home.
     I cherished every moment. I savored and tasted the joy and experiences of their growing up. That was always my priority.
       We moved to nearby Fishkill in the fall of 2005. We lost touch with Beacon’s Main Street but we kept visiting the city for various reasons: trips to the railway station to take the Metro North railroad to New York City, attending the Beacon Sloop Club festivals --strawberries, pumpkin and corn festivals. I put up stalls in the festival grounds, selling Indian art and fabrics but never earned a penny. All the money raised were spent on the kids for rides, food, and shopping from other stalls. Profits had to wait until my kids grew up. My daughter would bring a friend along with her, and I would have to pay for the friend and her. I accepted the deal because it was good to have help. When they left the stall to roam the festival, they left together, which left me, the boss with no help.
     My son, his feet on wheels, was never at the stall except to ask for more money when the allowance I gave him had been spent. I was worried he would get lost in the warren of stalls. Once I even had to leave the girls alone to check on him, but he was playing on some ride with new- found friends. When I told him, I was looking for him, he smiled back with insouciance. 
       From 2005 to 2018, our priorities included driving our kids to classes, sporting games, and various school events. We drove to Beacon High School for their swim group practice for two years, but then the kids became interested in other activities. 
     Learning to channel them through their teenage years was a challenge. We couldn’t take our focus off them. We mothers were learning to be concerned without controlling, to be involved without interfering. I was never prepared for these teenage years.  Loving unconditionally was just not enough. Practicing patience became priority. 
     In 2015, I visited Beacon’s Main Street to taste the donuts from Glazed Over Donuts. They were the talk of the teenage children in our community.  Immediately, I noticed how the once depressed town was now renewed. Totally impressed, I started taking all of my visitors and guests to Glazed Over Donuts and to see Beacon’s Main Street.  I spent an entire evening with my daughter walking Beacon Main Street and was astonished at the once unglamorous waterfall now glorified with colorful lights. The once forsaken estate developed into a picturesque restaurant. It was ingenious how the crumbling walls and the old lawn mower factory were aesthetically remade for guests to enjoy their food looking out over the magnificent waterfalls. 
     By September 2018 all of our kids had left for college. The little playmates have now grown up to become soul siblings and friends. Most of us mothers had become empty nesters. Initially, our hearts and our homes, along with the streets, as well as the neighborhood, seemed barren. On the other hand it was like a vacation had begun. Household work, cooking, driving around, grocery shopping all drastically reduced. Was I actually relieved? I was not going to brood. I had put my heart, soul, and might into my children. Now I’d do whatever I was going to do with that same fervor.
      I left to India to help my parents move out from their old ancestral home in the countryside to a small house in town. My mom underwent eye surgery. I helped them out as much as I could. Their comfort was now my priority. 
     I settled them in their new home. My husband missed me terribly, and so did my kids when they came home on breaks.  I missed my home in the Hudson Valley, my writing group, my friends, and my long walks. After six months away I returned to New York.
     It was the weekend after Labor Day weekend. The kids had gone back to college after their summer break. My husband had to work that Sunday, and my friend’s husband was away in India. My friend and I decided to spend our Sunday in Beacon on Main Street. By now Beacon Main Street had become completely gentrified. The architecture varied from archaic to contemporary. The Howland Library, post office, a mosque, some old shops, a gas station, and the glass factory remained the same. Bright pink petunias in decorated pots adorned the lamp posts. Sculptures and paintings were placed randomly along the sidewalks. Old doors were festooned with artwork. Chic boutiques and a cornucopia of eateries had sprouted on either side of this main artery. Sophistication emanated from good old Beacon.
     We walked the streets, soaking in the perfect late summer weather. We shared a small veggie sandwich. That was enough for a healthy meal. We stopped at the marshmallow place and savored the s’mores and sampled customized ice creams.
     The crows were young and stylish. As we talked to a few of the shopkeepers, we figured out that some of them couldn't afford Manhattan, so they shifted here. Technically, Beacon was an up and coming miniature Manhattan.
     My friend and I explored all the dessert places and did not tire until we were satiated with the delectable sweetmeats. The trip ended with us buying rich, honey-soaked Baklavas for home. but we had to eat them before our husbands returned.
     We were once again savoring Beacon’s Main Street.  Our priorities might have changed, but we were, as always, getting it right. For now, we were satisfying our sweet tooth to the maximum.



Wishing Good Night after Breakfast


                                          Wishing Good Night after Breakfast

     “Get the table ready for breakfast,” my mother tells Leelakka, the kitchen helper.
      Leelakka pours hot water into the jugs and places the steel plates and tumblers on the huge red wooden table
      She also brings in the hot case with idlis (the steaming rice and lentil cakes), a small vessel of ghee, and steaming sambar in a steel bowl. Afterwards, she also puts a bowl of curd and a platter of grated carrots and cut fruits down.
     The seven of us sit around the table. We serve ourselves and chat over breakfast. It’s been three days since my children, and I landed in India.
     In America, we have cereal or toast and eggs for breakfast. There is always fruit. Sometimes the kids opt for waffles, bagels or pancakes with maple syrup. How they love the American breakfast.
     In my parents’ house, there are no breakfast cereals 
     It’s Friday morning in India. There is a scheduled menu for what is served for breakfast every day of the week.
    Monday and Friday, it’s idlis. Tuesdays, it’s upma. Since upma is not a favorite of many it is accompanied by a choice of fresh baked toast and egg. Wednesdays, its chapatis. Thursdays, appam and on Saturdays, it’s my favorite poori and potato masala
     “What would you like to drink?” Leelakka asks us.
     My father likes coffee, and my cousin wants milk with Bournvita. Mother, my kids and I want tea.
     All of the doors are open. A warm breeze passes intermittently through the dining area. Our dog, Bodie, stands in the doorway looking at us and wagging his tail hopefully. 
     “Leela, throw him a poori,” Appa says, and Leelakka throws a Poori to Bodie. He leaps up and catches his treat. What a good start to his day! He then races off to chase the crows, who are outside making a racket for their poori, too. 
      Every morning Mom feeds the crows and other birds. Today, with her grandchildren around, she seems to have forgotten her feathered friends.  They cry out in demand. When my children were toddlers, they loved feeding the birds. They’d call out to crows, mimicking their caws.
     The phone rings. It’s tone clearly indicates it’s from my husband, who remained behind in New York. It is bedtime for him.
      “What are you having for breakfast?” he asks me and then quickly adds, “Let me guess! It’s Friday morning, and you are having idlis.” I can hear his smile.
      “Correct.” I return the smile. 
      “I had Honey Bunches of Oats with milk for my breakfast. Tomorrow, I’ll make egg and toast.”
       I recognize his tone. He’s missing the breakfast we are having. 
      “What did you have for dinner?”
      “I had rice with chicken curry.”
      We talk for a while, before the kids take turns chatting. They keep him posted about our journey.   
      “Good night, dear,” I disconnect the call, and head back to finish my breakfast. Time to start my day.

Index:
Idlis - fermented batter of lentils and rice made into steamed rice cakes. Served with sambar, a lentil vegetable curry or chutney-paste of coconut and other ingredients.
Dosa - similar to pancakes made of a similar batter as of idlis
Appam is a fluffier form of dosa served with stew of vegetables or tomatoes.
Upma is dish made of cracked rice or wheat and seasoned with onions, chillies, mustard seeds.
Poori is deep fried wheat flour bread served with any curry but commonly with potato masala.
Ghee - clarified butter.
Masala - similar to curry. Potatoes boiled, mashed and seasoned with onions, ginger, chillies etc.
Bournvita - chocolate milk powder