Backpack

            The mystery is what initially got me.  The possibility of discovering a fatal outcome tweaked my curiosity and the frequency by which I was confronted with the whole thing – it was a gift I could not refuse.  I was, after all, a homemaker with four young children;   I was bored to tears.  I love my children and my husband, but everyday life had become a string of mundane tasks: wake up between 5:30 and 6:30 am.  Get one-year old from crib.  Get three-year-old from bed.  Hand off both to husband silently, both too tired to talk.  Help five and seven-year-old get dressed for school.  Make breakfast.  Clean kitty litter.  Feed cat.  Brush kids’ teeth.  Drive two older kids to school.  Come home and take two younger kids from husband.  Husband puts on suit for work.  “Bye.  Love you.”  “Love you too.”  Brush my teeth.   Eat breakfast.  Play with kids.  Naps.  Dinner.  Nighttime route.  I’m bored just recounting it.  Bored to tears.  Something had to give. 

            The gift appeared one early-fall morning.  I was driving Duke and Olivia to school and was stopped at the end of my street, waiting to turn right onto Route 299, when I spotted something off the road on the grass a few feet from my car.  It was a navy blue back pack with a rolled-up black sleeping bag attached to it.  A large, seemingly-full, green garbage bag lay next to the backpack.  I stared at it for a few moments and wondered who it belonged too and then I moved on.  Took my kids to school.  I forgot about the backpack until I drove by it on my way home.  I wonder whose it is, I thought again.  Maybe it’s someone who went into the woods for a hike and didn’t want to carry all that stuff.  But the garbage bag…my thoughts trailed off.  I looked up at the sky.  Blue.  Warm sun.  Leaves starting to turn.  Beautiful day for a hike. 

            Fall passed and nobody came to retrieve the backpack.  The leaves were brilliant that year, with fluorescent reds and oranges and then dark reds and oranges and then beautiful browns.   The leaves fell and covered the stuff.  And then it got cold and the snow came.  The snow covered the stuff.  Then spring came and the buds came out on the trees and the early spring flowers popped up around the stuff.  Spring rain soaked it.  Summer was early and wonderful.  The stuff baked in the sun.   With each passing day my curiosity grew.  I would scour the surrounding woods as I drove by, looking for clues.  Whose stuff was this? 

            One rainy fall afternoon, with all four kids in the car, I decided to go for it.  We were on our way home from school.  The kids were yapping away in the back of the mini-van.  Two rows of kids in that mini-van.  I made the turn onto Hasbrouck Road and I pulled over.  Put my hazards on.  The two older kids wanted to know what I was doing.  I pointed to the pile of stuff as I jumped out of the car.  It was raining but not torrential.  I was definitely going to be wet after I finished but I didn’t care.  My adrenaline was pumping .  My fingers were tingling, a long-forgotten sensation.  I opened the trunk and heard the kids, what are you doing?  What stuff? I don’t see it!  Just wait! I yelled.  I was smiling.  They smiled back and giggled from the excitement of it all. 

            I ran across the street, up the small grassy hill, and was finally face-to-face with the backpack and garbage bag.  I bent down and then looked over my shoulder to make sure the kids were okay.  They were watching me and I could see they were yelling at me, laughing.  I knew they thought I could hear them.  I turned back to the stuff.  The garbage bag was spread out flat and heavy with the rain.  I undid it’s knot and inside were papers and notebooks.  They were wet and stuck together.  I tied the garbage bag back up and I tried to lift it but couldn’t.  I bent my knees and braced myself, heaved it over my shoulder and half-stumblen, half-ran back to the car.  Threw it in the back.  The kids were screaming at me, what is it?  I ran back to the backpack, grabbed it and threw it in the trunk.  Slammed the trunk and looked around the woods.  I felt uneasy about taking someone else’s stuff.  Had a feeling I was being watched but I couldn’t see anybody.  Just my kids screaming at me.  I got into the driver’s seat and on the short drive home the kids listened with wide-eyes as I explained the history of the gift. 

                        I left all of it in the garage for a couple of weeks.  Didn’t touch it.  I think I was scared.  Afraid of disappointment.  Afraid this stuff wouldn’t release me the way I hoped it would.  I realized how much I was depending it would give me a purpose a mystery to solve or a life to save.  I needed to save a life. 

Ants

My back is sweating because I’m nervous. When do I break the news to my three-year-old daughter Olivia she is getting shots? History has proven timing is everything. If I hit it right, a hug and a lollipop will keep the peace. If I miss the mark, that lollipop could end up right between my eyes. Not to mention the snow-ball effect Olivia’s meltdown could have on her two siblings, who (by the way) unbeknownst to them, are getting shots as well. I take a couple of deep yoga breathes to keep calm. These kids have a sick sixth sense about them; it is imperative I keep my cool.

“Hi everybody!” It’s Dr. Mac and we all can’t help but smile. He puts his laptop down and crouches to Olivia, who is beeming. “Is everyone good today?” Olivia nods her head. “Am I gonna check your ears today?” Dr. Mac tweeks Olivia’s earlobe and she pulls away laughing and Dr. Mac laughs too. “Okay Olivia, let’s get you on the table.” Olivia proudly walks up the step-stool and heaves herself onto the table. “All by yourself?” Dr. Mac exclaims. “Big girl!” Olivia looks at me shyly and I smile back, reaching my arm toward her with my hand in a fist. She does the same and we bump fists. It’s our family’s high five and even Dean, at six months, can do it.

I’m thinking about how lucky I am to have found Dr. Mac. I went through four pediatricians, one unbelievably worse than the next: from completely missing hip dysplasia in my daughter to telling me to “fatten up” my children — I am amazed these people practice medicine. Coming from a medical family I know doctors are fallible and I searched long and hard for a pediatrician I felt comfortable with. From the first time I met Dr. Mac I knew it was a perfect fit. No nonsense, professional, appropriately funny and genuinely kind and gentle with the children.

While Dr. Mac checks Olivia’s heart, ears, and throat, my son Duke is resting his hands on the exam table and standing on his tippy toes. At five years old, he is finally tall enough to see himself in the mirror above the exam table and he is stoked. Dean is sitting on the floor in front of my purse playing with a maxi-pad he’s found inside. I’m not taking it away because he’s quiet and happy and Dr. Mac is a doctor so he knows what a pad is. I smile and revel in this little victory of calm.

Dr. Mac is done with Olivia (no shots yet) and turns to a grinning Dean who is now putting the pad in his drooly mouth. How cute, I think, and lift Dean onto the examining table and take the pad from him. “Dean’s turn for heart, ears and eyes” Dr. Mac announces. I hold Dean with one hand on his chest and watch him as he smiles and ‘talks’ to Dr. Mac. I am amazed at how easy-going Dean is. I think it’s partly because he is number three and Mommy isn’t always “right there”, like I was with Duke and Olivia. Sometimes I feel guilty about that but it’s a reality of having three children I am slowly coming to terms with. This thought naturally brings me to my own mother, who had ten children. Nine girls and one boy. And just to up the ante my father left when my baby sister was born. He remained in the picture financially (sort of) and would come by weekly for dinner, take us on camping trips every year, but on a daily basis, my mother raised us. I am hoping her ability to make each and every one of us feel special has rubbed off on me. I smile at the thought.

I am brought back to reality and Dr. Mac’s exam by Olivia, who is saying in an outside voice, “Mom, There’s an ant on the floor!” Oh yes, there is, right near my purse. I step on it and say, that’s okay. They’ll vacuum tonight and it will be all gone. Dr. Mac agrees and we move on until Olivia announces another ant sighting in her loud authoritative proud voice. “Mom! Anuuuuuther One!” She is proud because it is usually Duke who spots the ants at our house, runs for toilet paper, catches them and flushes them down. This happens frequently because it’s summer and ants are common in the summer and (I have to be honest) the kids eat on the move and drop crumbs around the house. The few ants we should’ve had for a short time have turned into dozens and dozens of ants for a long time. But the doctor’s office is a different story, I’m betting: no ants allowed and I step on the second one Olivia has found. I start wondering where the heck did these things come from?

Dr. Mac finishes with Dean and leaves the room to get the shots he will give all three. But before he is completely out the door, Olivia has her third ant sighting, surprise surprise, right near my purse. Mom! Anuuuuuther Ant! She screams, laughing with excitement. Dr. Mac glances back at this new finding and tentatively walks out of the room, closing the door behind him. I stand cool until it’s just me and the kids and then I put Dean on the floor and grab my bag to find a napkin to kill the third ant and pick up the two dead ones. When I pick up my bag I see dozens of ants scurrying inside. A piece of bagel is covered black and a box of opened raisins is teeming. I yelp, drop the bag on the floor and jump backwards.
What happened? Duke yells.

What happened? Olivia yells.

Dean stares and grunts.

Nothing happened guys. Don’t worry. I say it casually but know it’s a no go.

“Mom, what happened?!” Duke says again.

“Mom, what happened?!” Olivia says again.

Dean gives another grunt.

My arm pits are itching like crazy, something that happens to me when I get extremely nervous, and my back is now a slip ‘n slide of sweat. And then I give in.

“There are a gazillion ants in my bag! We have to zip it up. Quick! Help me zip it up. Iw! Gross! Look at all these ants!” I can’t find a napkin anywhere so before I zip up the bag I grab the maxi-pad Dean has been playing with and start squashing the ants. The kids are jumping up and down, pointing each one out and screaming, ‘There’s another one!” and “There’s a gazillion of them!” This is as good as a water park, as far as they’re concerned.

When Dr. Mac walks in the room, there I am on my hands an knees – maxi-pad in hand – squashing a gazillion ants on the floor of his examining room. He stops, looks down at the ants, at me, pauses for about five seconds, and then says, Okay, who’s first? at which point I decide I truly love this man. I pick up Dean. “This little guy.” Dr. Mac picks up the first needle at which point I hear Olivia start to whimper. I hold Dean with one arm and wave her over. She puts her head between my knees and starts to cry. “It’ll only take a second honey. Everyone has to get them,” at which point Duke starts to cry. I wave him over and he rests his forehead on my butt and then the ants are just a fleeting memory in my wonderful life.