Friday, March 23, 2012

You Call That Crap Art?

[Blurt alert: This post talks about poop. Continue at your own risk.]

As I mentioned earlier this week, when Cranky Ex-Boss Lady's grandson, Other Kid, was a baby, he was with us forty to fifty hours per week while his mom worked second shift. Every night, during her dinner break, Other Kid's Mom would call to see how things were going--how he was feeling, what he had eaten, and, always, every night, for the entire four years we babysat, the Poop Report. A simple "Did he poop?" did not suffice with Other Kid's Mom. There were always questions of chronology, consistency, color, quantity--so very many questions.

As the mother of four, I was not exactly squeamish about these questions, but I also didn't entirely understand the need to go into quite so much detail, especially at first. Later, it did occur to me that rather than an expression of her deep (and perhaps mildly disturbing) interest in poop, her nightly pop (poop?) quizzes were perhaps her attempt to offset all the time she spent away from him. Her job was essential for both her financial and mental health, but those facts fold pretty quickly in the face of maternal guilt and just the constant missing your kid that most moms working outside the home struggle with.

Anyway, regardless of its psychological underpinnings, the Poop Report became a staple of our daily routine. If I had to work late at the flower shop, or I couldn't wait one more second to take my evening shower, I would say to Hubby, "You're going to have to do the Poop Report tonight." If one of my kids changed Other Kid's diaper, they would be sure to tell me any pertinent poop information so it could go into the Report.

Compiling the Report grew a little more complicated once potty training began, because we had to include all the almost poops--the times Other Kid announced he had to go, then spent fifteen minutes in the bathroom doing everything but going. One evening, eleven-year-old Daughter-Only was on potty duty (doodie?) with Other Kid. They had been upstairs for quite a while when Other Kid's Mom called for the evening rundown. Mid-phone call, Daughter-Only walked up and handed me a piece of paper on which she had drawn, in brown and green crayon, her rendition of the toilet's contents before she and Other Kid had (triumphantly, I assume) flushed. She had even written a heading across the top: "The Poop Report."

As she handed me her masterpiece, she said, "Here, you can just give this to Other Kid's Mom so she can see what I saw." She did it trying to be funny, and it was most assuredly that. It's entirely possible (though I have no intention of asking) that Other Kid's Mom took that picture home and framed it. Or put it in Other Kid's scrapbook. The whole thing is a bit of a family legend.

I'm not sure the exact nature of the poop that's been getting to me lately--most of it is generated deep inside my brain and not from external sources. I do know it's been a pretty crappy couple of weeks. And I also know that sometimes I can't help wishing I could draw--or write--something as concrete and easily decipherable as Daughter-Only's Visual Aid to the Poop Report. Something that would portray the poop in a way that would help me understand it better. Something I could hand to someone and say, "There, now you can see what I see."

20 comments:

  1. That would definitely be awesome -- both to be able to just get what you're feeling out in a way that someone else can fully understand, as well as to be witness to their immediate reaction.

    For what it's worth, I'm sorry it's been a crappy couple of weeks for you. I hope things get sunnier.

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    1. Thanks for the sunny wishes. Mostly it's my attitude, I think, nothing particularly horrible going on.

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  2. Masked Mom, I am abjectly sorry that you have had a hard time. Sometimes, into this goofy charade we call Life, a little rain/snow must fall. With a little luck, we maintain our equilibrium, and stagger on.

    Sometimes it takes a little more effort to do so, but that does not change the ultimate goal: forward progress. I'm with you on that one, so take your time, get your "poop reports" completed, assembled, and then burn them, place your hands together in front of you, palms pressed against one another, and push off, "letting it all go," until the next time that is. :)

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    1. Thanks, Mark. Still trying to get caught up over at your place. Hope things are looking up for you folks.

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  3. Would that be anything like "Life is like a box of chocolates..."?
    I am feeling kind of misunderstood and under supported myself these days.
    I think your wonderful writings are most definitely the path to clarity.

    BTW, I got hung up on trying to figure out who Cranky Ex-Boss Lady is and why you consider her grandson, the Other Kid. An obviously newbie question.

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    1. I can definitely see the parallels between this analogy and the proverbial boxes of chocolates, Lynda. :)

      Though I sometimes struggle with putting my finger on what is getting to me, I haven't ever given up trying. I hope your writing is serving some of that same purpose for you as you continue to struggle with things so much more deep and valid than the things my whinings refer to.

      As for Other Kid, he got that name due to the amount of time he was with us for the first four years of his life--he was (and still kind of is) our "Other Kid". When he was first learning to talk, he actually referred to his own mom, me, and Hubby all as "Mom" interchangeably. His dad was always "Dad," though. His grandmother, Cranky Ex-Boss Lady, owned the flower shop where I worked for ten years before the shop went out of business so her daughter was very well-acquainted with me and my family and entrusted her son to us.

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  4. Funny thing is that when I paint what I see in my head I do feel as if I have made that stuff concrete. Sometimes it really is exciting; other times I get discouraged b/c even I could not get it right and I have a front row seat to the show in my head. Also, gotta say, it only makes sense to me. Sometimes other people like what I paint but they it probably doesn't mean to them what it means to me.
    As if what I just typed makes sense.....
    Get out some paints and try it. Just go with whatever colors and textures call to you. You might have fun too.

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    1. Perspective is a huge thing, isn't it? I agree completely that even if I could close the gap between what I see in my head and what I put out there in the world (in whatever medium), everyone seeing or reading it would be bringing their own attitudes and experience to their interpretation of it. I guess the best we can hope for is to get at least a little of it out of our own heads, huh?

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  5. Sorry to hear you've had such a crappy time lately- you might be on to something with the poop art therapy.

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    1. I am thinking of marketing the idea around. I could travel to schools and other institutions and host classes in poop art therapy. ;)

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  6. Oh to be able to have such clarity. I'm terribly sorry about your crappy couple of weeks.
    I am also cracking up over the whole "Poop Report" thing. My monkeys give me a "Poop Report" whether I want one or not. I can't help but think that at some point in their young lives, I let on that I was intensely interested in the quantity, consistency and color of their excrement.

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    1. I figure rather than out and out whining too much, I could at least share a giggle-worthy family story. ;)

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  7. First of all - hysterical. You're so funny and I wish we were next door neighbors.

    Secondly - Brilliant. I think I know just exactly what you mean. If I could make a picture or a chart of what's going on in my head I'd feel like I could make things make sense. If we could all do that, it would change the world.

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    1. I don't know why this posted as my book blog. But, its me from Leah Marie, Unpunctuated. You probably know that.

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    2. I would be thrilled to have you for a next-door neighbor--we could draw pictures of our mental poop and show them to each other, confident that the other would get it, at least a little. :)

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  8. Sorry you had a crappy week. :( But thank you for the laughs in this post!

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  9. Oh poop. Also sorry you had a bad week, but I'm hoping this one is a million times better. (:

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  10. Love, love, love the title! Hope the crappy weeks bring you some fertile dirt for writing (or April flowers, or something more pleasant).

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  11. I am naming my newest paper journal the Poop Report after you. You need to market it and sell it somehow because it is a brilliant way to describe the mess in our heads!

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