I like to think I have a pretty good brain.  It keeps track of all 
kinds of appointments and everyone’s shoe sizes and a long list of 
arbitrary toddler preferences about food and silverware.
But some things I never remember.  Not until they recur, at least, 
and then every time I think, “Oh yeah, this again.”  The classic example
 for me is every month I think my period is done early, but my husband 
(when he’s here) reminds me it’s just the fake-out before the last 
couple of days of flow.  So while I’m thinking of some of the things I 
never remember specific to my husband’s recent visit, I thought I’d jot 
them down in the hopes that maybe they’ll finally stick.  I feel as if 
future homecomings will go smoother if I can just not let that selective
 amnesia creep in.
The first example that came up during the Christmas visit was that my
 husband is always allergic to the house when he gets back.  Apparently 
the desert is great for combating allergies.  Ian said in Iraq 
everyone’s skin cleared up and no one sniffled.  Ian’s always had 
trouble with certain kinds of pets and dust, and every time he comes 
home I forget that I need to do a really thorough cleaning before he 
arrives. 
We wasted two whole days of our time together washing all the 
bedding and curtains and futon covers and beating the rugs to death in 
the backyard.  Dusting is just not a priority for me normally, and since
 it doesn’t affect anyone else in the house when Ian’s not around I 
don’t think of it.  It’s all I can do to keep the kids fed and bathed 
and the toys picked up, so dust is unsightly to me, but it never strikes
 me as an urgent problem.  When Ian returns from any time away with the 
Army there are a few minutes of happy greetings, and then he starts 
sniffling and sneezing and I feel about as horrible as he sounds.  I’m 
trying to etch it into my brain that I need to attack the dust before he
 comes home, not wait until he gets here.
The other thing is not really specific to deployment, but it’s more 
noticeable because of it.  I have to stop expecting that he knows what I
 want.  I don’t know why this takes me by surprise every time, but it 
does without fail.  I know during this last visit he was technically the
 one on a break from something, but I just assumed he would do what 
needs doing and I would get a break too.  I don’t mean to say he did 
nothing, because that’s certainly not the case, but he never seems to 
pick the things I want him to do when I want him to do them.  (As I 
write that down it looks completely unreasonable, but it doesn’t feel 
that way in real life.  I’m sure I’m guilty of the same thing, but he’s 
too polite to say it.) 
Certain things seem to me to be obvious, and 
apparently they just aren’t.  He was great about dishes and a couple of 
specific projects I requested, but I was up extra late every night 
playing catch up with the cleaning.  He gave me time to myself at the 
violin store which was great, and I got to take Aden out alone to see 
the Nutcracker for an afternoon, but then I got home and all the stuff I
 would have done in that time still needed to get done.  The laundry 
still needed to be finished and the kitchen table was sticky (that one 
really bugs me) and there was massive clutter everywhere.  I hated that I
 spent any of my short time with him home being annoyed, but there were 
evenings where he just read a book and went to bed and I muttered to 
myself while tossing legos into a box so I wouldn’t step on them in the 
night.  I know in his mind he’s keeping out of my way somehow, but it 
ends up feeling like instead of sharing the work I am just picking up 
after one more person.  Next time I will try to be clear about what I 
want so there won’t be any misunderstanding. I won’t assume he’ll jump 
in and tackle the projects I think look obvious.
I need to remember to buy food my husband likes that I don’t.  He 
gets home and the first day he doesn’t know what to do for lunch.  Not 
that this isn’t easily remedied, but still, I’m amazed that I can’t 
think to pick up pickle relish until I watch him open the fridge.
We both need to start remembering that when Ian comes home and tries 
to get the kids to toe the line that he sounds scarier than I do.  He 
can say exactly the same things I say and in the same tone, but coming 
from a man it sounds more threatening.  Ian’s a gentle and sweet guy, 
but we always have at least one episode when he comes back where someone
 winds up cowering behind my knees because the way daddy told them to 
pick up toys scared them.  I want to avoid this, so if I can just keep 
it in my head that maybe Ian shouldn’t be doing any disciplinary things 
for the first month until they’re used to the sound of him again it 
could help.
And this has nothing to do with deployment, but while I’m on the 
subject of memory, before I go to bed tonight I’m going to try and 
remember to sew up the holes in my coat pockets.  I think there are at 
least two sets of keys currently in the lining of my winter coat because
 I never remember the holes are there after I take the coat off.  Every 
time I’ve gone outside in the past two months I’ve thought, “Oh yeah!  
Got to sew up those stupid pockets!”  Of course, living in the mental 
obstacle course that is raising children, it’s not surprising that every
 time we get inside the house someone is offering up a distraction that 
boots the pocket problem right out of my head, but still.  (Stupid 
pocket holes.)
I’m sure there are many more things I could add, but compiling a list
 of things I can’t remember is, by definition, a bit of a paradox.  
(Sort of like when my grandmother was given pills for her memory and 
couldn’t recall if she’d taken any.  Don’t know why the doctors didn’t 
see that one coming.)
    
No comments:
Post a Comment