My, my, June has been a busy month.
Here are some of the stranger or more laborious tasks of the
past few months, tasks which are all part of being in the Sandwich
Generation. Only a few are awful.
The newest addition to the Common Household: our very own owl! |
- birthdays, graduation, a college tour, driving lessons, and more birthdays. For Younger Daughter’s birthday we went to an escape room and successfully saved the world from a deadly disease, in only one hour! The puzzle was cleverly put together, and it was lots of fun.
Sovietskaya balalaika |
- Tuning my aunt’s Soviet balalaika. A few months back I was
surprised to learn that my aunt acquired a balalaika but was at least relieved
to know that it was given to her for free.
She has not played any musical instrument since playing violin in high
school, but she says she wants to learn how to play “that song from Dr.
Zhivago.” The chance of her doing that
is about as likely as an overbearing reality-TV star with a comb-over becoming
US President. In other words, never say
never. My aunt and mom were unduly
impressed that I found the “Online Balalaika Tuner.” It was necessary, because I don’t know the
first thing about balalaikas.
- orchestrating a rather complicated series of medical
appointments for my aunt. The whole
thing was made blessedly simpler because my brother is able to take her, rather
than me having to arrange transportation.
- having my own medical procedures discussed at length at
the Old Folks’ Home by people I don’t know while
I wasn’t even there. My aunt called and said, “Did you have surgery on your
eye? I think maybe you did, but I can’t remember.” I said, “Yes, I had a very small growth
removed from my eyelid. It wasn’t really
surgery.” My aunt said, “Well, my friend
is very concerned about your eye. What’s
her name? It’s that Chinese woman. Oh, yes, Sherry Ottley*. She is very concerned about your eye.”
I have never heard of Sherry Ottley
in my life. I certainly have never met
her.
- duties as the junior member of the band program committee,
which merely (ha!) puts together the paper on which your son or daughter’s name
is listed, along with the musical selections the bands will play. Despite that simple description, it isn’t
simple. But okay, it’s easier than
chaperoning a band trip.
- moving Son out of his college dorm, and into his first
apartment!
Moving into one's own apartment is likely to mean a trip to Target. This Target had an escalator for the shopping carts. |
- leading book club discussion. The book was David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants, by
Malcolm Gladwell. The person who started
the book club, my husband, insists that there be snacks. What kind of snacks should there be? I decided on slingshots constructed out of
pretzels, fruit by the foot, and cemented with melted chocolate, only to have
Son tell me that David used a sling, not a slingshot. I only made four of them because I thought no
one would actually want to eat any. I
was right. Fruit by the foot is edible,
but it is hard to classify it as food.
* Name has been changed to protect the identity of meddling
old ladies.
5 comments:
The moving of our son into a place on the other side of the continent in February involved 2 trips each to Target, BedBath&Beyond, and Home Depot, plus waiting for an Ikea delivery. On our recent June visit, after delivering the truckload of stuff we drove from CA to MA, we also went to Ikea, Home Depot, and the local Ace Hardware. Hopefully he will stay in place at least 3-4 years now.
I have also been sandwiched. My elders are gone now, no balalaikas but I do have a zither.
I love the owl. Does he bring messages?
I hate moving myself, I can't imagine having to help my kids :-)
The owl is wonderful. I hope it makes you smile every time you walk into your house.
All of those other things sound so tiring. So much responsibility heaped onto you! I know that's kind of what the whole sandwich thing is about, but man. I'm exhausted for you. I have never so much as heard of a balalaika, let alone know how to find a tuner online. Color me impressed! I'm glad to hear you're taking time for book club, and hopefully other things that fill you back up when you're feeling otherwise depleted.
Dh and I, plus the 23yo, helped our oldest move his little family into a new-to-them abode. It's so much bigger and quieter than their tiny college town apartment. My job included holding and entertaining the baby and wiping out some cupboards before we filled them at teh new place. SuperDad, EB, and The Engineer did all the heavy lifting with many trips in the pickup truck. The Author, when she wasn't chatting with me or feeding the baby, packed a box or two. It was the easiest move EVER (for the females).
I'm glad your brother was able to step up and do some of the transportation for your aunt. You are truly living the sandwich generation life. I'm grateful for the respite currently being experienced on my end, and I hope you can fit some respite in there for yourself, too.
My, I am exhausted by this list. You've been wicked busy helping all the people. Kind hearted, that's what you are.
Cute book club treat--I hope you had fun discussing.
That owl is adorable.
And I never knew about that instrument, thanks for educating me today!
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