Search This Blog

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

So long, fare thee well

Goodbye is too good a word, babe.
I'll just say, so long,
fare thee well.








































This morning three motorcycles rode out of the alley.
It was the official end of a sweet season living with two wonderful girls.
They are now headed toward opposite ends of the country; west coast, east coast.
And here I am, stuck in the middle with you.

I feel the bittersweet joy and sadness,
the hope of visiting both of them in the future, and a little bit of consideration toward the boxes and things left to pack. But overall, I want to be THANKFUL.
Thankful to the Giver of good gifts.
Thankful that He gave us this time, apartment, friends and sweet memories...
and hopeful for what is to come!

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

The saga continues

Upon arriving home from a night at the theater (yes, dahling, we had a nice time but were slightly traumatized by Tennessee's tragedy & on stage bottle breaking in 'A Streetcar Named Desire') I was greeted by a guest! Hello, housemate, so good to meet you! Mousey #4 (yes, #4, because #3 met the clap trap this evening, whoo hoo!) introduced them self tonight, and is currently under the stove. Two traps have been strategically placed in an effort to beneficently boot out this guest...and more will be purchased tomorrow.

Questions: How many more should I buy? What bait works well? I'm doing peanut butter now, but might go back to glued down peanuts...or maybe cheese? I should have kept some of that salmon! And why don't the Decon traps work?

Travelin'

After lamenting with with Kela about the length of plane rides and the limitations of short vacations, we recalled to mind the wonders of teleporting and time travel. And why, exactly, has this not happened yet? Resolved to write a letter to the top three companies we think could make this happen- please get on it, guys!

1. Google (They can do everything, right?)

2. Apple (As long as you get the chip placed in your wrist, that is...)

3. Ikea (Swedish ingeniuity with style)

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Guests

After a week of work travels, I returned home. Glorious home. I was breaking out in a full smile walking through the MSP airport. My current apartment is now empty- both roommates gone- so I returned to an experiment of living alone.

Or so I thought.

Soon I had a sneaking suspicion that I was not alone.

It was a vague movement out of the corner of my eye. Slight sounds filtering through the air.

Sure enough, yesterday morning Mr. Mousey was poppin' his head out to say hello. Brave and unafraid of daylight, he hid behind the stove and would race out when I had been quiet for awhile. I resolved to buy some more clap traps. Cruel, yes, but effective. I want to live ALONE, you see, not with a guest.

Yesterday Kelly came over for dinner. I showed her my 2-sticky trap, 2-clap trap set-up, and she approved. I was set for my mission of destruction.

As we munched on homemade kettle corn, she noticed movement- a brown blurb shimmying up the shelf. Suddenly the mouse was on the counter, then leaping in the bread basket. The bread basket! Not the bread basket! We went over, unsure what to do. I was freaking out, cussing and cursing at the mouse. Kelly was calm. I ran down the back stairs- we could carry the basket out side and release it! I opened the door, and on my way back up, she said "It is finished!" the mouse had invisibly escaped the bread basket and ended up in a trap. Wowza!

After a short struggle, Mr. Mousey was bagged and disposed of. It felt good!
We cleaned out that bread basket- he had been thriving on some salmon jerky! Two sticks were nibbled on. I guess I would eat salmon over moldy bread, too. (I just returned from a week way, to remind you. Moldy bread is not normal. Moldy cheese on the other hand, but I digress). After that accomplishment, I still decided to leave the other traps out just to be sure. But was really looking forward to the living alone experiment.

Except, I still wasn't alone.

Last night I heard a quiet chirping, like a mouse, but couldn't locate it. I went to bed. This morning, sticky trap #1 by the stove had accomplished its mission. Mrs. Mousey was caught by her back legs and wailing. I felt terrible. I freaked out a little less. I sang "Jesus lover of my soul" and got the Mrs. in a ziploc. (She went outside, too, though for now she is waiting to meet the tire of my car. I don't want her to struggle for days. Maybe the sticky traps are even crueler, as they prolong the end.) When I felt really mean, I called my mom, and she reminded me that mice don't have a right to live with me. I do have the right to live alone.

As I climbed back up the stairs, I felt sad but strong and ready to persevere on my mice killing mission. At the top of the stair I was met by yet another furry beast, this one scrambling into a hole in the wall! A tally of three mice, and counting! HOW MANY KIDS DO YOU HAVE? I quickly found the steel wool that had been purchased for this occasion, and stuffed the crack. I went to the other side (ahem, the kitchen side, where I live!) and tried to stuff that space, too.

I shake my head as I think of the millions of mice babies currently inhabiting my house, just waiting for me to leave. I found another clap trap, so hopefully Sticky #1 and Clappy #3 will do their work in the back hall. Clap #2 and Decon are inside waiting. Waiting. Waiting. Like me.

Waiting to be free of unwanted guests.

Until next time, loyal reader, I wish you a pest-free week.

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Bluegrass makes me thankful

Something about the fiddle. The mandolin. Bill Monroe's high pitched yoddle. The real talk of sorrow, loneliness, despair, tragedy, and evil. But there is a chord of thankfulness that runs through the lines. I hear gratitude in the plucks and harmonies.

I've been reading about grumbling in Exodus, and have been thinking about how grumbling is based on unbelief! God's people didn't believe he could provide-- they would rather be back as slaves in Egypt than to die from Pharaoh's armies, then to die of thirst, then to die of hunger because they didn't see how God was testing them to trust him. I can't see right now how I'm being tested, but I want to be trusting in God's provision and protection, and not relying on what I see I lack in my wilderness. Listening to bluegrass helps me to look away from the present, and fix my eyes on the unseen. It fills my heart with gratitude for him, rather than grumbling for what I lack.

My life has been consumed with a big project at work. It's challenging. Tedious. But I'm trying to make gratitude part of my days and hours, rather than grumbling. Play on, Bill!