I am a warrior fearlessly peering down danger and death everyday.
Well, the reality is I’m actually a giant pansy who hides under the bed and sucks her thumb is afraid of any sort of physical confrontations but in my mind I’m the long lost sister of Braveheart.
Facing grief and wrestling with it every damn day tends to toughen an old bird up. At least in my mind.
I sometimes forget that I’m not the only soldier out on this battlefield; that my loss wasn’t strictly my own. It was also my husband’s and my children’s. I try to remember this, but to be honest, sometimes the rawness of their emotions takes me by surprise and feels like an imaginary cast iron frying pan whacked upside my noggin.
The other day, out of the blue, my lovely daughter was staring out into space with a faraway look on her face.
Thinking she was drooling over some boy at school or envisioning herself as the future wife of some teenaged heart throb, I poked her and asked what was running through that pretty little head of hers.
“I was just wondering what Shale would have looked like when he was a grown up.”
THWACK! That’d be the sound of the ole frying pan up against my head.
“I mean, I also wonder what I’m gonna look like when I’m a grown up, but all I have to do is wait and see. But there is no waiting and seeing with Bug. He’s gone. I miss him so much Mom. And, well, I just was wondering what he’d look like right now, or when he was grown up.”
I swear I heard imaginary birds twittering around my head like in the cartoons and I blinked back the stars I suddenly saw.
I gave her a big hug and told her there wasn’t a day that didn’t go by where I didn’t wonder if he’d grow up to look like his father or like me or some weird hybrid of both of us. I wondered all the time if his hair would have stayed curly and blonde, if he would have been tall like his father and my brother Stretch or if he would have been vertically challenged like both his grandfathers.
Satisfied that she wasn’t alone in her grief, she bounced back into happy form like a damn rubberband and went to find her living brother to go fart on him or push him down a flight of stairs.
Leaving me of course, gasping for breath and wondering. Would he look like Boo? What if he grew up ugly with a big nose and a big bald spot? Would he have been thin? Or one of those potbellied drooling dudes who wheel themselves around asking for spare change to buy smokes with that you see downtown.
I snapped out of it eventually. I mean, this was my child I was thinking of, not some random disabled homeless dude on the street. Even if he was, he’d have been the best looking beggar out there. He’s got his daddy’s genes.
The truth is, all I have to do is look at the photos snapped through the years to get a clear idea of how he would have looked as he grew up. He really didn’t change much, he was very much like his siblings. Cute from the get go.
Well, maybe not, but love will blind a mommy to even the most hideous imperfections. Right?
I remember being Fric’s age and staring at myself and hoping I’d mutate into some beautiful swan. I was desperate to look into the future and find out if I’d be pretty, or thin or tall. I didn’t care much about whether I succeeded in life or had a nourishing career, I just wanted to know if any boys would finally like me.
Hell, I just wanted to know if I was ever gonna grow boobs.
It’s a good thing I didn’t know back then that I wouldn’t sprout a pair until well into my late teens and that even after popping out three babies I still would have a rather small set of girls.
It’s a good thing I didn’t know then that by the time I turned fifteen my twelve year old little sister would be wearing a bra that I could only dream of wearing. The only thing of mine that would fit into my younger sister’s cups was my head. Not so good for the pubescent ego.
It’s probably for the best that I couldn’t have seen myself in the future, slouching about in yoga pants and a ratty teeshirt, still without a bra, not wearing any makeup and my hair in a pony tail, doing my best impersonation as a soccer mom. If I had known then I never would have been a supermodel I may not have had the fortitude to endure all those years of teenaged teasing about my being ‘flat as a board and never been nailed.’
But a small adolescent part of me still wonders what the future will hold for me. I have faith in my children’s gene pool to know they will grow up to be strong, happy, beautiful people. At least in the eyes of those who love them. But what of me?
Will I be a graceful elegant older lady who embraces every wrinkle, every liver spot and still manage to look striking?
Will I lose my height and become a shrunken version of who I am now, stooped over and hobbling around chasing the neighbourhood children with my cane?
Will I be a pleasantly plump elderly woman, the type children love to bury themselves in with hugs, handing out sugar the way crack dealers pimp out their drugs?
Will I keep my hair or will it grow so thin and fine that you can see my skull from underneath? Will I start dying it hideous shades of orange or start wearing a lot of ugly hats?
Will I develop a sudden love of orange lipstick that makes me look like a bad drag queen?
I guess, like my daughter, I will have to wait to find out. And pray that my friends and family keep me away from anything orange in the cosmetic’s departments in the mean time.
Then I found this.
Suddenly my future self flashed before my very eyes.
Not bad. Not bad. At least I have hair and I’m not wearing any funky coloured lipstick.
I always knew I’d be hot stuff.







justmylife
Thanks for the old lady pic, I will never look at grandmas the same way again. Who knew what could be hiding under that granny dress>.
Backpacking Dad
I hope Boo likes it when you keep the flip-flops on.
And the sandals.
SassyPants
Boo’s a lucky man. Tattoos and with a side of exhibitionism. You are one hot momma!
I have a question though. If Grammy has the full-frontal thing going on, why did the block out the nips on the woman in the background? I’d put my money in Grandma’s g-string before the balloon lady any day.
Annabelle
LOL That picture caught me off guard!
rachel
This was so sweet and I was totally loving it and reveling once again in the amazingness that is you when THWACK! You wacked me with your virtual frying pan with that last pic. Seriously darlin’ was that necessary
?
SciFi Dad
AAHHH! MY EYES! MY EYES!
Why do you do that? Lull us into a false sense of security with cute baby photos, and then BAM! that stares at us?!?
Jenn @ Juggling Life
I guess she didn’t think that joining the Red Hat Society made an appropriately bold statement!
larrylily
Next Tuesday would have been my daughters 31st birthday.
Yeah, I wonder the same things.
But then my reality is that SHE took herself from this place, and well, therein lies the difference, she didnt want to find out for herself.
So how can I?
Binky
Oh, dear God. The overhang!
andi
This was a great post. I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately too. Although I have to say, I wasn’t expecting the ending. Gah! I hope I don’t look like that when I’m older! Must go – eyes are demanding to be poked out with something pointy.
SusannahS
I have to comment on the first part of the blog (because that photo? I have no words)…my older brother died in an accident when I was 12, and after many, many years, I had come to terms with my loss, my family’s grief and even his high school sweetheart’s grief. And then I went to the HSS’s 40th birthday party, some 18 years after his death. And her brother-in-law, who was one of their classmates, walked over to me and told me that he still missed my brother and considered my brother to have been the best friend he ever had. And it was as if someone had hit me with a sledgehammer. I suddenly realized for the first time ever that it wasn’t just ‘our’ loss–others had been affected.
So I drank lots of wine. And maybe let myself cry just a little in the taxi on the way home.
Shamelessly Sassy
Then ending picture was just beautiful. There’s nothing I love more than a naked old lady strutting her stuff.
Mrs. Schmitty
I think I felt that frying pan….wow.
And grandma pic….um, ewwwwww!
the planet of janet
note to self: do NOT read redneck mommy at work. people look at you funny when soda is spraying out of your nose.
you should totally post a warning before you do that to people.
qt
Whoa. I mean…WHOA!
michele
reminds me of the song by Kenny Chesney “who you’d be today”
god bless…
Tiger Lamb Girl
Okay, you made me tear up and giggle my ass off in the span of 5 minutes.
That photo of the tattoo lady? Is PRECISELY why I would never get a tat;).
Tiger Lamb Girl
p.s. not that I’m judging….I just know the saggy ass nature of my skin and it would be far worse.
mandy
That photo made my day! Holy crow is all I can say.
kgirl
hot stuff, indeed. and all of your babies are as gorgeous as their mama.