Monday, August 28, 2006

Ballantine Clan






























We have a tradition in my family of debriefing all major Ballantine-Family events in the form of high-school year book-like superlatives: Best Dressed, Biggest Splash, Most Changed Since Last Time, etc. and for many years, the Lightfeet would eat up a good two hours of the drive home coming up with categories, and then voting on them. All of this took place in our family’s old-school Chevy Van, the one we no longer drive; the one with live moss growing inside on the carpeted walls. It was so much fun and essential to rehash the reunion and hear about everyone’s experiences and conversations held with our beloved Ballantine family—an off-shoot of Wilmot and Tilden Ballantine’s brood: six sisters and two brothers, their children (the first cousins), their children (the second cousins) and their children (the third cousins). Elizabeth Ballantine Johnson, my mother’s mother, was the third oldest of Wilmot and Tilden’s children— the second oldest sister. My mom was one of nineteen first cousins, I’m one of forty-six second cousins and Grace and Johnny are two of over forty (and counting) third cousins. Nancy Ballantine Bell, now in her eighties, is the youngest of Wilmot’s and Tilden’s eight, and the only sibling living. She’s the strongest link to the Ballantine past and the most inspiring link to the Ballantine future.

Over twenty years ago while sitting around my grandmother’s dining room table, I observed out loud that the common denominators that seem to bind the extended Ballantines are a sense of humor and musical interest/ability. Imagine playing music and laughing with eighty or so of your closest friends…eighty of your closest friends that look a lot. like. you. So much like you that it becomes increasingly difficult to link children to parents because of the striking resemblance to their aunts, uncles, grandparents, even second cousins once removed. You can’t pick who your family is, but you can choose whether or not to show up at the family get togethers. We Ballantines show up, because if you miss it, you miss out on some of the best times you’ll have all year.

The ebb and flow of births, deaths, unions, separations, geography, schedules, and travel logistics alter the course of who’s actually present at each one, but the core elements remain: kids, canes, cameras, conversation, hugs, laughter, tears, spirits, singing “Ballantine Clan”, barbeque, and the inevitable sentiment that, “Gosh, these people are neat; I wish we got to see them more often.” Maybe it’s a result of seeing Booba and Sam looking dapper in the black and white photos, or maybe it’s due to images I conjure when hearing about hanging out at Martha’s and Max’s house, but I can’t shake the sense that the Ballantine Glory Years were over before I was even born. Then I think back to the summers at Otter Creek and the endless games of Hearts and Spades that Gabe taught his younger cousins to play, the lodge and the kids’ bunk room upstairs where you talked all night long to cousins that you just met but became best friends with, the all-ages softball games, swimming, the Horse and Carriage ride that D. Bell organized, impromptu charades games and talent shows, horseback riding with John and Ann Austin Glenn, the year my penny whistle got run over by the Chevy Van but Gordon worked out the kinks with a wooden spoon and it played better than before, retelling stories from the trip to Michigan, the year Sadie transported all that barbeque from Owensboro and had pickle juice spilled all in her purse, the year that there were like eight or nine babies under one, the hours of planning the sleeping arrangements for the cabins and people ending up sleeping wherever they wanted, Welcome getting bitten by a dog, and when Katie Dee asked Bill Lightfoot, “Where did she get bitten?” my dad replying, “Oh, in the kitchen,” the year Jay, Clay and Doug went to great lengths to document everyone on the Family Tree and then giving everyone name tags to identify who’s who, hearing my dad and G. Scott, childhood friends since the first grade, tell entertaining story after story, T. Scott taking people on a boat ride, L. Bisson and Z. Bisson keeping the group in stiches at their stories and jokes, finally being able to tell Dair and Brigid Ballantine apart and getting it straight that Dair is older than Brigid, but Brigid’s children are older, Bill Lightfoot nodding off while playing guitar, the year Kristen Jensen arrived to the airport a week early because she got the reunion dates wrong and still came back a week later, Terry’s Telephone Song, Nancy Bell’s double-talk, the reality that Nathaniel is gay so it was probably not appropriate to have a crush on him anymore, the reality that Nathaniel is your cousin, so it probably wasn’t appropriate for you to have a crush on him in the first place, finding Terry’s black glasses and guitar case strewn the morning after, Janie, Katie, and Emily singing “Monday in Rumsey,” Mary Bisson singing, “Family Hands,” the Jensens/Bissons arriving in a beat-up crowded station wagon, the feeling that everywhere you turn there’s a fascinating conversation going on that people welcome you to be a part of, Gordon and Jane’s music and the happiness I felt when I was finally able to play along with them, Janie and Emily Catalano’s duets, Matt and Janie’s duets, T. Mathistad’s singing talent, M. Mathistad’s Irish dancing talent, S. Haynes’ gumption at playing music with the big dogs at age eleven, viewing Gordon Bell’s amateur movies and four years later viewing Gordon Bell’s award-winning senior project, hearing all about J. B's identity crisis, seeing Austin Haney connect with my kids, especially Johnny, intending to leave at 10:00 AM, but an hour later, just not being able to tear yourself away from the stories and the laughs, seeing how happy my mom was with her sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles, and always wanting to be the last one standing and the first one up, the feeling I had at the first reunion without my mom, Grace and Johnny running around with Andrew and Aurelia Ballantine in total glee, the fact that at this last reunion, the last ones standing (or should I say crawling?) called it a night about an hour and a half before my kids woke up the following day, seeing Will Ballantine, age three, completely in his element dancing to the Irish jigs and reels, being pleasantly aware that Keith, an outlaw, is genuinely interested in this fine family and how we’re all connected, and, last, but not least, realizing that just as people got warmed up, just as the weekend started to hit its stride, just as the juicy stories were starting to come out, and just as we were all getting over the awkward reacquaintance phase, the reunion was over and it was time to go home.

There’s a group of second cousins that feels like it will soon be time to pass the baton to our generation for reunion planning. It’s not to say that the first cousins aren’t doing a good job. We’ve noted that the first cousins grew up together, close by in nearby Kentucky towns. The second cousins, however, are a generation removed, and we’ve only gotten to know one another at these reunions every few years. We’re up for the challenge, though, and we’re already planning the next one, and little mini spin-offs, like maybe in the NC mountains, or on the NC coast. So, much of the “here and now” of the reunions ends up being the “there and then” and the “where and when.” When my sister was a little girl she said, “I’m a part of this family, and I always will be.” Would that everyone was so lucky.

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Happy Birthday, Grace!

Grace sees the cake...



The cake.




















Daddy helps with the pinata...

Grace gets a hug from "Boy," her crush.






Neato, a Cheeto!

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

It's My Blog and I'll Cry if I Want To

The cruelty of this summer is that both of my children had milestone birthdays. Johnny turned 3 on the last day of July and Grace turns 5 tommorow. I was not prepared for the emotions that have swept over me of late, but are we ever prepared? A few weeks ago, my supe and I were doing our regular "How are you?" check in and when I mentioned that I was going to Boone to celebrate Johnny's birthday and that he'll be three, I just broke out in tears. Good thing my supe is a clinical psychologist, and right on cue, he handed me a box of tissues and said something like, "Yes, how does that make you feel?" You know when you start crying about something in particular (at least this happens to me) and then it seems like everything that is sad or has ever been sad or not right in your life comes to the forefront and you start crying about all of those things too? Well it was like that. It was like "Johnny's turning three (sob), and I might not have any more babies (sniff), and I might not be able to have any more babies (wail), because there might be something wrong with my ovaries (boo), and I have an ultrasound scheduled next week (hoo), and I miss my mom, (sob), and a little girl made fun of me in the third grade (snort)." I'm glad I was talking to a therapist who explained it was appropriate to express emotions and even grief over the loss of something so dear and important to me--in this case my baby's babyhood.

It was a long day with more unexpected emotional outbursts, and when I finally walked through the front door at home, David had a glass of wine already poured for me.

So, fast forward to last evening when I was at Harris Teeter flipping through the notebook of customized kids' cakes. I've never ordered a cake before for the kids, but this year, I wanted Grace to feel the "wow" factor at seeing her pinata, cake, plates, cups, napkins and goody bags all matching in Disney Princess glory. My princess only turns 5 once. I ordered the cake but when the sales clerk asked me my child's name and age, I literally choked back tears. I'm choking them back now even writing about this. I want tomorrow's party to be a joyous celebration (which it will be) but I have to find the time and place to cry-it-out over the fact that my little girl is 5. The summer's saving grace is that Grace doesn't start kindergarten in two days. She starts in two days plus one year.

Monday, August 21, 2006

Concert? What Concert?




The "Be Fris" strike again. Monica has now added 106.1 RDU to her list of stations on which she can be heard and she invited me to join her this past Saturday night for a 106.1 remote and the station's 22 year birthday party at the Alltel Walnut Creek Pavilion in Raleigh for the Allman Brothers Band show. I tagged along as a "friend" (one step below the intern) while Monica and the guys at RDU worked their magic. What's more fun than hoola hoops, birthday cake, and fans that are looking for famous people and free stuff? Highlights included:

1. SWAT-team-level security at bringing the hoola hoops in (none of the hippie chicks were allowed to take their hoops to the lawn. Monica had her media pass, so ours got through).

2. Running into Monica's mom's best friend's son and his crazy friend(s) from Boone.

3. The look on everyone's face when I told them I couldn't stay out late because I had to teach Sunday School the next morning.

4. Talking with Monica back at our cars when we had to return the hoola hoops and missing the entire Allman Brothers show because we just had so much to say.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Trip to Atlanta

What do you get when you put three New Yorkers, (two of them professors of psychology and one an MD and professor of psychiatry), a psychology grad student, a professor of clinical psychology and me around a dinner table at a trendy "Euroasia" bistro in Decatur, Georgia? What you don't get is a word in edge-wise, but you do get non-stop free-flowing stimulating conversations about every topic imaginable. I held my own and even made the whole table laugh a few times.

The visit to Emory went very well. The group was super impressed with the organization of our data (they loved the notebooks), and they were amazed at how much data has been collected and analyzed over the last fifteen years. Traveling wasn't too bad given the newest security restrictions, although we did see an unfortunate puddle of liquid oozing out of a big suitcase at baggage claim. Two words: ziplock bags.

I was struck with all the talk of the interesting projects, programs and research going on at Emory and UNC, and I thought it's about time for me to begin furthering my academic pursuits and put my dream of an MSW into action.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Heading South

I'm not supposed to be blogging today, because I'm supposed to focus on preparations for my first business trip in over five years. A colleague and I are flying to Atlanta, to Emory University, in the morning to present the Foundation's data set that I've been working on for the last four years. It's been one of those rat-race crazy days of "presentation prep" as well as usual work stuff and getting ready to be gone for two days. Haven't even tackled what I need to on the home front yet. I'm going to need chocolate and coffee...and twizzlers. Here's how my day has gone so far...

1. I'm on the phone (already late for a lunch date with a friend and her daughter) explaining our building's complicated security code system to a new user when three calls come in. I see that one call is from David. He doesn't usually call me unless it's something real important, so I look for my cell phone to call him back on my way out. Can't find my cell phone.

2. Quickly check the three messages and David's is to notify me that I've left my cell phone at home.

3. Another one is regarding something I should have followed up with yesterday and the third is from a business partner that needs a signature today (he's sorry for the late notice).

4. I'm out for several hours at lunchtime. Lunch is great with Jen and Calla, but I get turned around at Crabtree Valley mall and spend between 15 and 20 minutes looking for my car. (Jen, you can laugh now...I went to the wrong parking lot exit)

5. Got the important papers signed, ran another "pre-trip-work-related" errand and am now back at work putting these training notebooks together.

6. Easy enough you'd think but I'm working with "spine insert" templates and "tab" templates and have spent way too long going back and forth between pre-formatted and blank templates. Finally get these printed correctly, (because they have to be correct), and now I'm to the point of copying the mounds of paper that go in each notebook. It's times like these that I wish I had an assistant. I realize I am the assistant. I'm the assistant, the director and the research associate. Will I get home at a decent hour tonight?

7. I've just raided the pre-school's candy jar. I have an open invitation to get candy whenever I want, but I usually wait until most of the staff is gone. I want it to appear that I have lots of will power and that I can resist candy. I usually can, but not when I'm stressed and under deadlines.

8. I've just eaten 2 mini Mr. Goodbars, 1 Crackle, and 4 mini Reese's peanut butter cups...in about 20 seconds. It reminds me of the time Kate babysat for Grace and Johnny Valentine's Day 2004...I left a whole bag of Hershey's kisses out and said, "Help yourself." She ate the whole dang bag...and I secretly knew she would...and even more secretly hoped she would. That's terrible.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Nuffin

I don't ever want to forget the way Johnny says "Nuffin" when I ask him what's in his mouth. I don't ever want to forget the way Grace says, "There's a mouth about the houth." Or how Johnnys says, "I don't want to do to the doctoe!" or "Please add some watoe to my juice," or "Is Elmo a monstoe?"

David was at Weaver Street with the kids the other day, and they heard this boy speaking a different language. David commented to the kids that it wasn't Spanish the boy was speaking. Johnny replied, "I think it was Pig Latin."

Grace and Johnny read their first book over the weekend, Hug, by Jez Alborough. Granted, the book only has three words, hug, Bobo, and Mommy, but still, it was thrilling.

Friday, August 11, 2006

I'll Huff, and I'll Puff...

For a couple of days, every time we pull up in our driveway, Grace has said, "Yay! Our house is still standing!" Okay. So, just now when she said it, I asked her what she meant. She said, "The fox didn't blow it down." The fox, the fox. "You mean, the big bad wolf and the three little pigs?" She said, "Yeah! The big bad wolf didn't blow our house down! It's still standing!"

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Before You Can Love Thy Neighbor, You Have to Know Thy Neighbor

We’ve lived in our house for five years, and we have these neighbors that I just can’t seem to get in with. Let’s call them Penny and Cliff, their daughters Maggie and Lola. Penny and Cliff are Thirtysomethings like David and I are, and their kids are roughly the ages of Johnny and Grace. So, for the last five years, whenever I see Penny or Cliff out with Maggie and Lola, at our neighborhood park, out walking, out playing in the yard, when I stop at Maggie’s lemonade stand, Trick-or-Treating on Halloween etc., I always think (and usually say out loud), “We should get our families together sometime.” The first time I suggested this to Cliff (five years ago) while swinging our girls at the park, his initial reaction surprised me a bit. “Yeeeaaaah,” he said, in that slow Office-Space-Manager drawl, “I just told my next door neighbor that moved in recently that it’s, you know, cool to speak to each other, like when we’re taking out the trash and stuff, but, I mean, I don’t want to be best friends with the guy. You know? When I get home from work, I want to do my own thing and don’t really want my neighbors thinking we’re going to hang out all the time, you know?” No, not really.

And then there’s Penny. Penny is friendly enough, always waves and speaks to me in passing, asks about the kids, comments on how big they’re getting, etc. It just makes sense to me: we enjoy talking to each other, our kids seem interested in each other, so wouldn’t it be natural to take it to the next level over pizza and cokes on a Friday evening while the grown ups talk and the kids run around? Parents of young children are mostly all doing the same thing most nights, so why not do it together? When I’ve suggested getting together with Penny, she just smiles and never once has she said, “Yes, let’s.”

For the last year or so, Penny and Cliff have been really involved with our Neighborhood Association, and Cliff’s now an officer, the President, in fact. Even though we’ve been neighbors for five years, sometimes at various functions, like the annual July 4th parade, he acts as if he doesn’t know us. I always speak and ask about Maggie and Lola. He never asks or comments about my kids. And he acts as if he’s never talked to us before. It has started to bother me.

Cliff and Penny belong to our gym. A few weeks ago, Cliff and I were both swimming laps in the indoor pool. I thought I recognized him but didn’t know for sure (Who really looks like themselves in a speedo and goggles?). Anyway, I wasn’t about to say hi first. We did our laps and then I got out and went to the hot tub to relax for a few minutes. I was the only one in the hot tub until Cliff got in after doing his laps. Now we’re inches apart, in a hot tub, the only ones, and I still refuse to speak to him or even look him in the eye. I admit I can be a bit of a game-player, but I was tired of initiating all of our exchanges up to this rather uncomfortable point. I wanted to see if he’d speak to me. He didn’t. So for ten minutes, the two of us, long-time neighbors, sat in the hot tub, with nary a word.

About two weeks ago, Penny got on the treadmill next to me. I thought, “Well, this is going to be awkward. Am I supposed to talk to her?” We smiled and gave each other the perfunctory acknowledgement nod but I did not take my ear buds out and kept right on running. She wasn’t listening to music, so thirty minutes later, as I was getting off the treadmill, we exchanged a few pleasantries about the summer, what our kids were up to, whether Grace would start Kindergarten in the fall or not, how Maggie had liked Kindergarten. Turns out, Maggie has some of the same “Sensory Integration” issues that Grace has. At the end of the conversation—I couldn’t help myself—I said, “We should get together sometime.” But I turned and walked away before Penny could respond.

Fast forward a few weeks to the open kid swim on Wednesday evenings at the gym. I see this friendly mother with her hands full with three daughters, her youngest only four months old. Our kids notice each other, we talk a bit, things are good. The next time I run into, let’s call her Ebony, we exchange names and start talking about our kids’ ages, what schools they’ll go to, where we live, where we’re from, what our husbands do, what we do. Ebony’s husband, John, is from Banner Elk, not too far from Boone. I tell her I grew up in Boone. Neat! As if it were logically the next thing to say, Ebony says, “We should get together sometime.” I said, “We should!” We leave it at that. On Monday I run into Ebony, John, and their beautiful daughters. I introduce myself to John and we try to think of who we might know in common from the highlands. Ebony says again, “We should get together sometime.” I ask her if she’s taking her kids to the kid swim on Wed. She says she is. I say, “Great, let’s exchange numbers then.”

Monday, August 07, 2006

SwillFest 2006

Call me crazy, but on Saturday I drove with my friend Jane two and a half hours to go to a music party in the mountains. The email invitation arrived in my inbox a couple of weeks ago, and while I immediately thought of many good reasons to go, I came up blank for "why not?" In the old days, a long time ago when my kids were babies, I wouldn't have given serious thought to taking off without them or David, but now there's not much excuse for me not to go off and have a little spontaneous fun. David and the kids were invited, of course, but even though he passed, I didn't. Into the picture enters Jane, my friend who, like me, becomes energized by meeting new people and doing new things. Besides, she's organizing a spa trip to West Jefferson in October, and if there was time, maybe we would swing by the salon, check out the rental house, etc.

David and the kids left the house for their Saturday adventures before I did, all smiles, and this seemed easier on everyone. Jane and I met in Chapel Hill and got on the road for West Jefferson by 12:30 PM. She brought a couple of CDs that she wanted me to listen to, and I had some songs I wanted to play for her. But in reality, the music in the background was secondary--secondary to the conversation that flowed freely for the next two hours. We mainly talked about her business, what she's doing now, what she'd like to be doing. As we ascended from the foothills of Wilkesboro, our thoughts turned to the order of the day: the salon, the rental house, the party. We found the salon, chatted it up with the owner and stylist, got directions to the rental house, finally found the rental house, approved of the rental house, stopped off at Lowe's Foods for some party essentials, grabbed a cup of coffee to go, and then we were off to find the exact location of SwillFest 2006.

I told Jane I had the same feelings that I'd had in High School looking for a party: anticipation of the evening to come but also apprehension for not knowing exactly who would be there, exactly what to expect, should I really even be doing this? Jane understood. Afterall, I was the only one she'd know at this party, and she had the fleeting concern over whether there would be other people her age (both of her children are in college). Arriving at around 5:00 PM to a small but friendly game of horseshoes, we were instantly met with warmth and hosptitality. This party might get big, we were told--huge in fact--but it was great that we had made it, and regardless of who and how many showed up, it was going to be a good time. After the tour of the house and grounds, Jane and I settled outside into comfortable conversations with old friends and newcomers, relaxed and happy to be outside in the exquisite mountain summer air, washed in the sweet sounds of the mandolin.

People kept arriving, including my brother, Daniel, and his girlfriend Sheila. We all chatted away, for hours, while the daredevils rode around on four-wheelers, while the "pig butts" slowly cooked, while the musicians arrived and instrument-cases accumulated, all while the sun went down.

Jane and I found ourselves at a picnic table with other blondes, complimenting each other in ways that sounded something like, "Oh, my gosh, you don't look a day over forty!" (By the way, that comment was not to me), and "What color are your highlights? They're so pretty," and "No way you have a thirteen year old daughter." "Girl, I'm thirty-four." All of us had children, none of whom were there, and it was great to gab with other mothers, compare notes, share pictures, and swell with pride from a distance for a change, from a distance. Jane's a major connector, so when she found out one of the ladies owned a boutique in West Jefferson, she started cooking up ways to set up a "Trunk Show" at the Spa weekend coming up in October.

More people, more music, more fun. Ben and his band sounded tight, and they were clearly having a good time. Ben had a vision of what he wanted this party to be, and as far as I could see, it was going his way. That made me happy, because Ben's a guy you want good things to happen to. He's got an abundance of positive energy, in a time when there's no such thing as too much, and it seemed to spread out across the acres, to the thousands of Christmas trees that soaked up the sounds of SwillFest '06. Jane and I perched on the "back row" watching the revelers and musicians come and go. Out of nowhere, these tall guys in overalls showed up and eventually got on stage and played. "Overall" they sounded good--think "O, Brother, Where Art Thou?"-- but no one really had a handle on who they were or where they came from.

We stayed a lot later than either one of us thought we would. Time's fun when you're having flies. Jane was an excellent travel companion. On the drive home, after sleeping in and a delicious lunch al fresco in Blowing Rock, our conversation settled into me, my goals, and my general "five-year" plan. Again, we never got around to playing our CDs.

I was thrilled to see David and the kids, and vice versa for them. I asked David what the most challenging part of the weekend was and he said just being "on" for such a long stretch without a break. And the best part? Laughing with the kids, all day it seemed, waiting for me to get home. SwillFest was what it was: A mid-summer music fiesta in the woods in the mountains. For me though, it was much more.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Outta the Mouths of Babes


Advanced aplogies for anyone who might be offended/shocked/or grossed out by what follows:

I'll start off with a "Rated G" one:

Johnny: I'm tired. I have a yawn in my mouth.

And moving on and out of the G Rating...

Johnny: I just vomitted a little bit in my mouth.

The Scene: Sunday School, song time, singing a song about different animals and what we'd do if we had wings like a butterfly, a trunk like an elephant, etc. the point being that "I just thank the Lord for making me me." It gets to the point in the song that goes, "If I were an angle worm..." and Grace blurts out: 'penis.'

Grace: She a ho. (We can thank Aunt Kate for that)

Johnny: Batman has a "gina" (pronounced with a long "i")

Grace to her preschool teacher: Mommy had diarrhea this morning. (Thanks, Grace. My little girl with a speech delay. Looks like you can utter a complete sentence when you want to.)

And saving the R Rating for last...

The Scene: I'm driving the kids home from school one day, and they each have a sticker. Johnny is trying to peel his off and put it on his hand. Apparently, this is a difficult and frustrating task.

Johnny: (and he said the complete words) f-ing sh_t! This sticker, f-ing sh_t!

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Listen Up

I like it when I'm turned on to new music that I like. That happened recently. Amos Lee is an artist to check out if you like mellow, jazz-like, folk-ish, blues-twinged good songwriting. The last track on his self-titled album (2005) is a cover of a John Prine song, "The Sound of the Speed of Lonliness". Beautiful version of a really great song. My dad agreed and told me that Prine and Nanci Griffith do a good version also.

If you haven't heard, The Vacation is an LA-based fairly new rock band that Jet called their favorite new band (last Fall) who could be on the verge of hitting it big time. Personal friends of mine. Well, personal friends of a personal friend of mine, but still...I did hear them live at Local 506 in Chapel Hill (last Fall) and hung with the twins before the show. That is important to know if and when they hit it big.

And lastly, I pulled out a 1999 copy of "Summertown" by the Mayflies USA, (a Chapel Hill band who I haven't heard anything from in years...) Listening to this CD on the way to work today just made me smile...thinking about where I was and what I was doing in 1999, the fact that David and I tried to "cover" one of these songs at a music party and butchered it completely but had fun doing so, and the fact that I also have a personal friend (well, not friend, former acquaintance) in this band also.