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Always Winter
Peel the carrots and potatoes. Chop the onion. Wipe the nose of the kid with the cold. Wipe the butt of the girl yelling my name on repeat from her potty throne. Wash hands without drying. Back to dinner. Scrub the pot. Warm the broth. Remove the bones. Add the veggies. Wipe two more noses and catch a baby from slipping out of her high chair with the missing seat belt. And on it goes. The last few nights have kept that rhythm alive. Nose wipes. Cold toes. A hot forehead. Melatonin magic pills for everyone. You know this “most wonderful time of the year” isn’t living up to the…
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Hiccups
The roads around our house remind me of that Mouse Trap roller coaster at amusement parks. The cute mouse with its slice of Swiss fools you into thinking the ride is for babies, until you get to the hairpin turns. Our roads are like that. Made for daredevils. That is why Micah drives like Rambo and I wait for America to take the wheel. It’s common to see cars with one wheel stuck in the deep cement ditches that perilously line each side of the road. This happened to us when our Hindi vernacular consisted of fruits and zoo animals. Within minutes, males from all directions, let’s call them the…
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Swede of the Mountains
We often hear what an education our kids receive just by living in another culture. People assume language is as automatic for children as the toy promised on the front of the cereal box. They are little sponges, after all. While I’m sure there’s truth to these things, what I see up close are other influences… I see one heck of a junglee Swede. We have a very wild, white-haired three-year-old. I don’t mean wild, like naughty. I mean that she’s more like Mowgli from The Jungle Book than any princess. She is known to noiselessly sneak into our yard after breakfast and stay there. And with five other kids,…
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Mirror, Mirror on the Wall
For whatever reason, our massive house has only one mirror. It sits above a sink in our dining room. We have no clue how we are looking from the shoulders down. That’s fine. We don’t need a mirror to tell us that. We have our neighbors. My husband receives the most feedback. He recently pierced his ears in America at an off-brand Claires inside Walmart. Judging by all the rose gold and unicorns the store was designed for tween girls. He held the teddy bravely while I snapped a photo. He has long admired the gold that glitters from many men’s ears in the Himalayas. Not only sported by the…
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We Cast No Spell, Promise!
Where we live, autumn isn’t celebrated by sipping maple lattes in chunky sweaters. So, driven by homesickness and a stubborn determination to give my kids some Hallmark memories, I charged Lucy and Moses to go and hide our near-rotten pumpkins around the neighborhood. I loaded their arms with the green, stripy squashes that had been staring me in the face the last couple of weeks. These festive friends had been too stout to carve but lovingly made over with goopy paint, cotton balls, and popsicle stick bunny ears. My two oldest nestled the gaudy pumpkins along the walking path outside our home and in the wheat fields of our neighbors.…