Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Where I'm Really From



Where I Am Really From

By Jillian Grimsley


I used to tell people that my dad’s stage name was David Copperfield.

That made me feel better about him being a magician.

Cutting people in half for a living was a little embarrassing -

Unless your dad was a doctor,

Like all the other kids in my neighborhood.

No one else’s dad had a profession like mine.


We didn’t have a beach house like Liza, or a lake house like April

Nope, we just had one house - a funhouse.

Two pinball machines beeping away in the bonus room

A real antique telephone booth tucked in a corner of the living room

A fake hand propped up in the attic window,

Frightening people as they walked by

Thinking someone was trapped up there.

No one else had household decorations like mine.


Everyone else in my class had a dog, maybe a cat.

We had two white doves, Hocus and Pocus.

The perpetual cooooooo cooooooo coooooing

That emanated from the garage

Was more unpleasant than the noise made by a weed eater.

Houdini the white rabbit wasn’t much better

(granted I’m not an animal person)

But his beady red eyes and pellet like poops

Always left me feeling uneasy.

I think he had a lot of rage built up

From being crammed in the fake bottom of that box

All those years for dad’s magic shows.

No one else had family pets like mine.


During the summers, the family business boomed

So everyone in the family had to help out.

I would take turns making the snow cones for sweaty faced customers

Crushing the ice in the loud angry grinder

Scooping a perfect shaved sphere with a ladle

Striping the top with red and blue syrup.

It sounds okay, but you don’t know what sticky means

Until you’ve worked a snow cone booth.

By high school I swore I would be fine

If I never saw another snow cone again.

No one else had summer jobs like mine.


I have to concede – our birthday parties were the best in town

Bouncing for hours on a red and blue moonwalk

Or sliding down an inflatable water slide taller than our house

Or watching Tom Hanks play the giant piano in Big

On a theater-sized screen in beach chairs lined up in the driveway

Eating salty fresh popped popcorn and clouds of pink cotton candy

Deep purple snow cone syrup staining our tongues for days.

No one else had birthday parties like mine.


Everyone else in my class had boring family dinners

With normal small talk conversations about school projects and papers.

I quickly learned that my friends couldn’t wait to come over to my funhouse,

Where we all told stories and jokes at dinner simultaneously

And even though she wasn’t wearing sequins –

One time my mom even threw us the rolls from the kitchen.

It was a culinary circus with three rings.

No one else had family dinners like mine.


When I was little

I said that when I grow up

I want to be a teacher and a part time clown.

I think I made this decision because

My parents taught me the value of working hard

Of learning and studying

But also the importance of having fun

And laughing and playing

Until you fall asleep

A big snow cone smile stuck to your face.

No one else had a childhood like mine.


True, I may not be able to juggle flaming clubs

And my classroom doesn’t have a cotton candy machine–

But I love being able to clown around with my students

And help them to understand

That it’s okay to be silly

That learning can be fun.

No one else has a job as magical as mine.

Except maybe my dad.

Friday, March 18, 2011

The Little Things


Tonight my mom is in town. She's only been here since dinnertime, but I already feel a million times better about life in general.

My mom always has that effect on me. :)

As I recounted the weeks' events, we had country music playing, natch. The song "Don't You Wanna Stay," by Jason Aldean and Kelly Clarkson (AMAZING) came on, and it reminded me of a cool moment that happened this Wednesday morning.

I got up late for school. I felt tired and grumpy. We have four weeks left until Spring Break, and I've been feeling like I have to ride my broom to school every morning just to get many of my students to take school seriously.

While I was still lying in bed, I said a little prayer that God would help me to have a good day in spite of being tired, and that he would give me the energy to get through it all with an attitude of joy.

Then my mom called just to say good morning. I felt a little better.

I've been running a lot lately and have been surviving on Lean Cuisines for dinner every night, so I was super hungry. A bowl of cereal just wasn't going to cut it. Even though I didn't have time for it, I decided to stop by Chick-fil-A and treat myself to a big gulp diet coke and a chicken biscuit.

I hit every green light on the way to Chick-fil-A.

There was no line in the drive thru.

And then my jam, "Don't You Wanna Stay," came on the radio. I blasted it and arrived to school with a huge smile on my face - five minutes early. The rest of the day flew by.

I especially liked that I had a gigantic styrofoam cup to keep refilling with diet coke all day. "Isn't that dumb?" I said to my mom. "That a styrofoam cup would make me happy?"

My mom replied, "Nope. Sometimes it's just the little things, honey."

How true.

I think if I spent more time collecting these "little things" and storing them up in my heart, I could carry that joy with me all the time.

Some of the other little things this week that have brought me JOY are:
  1. 70 and 80 degree weather. Hello Rainbows! How I've missed you!
  2. Cashing in a hot stone pedicure gift certificate I got for Christmas from one of my little girls in my class. I love seeing my light purple toenail polish when I wear my Rainbows!
  3. Reading the second book in "The Hunger Games" series in one sitting Thursday night. Yes, it is that riveting. Cannot wait to start the third one!
  4. Eating at PF Changs tonight after a week of Lean Cuisines. Heavenly.
  5. Walking around the Shops at Greenridge with my mom, with no agenda and no rush.
  6. Having our "Holiday Book Club" today, when my kids that read a book over Christmas vacation get to talk about what they are reading. I love how they got so into the discussion, they didn't want to go outside to recess on this insanely gorgeous day!!! That's what I'm talking about!!!
  7. Having our sweet school counselor bring in some clothes she didn't want anymore and finding an adorable pair of Big Star jeans in the stack that fit me perfectly.
  8. Hearing from an old friend out of the blue.
  9. Writing a song with my Thursday afternoon guitar class.
  10. Getting this in my fortune cookie:

What are some of your little things?

Now I know:
There isn't one big key to joy. There are a million little ones.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Sisterly Love



I was 9 years old when I found out that my mom was having my little sister, Katie. Big dork that I was, I decided to run around the house screaming with my hands on my cheeks like Macaulay Culkin does in "Home Alone." I was beyond excited at the possibility of having a living baby doll to dress up, feed, and rock to sleep.


And Baby Katie did not disappoint. With her chubby cheeks, head full of dark brown hair and ocean blue eyes, she was as calm and sweet as a Cabbage Patch Kid.



She never went anywhere without her paci and her stuffed lion, Simba. We have this video of her singing "Twinkle, Twinkle," and when I try to butt in she quickly tells me to "SHHH!". Smart girl, that one.

When Katie was just a year and a half old, my mom gave me another adorable living baby doll in Erin - who was tiny, rambunctious, and full of life from her first minute on earth. Erin was a baby with energizer batteries; she was seriously dangerous in her rolling walker! She would zoom from room to room, laughing her head off as I'd chase her in exhaustion. Erin would also crack us up by pooching her lips so big that they'd touch her nose. Then she'd snort. She was already a stand up comic by the age of 1.


Of course being so much older than my sisters, I liked to pretend I was their mommy. When Erin was about four, I made her sit in my lap wearing a bib. I’d take applesauce and would smash it all over her face, using the spoon to smear it all around and then stuff it back in her mouth. She pretended like it was torture, but I knew that she secretly loved this little game. My sisters taught me that the people in your family are the most important people in the world because they will love you even when you smash applesauce on their face and call it a game.



Just this week, Katie and Erin came down to Greenville to have lunch with me at school. They brought me Chick-fil-A - my FAVORITE - and brought Krispy Kreme doughnuts for everyone in the class. Seriously, how lucky am I?


These girls have brought endless laughter and light into my life. My little living baby dolls have grown up into high school barbie dolls. Both of them are smart, gorgeous, and have magnetic personalities. People love to be around them because they are kind and funny and interesting. They tell amazing stories and do hilarious impressions. Both of them make me so proud.



Now I know:
If I had to choose someone to be my sisters, I hope you NOSE I'd PICK y'all every time. :)