Welcome to Selene Castrovilla's blog!

I'm an author spreading the words. Read about my books at www.SeleneCastrovilla.com







Showing posts with label parenting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parenting. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Tightrope Tuesday: Credit for Time Served?

So how am I handling parenting during this writing season?



Pretty well, actually.



I have learned to pace myself a little bit more on this fifth novel, and to forgive myself if I don’t get as much done in a day as I’d wanted. I make a scene a goal for a sitting, instead of a certain word or page count. This way, if I need to take care of something for one of my sons, at least I accomplished a goal before I walked away from the computer.




It’s helpful that my older son is seventeen, and very independent. There are certain things I need to do for him, but on the whole he can carry on very well. My younger son is in middle school – a place where they had to expand the lost and found into the rear of the auditorium because they have so many unclaimed items. In other words, he needs guidance to stay on track.

In the past, my biggest problem was freaking out about everything.

I've realized, if I just relax, I can get everything done.

 And I’m doing it!

 I’ve even been going to the gym – rare when I’m deep in a novel. My older son goes religiously, and I go with him. A parenting perk! I keep having thoughts on the elliptical. Sometimes I halt and head to the front desk for a scrap to write them down. Other times I run the lines over and over in my head like Jack Nicholson typing in The Shining so I can get through my two miles without forgetting them.





I've been to hockey games. I've dealt with stomach aches and doctor visits. I didn't flip when my younger son got in my car with a surprise gift of eight fish swimming in a Chinese soup container from a friend's mom. I’ve even done some food shopping with relatively good humor!



It’s all about state of mind. Serenity, baby.



Don’t ask me how I got it, but it’s here. Maybe it has something to do with time served. Having parented for so many years, and completed four novels, perhaps I’ve become convinced that I can in fact do both those things well.





Or maybe something inside me realized that all that angst was taking moments from the writing and parenting. I have so much more time now!



Remember “The Redbook Juggler?” The woman who can handle career, parenting, housekeeping and romancing her man? (Kind of like the woman in the old Enjoli perfume commercial – bringing home the bacon, frying it in a pan, and never, ever letting her husband forget he’s a man.) I always thought I’d drop the balls – not just one, but all of them. It’s no fun juggling in constant fear! Now, I feel great. I’m doing it! I’m juggling!!!



It may be my writing season – but parenting is always in season.


Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Tightrope Tuesday: Brimming with Words and Trying to Relate

The college applications are in (except for CUNY schools, due 2/1) and we’ve moved onto the financial aid stage. I’ve filled out the federal form, but I’m confused about the CSS profile from the College Board (AKA: Highway Robbers.) Is it necessary, and why? It is expensive, or course – because it they could, the College Board would charge you for the air you breathe while taking the SATs.



I’m also moving towards the end of my latest novel. An exciting time, but also hard because when I’m in that zone, it’s hard to think about anything else. Imagine trying to live in two worlds at once. Something’s going to suffer.



Then there’s my younger son, Casey. I feel like I should be giving him more attention.



I took the kids to see RENT recently, and Casey loved it (yea!) This, after he practically had to be shanghaied to go. We’re going to watch the movie this weekend.



And I took him shoe shopping.



Other than that, Casey prefers to be with his friends – either on-line or in person. I guess this is normal, but I can’t shake the feeling that I’m doing something wrong.



With Michael, it’s so easy. We can laugh at anything together. We both love Hard Core Pawn, and have a plan to journey to Detroit (the heart of Detroit’s 8 Mile, to be exact) to see American Jewelry and Loan in person. I want to meet Les Gold, the owner. I don’t even know why, but I do. I just love that show. And the great thing is, Michael’s down for it, too. We want to bring things to sell, and we’ve got a plan. We have to bring them all in separately, because if you bring it all together you get an offer for the lot, which is never enough.



These are the things we talk about. What do you talk about with your kids?



Casey, on the other hand, would never be up for a road trip to Detroit. He wouldn’t even entertain such a discussion.



My kids are so different.



It’s not that I don’t relate with Casey, but the relating seems to come in dribs and drabs, while it’s always there with Michael. But I do have a rapport with Casey – and he knows he can always talk to me, no judgments.



What can I do but take it day by day? I’m not complaining – I’m just unloading my brain, and possibly not very coherently, I’m afraid.



It’s hard to walk this tightrope of parenthood – and even harder with all these novel thoughts brimming from my soul.



But I’m grateful for everything.


Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Tightrope Tuesday: Another Year of Parenting Without A Net

            Another year of being a mom is underway. And I can’t help thinking: somehow this parenting thing eludes me. I always feel like I should be doing something more for or with my kids, and yet the tug to write is so strong as well...

            The other night they wanted me to carve pomegranates. Tearing myself away from my manuscript to paw at seeds and splatter crimson everywhere was not thrilling, and I let my kids know it. They laughed.

            Some mothers manage to fulfill their kids’ requests with a big smile. I can’t help wonder: is it genuine, or Zanax-induced?

            My son Michael made a little comment about my perpetual menu options the other night. “We know it’s either going to be steak, chicken or fish,” he said.

            “Excuse me, but this isn’t the diner,” I told him. “You’re lucky you get that. Besides, sometimes I make tacos.”

            What does he want? Doesn’t he know how hard it is for me to deal with meals at all when I’m in the middle of a novel? On Saturday night it took me an hour of wandering through the supermarket even though I had a list of only four things to buy, because I literally couldn’t focus. I kept running lines through my head.

            Living in two worlds is like constantly juggling. And when I leave the literary world for awhile, it takes me that much longer to reacquaint myself with the characters – let alone write something quality. Sometimes I forget plot points, or if I’ve tackled something yet. So the bottom line is, I don’t want to cook or shop AT ALL. That doesn’t mean I don’t love my kids. I just wish they could fend for themselves.

            I do what I need to do. I’m just not going to be researching any recipes. It’s only dinner. Eat it and more on.

            I love spending time with my kids. But I like to do fun things with them. You know, like those “Disney Dads?” Yeah, I get that.

            So what I need to do is get famous and wealthy enough so I can hire a chef and housekeeper, so we can just have fun when I’m not writing.

            Until then, I’ll cook and do the laundry and do marginal cleaning, but there’s no service with a smile here. Just can’t do it – I’m not a Stepford wife. I’m not a wife AT ALL!!!  

            But I am a mother, and I must be doing something of a decent job because my kids are interesting and funny and I’m proud to know and be affiliated with them. And when we sit down to dinner – I do smile and enjoy myself. I wish we could just cut to the chase.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Tightrope Tuesday: A Week With Mom


I could be happy here...as long as laptops are allowed.


This Tightrope Tuesday is a bit different in that it focuses on the time I've spent parenting my mother.

How can a child parent a mother? You may ask.

The answer is, not well.

It seems to happen with the children of alcoholics. I remember identifying with David Hasselhoff’s daughter as she pleaded for him to get up off the floor and go to his acting job, which he would lose if he didn’t show up that day.

Sometimes children have to hold the world up, like Atlas.



My mother is not an alcoholic, but she is mentally ill. I don’t know exactly what she is¸ because she never went to therapy. But I’ve spent much couch time diagnosing her in absentia.




The consensus is: bipolar. Maybe medication would’ve helped. Maybe my childhood could’ve been rescued by a little pill. We’ll never know.

I’m not going to get into all that “David Copperfield” crap – as Holden Caulfield calls it. If you want to know about my lousy childhood, read my novel Saved by the Music. You’ll get the gist. There were newspapers. Lots of newspapers, everywhere. The New York Times gives me the chills.






Mom was (is) a hoarder. Now her stuff is not only piled – it’s decaying. The house stinks.

(I couldn't find a Google image as bad as her house interior looks.)

If you read my Facebook updates you’ll know that my mom arrived on my doorstep last Monday evening. That fateful morning, the electric company shut down her lights – the culmination to years of warnings that she needed to have her circuit box repaired.



Like a little girl she phoned me, “Selene, something terrible has happened. The house just went dark.”

She was at a neighbor’s, because she’d lost yet another cell phone a month ago, and had neglected to replace it. But frankly I think she likes asking for help. She gets attention from it. Oh, help me, help me. She's like Blanche DuBois: "I have always relied on the kindness of strangers."

Naturally I thought she hadn’t paid the bill (which has happened.) It took a while to ascertain the real problem.

I called an electrician and arranged for them to come. I thanked the neighbor. I told my mother to go home and leave the neighbor alone (she stayed there for three hours, and he'd never even met her before!) Then I hung up and went about my life – which means I sat down to write.



But the work on her house never got done that day. The electrician came, and my mother refused to let him do the work because she had to “think about it.”

That’s how she wound up here.

The week has been a series of unfortunate events. She’s lost her car keys twice (they are gone at the moment) and also the new cell phone she purchased on Wednesday. The lights are still not on, though the work was finally done and the electric company claims to have restored her service. She paid some handy man the hardware store clerk recommended $75 to come and flip her breaker switch because she didn’t think she was strong enough to do it herself, even though a neighbor had tried. (Her poor neighbors!)

Through this all I have been nice –mostly. Sometimes she pushes me too far. How many times can I answer the same questions? She asks how to use the microwave repeatedly (for years, she’s been asking how many minutes for tea, and what buttons to push.)

She sure knows what buttons of mine to push!


She forgets the things she asked me a moment ago¸ and when I answer again, she forgets again. You may call it dementia, but she’s always been demented. It’s just worse now.

People ask me, “Don’t you feel bad for her?”

I say, “No. I feel bad for me. I don’t want to be her parent anymore. She never learns.”

Last night I left her by her car waiting for AAA to come give her a jump¸ even though I knew they couldn’t do it without the real key (she found some skeleton emergency key, but she has a short circuit in her alarm that has to be clicked off.) I told her this, but she didn’t listen. I had to go home to my kids. So I called road service and I told her, “Good luck.”

About an hour later she called me from another neighbor’s. (At this point I think she must’ve hit every house on the block.) “Selene, they couldn’t jump the car without the regular key.”

“I know, Mom. I told you that would happen.”

“The driver was very nasty. I think he was drunk.”

“I doubt that.”

Earlier she’d called the pharmacist “a jerk” when he didn’t want to renew her prescriptions sooner than authorized. “I can’t help it if I lost my pills,” she’d grumbled.



“What should I do?” she asked now.

What else? “Take a cab here,” I told her.

“Oh, okay,” she said, sounding relieved.

The only people having a good week are the cab drivers. They are making a mint.



So my challenge this week has been not as a true parent, but as an unwilling surrogate to my mom.

Incidentally, I left out the parts where she turns into a raging lunatic. That’s her other persona. Her whole voice changes. It’s a scary tone, but I always preferred it because at least it was authoritative. No child wants to be responsible for their mother.

It’s been a helluva week. My son Michael says this is an endurance test. The thing that helps the most is that I’m not alone in this experience. My kids see that my mom is nuts. Before, no one believed me. She can put on a good short-term act, and she’s real good at playing the wounded victim in front of people.

Most of all, this week has been a lesson in appreciating the life I have.



I worried that I’d be like her. I’m not.

So there.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Tightrope Tuesday: It's High Noon!

             I’m in a rush today, so I’ll have to keep this brief. I was waylaid by the arrival of my mother on my doorstep last night (if you want to know about that relationship, read my novel Saved by the Music.) Suffice to say, I had a rough time until the Valium kicked in.
            Today I’m feeling kind of sunrise-sunsety. Except the sun’s not setting. It's at "high noon."  But the metaphor works when thinking about my kids – especially Michael.





            I can’t get over him being 17, a high-school senior, and a licensed driver. I mean I can, but then suddenly the thought hits me: “How did this happen?”
            He’s soooo tall!
            I’m used to him towering over me, but I glanced at his leg the other night and was struck by how adult it was. You know, hairy. Like the leg hanging over the bridge on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disney – but without the grime.



            When did puberty occur? He was so quiet about it. Unlike my younger son Casey, who is reveling in puberty like it’s Mardi Gras and asking me questions which make me blush.



            Michael has always been one to work things out quietly. When he was little and we went somewhere, the first thing he would do is scope out a “mad place.” Usually, it was under a table. This was a place he could go when he got upset, and he would stay there until he worked it out.
            He made himself his own time-out place!


(This is not Michael - it's a Google Image)

            He only threw one fit in his childhood, when he wanted a pacifier in a drugstore, He had a collection in his pockets. “Me-me! Me-me!” he cried, pointing.



            “No more me-me’s!”
            “Me-me! Me-me!”
            I took his hand and tried to lead him away, but just like in the picture book Knufflebunny, he “went boneless.”
            “Me-me! Me-me!”
            I was dumbfounded. He’d never acted like that before. But I knew enough not to buy him that me-me. I dragged him out of the store. It must have been very disturbing for bystanders.
            When we got to the sidewalk I asked him, “Done now?”
            He nodded and stood.
            That was it. He must’ve realized that the fit tactic was futile with me. That’s the kind of kid he was – and is (even though he’s a man now.) He learns from experience. Can you imagine?



            We have such a great relationship. At a college visit on Saturday¸ one of Michael’s friends' mothers asked me, “Do you two just laugh together all the time?”
            We do.


            Somehow, my son turned out to be the perfect man I could never find for myself. He is empathetic, honest and reliable. He’s a man of his word. He’s self-motivated. And he’s darn good-looking to boot.
            How about that?
Michael & me: And he was only about 13 here!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

A true "Tightrope Tuesday"

            Today is the perfect example of “walking the tightrope.” There’s no heat in my house (too long a story.) My older son and I have to meet with his third guidance counselor (first was laid off by budget cuts, second was the head of the department - filling in, and third just arrived. This is what we dream of during senior year.) And my younger son came home distraught last night because he was Snooky, wearing heels, and his friends didn’t wait up for him while trick-or-treating. My poor baby.
            At the doctor yesterday, I worked on a particularly challenging paragraph from my current manuscript while sitting in a gown on the examining table. I knew this would be my only time to write.
            There was an order deadline for my son’s senior pictures if I wanted to get a discount, and so there I was at last night discussing my package picks with a representative. Joy.
            I won’t even tell you about the laundry I have in my room – the summer clothes in the drawers and the winter clothes, well, not in the drawers...
            And now, the piece I intended to post on this blog – about an incident my kids and I experienced in France – is hiding. I can’t find it in my files or on my back-up or on my e-mail. I’m sure it’s there – I’m just rushing. Nevertheless, here I am trying to write something for you when I need to get dressed (and did I mention my house is like a refrigerator?)
            So it really is “Tightrope Tuesday.”
            But I did manage to make a good dinner last night. As long as you chop up a lot of garlic, you can rock a meal.
            I have to run now. My apologies. I will make it up to you. Maybe I can find the piece later.
            To end on the positive, I will say that I’m grateful for everything, including my problems, because it’s a privilege to be alive. I’m not unhappy – I just occasionally wish I could “stop the clock.” 
            We did manage to get our annual pumpkin picking in last week with my dear friend Pascale and her kids, Tommy and Amanda (who are cousins with my kids, through their fathers.) We packed what used to be a day’s activity into an hour because of our hectic schedules.
            Here’s to happy times, abridged as they may be.
            Cheers!


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Dinner or a novel?

Hello again!

Welcome to Tightrope Tuesday!!!

Yesterday I wrote about how I overcame my fear of writing a novel & pounded out two in three months.

But how did I manage parenting at the same time?

The answer is: poorly.

You would think that the hard part was managing to keep the books separate in my head. No, it seemed that the deeper I swam in the manuscripts the more adept I became at swimming.

The hard part was drying off. Coming back to reality. Life.

Let me just say that I hate cooking. I always say: “We can make dinner, or we can write a novel.” I choose the novel!

Maybe there’s a genetic gene missing in me, but I get no thrill from serving up dinner. I’m glad when people appreciate my offerings (I happen to be good at basic things – the secret is keeping it simple) – but tearing myself away from my computer to boil water for rice and chop garlic is about as appealing to me as a thirteen hour plane ride with no leg room and someone snoring next to me.

Even worse is planning a meal. I dread that question: “What’s for dinner?”

Shop-Rite claims to have the answer, but I shop in Stop & Shop. I would guess that even in Shop-Rite you have to hunt down their aisles for the answer. Honestly, don’t we have to do enough searching in our lives? Supermarkets should make announcements: “Dinner for tonight: Grilled pork chops marinated in whatever sauce with whatever sprinkled on them and a side of whatever.” You can see how much I care.

It’s just FOOD!!! Whatever!!!! Can we get back to writing, or what???

So let’s just say that while I wrote two novels simultaneously, there was lots of Chinese food involved.

I should’ve dedicated the books to the people at the Chinese take-out place.

I was still married at that time, and my ex is a devoted dad – but he didn’t cook dinners back then. Funny how we both cook separately now – is it a rivalry? Hmmm...The psychology of cooking dinner for your kids. You see how I think of things – as possible topics.

Anyway, how I managed to take care of my kids while I wrote the books is kind of a blur, but they did survive. I like to think I passed on my work ethic to my son Michael, who is quite devoted to his schoolwork. Casey is a little tougher, but he’s coming around. I love to look up words with him in my WRITER’S FLIP DICTIONARY.

I know I’ve set an example to follow a passion – and Michael is doing that with law.

But there is a price for passion, and that is often everyday life. When I’m typing an idea and Casey is staring at me from the staircase because he wants me to give him a ride somewhere, it’s hard to concentrate. (Mental note: Lock myself in a room where he can’t get to me.) Just kidding ;)

A writer friend of mine told me about someone she knows who hangs this sign on her office door for her kids: “I don’t love you when I’m writing.”

Ouch! Massive shrink bills ahead!!!

I ALWAYS love my kids, and they know that. But they also know they have a growing number of adopted siblings who I must nurture in my manuscripts. Like new additions to the family, they need extra attention. And, like real babies, they call to me in the middle of the night! I could never leave my kids wailing in the crib – nor can I ignore my characters’ cries.

Being a writer’s child is tough. But it’s also not so tough, I think.

I’d like to think I bring empathy and honesty to the dinner table, even if the steak is burnt because I needed to jot an idea down.

What I remember most about that time when I wrote the novels is what five year old Casey said when I finished: “Mommy, please don’t ever write two books together again.”

I didn’t write two novels simultaneously again, but a month later I was struck by my darkest novel, EVOLUTION. That sent me into a deep depression, and literally altered my personality. My poor kids...

The good thing was that I wrote it over the summer. I do tend to get these things out fast. Like Stephen King said: Write a novel in a season.

I think my kids have survived relatively unscathed. If not, I’ll have to chip in for their shrink bills. It’s only fair.