In·de·fat·i·ga·ble (of a person or their efforts) persisting tirelessly.

Monday, September 11, 2017

Entry 12



5/17/2017
-It is literally and figuratively raining cats and dogs around here.
-We got a cat from church, and almost took on six more puppies till mum said no.

-We were all devastated.
-As if eight dogs were a lot!!!

-Ophelia is actually sleeping on my lap now. (the kitten)
-This is probably a bad idea, since it will be me she wakes up to play with at  midnight : thirty-five  yet again.

“Where's Ophelia?!” Isaac exclaims just now, running in the room.
“Here!” I yell over the thunder.
“Where’s Cyrano?!” He exclaims again.
“Dunno!” I yell back.

-He checks under my bed, pulls the little rabbit out and plops her on my lap.

(Note: at this point in time everyone thinks she's a girl. I give up.)

“Can you take care of her?!” He exclaims.
“Fine!” I yell.

-Then he runs off to exclaim at other people.
-Cyrano climbs off my lap and tries to find a way down. I put him on the ground.

-Kids come in and out, all yelling over each other and the rain.
-Every once in awhile Ophelia will wake up and then go back to sleep in a curled position.
-Rachel comes in and tells me:
“Isaac's like: ‘I really want to sit in this water!’ Then a few minutes later he slips in it!”
“Heh!” I laugh in appreciation.
-I think I will write some more now.


later...


-I have a terrible headache. My stomach wants to empty lunch all over my bed, and also it begs me to eat supper.
-I lay in the semi-darkness of my room and tell it to shut up.
-Cyrano messes with something under my bed, and Ophelia growls, purrs, and eats the rest of my toast simultaneously.
-I thought she was fighting with Cyrano at first, but I think she was growling at the flies actually.
-We have so many flies.
-I don't know where they came from, but gawsh they are annoying!!
-We are now waging war on the living flies and the dead flies that accumulate on floors, counters and the dining room table.
-But my head hurts.

-I'm going to read now, since I have nothing better to do and I can’t sleep.

Friday, September 8, 2017

Entry 11


5/14/2017
-So it's 9:30 pm.
-You just had a long, fun, semi-stressful day and now you are zonked. You-

-Okay fine.
-Yes. I'm talking about myself.

-Yeah yeah, you're very smart, now shut up.
(EHH!! BONUS POINTS FOR AWESOME QUOTES)

-And so I says to myself, I says, “I need to take a shower.”
-And myself throws a fit, and lounges on her bed with a distraught air (okay fine, I was reading), and then-

-Decides!
-I am going to take a shower.
-I grab some clothes, take a shower, and then go to bed, the end.
-NOT!!!!

-BECAUSE WHAT ARE YOU THINKING?!?!?? YOU CANNOT JUST TAKE A SHOWER IN THIS HOUSE.
-THERE ARE RULES.
*AND REGULATIONS.
-AND YOU HAVE TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT AND CHECK WITH ALL THE IMPORTANT MEMBERS OF THE HOUSEHOLD.

-(Aka, everyone)

-So, for some reason this escapes my train of thought EVERY STINKING TIME??!?!?!????



-For the benefit of you ignorant swine, here is what you have to do:
  • Check with the bathroom.      Is it decent? Is it empty? Is the light on and working? Do we even have power?!
  • Check with the bunny. Is she around? Has she recently used the floor as a public restroom?? Is she skulking in the loo doing this now?!?
  • Check with the cat. Is she in the bathroom? Is she being loved and nurtured? Is she still alive? Why do I care so much?!

  • Oh I don't.
  • She just likes to threaten.
  • I also happen to like my life.

  • Check with mum. Is now a good time? Do I have a job or sibling to take care of? Is it okay if I add to the laundry?? Is there even a:
  • (Check with the) towel? IS IT CLEAN? IS IT AROUND? HOW MANY TIMES HAS IT BEEN USED?? WHY IS IT ON THE FLOOR IN THE BATHROOM?!

  • Wait did I even bring a towel?

  • DANGIT I FORGOT AGAIN.

  • Check with the cockroach. Just in case it decides your foot is soft and warm.

  • I AM STILL SHUDDERING.

  • Because this happened.

  • Check with the shower. Is it currently functioning? Does it have bunny droppings scattered all over? Does it have the shampoo and conditioner? Does it have soap? Is the curtain going to stay up OR NOT?!

BASICALLY JUST BOOK AN APPOINTMENT A MONTH IN ADVANCE.

-Oh and don't forget! After you forget to check all of the above, and end up using a skirt and shirt for a towel, and forget to put on deodorant.
-After you nearly forget to brush your teeth, and get your hair to stop dripping by wrapping it in a scarf, and dry out your ears and your neck (WHICH KEEP GETTING DRIPPED ON), you nearly kill the cat who is sleeping in your bed yet again, and you get your feet clean for what feels like first time in months- dagnabit how is it midnight?!?!?!

Haha jk, its only 10:27.  

  • Yikes.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Entry 10


5/3/2017
-After a fifteen or so minute drive, during which we chatted and complained and laughed as only siblings can do, we arrived.


-The water is beautiful and cool touch. The beach strewn with pebbles, glass and various pieces of garbage.
-Due to an unfortunate coincidence with a malady of unusual length, I am unable to swim, but I watch the others with pleasure.
-The sun beats down upon us as Meg tells mom, shaking her little finger,
“I'm going to find two mowah wocks!” she picks her way along the shore to the water, her arms raised to balance herself.




-The kids push a log from the shallows deeper.
-With quite a bit of yelling commands and no more than the average amount of teamwork involved, they get it unstuck.
-They bring it farther and farther out until one by one the children get scared and hop off.

-They lost Isaac the moment they all tried to climb on the log and it rolled on it's side. (as in he fell off, he isn't actually lost.)
-He is now catching frogs on the beach with Bridget.

-Anne, Rachel and Peter stay with the log.

“Can you touch the bottom?” Mum yells
“No!” Peter grins widely.
“If one of the girls drowns, you have to save them!” Mum says
“I know!!” Peter returns
“If they die you can't have their plates!” Dad adds
“What?”
“If they die you can't have their plates!!” Dad repeats with his hands cupping his mouth.
“Okay!” Peter says and pushes out further.


-Then we have Cremas because the children are “Staarving!!” As they so loudly wail.



-Then Ninoska starts yelling at Douglas who is in the water.
-I look to where she is pointing and see multiple men in the water on a different point of the beach.
-I see heads bobbing and mum asks
“Are they fighting?”

-A woman in a pink shirt runs into the water screaming something, a man holds her back but she fights him trying to reach something in the water.
-Then another head comes to the surface and two men pull the unconscious body to shore.
-People swarm over forming a crowd around the man.

-Dad was an EMT, so he runs over to help.
-Mum calls the kids over and we pray the chaplet of Divine Mercy, watching anxiously as Dad and Douglas get lost in the mix of humans.
-He comes back just as we finish, and reports.
Vive,” he says. “He's alive. He was drunk before he got it.”
Todo bien, no hay problema.” Douglas says and dad starts to correct him, but doesn't. Aside to mum he says,
“He still looked really bad. When I went over there they were pushing on his chest and breathing, but they could just push water into his lungs. So I rolled him on his side. A lady yelled at me, but I know how to help.”
“Wow.” mum says.


-Nothing like a bit of drama to spice things up.

Friday, September 1, 2017

Entry 9



4/28/2017
-Just in case you thought my family consisted of angels, here is a story to prove otherwise.
-(Of course, I am an angel, but I can't say the same for the rest of the horde.)


-This morning I did math. It was boring as ever and I kept messing up the timer and I almost had to do more than an hour of math.
-Eww.
-I may or may not have just guessed and hoped it was an hour.


-I started catechism and then got a call from dad.
-Oh.
-Apparently he and mum and Peter all left.
-Thanks for the heads up, y’all.

“Can you make sure the tank doesn't overflow upstairs. Since you're doing school up there, right?”
“Oh. Yeah sure.”
“Okay.” There is a pause. What am I supposed to do again?
“Okay. Bye?” I say, with a look that would usually accompany a dead rat.
“Bye.” he says and hangs up.

-Ookaay… I guess that was right?

(Note: did I mention we found a maggot home under our refrigerator? It was established the carcass of a rat. Biiiig sniff everyone!)

-I do some catechism, and check on the tank a few times. It's got a bit to go.
-Then Meg starts screaming blue murder and I turn to see her slap Isaac on the back.
-She's in tears and her face is covered in dirt and probably some snot thrown into the mix.
-Disgusting.
-I interrogate Isaac and he has some wild story and none of it's his fault and blah di da di da.
-I fix it as best I can and then go back to catechism.

-After a few questions, Meg is crying yet again.
-I go out, sort through it, and go back to school.
-Then I hear this sound.
-Kind of like running wat-
-GOOD GOLLY!!!

-So I run over, turn off the valve, get my arm soaked in the meantime and say
“Dagnabit!” About 5-8 times.

-Douglas was downstairs talking to somebody so he comes up to see what's wrong.
-He surveys the spillage and says in his easy way
Esta bien.” He says, but I sigh and still feel terrible for not paying attention. “Tranquilo.
-I make my epic: dang-this-is-a-lot-more-than-you’re-making-it-out-to-be-but-fine-I’ll-calm-down-sure-it’ll-be-fine-why-would-it-be-sarcasm-alert-sarcasm-alert! face.
-Don't believe I could look all that in one facial expression? That's where you're wrong, Scaryman!
-I have an exceptionally gifted face.

-So then Douglas leaves and I do school. Then mum and dad get home and we unload some groceries and then we make lunch.

-Well the kids were making fried eggs and tajatas and fried sweet bananas. Except they started the eggs first- AT ELEVEN O CLOCK.
-For the ignorant among you, eleven is waaay too early to start eggs for lunch.
-So I start making the tajatas by warming the oil, ordering the twerps to get the bananas for me, then I peel them, getting my hands ALL sticky in the process- despite putting oil on my hands beforehand.



-Oh! Fun story, I started to light the stove with a match when I realized that I still had oil dripping from my hands.
-Yeah maybe not such a brilliant idea?


-So then I sliced the bananas and then fried them in the oil.
-Becky cut up the sweet bananas and fried hers in the small skillet and then put them in a bowl with sugar poured over the top.
-Yumm.


-A great commotion comes from the living room area, and mum comes in with Meg in her arms and Meg's face is bleeding and there is a crowd of kids all around her and dad is there and Meg is crying and mum is telling someone to get a rag and dad is telling someone else to get some ice and lots of people are wondering what the heck just happened.
-I was one of these, and also looking for a rag.


-Apparently there was a little fight and a door got in the way and now Meg's going to have a black eye for a bit.


-I return to my tajatas, which are getting rather burnt, and mum puts arnica on Meg's face, and a certain child is crying and feeling extremely evil for causing this pain.

(Note: excuse you. Stop wondering which child it was. What are you, mean? Morbid? Cruel?Something else starting with M?)

I dropped more banana into the scalding oil and get a drop on the tip of my finger.
I also thought about covering the eggs when I remembered the tajadas and rushed over.
I stubbed my toe on the way over on the cement step.
I recently stubbed it, and it was bleeding like crazy.
So I screech
“Dumb horsey!”
My siblings show their sympathy by laughing.
I laugh too, and then frantically dump the tajadas into the aluminum pan.
A minute or so later, I feel something sticky and wet on my foot.
I look down, all prepared to be stepping on avocado or banana or butter.
But there's not really anything, I lift my foot and put it somewhere else, and see a tiny puddle of red liquid.
Ah.
Then I laugh and tell the kids I murdered my foot again, and can they watch the tajadas?
Everyone is busy in their own pursuits and don't answer, so I yell it again and then hobble to the bathroom to bind up my foot.
After I clean it, Becky brings me a band aid, and then I return to the kitchen.
“Did you guys watch the tajadas?” I ask
“No!” “Yes!” Numerous people call out joyfully at the same time.
The pan has new tajatas in it.
“Thanks, guys.”
Then I look in the pan and see a pile of burnt tajatas in one corner.
“Guys!”
Peter laughs.
“We told you we didn't watch it.”
“I thought you were kidding!”
They laugh.


A bit later, Rebeckah’s foot gets burnt by oil, and Peter scoops her up and carries her to the dining room to get ice on it.
Isaac wants to tell mum all about everyone's injuries but I tell him not to. She has enough with laundry to do, Meg to take care of, children to feed, school to administer and she probably has a headache!
But when she comes downstairs, Isaac tells her immediately.
Boy!


The niece of a certain monk (in a certain Abbey, in Kansas City) lives here in Nicaragua, and she came to visit us.
She is a nice girl. She has short curly blond hair up in a ponytail. She is wearing her uniform for her job- which is teaching, incidentally.
We shook hands at the introductory state of our encounter.
“I'm Sarah.” She says. She has a nice firm grip, but not too hard. She seems completely at ease with all of us, yet a little part of her is awed I think.


I tend to have that effect on people.


She has a nice smile and she doesn't laugh often, but when she does, you notice.
And it's not that it's a loud laugh or peculiar in any way. It's just… true.
True happiness.
She's completely comfortable with herself and I like that. She isn't necessarily pretty, or ugly but the way she carries herself and the way she acts around us makes her attractive.
She would have no trouble finding a nice man- and probably a sarcastic gentleman at that!
Lucky.


We sit in the living room and talk.
They exchange backstory and she asks questions right to the point. She doesn't best around the bush, this girl.
When dad makes a joke (the actual joke escapes my memory at this time) she snorts and slaps her knee and I feel like cheering.
I love snort-laughers and knee-slappers!
They're my kind of people.
The kind of people who love a good joke and usually tell the best jokes and even if they're not funny- you laugh because you have no choice.
It's a contagion.


She loves dad's home-roasted coffee, and drinks two whole cups.
I watched her closely to see if she would just pretend to like it, but she drank it all and had a second cup with supper.
She is an open book at times, yet I feel like she has a deeper heart and understanding of the world and it's wiles.

She's quite a chum. I have a feeling this won't be our last meeting.

Entry 17 (hello again)

It's 78° out and my earl grey tea is just a bit hotter, it warms my legs as it rests rather precariously on my lap. It's dusk and th...