Okay, whoever said "Survival is a series of near misses," should be shot at--and missed, of course. As long as they hear the bullet whoosh by their ears taking a little hair with it, being missed and having to live with the wet pants and the Niagara Falls heart is the entire point.
To totally freak you out, my least painful near-miss of the day was the 45 pages of text I've written in the last week--yes, 45 pages--that I thought my computer just swallowed and shit out as a low-rad radiation burst. When the Yarn Harlot talks about 'black spots in front of her eyes' and 'have me a little lay down on the kitchen floor' that just ain't bullshit and chocolate sauce, that's literally what it feels like... those 45 pages were some of the most painful, the most intense I've ever written (and yes, even that horrible event, the one no one talks about at the end of the first book, that counts!) and the thought of having to live through that again was like... it was like having to go back to my best freind's funeral in the seventh grade, that's what it was like, and I didn't think I could do. I honestly saw all five-hundred pages (so far) of the entire book being put into storage while I went back to the Cory-verse and licked my wounds.
So now you're all asking what in the name of Honor, Compassion, and Joy could top that little almost-disaster?
I'll give you four guesses...odds are, you only need one because he's done it to me before, on this very blog.
The Cave Troll. Holy Goddess, my sweet little Cave Troll went missing in Wal-Mart today, and...
And I did not keep my cool. I'm famous for keeping my cool--no shit. We lost chicken when she was six at the San Francisco Zoo--my friend said, "It was awesome, man--you sent the boys on a search pattern, you sent me on sweep, and you went off on the weird-ass tangent that she was most likely to follow and you found her!" Of course, my panties had a very bad day that day, but my friend didn't need to know that. When we lost Cave Troll at Monterey Bay Aquarium, I kept my cool. I sent Mate one way, the older kids the other way, and we all met at the information booth downstairs, where he was drawing pictures. Another bad day for the panties, another day where mom looks like she's tough as nails.
Today I lost that whole rep for keeping my cool. I can't explain it. Maybe it's because I hate Wal-Mart. Maybe it's because I hate THIS Wal-Mart--it's the Wal-Mart near where I work, and it could be I just have a mucking buckload of crap feelings for the area because I hate my school with the burning passion of a thousand suns. (I expect this feeling to fade by August. Really.) All I really know is, the minute I saw the little badger hauling ass for the electronics department with his usually on-the-ball sister NOWHERE NEAR him, my stomach dropped to my bowels, my bowels turned to water, and my internal panic alarm began to deafen all reason. When I went up to the customer service people to have them help me, the greeter had found him.
He was wandering outside as she snagged him.
When he saw me, he ran up and I picked him up and hugged him fiercely, and he smiled at me--"Mom, I was lost!"
And I burst into tears--not 'Oh thank God!' tears, more like, "Oh, Holy Heaven, I know you almost let the big bad happen to me and I can only sob in relief" tears, and suddenly he wasn't smiling anymore. Cave Troll ain't stupid--he knew that mom was UPSET, all in capital letters, and that running away from his sister was a baaaaaaaaad thing to do. And all I could do was hold him and cry.
And again, I can't explain it. Maybe it was lack of sleep. Maybe it was the familiar surroundings--bad things have happened to me in this community. Sometimes the people are the best in the world, and, as I learned this year, sometimes they are the type of people who will let a toddler wander into traffic while they sneer at the parent who let him get away.
But that wasn't who they were today, and I can only be grateful.
Now excuse me, I seem to have soiled my armor.
So glad all turned out well. My mother lost The Baby in a grocery store when he was two (small town, he was having a cookie with his cousin over in the bakery). I found out about this little adventure at his Bar Mitzvah. Hold 'em tight, they keep trying to grow up.
ReplyDeleteOh God Amy. that's awful. But not awful, because the Cave Troll was found. That's enough to make anyone shit themselves.
ReplyDeleteWhat a relief.
Oh man, that sucks. Happy it turned out well. You might even get a half of day of Cave Troll being unlike himself to make up for what he's put you through.
ReplyDeleteIt's a shame we have to lose that damn umbilical cord before they're 18. Glad both precious things were not truly lost.
ReplyDeleteOMG! I can barely imagine what you felt like. That is the reason I want to move to a small town when we decide to have kids.
ReplyDelete*hugs* I'm glad that everything turned out OK in the end. Kudos to you though for being a good mom when he was found. I used to work at the Mall of America and I can not tell you the number of parents who screamed at their kids, spanked them, called them horrible names and so on when the lost kids were found. I don't much like kids, but those parents made me want to grab up the kids and run far, far away with them.
ReplyDeleteGod Amy, I could feel the tears welling and my chest getting tight as I read about it. Utterly unspeakable. Words can't describe the horror. (And no, I don't mean, "The Horror." I'm not being smug.)
ReplyDeleteBlessed relief that you found him.
Bless your dear heart, Sweetie! And bless your dear little Cave Troll and poor sweet Chicken. What a craptastic time for all of you. So glad that the enfant terible is safe and sound. and the manuscript as well? Omigawd I have SO got to put stuff on disc!
ReplyDeleteWould the Cave Troll fit on Disc? Keep him there till he's 18, - no 21, - no, 35, . . .