29 March 2011

Good Fences

Last summer, we got new next-door neighbors.

They can't really help it that they have the same last name we do.  And they didn't know us when they decided to give their daughter the same name we gave ours a whole year earlier, so that they actually have the same first AND last names.  So we'll just call those things weird coincidences that couldn't be helped.  We'll forget for a minute that they've enrolled their daughter at the same neighborhood preschool we go to and they take her to the same doctor we go to, so that now every time I call those places, I have to be prepared to give a date of birth or a teacher's name so that the staff doesn't accidentally look up the wrong records.  Let's forget about those things, since it's really my fault for giving those places such stellar reviews when they asked us for recommendations in the first place.  But even if I don't blame them for those things, I think they're the kind of people who just might think all of those things are awesome enough to have done on purpose.

They have no boundaries. Don't get me wrong, they seem like nice enough people.   They're friendly, and that's great.  But I'd like to keep it at friendly without being friends.  I like having my own space.

I don't want them ringing our doorbell three or four times a week because their little girl wants my little girl to come over and play.  I don't want their daughter racing up my stairs as soon as I open the door, and if that happens I'd prefer it if the mom at least batted an eyelash about it.   I don't want the husband coming over every couple of weeks because he's anxious about how to care for the wonderful old live oak we share, or asking if we noticed the bushes that cover our utility meters have been trimmed. (Um, yeah, because I TRIMMED THEM, and only the ones on MY property that were blocking my access to my water meter.) 

My daughter likes theirs, and I'm happy they can play together outside in the front yard, but I'm sick of them inviting my daughter inside to play, and I'm sick of my daughter telling me she wants to invite theirs over.  I've allowed both a couple of times, but frankly I don't really want to babysit their 3-year-old for them, and I don't really want to invite the mom in to visit so she can watch her, either.  A few months ago, the mom actually asked if my daughter would be interested in coming over to spend the night.  She's four.  Even if I didn't have huge trust issues, that would never happen.   The people who used to live in their  house had a little girl, too, only a couple of months younger than my daughter, and we never had this problem.  So, I've been saying "no" a lot lately.   And trying to explain to the kids why I don't want them to answer the door. 

I get the feeling they let their daughter do whatever she wants most of the time.  For example, our preschool gets people to come to the Scholastic book fair by setting up an art show alongside it, with our children's art available for purchase.   Each teacher signs up to be there at a certain time during the evening, and the kids try to go at that time to play with their classmates and show us their art.   We always go, because who can resist the immortalization of our babies' handprints in tempera?  Well, on the Tuesday of the fair, they came home from school and told us they'd already been because their class slot was kind of late and they were worried it would interfere with bedtime.  They asked if we'd been yet, and I said we planned to go later.  My daughter admired the book theirs had bought, and we went our separate ways.  So imagine how perplexed I was when, later that evening at the book fair, their daughter runs up to us and says hello.   When I saw her mother, I mentioned it was a surprise to see them.  "Oh, she kept talking about how she wanted to go to the book fair with [my daughter], so we decided to come back."  We were already done, so I just said I hoped they enjoyed the fair, and we left.

Now that's just creepy.  Right?  Who lets their preschooler stalk other children?  Don't reasonable parents say things like, "Ha! NO?"

And then there's the dog.  He's some enormous mixed breed that she bought at a shelter when she was single, because she wanted some protection while she hawked rugs on the side of the road.  (Which she still does, by the way.  So, the next time you're on the highway, and you see the person with rugs hanging from the side of her big white van, and you wonder what kind of person might decide to do that for a living, wave.  That's my neighbor.)  Anyway, this dog bolts out the front door any chance he gets and proceeds to mark all of the neighbors' territory as his own.  One day she got tired of calling for him and decided she'd rather not chase him.  She turned to me and said, "Haha, I hope nobody minds if he's running around the neighborhood."  I told her about our leash laws and let her know that somebody (me?ahem!) might call animal control if she doesn't keep him on a leash when he's outside.  I guess that scared her enough to keep him inside, because I've only seen him get out without a leash once since then, and she actually chased him down and took him back inside.


I've been wondering if the HOA will let me build a picket fence along the property line of our side yard.  Probably not, since I haven't seen one anywhere else in the neighborhood.  But it would've kept the husband from pulling the oak sapling that was growing in my yard--and believe me, I am sure it was my yard--while he was weeding today.  I noticed it last week.  It was in a perfect spot--not too close to the house, not in the middle of anywhere we like to run with the kids, and actually in a part of the yard that could have used a good shade tree.  As I looked at it this morning and thought about how much it had grown in less than a week, I thought about involving the kids in a project where we'd measure it every few days and chart its growth.  And then this afternoon, it was gone.  And the neighbor was outside on his knees in the grass, with a big pile of weeds beside him on the sidewalk.  I confronted him about it, and he admitted he pulled it and seemed contrite that he had not paid attention to whose yard he was in.   And while I'm willing to forgive him, I don't feel badly about letting him know I was annoyed. 

But as one of my dearest friends pointed out to me last week, it could be worse:  it could have been my parents who bought the house next door.  But that's a story for another time.

Please, pretty please, leave me a comment below.  What are things like with your neighbors?  Are their people in your life that just don't get personal boundaries?  Let me know what you think!

25 March 2011

Today Is the Beginning of Our Salvation

Sometimes, when a friend mentions how she just can't wait for her mom to visit or how they're best friends and love doing everything together, I get a little sick at my stomach.  I mean, I think that's great for them, it's just not my experience.  The sound of my mother's voice makes me want to hide under the covers and never come out.  Her touch feels intrusive, like she's a parasite trying to suck something out of me.  So the concept of having a good time with my mother is foreign to me, just as the idea that I could be a happy person without talking to my mother for three months often makes no sense to someone else.  So, I don't really bring it up much unless someone asks me about it first. 

Growing up, it really never even occurred to me that other people's mothers didn't yell at them for hours at a time or call them terrible names, that their parents didn't spend their evenings screaming and cursing at one another, that their mothers didn't burst into uncontrollable tears for no predictable reason and then blame them for it.   I felt like a failure as a Christian and a daughter for constantly making mistakes and disrespecting my mother, for never being good enough to make her happy.  I thought it was my fault she acted the way she did, even after I started to realize her behavior didn't make a lot of sense.  I was well into my twenties before I was able to accept that I had grown up in abusive home.

It's taken a lot of work to learn how to deal with that, psychologically, spiritually, and practically.  And I'm still learning.  I am deeply grateful to Christ Jesus with giving me what I need in order to heal, including a supportive husband, a prayerful priest, understanding friends, and sacramental grace.  But I think one of the most important things He has done is to share His own mother with me.

I don't really know that I would be able to articulate how wonderful she is without writing several pages, and I really want to keep this shorter.  I will just say that she is everything I need a mother to be.   The New Eve is the greatest example of what it can be like to allow The Most Holy Trinity to transform us into Their likeness.  Where the corruption of this world results in people who live in a constant state of turmoil, she is peaceful.  While humanity is vengeful and abusive, she is patient and tender.  She prays for us, weeps over us, and protects us.  She wants us to grow and guides us towards her Son.  Even though I don't have a perfect biological model for how to be a good mother, I have the Theotokos.   She is a great source of strength and comfort to me.  It helps tremendously to know that the first person to ever say yes to the incarnate Christ is still around saying prayers for me and my children.

Today we celebrate that moment when the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, when a young Virgin made our salvation possible.  On days like today, I begin to understand the joy my friends feel when they think about seeing their moms again.  It feels right to walk into the church to honor and celebrate her, and to thank her for all she has done for us as she participates with the Most Holy Trinity in the restoration of humanity.  It's really nice to have such a beautiful and wonderful mother.

Icon of the Annunciation, from www.oca.org


Troparion for the Annunciation

Today is the beginning of our salvation,
The revelation of the eternal mystery!
The Son of God becomes the Son of the Virgin
As Gabriel announces the coming of Grace.
Together with him let us cry to the Theotokos:
Rejoice, O Full of Grace,
The Lord is with You!
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