Friday, July 13, 2018

Aloe and Snowflakes: Use Your Words

Today’s post is a monthly writing challenge. If you’re new here, this is how it works: participating bloggers picked 4 – 6 words or short phrases for someone else to craft into a post. All words must be used at least once. All of the posts will be unique as each writer has received their own set of words. That’s the challenge, here’s a fun twist; no one who’s participating knows who got their words and in what direction the recipient will take them. Until now.


Use Your Words, a multiblogger writing challenge | www.BakingInATornado.com | #MyGraphics


At the end of this post you’ll find links to the other blogs featuring this challenge. Check them all out, see what words they got and how they used them.
I'm using:  swim ~ towel ~ aloe ~ snowflake ~ hot dog ~ Kool-aid  They were submitted by Dawn of Cognitive Script.

                          
We recently brought my younger son home from college. I'm still traumatized. Don't get me wrong, I love having him home. In my nice, neat, clean home. But what I saw up there, and especially when we unpacked back here, well, I can never un-see. I mentioned in an earlier post that I thought he was living in a house with a few friends. It wasn't until I got there that I realized he was living in a cave. A dark, disorganized, dilapidated cave. 

I know he's a boy, and I know boys will be boys, but I cannot believe the way he had been living. I am the most organized person on the planet. Apparently he is the least organized person on the planet. 

Somehow he had decided that he would only pack up what he needed or wanted at home for the next few months, then when his lease ran out in July he'd drive 10 hours back, pack up his 2nd floor room, and move it all down a thin staircase and out of the house by himself. So he was partially packed. Or so he said. 

In his bedroom upstairs were a half filled trunk, a half filled suitcase, and a body sized duffel bag I was too afraid to open. In his outer room were about 40 partially filled bags and 6 boxes completely covered in white dust and plaster (management had replaced his door at some point, who knows how long ago). It took me two days to convince him that he had to move his furniture out while we were there to help him, and that it made no sense to move partially out, then drive back for the rest of his belongings.

I did consolidate his trunk, suitcase, and bags before we left so we could fit everything into our cars. I didn't have a chance to go through anything, just noting that there was no rhyme or reason to what was where. Unfolded clothes were packed with toiletries, papers, whatever.

Once home (and after spending 2 days explaining that we would not be leaving everything in his unpacked until he moved out again), I worked with him to be sure he had everything organized. I still cannot believe what we'd transported home. 

I threw out about 10 pounds of trash. There were old receipts, plastic silverware, empty packaging. He had 3 bottles of aloe (which had apparently moved with him twice) from when he got a sunburn freshman year at a football game ("I'll skype with you, Mom, but don't freak out when you see me", just what every mom wants to hear). There were 14 sticks of deodorant, 10 bottles of hand lotion. Apparently the way toiletries work is that you use them once, misplace them in the morass and just buy another. Who knew?

There were about 50 batteries, a can of lighter fluid for the lighters he didn't have, and 3 packets of Kool-aid, which he does not drink. Had I found a half-eaten hot dog, I would not have been surprised. The body bag, I'm relieved (but bewildered) to say, was completely full of cords.

He had almost all of my missing beach towels, though I don't know why. And he had a new beach towel as well. Seems the one time he had an opportunity to swim, when he went with friends to Vegas for the weekend, he'd forgotten to pack a bathing suit and towel so bought new ones there. 

It wasn't until we got to the boxes that I realized he had packed them covered in dust, drove them home covered in dust and moved them into his room (yes, you guessed it) covered in dust. My turn to roll my eyes at one of my kids. I told him to take them outside and wipe the dust off of them so we could find what treasures lay inside. 

Later that morning College Boy and I were taking breakfast out to the deck. The outdoor dining table was covered in white. "What is all over the table?" College Boy asked. "Looks like snowflakes".


Loaded Egg in a Bagel Basket, an egg cooked in a bagel slice topped with salmon and green onion | Recipe developed by www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #breakfast
Loaded Egg in a Bagel Basket

Yes, it was plaster and dust. Guess I should have been specific, pretty much the only place I didn't want him to clean off those boxes in all of the outdoors would have been on my table. {{sigh}}.

If I ever, ever, am in the position to move this kid out of anywhere again (other than my house), the process will be simplified. Everything goes straight to the trash {{claps hands back and forth with finality}}. Done.


Here are links to all the other Use Your Words posts:




Loaded Egg in a Bagel Basket
                                               ©www.BakingInATornado.com

Ingredients:
1 bagel
2 TBSP butter
3 eggs
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup cooked salmon, chopped
1 green onion, sliced

Directions:
*Slice the bagel lengthwise into thirds so you have 3 round slices with a hole in the center.
*Melt 1 TBSP butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the bagel slices and cook for 2 minutes. Remove from pan.
*Melt the remaining butter in the skillet. Put the bagel slices back in the pan, cooked side up. Crack one egg into the center of each slice. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook for 2 minutes. 
*Carefully flip the bagel slices over. Cook for 1 - 2 more minutes or until the egg is done to your liking. 
*Remove bagels from pan. Serve topped with salmon and green onion.

12 comments:

  1. Oh the joys of having almost-adult sons! It used to drive me crazy! Even my daughter is unorganized I don't know where they get that hubby and I are insanely organized...okay hubby is and he drags the rest of us along with him!

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    Replies
    1. I try to drag them along with me, but you can see how successful I've been {{sigh}}.

      Delete
  2. With one single exception, all my kids are neatness freaks like me. They all stare askance at their sister who . . . isn't. And when these minimalists move anywhere, they pare down and pare down. Our middle son who lives alone literally takes one box to move anywhere. It makes Mama so proud! :)

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  3. There was a moment when TQ and I were visiting my folks for my dad's 80th birthday in May when I looked at him and shook my head and said "I don't know how two such organized and tidy people had me." Must be a recessive gene somewhere, I am simply no good at keeping things neat. :(

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good to know they survived a disorganized daughter, maybe that means there's hope for me surviving my son.

      Delete
  4. Great job on using my words, but oh how i feel your pain! We moved our middle son in May...he was "packed" as well. NOT at all and yes, garbage for days. I was in shock. This is NOT how he was raised, worse than any cave, or stick building you've ever seen. I had him packed and unpacked, cleaned and organized. But I guarantee you if I were to go to his new place...2 months later, now, it would be the same. SMH and wondering where I went wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes. I unpacked all his clothes into drawers, one for underwear, one for shorts, one for collared shirts, one for t-shirts, one for bathing suits . . . Went up there today and everything is everywhere.

      Delete
  5. This is a mystery I'm confronted with, too: On one hand you have this bright, intelligent kid who does well at school, graduates successfully from college (in my case 4th grade), and on the other hand they seem barely capable of surviving in this hands-on everyday world and keep track of their stuff?
    So my question to you: along with that bagel, how many glasses of wine did you have on unpacking day..?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm not giving away my secret but I will say this, there is a correlation between the number of glasses of wine and the level of long term traumatization.

      Delete
  6. This will be my kid. And all i can say is i might not be the modt organized person but I *am* clean--I clean up a couple times a day--so I blame it on hos father.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ooh, blame it on the father, I like that. I'm going to do that too.

      Delete

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