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Sprung

    Tuesday I watched Five climb the day camp bus stairs for the first time, half a step behind Eight, and pile into the same seat. They maneuvered bodies and backpacks like two tortoises sharing the backseat of a cab. As the yellow tube pulled away, so too my neon jumpsuit and shackles.

    I’m out on good behavior for the next five weeks.

    I began doing hard time on the stay-at-home circuit in 2004, and haven’t had a quiet day in an office entirely devoted to work outside of motherhood since. Suddenly, from 9 to 4:30 weekdays, my house sounds like the pause button—not just mute, but also frozen. Nobody but The Fur Bastard reads over my shoulder as I type, no smell my feet screams nor Lego bin-dumps, no did you flush and wash call and response, no worthy quotes to stealthily status-update. Freed-up from tracking time outs, my trusty microwave timer rouses only to warm-up my coffee. The solitude is bliss; it’s a milestone. I try not to dwell on the empty rooms foreshadowing my Isotoner slipper years.

    Having flexibility in my schedule intimidates my newly-sprung sensibilities, as I’ve had scarce authority to set the daily itinerary according to my own needs. My butt wonders what happened to its pogo stick–it hasn’t seen this much inaction since my days at Chicago switchboards. My internal timer needs to adjust to DayCamp Savings Time—it’s programmed for two hour maximum child-free increments in which appointments, exercise, work and hygiene management must compete for attention. I can have fresh air whenever it suits me, not just in the park with the other inmates during yard time. This morning my bladder nearly jumped out and kissed the ground when I got up to use the ladies’ at the very first sign of pressure. Yesterday I almost auto-ejected from my stylist’s chair—my internal warden notifying me that visiting hours with myself were coming to a close. Then I remembered I had 5.5 more hours before pickup, plus as many phone calls as I wanted–free of ‘I said I’m on the phone’ mime.

    A whole world exists out here. Today I gave my kindly financial advisor 30 years of my family history in answer to his question about our retirement planning. Last night I accepted another volunteer position I had no business accepting, but she kept calling me young and saying such nice things about me (my new-found freedom makes me vulnerable to such predators). I had lunch with my mom and she took me shopping for a dress; she did not beg for soda with caffeine at lunch, nor play bongos on my butt in the boutique. I did not ask her seventy five times if she needed to go potty, but the threat of recidivism looms.

    Look for me back in my jumpsuit for the last two weeks of August, and pray for a merciful parole board. Consider writing a letter or two. Pokemon cards couldn’t hurt.

    0 thoughts on “Sprung”

    1. Your productivity (and of great things) while on lockdown has been remarkable, so I can’t even imagine how much ass you’ll be kicking now. Let freedom ring.

    2. Okay, you’re allowed one volunteer position, but the answer to any more such questions is, “No.” Got that?

      You can save the world when you’re done with revisions.

    3. I am snapping up some of your parole. LUNCH! SOON! Quick before you’re locked up again. Oh and I have my voice back so it won’t be a one sided conversation.

    4. I love this. Both of my kids are in full-day school for the first time this coming fall. Until after Labor Day, I will never since they were born have had five days in a row of 8-4 to get work done. Your bliss is tantalizing. I can hardly wait.

      Also, this I can have fresh air whenever it suits me, not just in the park with the other inmates during yard time. is genius.

      Enjoy the summer!

    5. I get free days too from time to time this summer. But I’m starting to have my eye on sleep-away camp. I think I’m getting too close to parole and it’s starting to mess with my head.

    6. Since I have a home office I understand this freedom quite well. I remember the day that the youngest followed oldest and there were no interruptions, but I have to admit that the silence was deafening.

      But no longer, now that quiet is simply charming.

    7. This sounds like a wonderful world. Unfortunately, i’ve got life without parole with the full time job. I will hope for a lenient judge one of these days.

    8. I hear George Michael singing “Freedom! Freedom!” Enjoy it while you can. The next big stretch of no-kid-at-home time, aka, the empty nest, might not be as rewarding. 😉

    9. The first time this happens, it feels weird: like you lost your purse or something.

      By the second time, it’s all good.

      Something you get used to REAL fast.

      It finally does happen, the moment does come … a moment you never thought would happen b/c of being submerged in motherhood.

      Now, please don’t go and get even more brilliant on us, all right?

      It’s impossible for me to get into McSweeney’s as it is without you stepping up your already triple A game.

    10. Nice!

      Isn’t it glorious?

      I find I have trouble avoiding the Isotoner-slipper thoughts around bedtime, but other than that the days just fly by. You can eat anything you want and no one will ask for it!

    11. I’m afraid if this happened to me I would just stand there and bounce a ball against the wall as I wouldn’t know what else to do. (Also, I’m always telling my kids – and husband – to stop touching my damn butt)

    12. As others have commented, bongos on our butts are popular instruments. We should get our bongoers together and let ’em start a band, only they will have to substitute something for our butts. Mine is tired of the bongo role, also.

    13. Sigh… This is the sad part of homeschooling. I haven’t ever had a time that I’ve been completely “kid-free” that wasn’t a sanity-saving vacation. And those are usually just a few days away with my husband which is, although lovely, not completely free like 5 days a week in my house all alone would be…

      Enjoy!

    14. I loved this…. Makes me think of my mom and how happy she looked when she’d wave good-bye to us on the school bus each summer vacation day 🙂
      ENJOY xo jj

    15. Lucky! My kids camps have all been half day camps. By the time I take them there and get home I have to go right back and get them.

      I like Isotoner slippers.