My babies

Monday, November 26, 2012

Comfort food

Thanksgiving just passed. We're in the throes of a major kitchen remodel so it's a hard thing not to have a kitchen on the holiday most associated with home cooking than any other. However, it has been years since I've cooked a Thanksgiving meal.

Last year, we went to Portland and had an Hawaii style feast with NO turkey. The two years prior to that and again this year, we ate at our friend's restaurant where he preps a beautiful spread complete with turkey.

Next year though, I'm going to make my own Thanksgiving meal in my new kitchen. One would think the remodel will be well over and done by then, right? So why wouldn't I have my kitchen to prepare a fantastic Thanksgiving meal?

That's the thing about Thanksgiving -- for my husband, it is full of comfort food, specifically, mashed potatoes and gravy. I mean, I'll make those things. But for me, Thanksgiving is incomplete without my mom's pancit and lumpia. Oh, and there must be pipikaula or poke to have with the beer and football; Uncle Johnny usually brought that. Would be nice if we could have some of Uncle Peter's noodles and maybe a pot of dinagaraan (aka dinuguan) with which to trick the haoles. That trick was a favorite of Uncle Morris -- usually played on boyfriends of the teenaged cousins of my childhood. There was always a pot of rice that didn't fall apart when scooped, but wasn't gluey or soupy. And the best part of the turkey was the jook that came the day after.

For me, comfort food is hot rice and crispy fried spam. Or maybe Portugese sausage and eggs. Even a hot bowl of S&S saimin with kamaboko fish cake is the food of my youth. And yes, of my soul.

I like go home.




Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Sorry

Sorry is an interesting word. I've been thinking about it lately because there are many instances when this word would be appropriate. I try hard to be understood by other people. I try to be careful in the meanings of the words I choose to speak.

Sorry doesn't have to be the hardest word.

The other day, my son was tossing the ball with my dog while we were watching a movie as a family. My daughter had set a coffee mug on the piano bench, a coffee mug that was part of a set I had received as a present from my husband for my birthday last year. When predictably, my dog jumped for the ball and knocked it with her nose to hit the coffee mug and sent it crashing to the floor, I was upset.

My son refused to say he was sorry. I get that he thought it was an accident. He said that the dog hit the ball and it in turn hit the cup, so he was unapologetic. My dog for her part was properly apologetic. She came up to me, ears folded back, big eyes begging forgiveness and climbed in my lap for kisses. My daughter said she was sorry also since she had left the cup to bring up to the kitchen later.

In this case, saying you're sorry could have meant, "I know it was an accident, so it's not exactly my fault, but I'm sad that your cup is now broken. I see that it upsets you that the cup is broken so I feel compassion for your loss." See, would that have been so bad? For example, when you hear that somebody's grandpa died and you say, "I'm so sorry," you're not saying that you killed Grandpa and are responsible. You're saying that it is sad that Grandpa is dead and that you know that the person is upset by that. You are displaying compassion.

Another weird misunderstanding of the word, "sorry." A friend of mine was looking for new work as his present place of employment had become a hostile work environment. He had a very promising interview but in the end, didn't get the job. When he told me, I said, "I'm so sorry." To which he replied, "No need to apologize. It wasn't your fault."

See, again, here I was using the word, "sorry," as a way to express compassion for my friend's disappointment with not getting the job. I wasn't trying to claim blame for him not getting the job nor did I think I had anything to do with him not getting that job. It isn't as if I called the interviewer and told her not to hire him. I didn't drive him to the interview and get him there late. I didn't spill mustard all over his suit before the interview so that he smelled like a hotdog. See, those infractions would have merited his statement of, "no need to apologize." I was NOT apologizing. I was expressing compassion.

So because I'm not feeling terribly creative. I'm not going to put a button on this essay.

Sorry.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Ohana

My cousin Grace came to visit a couple of days ago. She and her husband just left this morning.

A little history -- her story is so close to my story not just because we are double first cousins (her dad and my dad & her mom and my mom were siblings), but because we were on two ends of a spectrum. She was the eldest grandchild and I was the youngest for a good long time. She's 12 years older than I and we resemble each other so much that I simply think if I want to see what I look like in the future, I just need to look at my cousin.

Damn, I still look good in 12 years.

On this visit, she told me stories about our family -- the one that existed before I was born.

I was 2 years away from being born when my father's father died. The stories I can remember being told of him weren't terribly flattering. I remember being proud that he was a luna (boss) on the sugar plantation so he was one of the few who rode a horse. But I was also told that he was a womanizer who would find the prettiest of the new arrivals and bed them if he could. I was told that he was merciless when it came to punishing his children for misdeeds -- that he'd tell the kids to cut their own switches for their whippings. He was vicious to the point that my grandmother would intervene asking if he wanted to kill his children that day.

But this week, I was told of a grandfather that I didn't even know I missed. The one I think I would have loved. The one whose lap I would have crawled up in and in whose arms I would have fallen asleep. If only he had waited here to meet me.

My cousin told me about crabbing with my grandfather, all the uncles and her dad. My grandfather was a water luna for the plantation so he had the keys to all the gates and roads on the plantation. There was a beach that was only accessible with Papa's keys and every Sunday, the extended family would get together to fish.The kids would wade or swim out to a platform from which my grandfather would lower a cone shaped crab pot. He would tie aku head to the cage and because the visibility was so clear the kids would peer over the edge of the platform to watch the crabs climb to the pot. At some point, Papa would judge the pot to be full enough and he and the uncles would huki it up as fast as they could. They'd dump their catch into a big bin that they would bring back for Mama to cook.

On this particular day, all the uncles were ready to go home with their spoils. They tried to convince my grandfather to leave but Papa was sure there was a big one just waiting to be caught. He lowered the pot one more time and they saw it:  a huge Samoan crab.  The kids held their breath as they and Papa watched it cautiously approach the tattered aku head. The second the last leg crossed over into the basket, Papa and the uncles quickly pulled the pot out of the water. Papa threw it onto the dock and the big crab was spoiling for a fight. It had its claws up ready to pinch and was hurriedly scooting towards the side of the dock. My father was wearing rubber boots that day, got behind the crab and stepped on its back. Uncle Johnny quickly put sticks into the crab's claws so it would clamp down on them. So satisfied, the remaining two brothers tied up the claws with lassoed string and into the bin it went.

The family returned to the house in Ewa victorious.

Grandma prepped the pot, putting in tomatoes, onions, garlic. All my cousin could remember was that it was a big pot on the stove and although Grandma was talking in Ilocano so she couldn't understand what she said, Grandma was obviously happy. They were going to eat good tonight. Then Grandma put the crabs into the boiling water including the large Samoan crab.

At first, nothing happened. But there was fight still left in that big crab. Grace remembers its legs reaching up over the edge of the pot. Mama grabbed the pot lid and slammed it down repeatedly on the pot, forcing the would be escapee to meet its fate.

My cousin doesn't remember if she ate those crab. Only that watching Grandma cook them was very traumatic.

The story of my grandfather crabbing with his adult boys just enchanted me. I think because I'm a parent myself, the thought of the teaching and training my grandfather must have given his boys puts me in awe. The way my cousin remembers it, she was maybe 7 years old at the time, the uncles all moved like a well oiled machine. Each one knew exactly what to do and how to do their part. It was over in moments. She didn't say but I imagine how contented my grandfather must have been to see his boys work together so well. Even the trust of throwing that prize crab onto the dock just knowing his boys would take care of it amazes me. I imagine that those Sundays must have been the culmination of everything he had come to this country to achieve. His kids were all educated or on their way to being so. His boys had children of their own and they knew how to fish and crab and clam -- to harvest from the bounty of the sea -- to feed this brood. His boys were so close, they worked together as one.

Shortly after the claiming of that large Samoan crab, my grandfather went to have lunch with my cousin's mom. Aunty Lydia was a physician. He complained of difficulty swallowing. Aunty took him to lunch to observe Grandpa's ability to swallow which had become so impaired he ended up spitting out his food as he couldn't make it go down. Aunty ordered studies and discovered then that Papa had a brain tumor.

It was operated on and while they were able to remove the tumor, during recovery he suffered a massive stroke. He was never the same again.  My grandmother refused to let him go and with her care he lived for another 2 years. He died when Grace was around 10 years old.

I wish I had been able to meet him. I wish I had memories like Grace had of Grandpa.

Ah well, at least I have stories of him now.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Another one bites the dust

Yesterday was my birthday.

I'm actually pretty accustomed to having my birthday lose out to the needs of Halloween festivities. I'm also accustomed to having to plan my own celebrations because often times they don't happen unless I do.

But this year, that didn't happen. Well, mostly. But I think babysteps and kudos are deserved all the way around.

This year I gave a list of 3 things that I'd like to do to my husband. I made arrangements for my younger kids and assumed that my eldest would be bailing to hang with his friends. I only made the caveat that everybody needed to be home by 8:30.

And then I waited to see if anything would come to fruition.

A few days ago, I had a touch of anxiety and worry that nothing was going to happen. In years past, I'd tell my friends that I didn't know what was happening on my birthday because I'd hoped there were plans that I was unaware of. I'd wait to see and then discover on the day that nothing was happening,  so I'd go trick-or-treating and have some cake. I suppose people who don't have their birthdays on Halloween and have dinner at Red Robin as their back up plan versus trick-or-treating would envy me. I announced that it was fine if we didn't do anything on my birthday. If tickets weren't purchased or what have you, we didn't have to push it. The day was going to be busy enough.

I gave him a way out. But thankfully, he didn't take it.

It was a satisfyingly busy day. I woke up half an hour earlier than normal so I could turn my youngest into a zombie princess. Second year she's opted for that. I just covered her beautiful face and neck with lots of tattoo gashes and teeth marks, put on a sparkly rhinestone head band, and put her in a dressy dress. Done.

Then I was off to my second child's school to chaperone their field trip to the science museum. I had been warned to bring ear plugs but the kids were not noisy. It was a fun field trip. My group of 7 girls had 2 rabid Justin Beiber fans and when a boy who vaguely resembled Justin arrived at the museum, it was all I could do to keep them from assault and battery charges. They kept "accidentally" touching him or bumping into him and then running back to the group to tell us how they touched the Justin Beiber look alike. That poor boy. I was able to keep my girls together by having them self select buddies, inform them that they had to tell me where they were wandering off to so that I would not panic, and lastly, when I say "Potato," they say, "Potahto." It worked out pretty well. If I said potato, I knew I had their attention if they answered back potahto.

We got back home at around 3:30 PM. Disappointingly, I didn't get to wear my Jessica Rabbit costume.  I had tried it out a few days prior and did a spectacular job on the makeup. I posted pictures of the completed look on my Facebook and Google+. I had lots of positive feedback. And then showtime came and I couldn't get my eyelashes on right, the lips looked funny, the eyebrows were misshapen and  I couldn't get the wig to sit on my head correctly. So with 20 minutes to spare, I scrubbed my face, put on a pretty dress and regular makeup and ran out of the house not dressed as anything but a regular person.

My husband took me to a bar near the ferry for dinner and drinks. Then we ran off to the Underworld Rated R tour. I had hoped it was a special Halloween themed tour but it was just their adults only tour. It was really entertaining and fun. After having drinks with some of the other tour patrons post tour, we headed back towards the ferry. Having just missed it, we opted to go to the Seattle's Great Wheel ferris wheel on the waterfront.

What a spectacular view! If it hadn't been nighttime, I think I might have been a little more nervous about the height. But since it was evening, it was just a pretty time.

We came home to kids who were up too late but who had been waiting for cake since they didn't yet have enough sugar coursing through their blood streams. And I unwrapped my present -- a Duostar Karaoke set with hundreds of songs included. So excited to play!

It was a very very good day.