family

What’s in a Name?

I’ve been asked to be a facilitator at an upcoming equity & multiculturalism workshop.  Eric questioned what expertise I have in this area, something I’ve questioned of myself over the last two years.  What can a middle aged, white girl from the San Fernando Valley bring to the table?

For one thing, I can bring my name – and the stories of the names around me.

I came into this world with not one, but two names.  An English name and a Hebrew one.  Growing up with mostly non-Jewish friends, my Hebrew name was something used only by my grandparents and my Rabbi.  (To this day, I hear “Shayva Rivka” in my grandfather’s Eastern European accented voice.)  It was a name chosen by my mother to honor the memories of people important to her – an Ashkenazi tradition that I continued with my own children.  So why be ashamed?  Growing up, I just wanted to be like everyone else.  Eat the same foods, celebrate the same holidays, have sleepovers on the weekends.  Having another name was just another reminder of how different I was and as a kid (and even as an adult) that was just not cool.  It took intensive cultural training for me to explore this and convince myself that being different was what made me… me – and that was certainly cool.  My Hebrew name and my mother’s wedding ring are the two strongest ties I have to her now that she is gone.

My mother gave the same gifts to my children, selecting each of their Hebrew names even though she knew it was highly unlikely that they would ever use them.  Oddly enough, the most unexpected of the boys does.  My mother named Anthony, Chaim Velvel – Life Wolf.  A name that he has embraced.

Ironically, Anthony’s name is the only one we did not choose.  It came with him – at 3 already a big part of his identity.  It was a part of him and the idea of taking that away never crossed our minds.  We added his middle name in a nod to my father.  A reminder that some things are within our control and somethings are not, and that’s (generally) ok.

28 years ago I gave up my father’s name in lieu of Eric’s. At the time it allowed me strip away years of personal heartache as well as the cultural stereotypes that come from having a “Jewish last name” (remember I was pretty intent on assimilation). I now carry a surname that I have little connection to. A name I often have to correct the pronunciation and spelling of. I am not German like Eric’s ancestors and when asked “what Herchenroeder is” (an odd question in the first place) my first reaction is to be snarky and answer “my husband’s last name”. My connection to the name is in the context of Eric and the boys – TOGETHER we make H5. I have been a Herchenroeder longer than I was a Weisman, and it was only recently that I began using my maiden name publicly in an attempt to find childhood friends (thanks Facebook). After nearly 3 decades, my connection to Weisman is tenuous at best – even my 1st cousins spell it differently, yet another name story.

Having a name that is constantly mispronounced has made me conscious of my spelling and pronunciations of others’. So much so, that I recently took a Spanish course specifically to help me with pronouncing Latino names. I still often butcher them, but I’m trying.

The most amusing (and annoying) part is when a stranger says, “Herchenroeder? Do you know…?” Umm how many of us locally do you really think there are that I wouldn’t be related to all of them? Seriously? It’s not Smith or Brown or… It’s fricking Herchenroeder! And while we’re on the topic complete and total stranger, yes it IS long and no, my children did not struggle to learn how to say or spell it.

When I buried my mother, I made the decision to engrave all of her names on her headstone; her Hebrew name, the name everyone knew her by (Bubbe Malka), and her English name including all of the last names she carried through her life.  Her ties to her childhood, to my father, and to Dan who she cared for in their final years.  Each of these names was a piece of her, and made her who she was – both to herself and to the world.

My grandfather’s last name was Kohen, with a K. His children were all Cohens, with a C. I always assumed he changed his name to avoid the law or a jilted girlfriend, he was a bit of a sketchy character. When I found his naturalization certificate from 1926 I was shocked to see his name spelled with a K. Another name story, this one likely lost forever.

When I started at Chaffey, my boss asked me what I preferred to be called.  Sheri.  “Sorry, that name is already taken by 3 others.  Go by Sheryl – you’ll be the only one.”  So, for the first time in my life someone other than my mother, a school official, or the IRS was calling me Sheryl. It took years for me to realize they were talking to or about me. Now, once again thanks to Facebook, Sheryl is how most people know me.

I have a friend whose daughter is transgender.  As part of her transition, she has changed her name and that got me thinking about how strange the whole idea of naming a child is.  Names are determined by people who have never met you, often long before your entry into the universe.  That name is yours for all your days – and beyond.  How strange is that?  Like something out of Lois Lowery’s The Giver. When people refuse to use a name that a person has chosen for themselves, what are we saying to them?  Your randomly assigned designation is more important than how you see yourself, who you have developed into.

I’m not perfect by any means.  My oldest friend has selected a name for herself.  I call her Omi, because to me that is who she is.  When I introduce her to others I call her by her chosen name, or at least I try to.  I need to be better about that.  I need to honor what she wants and I need to be more diligent about it.  Because, when you love someone that’s what you do.

You can judge what circle someone knows me from based on what they call me. So many names… Sheryl, Sheri, Sher, SherBear, Mrs. H, Mom, Mama. I even have a friend that calls me Herchenroeder – easily the oddest choice. It’s pretty comical when the circles intersect and people are genuinely confused. I get it. I get confused, too.

So who am I? As I near the mid century mark, I’m still figuring that out. Whether that’s in the context of birth name, cultural name, maiden name, married name, or nickname – each has helped to build the woman I am and each is important in its own way.

Right now, THAT is what I bring to the conversation. No longer assimilating – celebrating ALL that I am and each name THAT represents. Hopefully my story inspires my colleagues (and now my followers) to be understanding and empathetic, to address people in their chosen way, to be respectful of cultural differences. To never, ever, rename someone simply out of their own convenience.

And yes, you can still call me Sheryl.

animals, family

Finding Dobby

My children have a knack for “finding” things.  Justin dragged a filthy hubcap home from a walk.  We have a street sign, too.  The tweedles once brought home a toilet. Don’t ask.

And, of course, the animals.  Common yard lizards.  A giant turtle the pet store was going to throw away.  A bearded dragon in the recycling.  And dogs.  Yes plural… dogS.

The first one was Fontana, the porch dog.  “He just followed us home.” Neutra wanted nothing to do with him, so on the front porch he lived… for about a week until he either ran away or some kindhearted person rescued him.

Not long after the week with Fontana, this happened.

“Mom we’re bringing home a dog.”

Wait, what?

“She was tied to a tree at the park (with a sign that said FREE), we couldn’t just LEAVE her there, could we!?”

Well…

That was seven years ago today.  Seven years with Dobby, our first HOUSE dog, hence her name.  Prior to Dobs, dogs lived OUTSIDE. Because… dogs.  Wylie, Corbu, Neutra, Harley.  Dogs were also not little.  For better or worse – Dobby changed it all.

In 2014 we came home to her missing – hysterically checking the pool to make sure she hadn’t fallen in and drowned – hearing from a neighbor she’d been hit by a car – checking the internet and seeing her jailed, leg in a cast – trapped at the shelter until they reopened DAYS later – ugly crying picking her up – surgery to repair the leg and hip – and then back to normal as if it was all just some horrible dream.

She wasn’t the last dog they brought home.  “Mom, I got a dog.”  I thought Aaron was kidding.  When will I learn?  And then, of course, bringing Anthony back home last year meant adding Charlie to the mix, too.

Before Luna, she was Eric’s dog. His bird hunting (and occasionally catching), adventure seeking, carpool copilot.

e and dobby

Now, Dobby’s more like me.  Middle aged.  A bit bigger in the butt than she used to be.  Yeah we can go on an adventure OR we could sit in the recliner and nap rather than “be productive”.  She’s my armrest dog.  And like me, she puts up with this shit…

Although, we’re both not sure why.

family

The Mysterious Case of the Single Shoe(s)

I have never in my 48.75 years on this planet lost a pair of shoes.  Keys? Wallet? Phone? My mind? Of course.  But shoes? Nope.

Heck, I’ve even lost a pair of pants… but that’s a story for another day.

So, HOW on Earth does my child CONSTANTLY lose his shoes? This is not a new phenomena.  Hours before leaving for camp – “Mom my boots are missing.” Dance shoes “stolen”. Leave for school with shoes, come home without them.  How does this keep happening?

In January, I found him a pair of AMAZING gold sparkly hightop Converse (a killer deal at Ross).  By early February they were gone.  GONE! “Someone threw them away at school.” Wait… what?

As if that’s not weird enough, there is currently a collection of SINGLE SHOES on my porch.  Not one single shoe (although that would be weird as well) but MULTIPLE.  Where are their mates?  We’re not talking socks that can get lost in the dryer – SHOES! Not cute little baby shoes that could easily be misplaced – GROWN ASS ADULT-SIZED SHOES!

How does one lose a SINGLE SHOE? Do you just limp home with one shoe on? Talk about a Walk of Shame.

Thanks to a clubfoot, up until age 8, I pretty much only needed left shoes.  There was probably a box in a closet somewhere filled with brand new right shoes.  Someone happening upon it probably was as perplexed as I was when I found this stash headed to the garbage (trashed since he couldn’t find the mates).

I have no idea if the other shoes will turn up.  They could have been left at school.  Or in someone’s car.  Or at his grandparent’s house. Or a parking lot.  Or the park.  Maybe they’ve gone to the Upside Down place where socks and Tupperware lids and bread twisty ties and forgotten homework live.  The shit I lost last night with him is probably there, too.

Maybe Luna took them and hid them outside as she is known to do. Or maybe… just maybe, they are in the 100 square foot dumpster we call “Aaron’s room”.

Todays moral: Like much of my life – I’m just waiting for the other shoe to drop.

family

Random Thoughts to Pass the Time

083347F4-6128-4F87-8BD4-5C5E5A1D6801.jpegI have a thing for clocks. There’s a big clock on the wall of our family room.  Just the sight of It’s a Small World makes me smile.  We’ve even been to the Sundial Bridge near Sacramento

Disclaimer – I’m not a fan of the bird clock at the Atascadero house – probably because in general birds freak me out and hearing birds every hour on the hour is a big No Thank You from me.

And watches. From the time I was little, watches were always important to me.  My favorites were the cheapie watches from McDonalds (remember the fake ones that you could put change in?).  There was the early (horrible) digital Casio that I could never get the alarm to work properly on.  I had a collection of Swatchs (including a large wall version), but who lived through the 80s and didn’t wear an obnoxious colored plastic watch? I even still have a Seiko that I received as a bat mitzvah gift circa 1982.

Eric’s bought me a few over the years – an orange Indiglo with an orange band, a Lego build your own from LegoLand (that the tweedles had smaller versions of), a fancy silver “more professional” one, and of course my iWatch. Pretty ironic since he doesn’t wear a watch and never has.

My mom bought me quite a few, too – CocaCola, Winnie the Pooh, Mickey.  All treasured but no longer worn.  Truth be told, there’s a box of watches in my bedroom that I never wear but can’t seem to part with including a large dial, glowing one that harkens back to my pre-Lasik days.

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One of my favorite watches dates back to high school – a simple black windup Timex.  Despite constantly forgetting to wind it, I wore it into adulthood.  My current watch is a powerful minicomputer that like my old Casio I use for little more than telling time (although I do feel like Dick Tracy when I answer calls through it).  At least once a week, I forget to charge it, so despite the HUGE leap in technology, apparently somethings never change.

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For a while I stopped wearing a watch at all – I relied on my phone to tell me the time – but there is something almost comforting about having a watch on my wrist.  A constant reminder that time is passing whether I am appreciating that fact or not.  I guess I should charge my damn watch.

adventure, animals, Craft, family, food, holiday

The posts that wouldn’t be OR ramblings for a Thursday morning

So many things I could have written about over the last month but I just wasn’t feeling it.

There have been adventures…

E and I went down to a cool, private botanic garden in Fallbrook a few weeks ago without the boys.  We’ve been trying to spend more time together without them.  It’s all about balance and learning how to be a couple again after being 2:5 for so long.

There were goats, lots of rustic crap, and some yummy food.

Side note: this was my first time on the 395 in Fallbrook since the accident and I think I handled it pretty dang well.  I don’t think I’ve put last year’s accident behind me but maybe I’m desensitizing a little.  Now if I could just stop seizing up every time I see a car roll in a movie.

Last Sunday I asked E if he was in the mood for a sandwich.  (AKA easy way to get him to go somewhere that he likely would not have wanted to go in the first place.)  My ulterior motive was a scrapbook store that had lost its lease and was having a close out sale.   Instead of reminding me that I have enough crap and that I had just been at the expo the day before – all he asked was if it was the store with the comfy chair.  Like I said, sandwiches get me pretty far.

Katella Deli for a shared sandwich – after 30 years we’re getting better at sharing one meal rather than bringing home a ton of leftovers.  (We’ve officially turned into that old married couple with one meal, two plates, and two glasses of water.)  It’s all about compromise and finding something we can both not just tolerate but enjoy.  The winner? A combo of pastrami AND corned beef that was taken apart so that we each got exactly what we wanted – his side with yellow mustard and mine with brown and both slathered in coleslaw.

I miss deli SO much!  It reminds me of my dad and it is IMPOSSIBLE to find anywhere near us.  We both commented on how the sandwiches at Katella seem to be shrinking.  I also noticed that the clientele was all our age and older.  Although they were packed, like always, I wonder if after we are gone, Katella will be as well.  My kids don’t get excited about deli the way we (still) do and I cannot imagine them driving an hour to get a sandwich.  I hope I’m wrong.

There was scrapbook… shopping…

I keep sitting down to craft and nothing comes out.  Kind of like my writing – over the last few weeks I’ve been dry.  I was hoping walking around the expo with Lisa would solve that.  All it did was enable me to buy more stuff.  When I went to put it away I realized between the expo and the store, I’ve managed to buy a bunch of duplicates.  I REALLY need to organize again and get some stuff done.  Crop signed up for Thanksgiving weekend so I have the incentive, now I just need the motivation.

I did play with alcohol inks a few weeks ago and made some cool tile coasters that are still sitting in the family room waiting to be sealed.  THREE WEEKS LATER!

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I probably should get on that.  I was so excited about the tiles that I went out and bought 9 more bottles of ink and some more tiles so that we could have a family craft night – ummm yeah… not sure when exactly the planets will align for us all to be home together but it was a nice thought.  The newly purchased supplies are also sitting in the family room; a constant reminder that we all lead WAY too busy of lives.

There was also a trip to Sam’s Club the other night to get a ginormous cinnamon roll.  Went for the roll, spent over $200 on stuff – mighty expensive pastry.  It would have been cheaper to get us all Cinnabons!  FYI Cinnabons would have tasted better, too – ours looked NOTHING like the Delish article.

Or caramel apples… I’ve been craving one for at least a month but the one at Myrtle Creek was disappointing and I cannot justify $10 at Rocky Mountain.  E saw that they have 13 varieties of apples on sale at Sprouts this week and I suggested that he buy one of each kind and we have an apple taste-off.  I even offered to make caramel dip.  Nope, not a self-serving suggestion at all.  😉 We’ll see if he comes through when he goes shopping.  If so, there WILL be a DIY caramel apple bar in our future!

Aaron tagged along on a trip up to Idyllwild last week.  E needed to site supervise the placement of the chapel he designed at Camp Emerson and I went along so he didn’t have to drive up alone.  Not sure why Aa came with except that he thought he was getting breakfast which apparently is NOT the same thing as run through the drive through at Mc Donald’s – good to know.  After we were done at Emerson, Aa DEMANDED “real food” so we stopped in town.  We walked around for a little bit – how have we never walked around Idyllwild despite the hundreds of trips we have made up there???? Happened upon a store that sells HAND-DIPPED ICE CREAM BARS! I search FOREVER for ice cream bars and the one time I find one I am too stuffed from eating TWO breakfasts?!?!  Good thing I can guarantee that that will not be my last trip up there so at some point, there WILL be an ice cream bar in my future.  Damn you Costco for taking them off the cafe menu! Curses!

There was a bunch of random ass shit, too…

The other night I was getting into bed and Anthony asked me why I was going to sleep in my work clothes.  I was wearing Rudolph pajama pants.  Either I’m way overdressing for sleep or I need to step up my work clothes from leggings.  Probably the latter.  Probably not going to happen though.  #leggingsarepantstoo

I finally de-Halloweened the front porch.  Took that nasty spider web crap off the trees.  That shit is worse than tinsel.  They’re both like holiday herpes!  Aa is already talking about Christmas so I am sure it’s only a matter of days before one of those damn trees is setup in my house.

Speaking of Halloween, we went to Target last week and bought about $20 in candy.  When candy is marked down 50% off that’s a shitload of candy.  I brought one bag of Reese’s to the office with me because I live with damn locusts.  E may have a few bags of Skittles hidden.  The GIANT bag on the counter is at least half way down! Locusts I tell you! (In all honesty, it’s mostly Aaron.)

The Mystery Oreos are STILL sitting on the kitchen counter from almost a month ago.  We tried them and they were just SO tasty that more than 1/2 the package is still there almost a month later.  Since it doesn’t look like anyone is going to eat them, I might need to find something else to do with them – maybe scrape the filling out and use the cookies for a cheesecake crust? Other ideas?  Want to know what we thought of them?

That being said, I just saw that they have limited edition Hot Cocoa Oreos out now.  Yeah, THOSE will be in my cart, most definitely.

Monday night I finally was able to stand on one leg. WITHOUT FALLING OVER! We’re nearing the end of yoga class so apparently the damn optimists were right and persistence does indeed pay off. Who’d have thought?

Last week, I read Dan Brown’s new book Origin.  We saw Thor: Ragnarok.  We rewatched the original Kingsman movie in hopes of seeing the sequel which is pretty much not even playing anymore.  We still haven’t watched season 2 of Stranger Things – once again trying to find a time when we can all watch it together so that no one is an asshole and spoils it for anyone else.  Yeah, not sure when/how THAT will ever happen.  It’s been a no go for the new season of Orange is the New Black, too – every time I sit down to watch it some kid starts asking me questions about characters or plot lines or the criminal justice system – sheesh, just watch it from the beginning and stop yammering on so I can hear what they are saying!

One last thing, there may have also been donuts as big as our heads, too.

The last two months of the year are filled with madness.  I have an adventure day with the boys scheduled for tomorrow (Veteran’s Day observed). Band is winding down – only 2 more performances to go!  2nd Annual Thanksgiving with the Weiners. Our 18th familversary.  Feeding pomegranates to and riding camels – YES REALLY!  CHINA!!!! Hanukkah/Festivus/Christmas.  E’s last birthday starting with a 4.

Holy shit that’s a lot of stuff – and I’m sure it’s not a complete list!  Despite the mayhem and chaos, it will be filled with family, friends, laughter, adventures, and shenanigans.  Definitely shenanigans! Because of course they are MY assholes children…

Until later llamas…

family

My mom had 2 fake boobs

Breast cancer took my mom. Not directly. Not immediately. But 30 years later the lingering effects lead to her death.

I don’t remember clearly her fight with breast cancer. I couldn’t have been more than 8 or 9. It wasn’t something the family discussed. The “C Word” was whispered (literally they said “the C Word”) and it wasn’t until I was much older that I understood why I got to spend weeks with my aunt and uncle or why we spent so many afternoons in the waiting room at City of Hope.

It was the late 70s.  Like so many other things, it just wasn’t something we ever talked about.

The surgeries left her with a flat, scarred chest. The chemo replaced her greying wavy hair with straight brown locks. She wasn’t happy with either. She wore a wig, then took to having her hair “frosted” grey and permed. She got fake boobs.

It was the late 70s. They were silicone. They leaked.  Years later she had them taken out but the combination of removed lymph nodes and the damage caused by the implants left her with no immune system to fight off the infection that eventually took her.

I’ve watched too many around me deal with this. Breast cancer runs in my family. My mother wasn’t the first; she wasn’t the last either.  I’ve had my own scare. We all have our stories. Stories of faith, and hope, and too often loss.

40 years later, I still remember that City of Hope lobby.  I’m about the same age as she was. It’s why I go for annual mammograms. It’s why I get nervous when I feel anything new. Why I TRIED to stay strong when Juli had to go for a biopsy that thankfully was negative. Like my mother’s chest, her breast cancer left me scarred.

This is MY breast cancer awareness month story. Someday, maybe we won’t have these stories to share. Hopefully.

family

maj!

Growing up to the sound of West… Three Crack… Bam… MAJ! The clacking of tiles. The laughter of my mom’s friends.

There was no bothering them on maj night. And no eating their snacks either.

I inherited her mahjong set when she passed. And in the garage it sat. She never taught me how to play. No one I knew played. I figured it was a lost art.

me and harrietUntil Harriet.

Harriet offered to teach us all. So around her kitchen table we clustered one night and all those memories came flooding back.

And the group grew. And we taught Anthony, too. And now years later, we’re still playing.

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Anthony, do you want to learn how to play instead of just lurking in the background?
We’re not always good at following the “rules” and we help each other out. We lose track of whose turn it is and the way the walls move. We joke about not calling the Mahjong Police on us.

The change we win goes in a pot for an end of the year dinner out. No winners. No losers.  (Which is a good thing since I rarely win.)

There’s just something magical about this cluster of women. They listen to my venting about the boys – delighting in their triumphs and laughing at their escapades. Four of them have become honorary grandmas, members of our family, participants in our celebrations and holidays.

I don’t always make it to maj night, the job and kid schedules often get in the way but when I walk in announced and unexpected I am greeted with love and welcome. Just like always.

img_3196These amazing women who brought back a piece of my mom to me.  And that’s how I win at maj, every time.