Here’s the HuffPo piece… for those of you who let me know that you don’t want to go over there. You can’t say I’m not accommodating.

It’s been almost three weeks since I left my youngest child at college. Given how many times I’ve done this since I took my eldest, seven years ago, you might think it would be old hat. You’d think I was done crying over kids who leave home — that this transition would be easy? You’d be wrong. My youngest is one of the kindest, most endearing people I know. Having him in our home has been a joy for 19 years, and seeing him off to this exciting new phase in his life was, selfishly, much harder than I anticipated.

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Packed and ready, he headed off to college

Embracing all the change that comes with his departure is 100 paper cuts of adjustment. I’ve been working on balance from the time he was accepted to college, through packing up his things to go, orientation, and each day that he’s been gone since. I wasn’t maudlin around him, or in any way clingy. I ignored that tiny voice inside that was screaming: Where did all the years go? You promised to stay my little boy! I’m not ready for this! What he saw instead was a competent mother, who was there to help him settle in at college. He’s attending an incredible college that is perfectly suited to him. The five days of orientation we shared left me confident that he’ll be happy there. As I prepared to fly home the last day, his room looked surprisingly lived-in; any necessary shopping was done, he was excited about classes and getting settled.

Still, as I gathered my things and gave him a hug, on the last night, it finally sunk in for him too. “Wait! Where are you going?” I could see the inevitable suddenly occur to him. This is it darlin’. I’m headed out in the morning; this is our goodbye — until Thanksgiving. He winced. Again, he’s that kid, my sentimental one. I wanted to grab him and say, Oh Man! I’m going to miss you so much! But he knows that. I knew that this goodbye was (almost) as hard for him as it was for me, so I didn’t make it harder. I looked around his dorm room, and said: You’re going to have an amazing time here; I’m so excited for you!

It may be hard to accept the passage of time, but I meant it. He’ll be fine, and so will I. This is something we’ve been working toward since he was a little boy. He walked me across campus to my car, and gave me a longer-than-usual hug. When I waved goodbye and drove away, he was heading out for the first of what will surely be many nights of socializing and managing his own life, and I felt myself beginning the process of letting go of the boy who left our home.

I will no longer be waiting up, or checking in on daily things. As I did with his siblings, I’ll go to sleep each night, from now on, not knowing if he is safe in his bed. I won’t call him to dinner; in fact, most days I won’t know what he eats for dinner. His friends won’t be people I’ve known since they were in kindergarten. I’ll have to assume the best, and sleep without knowing the things I’ve taken for granted for his entire life. That’s the new reality when our kids go off to college; we all shift and resettle into a new normal. And this is how it should be.

Seeing my youngest child off to college was not at all like I thought it would be. I was less flustered than so many parents I met or saw over the four days of orientation, who were saying goodbye to their first college-bound child. I was fine when my son didn’t text me throughout orientation days, when we were on different schedules. Though I wrestled with the impending goodbye, I slept fine in my hotel room the first night he slept in his dorm. When we all heard that several kids landed in trouble after a campus party, I wasn’t wondering if my kid had been there (he told me he was) or whether he’d gotten in trouble but wasn’t telling me; he’s always been honest with us. I’m not worried about him partying or looking for thrills; it’s not in his character. I feel lucky in that regard. He’s not my only child; I’ve seen pretty much everything.

What did take me by surprise this time around, was how real it all felt, and how keenly aware I was of each transition. This is the last time I’ll do these things. This was not my first Bed, Bath and Beyond rodeo. I went there knowing what my son would need and what he wouldn’t. Still, I felt all of those pillows and comforters as if I haven’t done this before, because it is his first time pimping out a dorm. Each of my kids had different plans for their dorms, but some things never change: you need wall hooks; your kid who has thrown his clothes on the floor forever, suddenly wants hangers; storage bins are critical, and it all matters so much. Buying some Nutella or ramen, for late night snacks, was a personal touch.

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So many hangers, and one big Nutella

The first time I went to a college orientation, my eldest child was moving across the country and it was the first time I was watching one of my children leave home. I was overwhelmed by the statistics that colleges are obliged to share, regarding things like safety, student mental health, partying and accepting your child’s autonomy. I was that mom who stood at the door as my girl blithely told me goodbye, and ran off to her first dorm meeting. I held my head high all the way to the parking lot, but cried for most of the two-hour drive to Boston’s Logan airport. By the time I took my middle child to college, I’d seen enough of college life that it wasn’t as emotional. He was confident and excited; he met friends day one, and I knew he’d do great. I felt a distinct lump in my throat knowing that he’d be living a flight away, but the transition was smoother.

However, I heard everything in a new way this time. I experienced the four days of orientation through the bittersweet filter of “this is the last time I’ll do this.” This is the last time I’ll help deck out a new dorm, negotiate meal plans, meet first roommates, and listen to professors and Chancellors tell me that I’m making the best investment in sending my child to this college over any other college. This is the last time I’ll have to tear a Band-Aid off my heart and accept that one of my children is flying off into world … and that he/she will never come home the same chick that left.

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He will be navigating a big new world

The next time I see my son he will have spent months navigating a whole new world too. He’ll, undoubtedly, have tried a lot of new things. I know he’ll come home with a few of his own Band-Aids torn off. He will have learned that the rigors of a challenging four-year college are not the same as a high school AP class. He will learn that the world is not as comfortable as one where you’ve known all of your friends since kindergarten, and they have your back. He’ll also discover new passions and interests that he probably didn’t look for in that sheltered world of old friends, a dog who’s loved him for 15 years and a school system so sure that they had him pegged, that they didn’t offer other options. College is full of options.

I tuned-in to different messages this time and I heard new things about sending my child off to college. I listened with renewed interest as we talked about encouraging self-advocacy in our college-age children, after years of a various levels of enablement. I was impressed by a brilliant presentation where we were reminded to call and just chat, not check up on our kids. It’s so important that they hear about what’s happening at home: We’ve bought a new chair for the T.V. room, dad’s going on a bike weekend with friends and I’m going to explore Portland with mine… Or, news that can be much harder from a distance: the death of a pet, health changes, etc.. Our kids need to hear what’s happening while they’re away, so they don’t come home to changes that suggest their absence doesn’t matter.

As confident and excited as your kids might be to start this new phase, they will be sleeping in a new room, with someone they probably just met. When we first took my eldest son to school, many years ago, his little brother said to me, on the way home, “I feel so sad for E.” Why, I asked, he’s going to have a great time! “Tonight he’s going to sleep in a room where no one loves him; that’s so sad,” he told me. The first night my now 19-year-old boy slept in his dorm room for the first time, his little- boy voice echoed in my head, even if I know he too will have a great time.

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A guy and his dorm room

This can be daunting, no matter how alpha or introverted your child is. While we don’t need to coddle or worry about every change they face, it’s good to simply ask “how is that going?” — “That” being any number of adjustments that your child may be facing. Leading with: Are you getting your assignments done? Did you drink at the party, or are you seeing someone, is likely to shut the lines of communication down– even if you want the answers. One parent wisely suggested scheduling informational conversations with kids, and leaving other chats for shooting the breeze. I love that idea! When both of you know that you’re going to have a serious talk about grades/parties/money, etc., it’s likely to go much better than when you blind-side them with these same questions. Lead with “how have things been going, are you having fun?”

Many parents don’t realize that colleges cannot legally call you or share information about your child, health-related or academics, without your child’s consent, regardless of who is paying the tuition. I knew this, but was relieved to hear that more schools now have release of information forms that allow your child to give permission to share these things. You might not hear whether they went to get free condoms at the health center, but you may hear about their grades — if you’ve both signed a release.

In an era where parents are often very involved in their children’s lives, up until the moment they leave for college, all of these changes can be challenging for kids and parents alike. What role do you, as a parent, want to play in your child’s college life? The age-old advice of “choose your battles wisely” is prudent. How often do you really need to hear from your child, to feel comfortable? Negotiate that and work out a mutually agreeable plan; then honor it. Do you really need to know everything your child is doing? Letting go is critical as your children grow up and figure out how to navigate the world they’ll live in as adults. There are bound to be some bumps in the road, but that’s how we learned and that’s how our kids will learn too.

Change isn’t always easy, but it’s vital. While I miss my youngest — his humor, his sparkle, his presence in our home — I’m comforted knowing that he’s charting hisfuture and living out his choices, just as I’m charting my new normal. We’re all right where we’re supposed to be, and I’m learning to embrace that.

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Outside the dorm, getting ready to say goodbye

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If you enjoyed this post: Please Like it; Share it; it’s much appreciated. If you’d like to read more of my work, check out my blog Tales From the Motherland, or follow me onTwitter and Facebook.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 22 Comments

This doesn’t happen often, but my new post is an original Huffington Post piece. I spent weeks writing it, and hope you’ll stop by HuffPo and show some love. For the record, my nest is never empty: my older son is home for a while, and my two nephews are living with us. But seeing my youngest off was a big step and it’s taken weeks to write this. Stop by Huffington (here) and let me know what you think.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 8 Comments

Another week, and I seem to fall further behind in everything! But each time I see the photo prompt, I can’t resist! Friday Fictioneers is a magical place, where writers spin stories from a photo. Rochelle Wisoff-Fields manages to keep us in line and provide inspiration each week, as our talented leader. Visit her blog Addicted To Purple to read more stories, or join in. This week’s photo comes from the talented Marie Gail Stratford.

© Marie Gail Statford

© Marie Gail Statford

No Means No

“Come on baby, just a little kiss? You know I’m crazy for you!”

Meg squirmed past Gerry, grabbing the tray of drinks. It was bad enough that half the customers hit on her, but working with Gerry made for an endless night.

“I need two gin and tonics and a Stoli on ice,” she said, avoiding eye contact.

“Megsy, you’re killing me! That pouty way you play hard to get!”

He reached for a glass and ran a finger up her arm.

“Gerry, stop it! It’s all just a game of cat and mouse to you, and I’m not playing!”

(word count: 100)

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. Honest, constructive feedback is always appreciated. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 48 Comments

Friday Fictioneers is a magical place, where writers spin stories from a photo. Rochelle Wisoff-Fields manages to keep us in line and provide inspiration each week, as our talented leader. Visit her blog Addicted To Purple to read more stories, or join in. This week’s photo comes from “The Reclining Gentleman.”

© The Reclining Gentleman

© The Reclining Gentleman

Jesus Saves

“Don’t worry, baby, everything’s ok.”

The dusky night whizzes by his speeding car.

“There’s evil in this world… but the Lord guides me.”

He glances at her sleepy face in the mirror and smiles.

“No more tears.”

He pulls the car over to the center of the bridge, opens the car door and unbuckles the car seat. His four year-old daughter wraps her tiny arms around his neck.

“You’re safe, baby. Jesus saves.”

He kisses her silky cheek and drops her over the railing, into the frigid water ninety feet below, then turns back around–– a deer in the headlights.

(100 words, exactly)  Most days the news is too much to bear. Some days, a photo reminds me of that. As always, I welcome your honest, constructive feedback. Please leave a comment.

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. Honest, constructive feedback is always appreciated. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 63 Comments

A Fruit fly!

Hot damn! It’s that time of year again, and I’m losing my mind chasing these horrible creatures around my kitchen, with wet hands (because, if you didn’t know this: it’s easier to kill them with wet hands) and clapping constantly. My husband said he’s going to buy me a set of canastas, and my adult kids just watch in horrified fascination. I can’t just leave them alone. Clap! Clap! Snap of the dishtowel! I’ll tell you: I’m good at this.

I was away for 8+ weeks, at BlogHer’15 and waiting for & meeting my new grandson in Israel, and when I got home, I thought I’d missed them. There wasn’t a fruit fly in site, and I was over the moon. Yes, that is seriously one of the first things I noticed. I thought I’d somehow gotten my cake and eaten it too, for a change. But lo and behold, they were simply waiting for me to let my guard down, and leave some wine out. Kerplowie! Fruit flies everywhere! Clouds of them on my dahlias. Bursts of them on the grapes. Isolated stragglers drowning in my Syrah. Clap! Clap!

And so, I’m bringing back this perennial favorite (if for no one else but me)… in the end, how can Barry White ever not make you smile? Though admittedly, now when I hear Barry White, talking in that infamous deep, low, sexy voice, I can’t help but wonder if it’s Flight of the Concords (and you can thank me for this gem too)! But when it’s Barry White and fruit flies fucking, well… bring it on!

Warning:  This may gross you out. It may make your skin crawl. So many insects, so much sex.

I am losing my mind. Before you assume I’m talking about my dining room table still, I’m not. It’s fruit flies that are driving me mad this week, not the mess on my table. Those tiny little insects that appear every year around the end of summer, and then procreate like crazy all over my beautiful, fresh produce. Those infuriating dots that fly up in little clouds when I come into my kitchen, from about late August to mid-September, when the cold finally puts an end to their siege. Northern varieties actually hibernate, which seems cute in bears, but disgusting in fruit flies. However, while they’re around, they seem to multiply by the hour!  At my writing group last night, they began to congregate around the wine glasses and before the meeting was through, we all swore they had doubled in numbers! The little guys are fu@#ing all the time!

Surprisingly, there’s a lot to learn about about these insidious little sex addicts flies:

The fruit fly, of the species Drosophila: which includes D. Melanogaster, D. Immigrans, and D. Simmulans… includes approximately 1,500 verities in total. The melanogaster is widely used in scientific studies, especially genetic studies. In fact, this little household nuisance is a labratory super star! Because they actually replicate many of the same genetic make-ups found in humans, they can be used for studies in all kinds of areas, inexpensively and without harm to humans or other animals. They’re especially popular because their chromosomes are quite large and thus easy to see under a microscope. Thomas Hunt Morgan studied fruit flies, and won the Nobel Prize in 1933 for identifying chromosomes as the “vector for the inheritance of genes.”  Fruit flies are not just studied in genetics, but are in fact, the most studied and researched bug in the world!  They have a short life cycle (1-6 wks, depending on the variety. The local/Pacific NW variety live about 8-10 days), interesting genetics,  they’re easy to breed, and let’s face it, I’d rather see them do scientific testing on fruit flies than other animals. Gives you a slightly different perspective when you find them swarming around your juice, eh?

That’s right folks, fruit fly porn! It’s all over the internet!
image: imp.ac.at

Sex and fruit flies? Seriously, these guys are putting humans to shame. Males in the drosophila group are known to have the longest sperm cells of any organism on earth (300x longer than human sperms), and they are wired to use those sperm. These guys go on, and on… When you see them congregating around your bananas, your ripe peaches, anything in your kitchen, they are there for a quick bite, and to score with female fruit flies and create little baby fruit flies.  They are not there to drink your wine. They are doing the big nasty all over your kitchen people! Seriously.

I’ve already caught 6!

 

Fruit flies are not that smart. Ok, this one surprised me frankly. I’d always heard that they were, but apparently not. Fruit flies are focused on eating and fu@#ing reproducing, and can be trapped fairly easily. Wine, overripe fruit or cider vinegar make for best baits, and any container with a small funnel-shaped opening in its top works. The little guys follow the scent and once inside, generally can’t figure out how to get back out. Duh. I set up a cider vinegar trap today, and it seems to really works. I did write: “For a good time–>” on the glass, in tiny fruit fly print. I am currently also on a stealth mission, when I’m home:  I sneak into my kitchen at irregular intervals,  and hit them with a sharp snap of a dish towel. My aim is good, the flies are stupid.

Did you know that fruit flies sleep. For real. They stop what they’re doing, close their little eyes and rest for a while. They’ve been used in numerous sleep studies, with applications for humans. If I knew when they were sleeping, I could get them all in one fell swoop! Clap!

No matter what I do, there’s a party going on on my compost bin 24/7.

These guys are drawn to any fruit that is edging toward the overripe stage, and the were all over my perfectly new grapes yesterday! If it’s brown, bruised, oozing, or soft, use it or get rid of it. Females like to lay their eggs (up to 500) in rotting fruit. So,when it’s fruit fly season… saving those bananas for baking may also mean fruit fly eggs/maggots/babies in your banana bread. Gross, but true. If you have a compost bin (bravo for you, but), keep it emptied and keep it spotlessly clean. Ours sits on the kitchen counter and has become the main brothel hang out for the flies that taunt me. When I walk into my kitchen, I can practically hear them calling to each other: “Hey baby!” “Looking for a good time?” It’s almost enough to force my hand on the compost issue altogether. Almost. I will not be brought down by tiny fornicators. For now I’ll just plan to leave the windows open from time to time, let the kitchen cool way down and hope they freeze their libidos off.

And now, the pièce de résistance (the most important or remarkable feature) you’ve all come here for, Barry White and fruit fly porn. Rated R: Mature audiences only for this video:

Still want to read more about fruit flies (really?), check out these sites:    Science in Society, Wikipedia/Drosophila, About.Com Insects (fruit fly trap), The Bug Squad-Pest Control (Very cool site)

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. Honest, constructive feedback is always appreciated. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 23 Comments
© clipartsheep

© clipartsheep

I’m just messin’ around! A cheap trick, admittedly. I’m not trying to win a million dollars, and the only help I need or want, is your feedback and support. Easy, peasy. If you feel cheated, you can step away now and I won’t know you were here. 

This year I decided to try some new things with my writing; I want to push myself to do more in regards to putting my writing out there. Huffington Post has definitely been a challenge, and it’s been both rewarding and frustrating, depending on the piece and the day. Another challenge I took on was the 2015 Flash Fiction Challenge, sponsored by NYC Midnight (currently, they are sponsoring their annual screenwriting challenge). It is a 3 part competition, in which participants are given a genre, an item that must appear in the story and a location that must be featured as well. Three things that must be used in the story, and 1,000 words maximum to tell the story. Prompts are given at 11:59pm on a given date, and then writers have exactly 48 hours to write, edit and submit their stories. 

I signed up for this competition in early summer, before I went to BlogHer’15; before I knew I’d be gone for more than 8 weeks, or that being there for the birth of my grandson would be so enormously impactful. As things go, it was not surprising when the date was announced and my daughter went into labor, that very day. So I wrote my first story in the hospital, in between periods of heavy contractions but little progression of labor, and long hours of waiting. I wrote it on about 3 hours of sleep in 50 hours awake. I was not in top form; that’s for sure! I asked my family and a few friends to read and give me feedback, as I went along. It was as serious push (not as serious as the one that brought my grandson 15 hours later, but…), but I sent my story in a few hours before the deadline and at 986 words. 

This was a challenge on so many levels. I am not a mystery writer; I’ll start there. It is not my comfort zone, and I struggled with how to build tension, create mystery, but write in my own style. I struggled with a lot of things. However, I liked being pushed and it was fun.  The wait has not been as fun! However, we were notified of our standing yesterday and I made it into the top 15, which qualifies me for round 2. Technically, all participants can go on to round 2, but the overall competition is based solely on points earned for each story, and if you got 0 for round one, you’re swimming upstream for round 2. I got a 7 out of 15… not my best work, but not my worst either, and I’m still in this rodeo! Part 2 starts this Friday and I will be given a new set of prompts, to work with.

I’m sharing my first story with you all now; I didn’t want to “jinx” it before. Wish me luck for round 2, and let me know where I could have improved this one. I always welcome honest, constructive feedback. Thanks! 

Round 1 Challenge:  Genre: Mystery;  Location: An abandoned factory  Object: A pair of snow shoes

A Missed Call

All three of them knew they shouldn’t be there, but the idea was too tempting. On the first day of spring break, with the snow still melting and nothing else to do, slipping under a section of loose chain-link fence and sneaking into the old place was a welcome distraction. They knew they weren’t allowed on the property, but as Mike pushed aside some broken boards, it seemed better than anything else they didn’t have planned.

“Dave, tell us again what you heard him say–– Why does your brother think this place is haunted?” Mike shined his flashlight up under his face, casting menacing shadows.

“Cut it out douchebag. I never said it was haunted.” Dave looked around warily. “I told you, Joe was talking on his cellphone a few weeks ago–– I wasn’t supposed to hear, but he said ‘they should never come back here,’ and that ‘she would probably haunt the place.’”

“Who’s she? And who was Joe talking to––what was it about?” Mike walked further inside, always the leader.

I told you, I didn’t hear much. I think he was talking to Tyler Whitman, but how the hell am I supposed to know? I could barely hear anything.” Dave stumbled, splinters jamming into his palm as something clattered loudly across the floor. “Shit!” He held his hand to his mouth. “What the hell was that?”

Mike shined the flashlight toward the sound, as Gavin leaned closer, trying to get a better look at the object in the narrow beam of light.

Cobwebs hung from the ceiling and aged wooden beams. The boys swatted them out of the way, none of them bold enough to venture closer. A damp stillness held the cold.

“What? Are you both pussies? Go check it out.” Mike held the beam steady.

“Fuck you Mike! It’s just an old tennis racket or something…” Dave studied the object, but didn’t move. There was something familiar about it, but the heavy gloom and a sharp pain from his hand held him in place.

Dust motes danced in the light’s beam, and they heard the sound of water dripping somewhere in the cavernous space. Gray light filtered through the windows. Most were boarded, but the few that still had exposed glass were foggy and dark from years of accumulated weather and dirt. A few dusty beer bottles littered the floor.

The city had discussed tearing the place down– “It’s a blight on the river front” the paper had quoted one councilman, but no one wanted to invest in a property in rural Maine, that would require so much work. Instead, the factory continued to sit abandoned on the edge of town.

Mike focused the flashlight on the wooden object and nudged Dave.

“I don’t think it’s a tennis racket; it’s too wide. And what are those straps for?”

“Who cares? Just leave it.” Dave walked back toward Gavin, rolling his eyes as Gavin looked at him. “I thought you just wanted to see what it looked like in here? It looks like an empty building to me.”

Mike took a few tentative steps toward the dark corner.

Gavin nodded toward the exit, signaling silently to Dave. “This place is just a rotting old shoe factory. My dad says it’s been closed since the 80s or something. Let’s go.”

“Why would it be haunted? Gavin’s right; there’s nothing here. I think my brother must’ve been talking about someplace else.” Dave joined Gavin near the entrance, watching Mike’s back. “I don’t believe in ghosts, but this place smells horrible! Seriously, let’s just get out of here.”

“Yeah, but you definitely said your brother was talking about an abandoned warehouse or something– this must be it. And why haunted… aren’t you guys curious?” Mike turned to look at his friends, still pointing the flashlight around the room.

“I told you, it didn’t make any sense; he’s just been acting weird lately. I probably heard it wrong–– I think he was talking about some girl he hooked up with or something. Who cares? This is a waste of time.”

“I don’t give a shit who your brother hooked up with; this place is rank! It’s probably some homeless guys’ place,” Gavin added, pulling Dave toward the door. “It smells like he shit in here. I just got the new Call of Duty; this is a fucking waste of time.”

Mike turned off the flashlight and took one last glance back. He thought he saw the edge of a black blanket or something, but the fresh air felt good, as he followed his friends out of the building and they headed back toward the fence, back to town.

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Deputy Steve Akins sat at his desk studying the file again. Having put countless hours into the case, they were no closer to figuring out what had happened to Kelsey Lathem. He’d met with her parents several times, examined and re-examined all of the evidence and information, but they still hadn’t found her. How could a seventeen year-old girl go out snowshoeing at the high school track, and just vanish? The question kept him up at night.

Akins didn’t believe the gossip: that she’d run away, that maybe she was pregnant. There was no boyfriend; she was doing ok in school, and her parents were good people. An athletic, quiet kid goes out on a late winter afternoon and doesn’t come home. No tracks, no one who saw her–– None of it added up.

He looked at her happy face on the missing person flyers her parents had dropped off. Her long brown hair, bright eyes, teal scarf and black parka, reminded him of his own daughter. It left him with a knot in his stomach. He’d worked on the force for eighteen years and never felt so helpless. She’s out there somewhere, he thought, as he put the file back in his top drawer.

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. Honest, constructive feedback is always appreciated. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper credit. Plagiarism sucks.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 17 Comments

Friday Fictioneers is a 100-word flash fiction challenge with a photo prompt. Rochelle Wisoff-Fields, manages to keep us in line and encourage endless creativity. Check out other stories and how to join, on her blog, Addicted to Purple.

Two weeks in a row, rusted metal… it takes me many places, but this week I was ambushed. I apologize that I’ve been unable to visit as many blogs as I’d like. I’m still catching up, after 8+ weeks away! As always, I welcome honest, constructive feedback. Please leave a comment and tell me what you think.

© David Stewart

© David Stewart

An Extra Word For Mom

It’s never been easy with you; so I step delicately around the things I want to ask you, and watch you recoil and spring.

“You’re too sensitive,” you say, as tears spring to my eyes.

That’s a lie. I am a sensitive person. It’s not a bad thing; it’s who I am.

“You’ve always been over-sensitive and too defensive.”

I’m defensive when threatened; don’t attack.

Just tell me why––

“Your dad didn’t take care of us,”

That’s a lie. I stand taller.

“I had no choice…”

That’s a lie too.

It’s diamonds and rust with you.

“I did my best.”

That’s the truth.

“I loved you.”

I loved you too. Happy birthday mom.

It doesn’t matter that you’re gone four years now; we argue on in my head.

(101 words)

Carole J. Quyle September 16, 1943- December 31, 2011, whose eyes were “bluer than robin’s eggs.”

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. I love to hear what readers think. Honest, positive or constructive feedback is always welcome. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper credit. Plagiarism sucks.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 56 Comments

I have been absent and treading water:  NYC, Boston, Cape Cod, Tel Aviv, Port Townsend, Bainbridge and now Denver; in the past 8 weeks I’ve been home for 4 days! Each week I see the photo prompt, delivered generously and regularly by the indomitable Rochelle Wisoff-Fields, and I’ve had to pass. No time. Today, I saw this beautiful image, with the date–– and the story was waiting. It took me minutes to type it out. I’m looking forward to getting back into a regular FF groove; I’ve missed my Flashy friends!

If you would like to join Friday Fictioneers, or read the other fantastic 100-word stories, check out Rochelle’s blog Addicted to Purple. As always I welcome honest, constructive feedback. Please leave a comment, and tell me what you think.

© Jennifer Pendergast

© Jennifer Pendergast

97 Words of Grief

There was no time to pack our boats for passage to the next realm.

We gathered our possessions that morning, with little thought of endings or goodbyes, in briefcases, purses and bags–– packed the same way day after day, with no anticipation of crumbling Trade.

The contents of these bags­­–– floating on debris clouds and caught in an otherwise perfect bluebird sky, rained down on shocked faces. Identification was sifted from dust and particles left, DNA the only marker for many.

Just another day, until that moment… now rusted metal and three numbers scar our collective memory.

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. I love to hear what readers think. Honest, positive or constructive feedback is always welcome. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper credit. Plagiarism sucks.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 51 Comments

My daughter, my eldest child, just had her first child– a baby boy. They live in Israel, and I flew over for his birth and to help afterwards. What was meant to be a two-week trip, became 4 and I became an integral part of a very important time in my first grand baby’s life, and in those first few weeks that my daughter became a mother. As I wrote this piece, my sweet grand baby slept against me, his little fingers feeling my dress, as he dreamt. He made little sounds and shifted, nestling closer– always seeking physical contact, and my entire being took him in and filled with love. During those three precious weeks he knew my voice; he loved when I held him- he sought the crook of my neck and nestled there. He brightened when I talked to him, and watched me intently as I sang to him. My voice, my touch soothed him, and we were enormously happy together. For twenty-one days– despite exhaustion and despite being far from my friends and the rest of my family, each day passed in a a perfect bubble, where my grandson, my daughter, her fiancé and I shared a delicate balance of adjustment, cooperation and love. Twenty-one incredible days with my first grandson; I feel very very fortunate!

But I have no illusions. I flew home to the US recently, and when I see him again- months from now (if I’m lucky) he will not remember me. I know this. He will be an entirely different baby then. First, let me tell you, he is a bit unusual for a newborn. Not because he’s my grandchild– not the usual bragging, but he is unusually alert and active. The pediatrician didn’t believe me when I told her that he “commando crawls already–” using his little legs to push himself away from the spots we leave him. Most newborns just lie there, startling themselves with the mostly involuntary movement of arms and legs. This little boy moves to the edge of his bassinet; he cannot be trusted on a changing table. “You have to watch him,” I warned. The doctor smiled, just a bit condescendingly, sure I was just being a grandmother… and then she shrieked, as he thrust his little legs and tried to move away from her. “This should not be happening yet!” She cried. I told you to watch him, I thought. I smiled. Duh. At barely three weeks, he can almost turn over. He stares at us and engages; he smiles a lot (gas?), and it is not uncommon for him to stay awake for up to 10 hours at time! This is not bragging; it is surprising to this grandmother, who thought she knew all about infants; it is exhausting to his new mommy, who would love for him to just lie there, or sleep.

He will be a different baby, and my daughter will be a different mommy when I see them again. Right now she is overwhelmed, exhausted and hormonal. Her breasts hurt from the hours and hours of feeding this little human. I warned her that it wouldn’t be easy. I was a lactation consultant briefly, many years ago, and I nursed three of my own children, each for just over a year. “Your nipples will hurt so much,” I told her, “they may even bleed.” These are not pleasant things, and I was not trying to scare her… but so many new mothers never hear these things, and expect it to all be so natural and easy. I did. I watched her dismiss me, as I said it, just before he was born. “It’s exhausting,” I added. “New babies wake up constantly! Just as you settle back to sleep, the cycle of feeding, burping, changing and settling back down repeats itself, and you may barely have slept before it starts again.” Again, she nodded dismissively. Just before she had her baby, my daughter had done lots of reading. She was sure that most of my advice was antiquated, and exaggerated. She didn’t come out and say it, but her eyes told me this each time I offered advice. This girl of mine has been flipping me off with those eyes since she was two. They are very expressive eyes. Now, her son has those same eyes.

19 years ago, exactly, when I was waiting for my third and final baby...

19 years ago, exactly, when I was waiting for my third and final baby…

What I didn’t realize was that remembering all of this, 25 years after it happened for me, is not the same as going through it for the first time. I remember labor; I remember nursing; I remember exhaustion and falling madly in love with my child and the blur of it all… but I forgot how it all really feels! In the quarter of a century that I’ve been raising three almost adults (the last just heading to college), time dulled my visceral memory. However, being with my girl for 48+ hours of hospital labor, and then three weeks with her tiny new baby, I’m wide awake again… except that I’m too exhausted to really appreciate it!

Labor, oh my. Wow, that really is an epic ride! I was blown away watching my daughter keep her cool and her focus, for two days, humming through each contraction! I think I swore and wailed. I did not keep my cool; that I’m sure of. Watching my own child go through it was transformative in ways I never expected. I was both awed by her strength and scared in ways I had never considered.

It isn't always this pretty... Picasso at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art

It isn’t always this pretty… Picasso at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Talking about bloody nipples is ugly enough, but seeing them– watching my girl wince as her little guy learns to “latch on” is so different than telling her that we called her “the vampire,” because her latch was so painful and intense. Watching her pump, and feed and try to build up her milk– something that has not come easily, is very different than my own memories of those first weeks. I know I went through similar things, but thankfully, we actually do forget the sensation. As we get older, we tell these stories as if we truly remember, but only watching my own child go through it, was I reminded that it was a long time ago; a lot has happened in between (hello, raising teens!) and we thankfully forget how truly mind-numbingly hard it all is.

Because her milk supply has not been adequate, I have been helping with almost all feedings, to hold a small tube that provides formula as she nurses. Yes, I have waited up for teens these past many years. I have lost sleep to menopause and lots of other things, but nothing kicks you in the butt like waking every 2 hours for a newborn. “New babies wake up constantly! Just as you settle back to sleep, the cycle of feeding, burping, changing and settling back down repeats itself, and you may barely have slept before it starts again…” is biting me in the ass big time!

Diapers, diapers, and more diapers...

Diapers, diapers, and more diapers…

In fact, I forgot a few things. And again, I have memories. I knew this all would happen… but knowing and living through it again is an entirely different thing. I forgot that you might not shower for a while. I forgot how much work it is to just run to the store quickly to pick up a few things, let alone get to the mall to return things that have a limited return window. I forgot that babies really do wake up just as your food is on the table; they eat while you stare at a cold plate of food, always hungry yourself. I forgot what it was like to be peed on, pooped on and puked on– sometimes in one go. I didn’t remember just how many diapers need changing and how the environmental and conscientious decision to use cloth diapers, means changing more diapers and then washing those diapers and hanging them to dry… Constantly. Oh, right; I didn’t have to do that part; I had a dryer… and then (at least with my third baby) a service. I forgot how scary it can be to drive in a car, knowing a tiny person is in that car, or how unsure your previously steady feet seem on stairs, when you’re carrying that baby. I forgot that when you do drift off, so tired you can barely move, you hear your child’s little sounds, even when they don’t make them. You jump up, afraid you missed something, or feel asleep. Even though, you need sleep so much! I forgot just how exhausting all of this is and just how little sleep you can survive on. Admittedly, at 52, that was much harder!

Minutes have become hours have become days... all a lovely blur of time

Minutes have become hours have become days… all a lovely blur of time

I forgot all of this. But more importantly, I forgot how utterly and madly in love you fall with the new human being who creates all of this havoc. How you loose yourself in their tiny sighs and the expressions they make as they dream, or poop, or listen to you sing. I forgot just how sweet they smell, when they are new and still smell of the world they’ve exited. That when they are nestled in your neck, that smell is intoxicating and you want to bottle it. I forgot how your whole world turns upside down, and you are never the same again.

I thought I remembered these things, and I did… through the lens of time and change, and the many other big phases that we go through as parents, each one dulling our visceral memories of the time before. Now I am watching my daughter become a mother, and I am experiencing it through her. It is miraculous and incredible in every way! I am remembering just how hard and amazing it is. I am becoming a grandmother, blessed to have this sacred time with my sweet grandson and his exhausted parents. I am blessed to be reminded of all the things I thought I remembered… but now get to re-experience, from a unique vantage point. We are blessed to share this together. And when I left, I got to sleep through the night and forget just how hard this is, all over again.

*I do not have permission to post photos of my grandson, but he is exquisite…You can take my word for it. That is me bragging.

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If you enjoyed this post: Like it; Share it; make me smile. If you’d like to read more of my work, check out my blog Tales From the Motherland, or follow me on Twitter and Facebook.

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. I love to hear what readers think. Honest, positive or constructive feedback is always welcome. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper credit. Plagiarism sucks.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 54 Comments

Life has been a swirl of amazing travel and incredible moments these past 6 weeks. I’ve missed my Fictioneers group, but have been swallowed up in hours of holding and loving my new grandson, Amitai Shelev (mommy minus the m + tie). He is amazing and my heart is filled with him… and the heaviness of leaving him, in just a few days. I can’t share photos, but check out my Tales From the Motherland FB page (nudge nudge- hit Like while you’re there, for good luck) and this post, for more.

Friday Fictioneers is a weekly flash fiction challenge, lead by our fearless leader, Rochelle Wisoff-Fields at Addicted to Purple. Writers from all over the world add their 100 words. Visit her blog for more details. I recognize the wall, in this photo… I’m pretty sure it’s in (or was) Vancouver, BC, near where I live. If not, somewhere close; I’ve seen it. I felt a jolt of sadness in seeing the photo prompt this week; it made me think about the loss of things that are precious. As always, honest, constructive feedback is always welcome.

© C.E. Ayr

© C.E. Ayr

There But For the Grace

“Don’t stare, love; let’s go.” Maria pulled her daughter’s hand, but the child stood firm. “Come, the market will close soon and we won’t have food for the week.”

“Mama, why are they taking it down? How will we remember?”

“Lower your voice; we shouldn’t speak about these things.”

Shelley’s large brown eyes watched the bulldozer as the beautiful murals crumbled.

“But mama, we will have nothing left! Why?”
“There are no more creatures in the seas; the wall is a hard reminder of what the Ministry has done.” Her mother leaned close and whispered. “Come, the market is closing.”

(100 words, exactly)

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GIPYHelp Me Reach My Goals! I’d love to see the Tales From the Motherland Facebook page reach 800 likes in 2015. Have you stopped by to spread some fairy dust? Follow me on Twitter, LeBron James does! Most importantly, if you like a post I’ve written, hit Like and leave a comment. I love to hear what readers think. Honest, positive or constructive feedback is always welcome. Click Follow; you’ll get each new post delivered by email,  no spam.  ©2015  Please note, that all content and images on this site are copyrighted to Dawn Quyle Landau and Tales From the Motherland, unless specifically noted otherwise. If you want to share my work, please give proper credit. Plagiarism sucks.

Posted on by Dawn Quyle Landau | 55 Comments