Welcome to the Bonny Glen

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Our Family Rule of Six

  • Six Things to Include in Your Child's Day:

    • meaningful work
    • imaginative play
    • good books
    • beauty (art, music, nature)
    • ideas to ponder and discuss
    • prayer

    A Lilting House post explaining the Rule of Six:

    Whence It Came






My Bonny Clan

  • Jane, 13 yrs old
    Rose, 10 yrs
    Beanie, 7 yrs
    Wonderboy, 4 yrs
    Rilla, 2 yrs
    baby eagerly expected in January

    and Scott, the love of my life

Books by Melissa Wiley

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    Poetry Corner

    • FERN HILL

      by Dylan Thomas


      Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs

      About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green,

      The night above the dingle starry,

      Time let me hail and climb

      Golden in the heydays of his eyes,

      And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns

      And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves

      Trail with daisies and barley

      Down the rivers of the windfall light.



      And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns

      About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home,

      In the sun that is young once only,

      Time let me play and be

      Golden in the mercy of his means,

      And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman, the calves

      Sang to my horn, the foxes on the hills barked clear and cold,

      And the sabbath rang slowly

      In the pebbles of the holy streams.



      (read the rest)










      THE LAKE ISLE OF INNISFREE
      by William Butler Yeats

      I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
      And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
      Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,
      And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

      And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
      Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
      There midnight's all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
      And evening full of the linnet's wings.

      I will arise and go now, for always night and day
      I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
      While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray,
      I hear it in the deep heart's core.



    Rings & Things

    « Something It's Important to Know About Living in Southern California | Main | Eat My Dust: Choosing a Vacuum Cleaner »

    November 10, 2006

    I Never Did Tell You About Those Junkyard Dogs

    The thing about moving is that when you get there, you're busy for weeks. It isn't like a vacation, where you come home on Sunday, and you spend Monday doing eight loads of laundry and a massive grocery shopping, and then you're pretty much caught up and can get down to the serious business of forcing all your friends to ooh and ah over your photos.

    With a household move, you have So Much Work to do when you get there. Who has time for photo-sharing and storytelling? And yet, there are all those stories from the big adventure of Getting There, all those landmarks you passed and wanted to write about so you'll remember them forever.

    We've been here three weeks now. That seems hardly the blink of an eye, and yet in the eyes of the DMV I'm already in penalty territory for not having registered the car. I did try, yesterday. After two hours of waiting in line and wrestling with papers, I left with no car registration and a temporary driver's license which has my name spelled wrong. Sigh. I'll try again next week. Dear DMV, Thank you for providing my five children with an important life lesson. I call it, "Red Tape is Like a Spider's Web and We Are Hapless Flies." Signed, Merlissa.

    Three weeks. We're mostly unpacked, the girls are already immersed in ballet and piano, and I refer to the freeways the California way ("the 8, the 52") without having to think about it. But part of my mind is still reliving our trip. I think I'm a little in shock that it went so well. I was braced for more misadventure in our adventure. Apart from a couple of rough moments when Wonderboy objected (loudly, stridently) to my going out to the car to bring in our bags—because these spaghetti arms can't handle luggage and babies at the same time—everything went quite smoothly. No getting lost in strange cities, no serious injury, no breakdowns (neither vehicular nor mental), no moments of panic.

    Except when those dogs were charging toward us.

    It was somewhere in New Mexico, or were we already in Arizona? Already, I'm forgetting the details. I was on the phone with Scott (handsfree, of course, THANK YOU BLUETOOTH) who had an airline ticket agent on his other phone. It was the day the movers unloaded our furniture here, and they finished surprisingly early, and Scott and I were regretting having scheduled a cushion day into our plans. He was booked to fly to Phoenix on the Wednesday, planning to meet us there and bring us into California himself. But I was making great time, and the movers were gone, and both of us were wishing we'd booked his flight for Tuesday instead. Hence the two-phone conference call with the ticket agent, who said she could indeed move his flight up a day and it wouldn't even cost anything.

    "She says she can get me to Phoenix at either two p.m. or five p.m.," he said. "Which one works best for you?"

    "Oh, definitely the—" I began, which is when Jane started shrieking. Then Beanie started shrieking. Then Rose started shrieking.

    "WHY ARE YOU SHRIEKING?" I shrieked.

    "OOOOOOHHHHH MOMMYYYYY GROSS HE'S THROWING UP!"

    And then I could hear the retching noises over the shrieking. Poor little Wonderboy. After 2400 miles, his tummy had had enough. So he was vomiting and the girls were screaming and Scott was on the phone wondering if we'd had a car accident, and the ticket agent was on the OTHER phone wondering if we were all crazy people.

    "Two o'clock! Arrive at two I gotta go BYE!" I shouted. There was an exit just ahead, so I took it. It turned out to be one of those nothing-there exits, just a frontage road in the middle of lonely fields scattered with rusting cars and old tires. I pulled over to the side of the frontage road and released the girls from the foul-smelling van. Wonderboy was sobbing. Or maybe I was. Hard to tell in all the confusion. I cleaned him up—experience has taught me to keep the minivan well stocked with cleanup supplies—and was bagging his icky icky clothes when I noticed something moving toward us. Dogs. Four of them, no, five. A pack. I think five dogs pretty much qualifies as a pack, especially when they're a motley assortment of shapes and sizes and they are glaring at you and your small children from not very far away.

    Oh, look, that's a junkyard,
    said my brain, which has a habit of chiming in with helpful information about five minutes too late. Also, that's a very low fence. Those dogs could jump that fence in a heartbeat. Look, they are coming this way.

    Thanks, Brain. I'd picked up on that already. Eyes beat you to it. And actually Adrenal Gland was way ahead of you both.

    Those dogs do not look friendly, said Brain. I couldn't help but notice that Brain was sounding decidedly panicky. And Heart seemed to have chosen this moment to stop beating.

    The girls the girls the girls!!! Are standing by that fence!
    shrieked Maternal Instinct. Heart executed a double backflip, landing in Throat.

    Don't just stand there you idiots! hollered Adrenaline. Get those kids in the car before those dogs—

    Oh they are really close now, observed Eyes.

    Myyyyyy baaaabieeeeeees! wailed Maternal Instinct.

    Adrenal Gland delivered a firm kick in the pants to Nervous System. The impact jarred Vocal Cords loose from the stranglehold Heart had put on them.

    "GIRLS!" I roared. "INTO THE CAR NOW! FAST!"

    Bless their beautiful little hearts, they obeyed without questioning me. Or rather, they were asking lots of questions but they were obeying as the words came flying. All three of them piled into the car as I shoved poor Wonderboy back into his seat.

    "Mommy, is it those dogs? Are they coming to get us?"

    "I don't know, sweetie. Probably not. I just don't want to take any chances—"

    Oh dear God they're almost here!!!!! howled Brain.

    Yup, really close now, Eyes agreed.

    Hey! We hear growling! said Ears.

    Brain and Muscles managed to coordinate efforts well enough to get me into my seat where Fingers, oh so eager to help, pushed the buttons that closed the van doors.

    Did you see that, guys? We had the most important job. Little old us! Fingers! We saved you all!

    Hush, scolded Ears. The children are saying something. Screaming it, actually. Hold on, I've almost got it...Ah. "The back door is open." That's it.

    Wha-huh? asked Brain.

    The—back—door—is—open.

    Of the van, put in Eyes, returning from a trip to the rear-view mirror. You know, the trunk.

    We don't have a button for that, said Fingers.

    Oh my Lord, whispered Maternal Instinct.

    You know we're going to have to get out and close that, said Common Sense, making a rare appearance. Everyone else stared at it blankly.

    Who are you? asked Brain.

    Don't get distracted, scolded Common Sense. We must close that door. FAST.

    AWESOME! shouted Adrenal Gland. WOO WOO WOO!

    Um, guys? Small problem, stammered Legs. We seem to be having a malfunction here.

    Don't look at me! protested Nervous System. It's Heart's fault!

    MOVE IT, MAGGOTS! bellowed Adrenal Gland. GET! THAT! DOOR! CLOSED!

    The dogs are at the fence now, chirped Eyes.

    My BABIES! sobbed Maternal Instinct. But even as she wailed, she was joining forces with Adrenal Glands to yank Heart up out of Stomach where it had slunk away to hide, the sniveling coward. That seemed to jostle Nervous System out of its stupor, and in a flash Legs leapt out of the car and hurtled to the back of the van. Arms knew what to do. Fingers screeched in triumph at having been saviors once again. By the time Legs returned the rest of the gang to the driver's seat, Brain was just finally catching up.

    I think we should go now,
    it offered timidly.

    You don't say, said Maternal Instinct in withering tones.

    DRIVE DRIVE DRIVE
    shouted Adrenaline.

    Wow those dogs sure bark loudly, said Ears. 

    They've reached the fence! reported Eyes. That was a close one.

    Actually, remarked Common Sense, as Fingers turned the ignition key and steered the van back onto the road, I doubt they would have jumped the fence after all. We probably weren't ever in any real danger at all.

    OH SHUT UP, snarled everyone else.

    Humph,
    sniffed Common Sense. I can see I'm not welcome here! Fine! It stalked off, sulking, and hasn't been seen since. Which probably explains how I managed to show up at the DMV yesterday without having had the van smog-checked, which is why I was not permitted to register it. Stupid touchy Common Sense. Humph indeed.

    So anyway, that's what happened with the junkyard dogs. Heart and Stomach still go into convulsions whenever Brain hauls the memory out of storage. Fingers are happy, though, because they finally got to tell the story.

    (We are the coolest, interject Fingers. We can interject that because WE CONTROL THE KEYBOARD bwah-ha-ha-ha! FINGERS ROCK!)

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    Comments

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    What a terrifying experience that you brought to life so well in your writing. I felt like I was there watching it all unfold. Glad that you the girls and Wonderboy are all safe in California now.

    Wow -- I really could see that unfolding! What a great storyteller you are! (well, duh)

    So glad you made it out of there safely! I have a knot in the pit of my stomach just thinking about it!

    Sherry

    Awesome story! I love it!

    Not me! Almost wet my pants with terror! I want to hear about little, fluffy dogs named "Snowball" and "Princess", not terrifying mangy mutts with big teeth charging a sweet family of innocent folks. :)


    I read this to the fambly and we are rolling on the floor!

    (Gotta love those Fingers.)

    And we're glad you made it to CA safely. :o)

    Oh, dear Merlissa! Only you could tell such a terrifying story with such wit and humor. Loved the telling, hated the story! I, too, could visualize every second of it, and I DON'T LIKE SEEING MY FIVE NEW FAVORITE PEOPLE UNDER THE AGE OF 12 IN SUCH DANGER (not to mention their dear mother.)

    Sigh. Okay. My common sense just made a rare appearance as well and reminded me that it's all over and we can laugh now. Right? Huh? Huh?

    oh my goodness -- you are such a good story teller -- duh -- but so glad that you are alright.

    Is "Merlissa" the female form of "Merlin"????

    Like I keep trying to tell you, you have a hilarious book or screenplay on just the move alone. It could be like Spencer's Mtn, setting up the "Bonny Glenn" tee-vee show...

    TOO funny, reading your posts makes me think of Erma Bombeck, only, (pardon me Erma...I know you are smiling from up there at her too, saying, "that's a girl, Lissa!!" ) you are much funnier...

    Hilarious! Horrifying, but hilarious!

    And, say, you never told me that Lissa is short for Merlissa! Good to know.

    At the end I thought, what a fun post...(but the middle was kind of too scary for me.) Fingers do rock, but who controls the fingers?

    Thats why you're one of my favorite bloggers (and people) lissa.
    That was a cool story!

    ~M~

    Oh Lissa!

    This is the funniest thing I have ever read...and my maternal instinct is still curled up in the fetal position since the beginning of the story...how scary! how funny! but how scary! I can't decide on one!! I am soo glad it has a happy ending with the good guys in the white hats getting a safe get-away!!

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