(Note: I'm going to write this mostly in the present tense, as though I were literally keeping a journal of what happened while I was gone. Also, everything spoken is in Spanish, unless otherwise noted.)
Day One: Wednesday, March 2, 2011
I've been up since 4 AM EST now (which turns out to be 3 AM Central here in Mexico) and already I'm worn out. I haven't even seen the kids yet and all I want to do is go to bed. I'm sitting in a car with my ex mother-in-law, whom I affectionately refer to by nickname of "Mari," short for Maribel. Generally I don't actually call her anything when I speak to her, even if I'm trying to get her attention. Anyway, to continue with who is in the car: We have Mari who is driving, me in the passenger seat, Mari's aunt who is called Lala but actually has a different name (what is it with Mexicans and pet names, I'll never know, but I also know that I'll probably never know Lala's actual name as well as the names of other people in the family.), Lala's sister and also Mari's aunt whose name I do not know, though I'm sure I was told it at some point I can't remember what it is, and chances are I missed it among a flurry of Spanish anyway. Also, there is Faby (short for Fabiola, which is actually her middle name), my ex-husband's sister (Ex-husband, by the way, I call Douchebag.), her youngest son Andre, her oldest son Angel, and that's it, until we actually get to the school and pick up the kids.
Got all that? Looool. Mari, Lala, Lala's Sister, Faby, Me, Isai, Angel.
We stop for a second and surprise Douchebag's dad, who didn't know I was coming. He kind of jumped a little when he saw me. It was pretty funny. He always just says my name when he sees me. Like when he walks in the door of the house and I'm sitting on the couch, it's just "HOO-lia!" and I will usually respond with "Que?!" I guess that's kind of the thing. I don't really talk with him much when I'm in Mexico, but I want to try to change that.
I'm told Nicholas, which is my youngest child, who I named Evan but they have always called him by his middle name at the request of Douchebag, who knew how much I loved the name Evan so had his family call him Nicholas to spite me. Not that I have anything against Nicholas as a name, it's just not what I thought we had agreed on when we'd named the child. At this point, though, he answers to Nicholas, so I'm forced to accept that that's his name - anyway, I'm told that he gets out of school at 1:45 and his brother, who is called Lalito* (and always has been, explanation of the name is in a footnote because I've already over parenthesized this entry as it is) gets out of school at 2:15. It's about 1:30, and we've driven past the school. I recognize it from the last time I was here. The "Kinder" or "Jardin de niños" has a door which looks like several bright crayons with the name of the school scrolled on the side of each. It's very cute. The rest of the school looks a lot more nondescript.
All schools in Mexico are fenced in and the gates locked throughout the day. Good luck cutting class. Or showing up late.
As we drive by, they're all kind of chattering, they know I'm anticipating seeing my kids. Of course, I mean Christ, it has been two years, right? Faby says, in English, "Your heart it is just going boom-boom-boom-boom-boom right now, isn't it?" Her English is not spectacular, but I'm always grateful for what little English I get. Everyone in the family knows a little bit. Even the great aunts (or great-great aunts, in my kids' case) know a little, which surprised me, but both of them live in the United States so you'd figure after 60ish years they'd have picked something up. I suspect they were always afraid I'd judge them if they tried to use English. Kind of like Elmer said about the JPs on those Q&A sessions he had a few years back. That the JPs know stuff, but they're afraid of making an ass of themselves so they don't use it at all to save face. After they kind of got to know me, more and more English would find its way out. I was really surprised with how much they actually knew. Mari especially.
Anyway, the time is getting nearer, and I'm kind of nervous. Earlier I had texted** my friend, the one who'd driven me to the airport (much love for that, he got up around 4 AM to pick me up at 4:30 and drive me around, not many people who would do that).
Me: Landed safely in Brownsville. Excited but kind of worried. What if they dont like me anymore?
Him: Whatever. Now ur thinking too much.
Me: Well you know me. Overthinking everything. Lol.
Him: You'll be fine.
Me: Thanks. Kinda needed to hear it even tho i kinda already knew it. Omg and i was just told my visit is a surprise.
Him: For the kids I hope. Lol.
Me: Yeah for them.
Him: Cool
That was just shortly after crossing the border, also affirming with him that texts still worked in Mexico. About twenty texts later between him and my mother and my dad, I got a free message from Sprint telling me that texts were going to cost me money per text while in Mexico. I couldn't help it, I texted that to my friend, even knowing it was costing me money. Glutton for punishment, I guess, but dammit, I love texting, I'm kind of a textaholic. I did cut back though.
Anyway, I'm super nervous - worried to death about whether the kids would even remember me. I'm less concerned about Lalito as he remembered me the last time I'd come two years ago but with Nicholas I was less sure. On top of that, the fact that the kids didn't know I was coming ... well, yeah. Nervous doesn't begin to cover it.
Anyway, it's that time of day. Mari parks the car - unusual, from what I remembered. There's a kind of picking-up deal set up for the kinder that I remembered from before when Lalito was in kinder. You kind of just stop there, they recognize you, and they bring your kid to the car for you. With the older kids, you'd go to the main school gate and wait for them or if they were older, they'd find you around the corner or whatever. But we're parked today, I'm guessing so that it's easier to pick up Lalito instead of driving around for a half an hour until his classes are done. It's nearly two though, so I guess they let Nicholas wait and play with his friends while we wait for Lalito, so we don't have to make extra trips or park for extended periods of time. (I find out later that he doesn't seem to mind.)
So Mari parks the car, and gets out. She tells me to stay, she's going to get Nicholas. Uh, okay then. Works for me. She collects him from the school and takes his backpack, and I'm just surprised by how big he is. He was three when I'd last seen him, and there's a damn lot of growing between three and five. Holy fuckballs. She opens up the passenger door and sets him on my lap, and they're all like, Quien es? Quien es? He just looks at me, all suspicious. He does not know me. Part of me wants to cry, but the bigger part of me expected him to not really remember me. He hadn't the last time I'd seen him, and Nicholas ... he's not exactly the social butterfly. When he lived with us, he was diagnosed as Autistic.
Anyway, they get him to hug me and give me a kiss, but he's still just looking at me with those big brown eyes of his and I see suspicion. I'm talking to him, telling him hi, asking him how he is, what he did in school, and he says nothing. It isn't until his grandmother talks to him that he starts answering, but he's still not ready to be all like "Hi mommy what's up?" yet. Okay. He's not like, running the fuck off my lap though, so that works, for now, and I know that, like last time, he'll warm up to me. I hug him for now.
I'm reminded of that old song "Suspicious Eyes" when I look at him here. Suspicious indeed.
After all this goes down it's about time for Mari to pick up Lalito, so she gets out of the car again and walks in that direction. Everyone is talking and chatting and a few pictures are apparently taken and later posted on Facebook (thanks Faby, I look like crap after a 4AM wakeup and airport hair) but Nicholas is still pretty quiet. Several minutes pass. I'm waiting for Lalito, because while I love both of my kids, I know Lalito is going to recognize me and be happy to see me.
Finally, there they are, they start crossing the street. I'm sitting in the passenger seat with Nicholas on my lap but I open up the door. Lalito starts walking past, apparently used to being stuffed in the backseat (as he should be) but notices the door open, then looks up and says, "Oh. Hola mami!" and hops right on up to give me a hug and a kiss. Wasn't exactly the "OH HOLY CRAP MOMMY WOW YOU'RE HERE" I'd been looking for but instant recognition was more than enough for me. The tears come. I say hi, ask him how he is. Mari starts to pull him back to the backseat for the drive, but he is having none of it. He wants to sit on my lap. So I've got both of the kids, and this car now has 9 fucking people. Let the Mexican jokes fly ... they are going through my head at that point, too.
So we drive off on the way to the house and Lalito starts just yammering on and on and on and on and on and I really can't get a word in edge-wise, though he does seem to be asking me questions. At this point, finally, Nicholas starts talking too. He was asking me questions, which I can't remember now, but he always punctuated his questions with a verdad? It's cute. It comes to be one of my favorite things to remember about him. I'm at a loss because much of what they're asking me I can't understand, and it sucks. Mari tells Lalito to use English and he's just like ... fuck that. To be fair though, I'll later find out that he really doesn't know that much.
We get back to the house, and I'm fucking relieved, because Lalito has a bony butt. Skinny damn kid, but he gets that from me, because up until about 14 I was the size that my thigh is now. And I remember people telling me I had a bony butt when I was a kid. So we get in the house, and cooking dinner becomes this big deal. We were having tamales, which I fucking love.
Funny story about tamales. We had them for Lalito's first Christmas, when the power had gone out in the neighborhood because it was actually cold for the first time in like a hundred years - it actually snowed - and so we ate dinner by candlelight. I wouldn't have tried tamales if I'd been able to see them clearly. They don't look all that appetizing. But in the darkness, I couldn't really see what I was eating and I figured I may as well try them if I wanted to eat (of course I fucking did) and I actually liked them. I've learned to be less judgmental about gross looking foods, but gross smelling foods are still off the table.
Anyway, we kind of eat in shifts. There's a bunch of us at the house and only a few seats at the table, so the kids eat first. I'm sitting on the sofa talking with some people. Lalito is getting up every few seconds to talk to me and then being yelled at to sit down and eat.
They finish eating though and decide to play Wii. At this point I've already eaten (still a bit fuzzy on what order that happened in, as I was honestly exhausted) and I'm sitting on the couch in front of the TV while Angel and Lalito play Wii Sports Resort. I'm given the Wiimote and offered the chance to beat on some people with a big stick. How in the hell can I pass that up? I laugh, but I give it back quickly and let them play.
Lalito Playing Wii
Nicholas and Andre (also called Isai, if I spelled that right, it's pronounced EE-sah-EE) are playing amongst themselves, too. He's three. It seems Angel and Lalito are close and Andre and Nicholas are close. In age, there's no more than 5 years between them all, possibly less. I can't remember how old Angel is. Anyway, the younger kids are playing with cans used to collect donations. I took video of it, because it made me laugh.
(Second half is a bit boring. I kind of expected the kids to do more but they didn't, which is why I left the camera on.)
I'm a bit camera happy this first night, as I don't want to forget that I should try to capture as many moments as possible, but I don't want to forget that spending time with the kids is the most important. Nicholas has warmed up to me at this point, but it's unclear yet if he thinks of me as mommy quite yet.
Lalito and Isai
Nicholas refusing to look at the camera
Nicholas and his cousin. Isai loves the camera, Nicholas does not. They were having fun hiding behind the sofa arm though.
Me and Lalito. I took this picture so the angle is ... odd.
Me and Nicholas. I also took this picture, which is why I think Nicholas actually looks at the camera. He doesn't expect a photo op from this angle, I guess.
Lalito's favorite spot on the sofa. The arm.
There are a bunch more photos from the first night on my cell phone, but copying them is a huge hassle and something I haven't gotten around to yet.
Something I begin to notice is that Nicholas doesn't really enjoy having his picture taken. He doesn't smile, and doesn't look at the camera. I'm not sure if that's an Autistic thing or not, but I do know that eye-contact is a particularly difficult thing with Autistic people. Either that or he just despises cameras. I can't blame him, they make me look pretty damn awful, IMO.
People start to leave after a while - Lala and her sister head back over to the States, and someone drives Faby home - she can't drive herself because she has a broken foot. For this reason, Angel stays over at his grandparents' house on school nights, so Faby only has to take care of Isai who is still not in school. Until her foot heals. The kids start to settle a bit at this point. I'm super tired, and ready to crash, but not before the kids do. Lalito is still playing Wii with Angel - they're combatting each other in a best of three match where you knock each other off the platform - and I decide to tape the third match. Lalito wins!! He gets pissed when he loses the first match, though. I know the feeling, when I lose something in a video game I also get mad. My second Maat fight, for example, when I seriously fucking had the bastard and he cheated and won anyway. I'd thrown my controller. So I understand some gaming related frustration.
The kids do start to settle down after everyone takes off, something for which I'm incredibly grateful. At this point, I've been up for at least sixteen hours, I've been told there's no internet at the house (it had been turned off just a few days ago) and I send a bitchy text to Douchebag saying, "You told me there would fucking be internet!" Starts an argument, but that's nothing new. I try to find a nearby connection to leech from but there's none, so I figure I'm gonna have to go without.
I sit down and try to watch TV, but the Spanish is giving me a headache already and I'm really tired. I see that the kids have settled into bed and they're just about asleep, so I go in to give them goodnight kisses and I move to find a place to sleep. Alejandro, Douchebag's younger brother, informs me that I'll be sleeping in his bed and he'll be crashing on the sofa, and shortly afterwards, I'm in bed.
Before drifting off, I make the conscious decision that unlike last time I was here, I'm going to get up with the kids and be a part of their "getting to school" routine. Last time I was in Mexico, I had just joined Excellence (yeah, great priorities, I know, don't go there) and I was terrified to miss too much or get kicked, so I still logged on for core events - Dynamis and Einherjar. Which were fairly late, and because I was just used to playing late with the LS as it was a PST linkshell, I stayed up way after the kids were asleep to get my game on. Then I'd sleep until noon, missing out on time with my kids. Not this time. I have WoW, but it's not really that important to me. Last time I was here, I chose not to rearrange my schedule for the kids. I think the family understood that I was used to a late night schedule and didn't criticize (at least to my knowledge) but I ended up feeling bad that I was so lazy. So I vowed I wouldn't do that this time around.
*Lalito is the diminuitive form of Lalo. -ito is a suffix meaning "little" so if you have a small car -carro it's called a carrito. Lalo is a pet name in Mexico for Eduardo. I have no fucking idea where they get it from, but that's just what it is.
**For accuracy, spelling and punctuation in texts is going to be transcribed exactly as written.
I'm about to start on Day two now, and I'm sure it will take me a while, but I don't expect it to be quite as long as this first entry. For one, I'll have been up for a shorter period of time, and for two, I have a lot less background information to explain. XD Hope to have it up in a few hours, but not rushing it. The goal is to finish the whole thing over the weekend. Hope you guys don't mind waiting for the whole deal! Lol.
Day One: Wednesday, March 2, 2011
I've been up since 4 AM EST now (which turns out to be 3 AM Central here in Mexico) and already I'm worn out. I haven't even seen the kids yet and all I want to do is go to bed. I'm sitting in a car with my ex mother-in-law, whom I affectionately refer to by nickname of "Mari," short for Maribel. Generally I don't actually call her anything when I speak to her, even if I'm trying to get her attention. Anyway, to continue with who is in the car: We have Mari who is driving, me in the passenger seat, Mari's aunt who is called Lala but actually has a different name (what is it with Mexicans and pet names, I'll never know, but I also know that I'll probably never know Lala's actual name as well as the names of other people in the family.), Lala's sister and also Mari's aunt whose name I do not know, though I'm sure I was told it at some point I can't remember what it is, and chances are I missed it among a flurry of Spanish anyway. Also, there is Faby (short for Fabiola, which is actually her middle name), my ex-husband's sister (Ex-husband, by the way, I call Douchebag.), her youngest son Andre, her oldest son Angel, and that's it, until we actually get to the school and pick up the kids.
Got all that? Looool. Mari, Lala, Lala's Sister, Faby, Me, Isai, Angel.
We stop for a second and surprise Douchebag's dad, who didn't know I was coming. He kind of jumped a little when he saw me. It was pretty funny. He always just says my name when he sees me. Like when he walks in the door of the house and I'm sitting on the couch, it's just "HOO-lia!" and I will usually respond with "Que?!" I guess that's kind of the thing. I don't really talk with him much when I'm in Mexico, but I want to try to change that.
I'm told Nicholas, which is my youngest child, who I named Evan but they have always called him by his middle name at the request of Douchebag, who knew how much I loved the name Evan so had his family call him Nicholas to spite me. Not that I have anything against Nicholas as a name, it's just not what I thought we had agreed on when we'd named the child. At this point, though, he answers to Nicholas, so I'm forced to accept that that's his name - anyway, I'm told that he gets out of school at 1:45 and his brother, who is called Lalito* (and always has been, explanation of the name is in a footnote because I've already over parenthesized this entry as it is) gets out of school at 2:15. It's about 1:30, and we've driven past the school. I recognize it from the last time I was here. The "Kinder" or "Jardin de niños" has a door which looks like several bright crayons with the name of the school scrolled on the side of each. It's very cute. The rest of the school looks a lot more nondescript.
All schools in Mexico are fenced in and the gates locked throughout the day. Good luck cutting class. Or showing up late.
As we drive by, they're all kind of chattering, they know I'm anticipating seeing my kids. Of course, I mean Christ, it has been two years, right? Faby says, in English, "Your heart it is just going boom-boom-boom-boom-boom right now, isn't it?" Her English is not spectacular, but I'm always grateful for what little English I get. Everyone in the family knows a little bit. Even the great aunts (or great-great aunts, in my kids' case) know a little, which surprised me, but both of them live in the United States so you'd figure after 60ish years they'd have picked something up. I suspect they were always afraid I'd judge them if they tried to use English. Kind of like Elmer said about the JPs on those Q&A sessions he had a few years back. That the JPs know stuff, but they're afraid of making an ass of themselves so they don't use it at all to save face. After they kind of got to know me, more and more English would find its way out. I was really surprised with how much they actually knew. Mari especially.
Anyway, the time is getting nearer, and I'm kind of nervous. Earlier I had texted** my friend, the one who'd driven me to the airport (much love for that, he got up around 4 AM to pick me up at 4:30 and drive me around, not many people who would do that).
Me: Landed safely in Brownsville. Excited but kind of worried. What if they dont like me anymore?
Him: Whatever. Now ur thinking too much.
Me: Well you know me. Overthinking everything. Lol.
Him: You'll be fine.
Me: Thanks. Kinda needed to hear it even tho i kinda already knew it. Omg and i was just told my visit is a surprise.
Him: For the kids I hope. Lol.
Me: Yeah for them.
Him: Cool
That was just shortly after crossing the border, also affirming with him that texts still worked in Mexico. About twenty texts later between him and my mother and my dad, I got a free message from Sprint telling me that texts were going to cost me money per text while in Mexico. I couldn't help it, I texted that to my friend, even knowing it was costing me money. Glutton for punishment, I guess, but dammit, I love texting, I'm kind of a textaholic. I did cut back though.
Anyway, I'm super nervous - worried to death about whether the kids would even remember me. I'm less concerned about Lalito as he remembered me the last time I'd come two years ago but with Nicholas I was less sure. On top of that, the fact that the kids didn't know I was coming ... well, yeah. Nervous doesn't begin to cover it.
Anyway, it's that time of day. Mari parks the car - unusual, from what I remembered. There's a kind of picking-up deal set up for the kinder that I remembered from before when Lalito was in kinder. You kind of just stop there, they recognize you, and they bring your kid to the car for you. With the older kids, you'd go to the main school gate and wait for them or if they were older, they'd find you around the corner or whatever. But we're parked today, I'm guessing so that it's easier to pick up Lalito instead of driving around for a half an hour until his classes are done. It's nearly two though, so I guess they let Nicholas wait and play with his friends while we wait for Lalito, so we don't have to make extra trips or park for extended periods of time. (I find out later that he doesn't seem to mind.)
So Mari parks the car, and gets out. She tells me to stay, she's going to get Nicholas. Uh, okay then. Works for me. She collects him from the school and takes his backpack, and I'm just surprised by how big he is. He was three when I'd last seen him, and there's a damn lot of growing between three and five. Holy fuckballs. She opens up the passenger door and sets him on my lap, and they're all like, Quien es? Quien es? He just looks at me, all suspicious. He does not know me. Part of me wants to cry, but the bigger part of me expected him to not really remember me. He hadn't the last time I'd seen him, and Nicholas ... he's not exactly the social butterfly. When he lived with us, he was diagnosed as Autistic.
Anyway, they get him to hug me and give me a kiss, but he's still just looking at me with those big brown eyes of his and I see suspicion. I'm talking to him, telling him hi, asking him how he is, what he did in school, and he says nothing. It isn't until his grandmother talks to him that he starts answering, but he's still not ready to be all like "Hi mommy what's up?" yet. Okay. He's not like, running the fuck off my lap though, so that works, for now, and I know that, like last time, he'll warm up to me. I hug him for now.
I'm reminded of that old song "Suspicious Eyes" when I look at him here. Suspicious indeed.
After all this goes down it's about time for Mari to pick up Lalito, so she gets out of the car again and walks in that direction. Everyone is talking and chatting and a few pictures are apparently taken and later posted on Facebook (thanks Faby, I look like crap after a 4AM wakeup and airport hair) but Nicholas is still pretty quiet. Several minutes pass. I'm waiting for Lalito, because while I love both of my kids, I know Lalito is going to recognize me and be happy to see me.
Finally, there they are, they start crossing the street. I'm sitting in the passenger seat with Nicholas on my lap but I open up the door. Lalito starts walking past, apparently used to being stuffed in the backseat (as he should be) but notices the door open, then looks up and says, "Oh. Hola mami!" and hops right on up to give me a hug and a kiss. Wasn't exactly the "OH HOLY CRAP MOMMY WOW YOU'RE HERE" I'd been looking for but instant recognition was more than enough for me. The tears come. I say hi, ask him how he is. Mari starts to pull him back to the backseat for the drive, but he is having none of it. He wants to sit on my lap. So I've got both of the kids, and this car now has 9 fucking people. Let the Mexican jokes fly ... they are going through my head at that point, too.
So we drive off on the way to the house and Lalito starts just yammering on and on and on and on and on and I really can't get a word in edge-wise, though he does seem to be asking me questions. At this point, finally, Nicholas starts talking too. He was asking me questions, which I can't remember now, but he always punctuated his questions with a verdad? It's cute. It comes to be one of my favorite things to remember about him. I'm at a loss because much of what they're asking me I can't understand, and it sucks. Mari tells Lalito to use English and he's just like ... fuck that. To be fair though, I'll later find out that he really doesn't know that much.
We get back to the house, and I'm fucking relieved, because Lalito has a bony butt. Skinny damn kid, but he gets that from me, because up until about 14 I was the size that my thigh is now. And I remember people telling me I had a bony butt when I was a kid. So we get in the house, and cooking dinner becomes this big deal. We were having tamales, which I fucking love.
Funny story about tamales. We had them for Lalito's first Christmas, when the power had gone out in the neighborhood because it was actually cold for the first time in like a hundred years - it actually snowed - and so we ate dinner by candlelight. I wouldn't have tried tamales if I'd been able to see them clearly. They don't look all that appetizing. But in the darkness, I couldn't really see what I was eating and I figured I may as well try them if I wanted to eat (of course I fucking did) and I actually liked them. I've learned to be less judgmental about gross looking foods, but gross smelling foods are still off the table.
Anyway, we kind of eat in shifts. There's a bunch of us at the house and only a few seats at the table, so the kids eat first. I'm sitting on the sofa talking with some people. Lalito is getting up every few seconds to talk to me and then being yelled at to sit down and eat.
They finish eating though and decide to play Wii. At this point I've already eaten (still a bit fuzzy on what order that happened in, as I was honestly exhausted) and I'm sitting on the couch in front of the TV while Angel and Lalito play Wii Sports Resort. I'm given the Wiimote and offered the chance to beat on some people with a big stick. How in the hell can I pass that up? I laugh, but I give it back quickly and let them play.
Lalito Playing Wii
Nicholas and Andre (also called Isai, if I spelled that right, it's pronounced EE-sah-EE) are playing amongst themselves, too. He's three. It seems Angel and Lalito are close and Andre and Nicholas are close. In age, there's no more than 5 years between them all, possibly less. I can't remember how old Angel is. Anyway, the younger kids are playing with cans used to collect donations. I took video of it, because it made me laugh.
(Second half is a bit boring. I kind of expected the kids to do more but they didn't, which is why I left the camera on.)
I'm a bit camera happy this first night, as I don't want to forget that I should try to capture as many moments as possible, but I don't want to forget that spending time with the kids is the most important. Nicholas has warmed up to me at this point, but it's unclear yet if he thinks of me as mommy quite yet.
Lalito and Isai
Nicholas refusing to look at the camera
Nicholas and his cousin. Isai loves the camera, Nicholas does not. They were having fun hiding behind the sofa arm though.
Me and Lalito. I took this picture so the angle is ... odd.
Me and Nicholas. I also took this picture, which is why I think Nicholas actually looks at the camera. He doesn't expect a photo op from this angle, I guess.
Lalito's favorite spot on the sofa. The arm.
There are a bunch more photos from the first night on my cell phone, but copying them is a huge hassle and something I haven't gotten around to yet.
Something I begin to notice is that Nicholas doesn't really enjoy having his picture taken. He doesn't smile, and doesn't look at the camera. I'm not sure if that's an Autistic thing or not, but I do know that eye-contact is a particularly difficult thing with Autistic people. Either that or he just despises cameras. I can't blame him, they make me look pretty damn awful, IMO.
People start to leave after a while - Lala and her sister head back over to the States, and someone drives Faby home - she can't drive herself because she has a broken foot. For this reason, Angel stays over at his grandparents' house on school nights, so Faby only has to take care of Isai who is still not in school. Until her foot heals. The kids start to settle a bit at this point. I'm super tired, and ready to crash, but not before the kids do. Lalito is still playing Wii with Angel - they're combatting each other in a best of three match where you knock each other off the platform - and I decide to tape the third match. Lalito wins!! He gets pissed when he loses the first match, though. I know the feeling, when I lose something in a video game I also get mad. My second Maat fight, for example, when I seriously fucking had the bastard and he cheated and won anyway. I'd thrown my controller. So I understand some gaming related frustration.
The kids do start to settle down after everyone takes off, something for which I'm incredibly grateful. At this point, I've been up for at least sixteen hours, I've been told there's no internet at the house (it had been turned off just a few days ago) and I send a bitchy text to Douchebag saying, "You told me there would fucking be internet!" Starts an argument, but that's nothing new. I try to find a nearby connection to leech from but there's none, so I figure I'm gonna have to go without.
I sit down and try to watch TV, but the Spanish is giving me a headache already and I'm really tired. I see that the kids have settled into bed and they're just about asleep, so I go in to give them goodnight kisses and I move to find a place to sleep. Alejandro, Douchebag's younger brother, informs me that I'll be sleeping in his bed and he'll be crashing on the sofa, and shortly afterwards, I'm in bed.
Before drifting off, I make the conscious decision that unlike last time I was here, I'm going to get up with the kids and be a part of their "getting to school" routine. Last time I was in Mexico, I had just joined Excellence (yeah, great priorities, I know, don't go there) and I was terrified to miss too much or get kicked, so I still logged on for core events - Dynamis and Einherjar. Which were fairly late, and because I was just used to playing late with the LS as it was a PST linkshell, I stayed up way after the kids were asleep to get my game on. Then I'd sleep until noon, missing out on time with my kids. Not this time. I have WoW, but it's not really that important to me. Last time I was here, I chose not to rearrange my schedule for the kids. I think the family understood that I was used to a late night schedule and didn't criticize (at least to my knowledge) but I ended up feeling bad that I was so lazy. So I vowed I wouldn't do that this time around.
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*Lalito is the diminuitive form of Lalo. -ito is a suffix meaning "little" so if you have a small car -carro it's called a carrito. Lalo is a pet name in Mexico for Eduardo. I have no fucking idea where they get it from, but that's just what it is.
**For accuracy, spelling and punctuation in texts is going to be transcribed exactly as written.
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I'm about to start on Day two now, and I'm sure it will take me a while, but I don't expect it to be quite as long as this first entry. For one, I'll have been up for a shorter period of time, and for two, I have a lot less background information to explain. XD Hope to have it up in a few hours, but not rushing it. The goal is to finish the whole thing over the weekend. Hope you guys don't mind waiting for the whole deal! Lol.
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