Wednesday, November 6, 2013

MAKING CAPES



Do you know someone who always seems to ask for favors at the very worst time possible? You must know at least one that person, right?  I mean, I love helping people when I can but there are days where I wish I could put on an invisibility cloak, and hide out until all is clear.

I'm thinking about a morning I had like that, quite a while back. 

It was already turning out to be a weird day because I left the house wearing my yoga pants inside out. I didn't realize it until I was under the glaring lights of Safeway, inspecting bananas. If I'd made this discovery at the grocery store near our old house I probably would have just pretended that I didn't notice until I made it home because the restroom there is terrifying. I know this because both of my children were potty trained at our old house so I was intimately acquainted with every public toilet within a ten mile radius.  Luckily, Current House Safeway has a bathroom that is reasonably less terrifying than Old House Safeway, so I was able to rectify the situation before anyone noticed. Maybe. Or maybe I became some stranger's Facebook status. 

Now I'm feeling kind of paranoid.

Anyway, it was at about this same moment I realized that, although I'd invited a whole bunch of people over for dinner that evening, I was going to have to cancel the party. Actually, my husband realized it and shot me a text. He saves me from disaster roughly six times per week – like a bald, bearded angel perched on my shoulder. 

We were supposed to have everyone over after they attended my kid's band concert, but I got the concert time wrong. The event started a lot later than I originally thought, and having dinner at 9:30 on a school night could end badly. Or rather, the next morning would begin badly.

So, I bought my bananas, and thought about who to call first – and what I was going to do with thirty-six hotdogs and the vat of potato salad in my fridge – when that person started sending rapid-fire text messages. I knew who it was because he's the only one I know who doesn't give you even a millisecond to respond to his requests.

Here's the conversation:

Peanut:  Mom.

Peanut:  Mom.

Peanut:  Mooooooooooooooooom!

(His phone charged per text, by the way.)

Peanut:  Mooooooooom  I need you to answer me!

Me:  Yes, okay, I'm here.  What's up?

Peanut:  I was supposed to bring my capes to school today, and I forgot.  My teacher really needs themmmmmmmmmmm.

Me:  Okay, I can bring them by lunch.  How many do you need?

Peanut:  8.

Me:  8 capes?  You only have 5...


(Yes. We owned FIVE capes. Four, if you called the green one a "cloak," which I was unfailingly reminded to do.  We belonged to an elementary school, which really encouraged individuality and creativity (which is more than awesome) so my kid was allowed to wear a cape (or cloak) almost every day of the fourth grade. We ended up amassing quite a cape (and one cloak) collection.  

Peanut:  I knoooooow Mooooom.  I was supposed to make 3 more but I forgot.

(Yes, yes: I KNOW. You're probably think I should have said something like, "Well, maybe next time you'll remember when you promise to do something." That just isn't in my parental makeup.  You see, he's a really, really good kid. He's always treated other people how he wants to be treated. He does his homework without being told. Therefore, when the kid needs to be bailed out, I try my hardest to come to his rescue.)

(It looked like I was on my way to Joann Fabrics to buy some cape-making supplies. At least my pants weren't inside out, anymore...)

Me:  I'll drop them in the office before lunch.

Peanut:  OK that will work.

(A "thank you" would have been nice but whatever.)

I managed to buy some fabric that didn't require being hemmed but would still hang in a cape-like fashion.  I dragged out my sewing machine, turned on Law and Order, and got started, stitching gathers at the necklines.  In between capes, I called my family to cancel our dinner plans:

Cape #1, call to my mother in law:  I'm so, so sorry.  I have to cancel dinner tonight.  The concert starts an hour later than I thought.  I'm glad you can still make it!



Cape #2, voicemail to my mother:  Hi Mom, I know you're working today.  I hope you're able to check your messages.  I have to cancel dinner, and the concert is later than I thought.  Call me!



Cape #3, text to my sister:  I am such a total idiot :-(  Have to cancel dinner.  Concert is an hour later.  See you there. XO.


I finished the project about twenty minutes before they were due and poked through my kid's bedroom until I found the rest of the capes (and cloak). I stuffed them all into a couple of paper bags and delivered them to the school.

When he hopped into my car at the end of the school day, my child thanked me profusely. He said that I saved. his. life. 

"What did you need all those capes for, anyway?"  I asked.

"Look," he showed me a button holding the cape closed, "it says 'ask me about my cape'."

So I did.

"We're having a canned food drive to help the hungry.  The capes are supposed to make people pay attention."

Wow. My kid was using his quirky collection to feed people.  If I had known, I would have offered to sew ten of the things...

Two days later I was volunteering at his school's Walkathon. As I scooped delicious fundraiser enchiladas and burritos onto plates, I caught glimpses of several of those capes, pinned to kids I'd never seen before. A shortish tween boy ran around wearing one, having the time of his life at the event. 

I almost felt bad about damning those extra capes to Cape Hell, while the thread in the bobbin kept bunching up and making the needle catch  in the loose fabric – because they were serving a great cause.

Now if only I could donate a few dozen hotdogs and a giant tub of potato salad.