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| Hollie with her Grover, me with my Grover. |
So, here's the thing:
When I was a kid, my stuffed animal of choice was my Grover doll. But it went beyond "favorite toy." An attempt at saying the word "Grover" was one of my first attempts at speaking, period, and it came out something like "Goh-dee-goh." When I got older, I was pretty much 96% sure that my doll was alive. I worried that Grover couldn't eat on his own, so I would smash soft foods against his lips and give him sips of water (to the point that his head would sometimes be completely waterlogged). You can still see faint stains on his lips from chocolate pudding.
I took Grover with me everywhere—on trips, to Grandma's house, to the store. I took him to college with me. I took him with me on my LDS mission to Tokyo, Japan. I didn't take him on my honeymoon, but he certainly had his place in our first apartment, and in every place we've lived in since. When I told my family I was seriously dating a man named Grover, my sister joked, "So, do you call him Goh-dee-goh?"
It is true how bizarrely unlikely and random it is that I would end up marrying the namesake of my first true love, and perhaps Dave's last name did give me that extra nudge of encouragement to send him a semi-cautious-flirtatious email after our first meeting each other, in spite of the fact that he was living in Ohio and I in Utah, with zero plans to ever happen to run into each other again. I'm so glad I did send that email, and I'm so glad that Dave was just as risky and adventurous in terms of long-distance love as I was. And that is maybe how the muppets brought us together?
(Side note: David once told me that he feels an extra special kinship to Grover because the two of them both have sort of sad, sleepy, droopy eyes. It is one of my favorite things about David, and I know I will watch for the same droopy eyes in our children.)
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| Dave's droopy Grover eyes, circa the time I first met him. What a mane, am I right? If it wasn't his surname that first got my attention, it was definitely all those gorgeous curls. |
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| My Grover doll, 30 years of wear and tear later, still finding himself cuddled up next to a toddler in a crib on occasion. |
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| Hollie's first injured toy—a ripped seam down her own Grover's back. |
Tonight was the night I decided that Grover should finally undergo surgery. I inherited the sacred title of Master Mom Healer. I will make this doll whole again. And that is at least awesome enough to be Thing #15, in my opinion.
| The surgery (avert your eyes, my squeamish muppet readers!). |
| A complete recovery is expected, after Hollie can cuddle some love back into him tomorrow morning. |
| My little patient acting brave for the camera. |
Anyway, I don't feel like that kind of person at all. When Hollie had a fever last month, David and I looked at each other in sheer helplessness. Taking her temperature was a joke. Watching her eyes weep in utter agony over how crummy she felt was heart-melting. Also, I never go to the store (Davey does all the shopping). I feel like I follow a different time schedule every day, and I often have no idea what to feed Hollie for lunch and end up foraging with her on cheese cubes, grapes, peas, and ripped up sandwich meat. Sometimes I am terrified that Holls's safety lies in my own imperfect and frequently clumsy hands. I don't feel at all like what I thought moms feel like.
But I admit: Sewing up Grover's back tonight made me feel like there is hope for me yet. Mending a favorite toy (using a needle and thread, no less—the very icon of domesticity!) at least makes me feel useful, even if it doesn't make me feel invincible.
So Thing #15: Mend a Grover = ACCOMPLISHED.




3 comments:
This post totally made me smile.
My guess is all moms feel inadequate about things and not like the supermom kids see them as!
We had to sew our Grover in the exact same spot. I guess they don't make them like they used to. Look how well yours has held up through all the love!
I love everything about this post. Thank you.
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