Even without children, even no more domestic than I am--
I was rattling around the kitchen last night, irked and short-tempered; Tam and I had planned on going somewhere for dinner but it has dawned on the tower crew that there is very bad weather incoming (possibly as early as noon today) and they worked aloft until sundown and chased the very tail end of civil twilight out the gate; so I got home late, having stopped at the corner grocer on the way home and stocked up for dinner and the next morning's breakfast, or so I had thought.
In the freezer, there was a little left-over beef stew and I thought I had a can of relatively low-carb French Country Vegetable Soup to eke it out, but no, what I had was Beef And Barley (ironically, lower in carbs) and it simply wouldn't do.
Tam was conciliatory: "Look, there's enough there for one. You have that, and I'll fend for myself."
I was still annoyed. She's been away the better part of a month and it turns out a big part of my self-image is being able to, you know, feed the various creatures under my roof: cats, Tamaras, and so on. Cooking and serving a meal is soothing. Not being able to, even when the "cooking" is no more than reheating leftovers and opening a can is frustrating.
Having the cats come to me to be served breakfast (they're quite insistent) and snuggle up to me whenever I relax is soothing, too. I'm definitely a "mommy" to the cats.
I made an omelette this morning. "Sweet" Italian sausage, mushrooms, a Poblano pepper, a few Kalamata olives and some Manchego cheese. Tam was just retreating to her couch as I was getting up (a night-owl to begin with, she's been out West and hasn't readjusted to Eastern time), but she said she'd be up for breakfast, so I've saved her a portion.
And I'm sure she appreciates it!
ReplyDeleteMy first thought after I read the title was: "Someone has to be the adult in the room."
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the post I realized that being Mom is more important than being adult.