Monday, August 30, 2010

Harvesting

I'm horribly behind on uploading photos.  I've done nothing since our vacation at the beginning of July.  (Things have been a bit of a mess since then.)  But, life goes on and gardens continuie to grow.  These beauties came from our garden.  The quarter is used to show scale.
Yes, the onion and the carrot are actual size.  This is what happens when you plant the entire package of seeds and don't bother to thin out the seedlings.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

When it rains...

I don't think my parents can handle any more bad news.  On Tuesday evening, their longtime friend Landis passed away.  Last night, their closest friend and neighbor for 30+ years Gerry passed away.  The services for both men are next Tuesday.  Dad will be flying down to Phoenix while Mom stays behind.  They are still going to Phx in October. 

Getting old just sucks.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

"Fundraising"

The boys and I walked up to Safeway.  Sitting outside on a little lounge chair was a little girl, who said the following: "Excuse me, ma'am.  Would you be interested in donating money for new uniforms?"  In exchange for what?  I was really bothered by this.  First, I already gave them money two months ago when the group was camped out at the same Safeway.  Second, this wasn't fundraising; this was panhandling.  I'm no stranger to the concept of fundraising.  I've washed cars, sold magazine subscriptions, washed more cars, and sold candy, cookies, wrapping paper, and other useless crap.  I've bought candy, cookies, cookie dough, wrapping paper, Entertainment books, and other useless crap.  I have no problem pledging money for a walk-a-thon.  I expect something in return, some action (washing my car, walking ten miles) or some tangible item (cookies, cookie dough).  Just asking strangers for money is panhandling.  Give me a lollipop or something as a token for my donation.  Plus, if they were really trying to raise money without doing anything, this is the wrong neighborhood.  Go to a wealthier area.

Sheriff of Tantrum Town

Both boys have thrown Oscar-worthy tantrums the last three days.  We did manage to have a tantrum-free time at the park this afternoon, and there were a few tantrum-free moments throughout the day.  I forget how much fun my boys are when not throwing fits.

Drake managed to charm fruit snacks from a nice lady at the park.  He's always had this talent.  When he was one, he got a complete McDonald's hashbrown out of a lady.  He got pretzels out of some guy on the ferry. He told the lady at the park all about summer camp.  He has only told me about the fire drill.

Flynn stalked a poor squirrel in downtown Olympia.  Luckily, the squirrel remembered he could climb the big tree to escape the small child.  Flynn also had a good time hitting random objects with a large stick.  Some cool sounds were discovered.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Wow...

The Teenager Audio Test - Can you hear this sound?



Created by Oatmeal
 
It's really, really annoying.  (The sound, not The Oatmeal.)

Dear Washington State Motorists

Move the hell over!!!  The left lane is not for cruising; it's for passing.  It's for actively passing, not "I'm going to eventually pass that semi-truck that's three miles away" kind of passing.  It is not your God-given right to drive the speed limit in the left lane.  (God was not available for comment, but the attendance records show s/he was not present during the law writing sessions.)  And stop pacing the car next to you.  There's a reason traffic in this state is awful, and you are it.  Do you not notice the line of cars behind you?  No, no you don't.  You are oblivious.  I do applaud you for maintaining the speed limit, but, please, do so in the right lane so the rest of us with a life can get on with it.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Summer camp

Drake begins another week of summer camp tomorrow.  This week's theme: nocturnal creatures.  He's really looking forward to going.  He had a good time at the last camp.  At least, I think he had a good time.  I'm fairly certain he did, but I'm not 100% sure.  Why?  He won't tell me anything about what happened at camp, or what activities he did, or the names of anyone else in the room.  He has only given up one piece of information about that whole week.  (The theme was art.)  He told me that you squish clay in your hands to make a pancake, then you squish the pancake into a sculpture, and then the sculpture goes swooooosh.  (I don't know why artwork becomes a rocket ship, but, whatever.)  That's it.  Nothing else.  I ask him what is favorite part was, about the artists they talked about, about his own artwork.  He won't respond to me at all, like he was sworn to secrecy and his tongue will be removed if he recounts his adventures.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Yard sale

Today was the yard sale for Maria's stuff.  It's quite odd seeing the culmination of one's household on the front lawn for strangers to pick through.  I was never into garage/yard/estate sales.  When I'm looking for something specific, I want to go where I know I can find it.   Hosting one is more effort than it's worth. 

I learned two important lessons about people today. 
1) There's no accounting for taste.  Some really ugly stuff found new homes, and some nice, practical, attractive stuff is currently homeless.   
2) People who frequent these sales are really freakin' cheap.  After 1 pm, we sold everything for half price.  The $40 newish BBQ was marked down to $20.  The guy offered $18.  The propane in the BBQ is worth $40.  We sold it anyway-- one less thing to move.

I watch Clean House.  I find it entertaining.  How the hell do they make $5000 at a yard sale?  Do these people have that much crap in their homes causing the clutter?   We're lucky if we made $200 today. 

Friday, August 20, 2010

Bucket List

A college friend of mine had a bizarre fainting episode that landed him in the hospital yesterday.  As he is regaling the story from his hospital bed via Facebook, he mentioned toward the end of this tale that it is time to get serious on his bucket list.  I've been mulling this over all morning.  I don't have a bucket list. 

So, what's wrong with me that I don't have one?  I mean, I have goals, I've achieved stuff, I've accomplished things, I've seen stuff, and I've been places.  Am I just content to go through life blindly, day to day, without any sense of adventure?  Does a bucket list imply adventure?  Or is it a list of stuff I'll get around to someday?  (I have one of those lists: the mighty "honey do" list.  It's categorized.)  Am I just that lazy that I've never thought about a bucket list?  Do most people go through life this way?  I'm going to have to give this some intense scrutiny. 

College baggage

When Benjamin Braddock returns from college, he carries with him one suitcase through LAX.  When Harry Burns leaves the University of Chicago, he carries two duffel bags and a baseball bat.  Multiple images abound of students returning from college carrying very little.  What a load of crap! Maybe the difference is the era ('60s and '70s versus '90s).  When I returned from college, my car was overflowing and half of my stuff was on a moving truck.  My stuff expanded exponentially over four years.  Maybe previous generations didn't need as much stuff.  Without cable, did you need a TV?  Plus, VCRs and DVD players didn't exist.  Eight tracks weren't exactly portable.  Maybe life was just simpler then. 

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Essay contest

Each year, Real Simple magazine has an essay contest for its readers.  Last year, the theme was "I knew I was a grown-up when..."  This year's theme is "I never thought I'd..."  The previous theme was too easy to blend in with all the others.  I'm going to have fun with this theme.  I'm planning to write the following: I never thought I'd have so many conversations regarding poo.  So many people are going to write about skydiving (which I refused to do when I had the chance), getting married (yawn), having kids (read that already).  I want to stand out.  I want to make an intern shoot Dr. Pepper out of his/her nose.

The winner last year just happened to be an English teacher from Phoenix.  So many people bitched about it.  Hey, I'm an English teacher; I didn't win.  Please, 6500 entries were submitted, and you think your trite narrative about paying taxes was going to win?  So what if she is an English teacher?  She wrote quite well.  It wasn't like she was J. K. Rowling or Danielle Steele.  Get over it.  It's like complaining that a person with a steady income won the lottery.

BTW, this is what I wrote.  I know it's on the maudlin side, but, in my defense, I'm really, really out of practice.  Plus, I understand why I didn't win.  I wrote one third of the recommended length.  Oops.  And, I referred to the prompt not once, but twice.  Double oops.



I first realized I was a grown-up a couple years ago, and it wasn’t because of my first job, first tax return, having my heart broken, graduating from college, getting married, changing careers, graduating again, or even giving birth. The notion hit me on a warm summer night when my eldest son was five months old.


You see, although I am deep into my thirties, I have always had a safety net. A safety net is the person who allows you to walk the metaphorical high wire without the fear of going splat: you are free to take risks without peril. I had a job in high school, but I didn’t need to have a job because I lived in my parents’ house. I did live in the dorm in college, but my folks were paying for tuition, room and board. Even my senior year, when I lived in an apartment with a roommate, savings bonds paid the rent. I was a boomeranger—moving back into my parents’ house after graduation until I married two years later. I was able to take the leap and change career paths, since my husband had a steady job that paid for the household expenses. I have never been spoiled, yet I’ve never had to be fully self-sufficient. And, although many of my actions were mature for my age (paying taxes in February, rotating tires regularly), they never made me feel like a grown-up, for they were second nature.

In the summer after my first son was born, my husband Tim and I packed up our little guy Drake and went to the drive-in. I don’t recall which movie we saw; we were just thankful to be out of the house and seeing a first-run movie. I knew Drake would nurse himself to sleep in the car. If he didn’t, we were prepared to drive home. Luckily, he slept and we enjoyed the movie. I was able to secure him in the car seat without disturbing him for the ride home.

When we reached the house, I gingerly extracted him from the seat, and, ever so slowly, made the journey into the house to place Drake in his crib. While in transit, I had a recollection of my childhood. I had the tendency to fall asleep in strange places, and yet, I magically awoke in my bed. My father always managed to carry me to my bed and never once woke me in the process. Carrying a sleeping child is a simple act, but it is one that embodies all the love, tenderness, and devotion a parent has for a child. And now, I wasn’t the child in the scenario; I was the parent. Holy crap! I’m the parent now. Me! All that fear of walking the high wire I never had for myself now engulfed me. I felt every ounce of it for this tiny, innocent person resting soundly in my arms, all the anxiety, all the uncertainty, all the unknown. He would be relying on me to care for him, to help him when he stumbled, to teach him to leave the nest. He will be looking to me for guidance, for support (emotionally and financially), for understanding. He will now be the one walking that high wire without fear because I am his safety net. That is when I realized I was a grown-up.

Jabber, jabber, jabber

Flynn is blissfully unaware that he is only 19 months old.  He tries to do whatever the rest of us are doing.  His favorite task to mimic is talking on the phone.  He loves cell phones, working or not.  A working cell phone provides the bonus of both lighting up and dialing Japan.  He holds the phone to his ear and says the following:  "Hi.  abaofhowiehfiuviawhegoiuahwoeighowihgnanjwhpviaiohewvneioaswlsdkagjhoigheidaddubdubdubdubdubd.  Bye."

Mom, what's with the ancient brick phone? 
(Among the treasures unearthed at Maria's house was my first cell phone.  My calling plan back then: 20 minutes per month.)

Drake at this age wasn't nearly as chatty as Flynn currently is.  The boy will talk your ear off and give you the what for, should to cross him.

Drake, the texting machine

Drake likes to send his daddy text messages.  It helps him during the day when Tim is at work to not feel sad that Daddy is at work and not playing with monster trucks.  Since Drake cannot spell or read, the texts consist of random numbers and letters.  But yesterday, after he sent another message, he was repeating to himself what the message said.

"Hi, Daddy.  We are being good little monkeys.  I love you. See you soon."

Melts your heart, doesn't it? :)

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

"Vampire Romance" is a genre at Barnes and Noble?

Am I fundamentally missing something about the whole Twilight craze?  I know I am not in the target audience, but there a legions of women out there who are my age who are quite rabid about the series (and a few closeted fans).  I do enjoy a good vampire story.  Dracula was the first epistolary novel I ever read, which lead to a lifelong infatuation with the vampire lore and the literary style. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is another favorite, both for the exquisite writing and the continuation of the lore.   I understand the lure of the mythology.  (Remember, the theme of the original story was female sexuality is evil.)  The vampire oozes sexuality and is just one smooth cat. 

I just can't bring myself to read the Twilight series.  Vampires shouldn't "glitter."  And, somehow, I'm supposed to believe that a 104-year-old vampire has been waiting around for the love of his life: a teenaged girl.  Umm...no.  (I was a teenaged girl once. No one's soul mate is a teenaged girl.)  All this wouldn't matter if the story was well written.  But, when Stephen King says your writing is horrible, I would listen.  You don't have to be a fan of his work to respect the depth and breadth of his writing career.

If anyone can give me some reasonable insight into this, I'd be happy to listen.  Until then, I'll stay away and glean the information from The Oatmeal.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Dear Innocent Motorists

Although I do not feel the need to justify my choice to be pasty, I must issue an apology.  You were just innocently driving to the store when you were struck blind.  Nothing in this area creates such a light source: lasers, lighthouses, atomic explosions.  Yet, you were subjected to it all the same.  I am sorry.  I was just taking my son for a walk.  I will issue a public warning the next time I wear shorts (which will probably be tomorrow because another 90+ degree day has been foretold).

Friday, August 13, 2010

My kingdom for a spoon

I cannot find a freaking spoon in my kitchen.  It's not that I don't own any.  And I don't mean soup/dessert spoons.  I own many spoons suitable for cooking in conjunction with my non-stick pots and pans.  Wooden spoons.  Plastic spoons.  But, no, I have to prepare Rice-a-roni with a spaghetti lifter.  It's like hammering with a small rock.

And, why, you may ask?

Because Chef Drake likes to make "Soap Soup" in the bathroom sink.  On the bright side, he is no longer using his toothbrush to stir his concoction.