Spring Yarn
New hat over at Craft.Leahpeah.com! It’s baby size. (chomp!)
Inappropriate Non-Carnivorous Chomping
Sometimes, I get a look at those baby toes (like these and these) and I want to *Chomp!* Joe will be looking over my shoulder and I’ll actually say ‘Chomp’ out loud and he’ll give me this look that clearly says, ‘There is something WRONG with you, woman!’
I can’t help it. Baby toes are delectable and delightful. They invite, nay, require a Chomp! and I’m just the one to do it. When my babies were born, I spent many glorious moments mimicking eating noises while kissing their feet and PLEASE tell me I’m not the only one. I can’t be. There must be more people out there that pretend to eat baby feet or perfect ears and fingers and chunky thighs, yes? Of course, this totally changes around the age of 1 when baby feet inexplicably turn into toddler feet and start to sweat and stink and get toe-jam. At that point, feet are feet and I’d just as soon not put them near my mouth, thanks. But, until then, YUMMY!
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Here’s a little story to let you know just how weird I am sometimes. Every time Joe loads the dishwasher, I go in after him and pull the spatulas and whisks and long knives up from the bottom shelf where he put them in, vertically, in the flatware holder and I place them, horizontally, on the top shelf next to the bowls where they FIT because they don’t FIT on the bottom and they impede the propellers that need to turn-baby-turn in order to get the dishes really clean. I mean, WHY is it so hard to remember?
A few days ago, we were in the kitchen together, loading the dishwasher and every time he placed one of those items in the flatware bin I reach over and placed it on the top shelf. Kind of like a robot. A dishwasher loading robot. Finally, he stops and asks me what I’m doing. So, in my most patient voice, full of dripping kindness, because really, is it his fault I’m just better than him at loading the dishwasher? No. It’s not. So I can be kind while I completely obliterate his method. I explain exactly what he’s doing wrong and how the blades can’t turn and then the dishes won’t get clean. And he says, ‘No. You’re wrong.’ And I’m all, ‘What? Are you crazy? Look! Look what happens!’ And I reach down to show him how the propeller blades can’t turn and they get stuck on those long utensils and guess what? No, guess! There are NO propeller blade where I thought they were. Those long utensils on the bottom shelf? The vertical ones? FINE where they are. Apparently, I’m thinking of a dishwasher from my other life with my other husband in another house in another universe because THIS one has the propeller blades on the bottom of the dishwasher and there is no way that the way he loads it is getting in the way. What’s even a little weirder is that this is the ONLY dishwasher he and I have ever had together in 5 years and we have only had it the past 2 years which means I’m thinking of some lame-ass dishwasher from over 6 years ago. Let’s just assume that THAT dishwasher had some kind of utensil-blade issue, ok? Thanks.
At the Zoo
People keep coming in the house, looking this way and that way, checking out the dining room where fifteen miscellaneous projects are arranged carefully, clockwise, around the table. They walk towards the backyard, sniffing over the dishtowel, crumpled, next to the coffee mug from this morning and the plate half slick with remaining egg yolk and toast crumbs. They scan the walls, the floors, judging the painting hanging slightly too far to the right and the pile of magazines, about 25 high, next to the stack of books, even higher, on the coffee table. There’s a corner of clothes waiting to be folded on the couch. Some balls of yarn on the floor by the basket. And the kitchen carpet, the blue one of respectable size and pile, is in the washer. They will never know that I am a person that has that kitchen carpet. They will forever believe I am a kitchen carpetless heathen with toes touching the cold linoleum at 2am while making toast.
They imagine their table where mine is. Their living room set where mine is. Their beds, linens, bathroom items including shaped soaps that look like seashells and stars, where my homemade candles sit in their small clay plant reservoir, just the perfect size for three laid in a triangle.
They come back downstairs, moving as a herd, the mom who judged the way my bed was (not) made, the dad who thinks the two plungers in the garage are a sure sign that the plumbing must be bad, their pre-teen girl chewing gum (she probably touched Alex’s jewelry on the table by her bed and smelled her perfume in the bathroom), their 5-year-old boy holding the railing, trailing his fingers on the side (they probably have something sticky on them from breakfast, like grape jelly or syrup and I bet he picked his nose and left a disgusting booger on the railing about half way down) and the toddler girl, too cute for words but she stole one of my kitchen magnets and put it in her pocket. If confronted, her mom will probably call me a liar and send her co-worker’s son, who belongs to a bad group of kids, over to steal our TVs when we’re out. I don’t really care about the magnet. It’s one of the butterfly ones that say cliché things like ‘Love is in your heart!‘ and ‘Today is the First Day..‘ blah blah blah. I imagine her finding it two days from now, cleaning out the pockets for the wash, and immediately feeling embarrassed. Her face will turn red and she’ll wonder if I know. I know.
And they are just one group of many. We are the attraction in the zoo, sitting on the couch and pretending to not notice them as the landlord takes them around and shows them the many benefits to this lovely home like the dog run sans dog, the spacious Great Rooms with dual fireplaces and the automatic sprinkling system. Doritos commercials have never been so captivating.
Mostly, I don’t stay around when the people come out on their excursion. Mostly, I go to the market or the book store and waste an hour looking at more books to add to the Haven’t Read Yet pile or stay in isle 4 reading the backs of cereal boxes. Honey Nut Cheerios are not a good read. And I can’t wait to be in our new home, away from these people looking at our old one, where we don’t really live anymore. So I guess I better get out there and look through more homes. But only empty ones.
Current Smarts: Real Estate
If you just want the tips, skip to the end.
Some people notice that on my resume, I have a 2004 listing as a Real Estate assistant. I worked with my friend, Margot, and had a great time. She is a Real Estate Agent and only works with reputable people. In fact, she can be a little anal, but all in a good way, because there is no way something shady is going to go down while she is in charge. What you don’t see in my resume is a 2002/3 listing of loan ‘consultant’ which is what we called ourselves. I’d like to forget about the time I spent doing it. But maybe the lessons I learned have some value and I’ll try and share what I know here.
At the end of 2002 I was newly back to San Diego and looking for work and I needed it fast. I found a job with a company that did home loan refis. Our target market were the sub-prime people – those people with kinda bad to really terrible credit but still able to qualify for a refinance loan because they had equity in their home or their bankruptcy was over 3 years old.
I remember my first day on the job. I was sitting near the center of a very long desk, maybe 8 or 9 of us all together, each with a phone, a pad of paper and pen, and a computer printout of leads. These were supposedly ‘warm’ leads, meaning people that had qualified by merely existing, owning a home and hadn’t refinanced in the past 2 years which meant they most likely had some equity. It was a given that they had bad credit. My job was to call each of the people on the list, ask if they had received the letter we had sent them X number of weeks ago and ask if they could use a little extra money. I seriously tried. I made the first two calls, got hung up on, made another call, found someone that was vaguely interested but said to call back when her husband was home and then started listening to the people around me. Holy crap, they were full of it. They were saying all kinds of things that I knew weren’t true. But the fact that they got around 1% per done deal was the motivating factor for them to say just about anything they thought would help get the paperwork started.
I asked to see the owner of the company, who I knew was upstairs. I had done ‘training’ the week before for an entire afternoon, like 4 whole hours (sarcasm intended), and I’d seen his office. The floor manager didn’t want to let me up to see him, but finally did let me, calling ahead and saying in a sarcastic tone that I was someone new with ‘some qualms’ to talk over. Then he chuckled and sent me up.
(more…)
Free Form Confessions
I wore my cute, breezy, brown and summery short pants* yesterday. I haven’t pulled them out since last summer. It’s been so hot it seemed like a good idea. Except for the fact that yesterday it was overcast and raining all day. That is so like me – just a few days off in my timing.
I put my hand in my pocket sometime after lunch and pulled out this card**:
This tells me two things: 1) the last time I wore these pants was at Blogher and 2) I didn’t wash them. Awesome.
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I want a job, like, yesterday.
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I made my stomach upset by eating a marshmallow bunny and a Reese’s peanut butter egg. My body is not used to sugar. I can only assume that Easter is evil and the power of Christ compels me to fill my body with yummy sickness inducing chocolate treats. Thanks a lot, Easter Bunny.***
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I’m sensitive to latex. Bandages make a red patch on my body wherever they are attached and it lingers much longer than whatever the original owie was. When I tried to quit smoking those last couple of times, I tried the patch only to find I was constantly itching around and around it. Like that mosquito bite that you don’t want to bother but you can’t leave alone. The gum eventually did the trick for me, as bad as it tasted. So, here comes the part where I share too much information (as if it hasn’t happened already) in that I remind you that I’m trying not to become pregnant. The status of Joe’s and my sex life is not really anyone’s business and not really suitable for public internet consumption but let me just say that latex has become an issue in this department. So much so that the only thing Joe wanted for his birthday was for me to find some type of condoms that would work for me and not result in me jumping up from bed and exclaiming ‘My cootchie itches, dangit!’ which isn’t really the finest ending to being intimate with your partner. I found these during a hilariously eventful trip to the drug store where we only purchased gender-appropriate items like sanitary napkins and Gillette shavers. At $38 per 12 pack, each use coming in at just over $3, I feel like I better rent a video and hone up on my pole skills to make buying that pack worth his time and money. No pressure.
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Frequently, Joe will try to push a little culture towards the kids’ general direction. He’s quite observant for an old guy (He’s 37!!!) and he watches for things that they might find interesting. A computer game here, a geek conference there, a movie from the era of raging musicals from time to time, and then tries to entice the kids to participate, to broaden their horizons, if you will. Sometimes it works, sometimes not. One great experience was the other night when The Goodbye Girl was available via HBO on Demand. Joe and I both love the movie**** but I’ve heard groans from my daughter in relation to movies seeming to be a much better match seeing as how she likes to sing and dance and would like to be in the movies some day (Guys and Dolls, West Side Story) so I didn’t have very high hopes. I was wrong. She loved it, giggling and laughing, mostly in reaction to the deadpan humor and cuteness of the daughter in the story, Lucy, played by Quinn Cummings, who was fabulous and was nominated for a Golden Globe and an Oscar for her role. Out of curiosity, because I’m nosy like that, I found her online.***** Her blog is The QC Report and her writing is brilliant. I think we all know of a few celebrity online spots where the writing is sub par and un-witty making it hard to read except for the fact that you really, really, really want the person to have something great to say because you liked them in some movie. But Quinn’s writing is poignant and real, well written and funny. If I were still doing blogger interviews I would hit her up for a session in no time. Instead, I’ll just point you to a couple of my favorites.
Love Means Never starts out with how people don’t actually apologize when they apologize anymore and ends up telling an experience she had of being held up as the show-and-tell item of the night. I’ve had nights like this. I’ve been so angry and left the party rather than talk to the person about it and I then avoid them forever after and wonder, as I replay what I would have said in my head for the next eight months, if I would have done better to confront them.
Big Daddy is a beautiful tribute to her father, Sumner, and includes the heart breaking tale of the last day making the movie, The Goodbye Girl.
Even in her most recent post, To Live and Dye in LA, she uses words in such a wonderful way, weaving them in and out and creating this tapestry that you can see and touch and taste.
Also, she is the creator of the Hiphugger.
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I’m kind of a Law and Order freak. I have a need to see bad guys put away. On the rare occasion that they leave it open-ended with no pat resolution and the perp not on his way to Rikers, I throw things and pitch a fit. I need RESOLUTION, bastards!
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For those of you receiving your latest issue of JPG: Street, please thumb through the pages until you find the interview I did with the amazing National Geographic photographer, Nick Nichols. The entire interview couldn’t fit in the issue, and he’s got a film festival coming up that sounds fantastic, so please read the entire interview on the JPG site here for more details.
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I like Simon Cowell more than Paula Abdul. He seems to tell the truth and for the most part appears unintoxicated.
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*I realize that historically, ‘short pants’ is meant to describe above the knee pants, or, shorts. I use the term ‘short pants’ here because I get all the capri, palazzo, flood, ankle, and crop terms confused and what I really want to say is my pants are shorter than regular pants, ok? Play along with me.
**I’d like to apologize, Eden, not just for not keeping your card in a place of honor these past few months (it’s now in the Honor Bin) but also because I didn’t even know it wasn’t. If you can’t forgive me, I’ll understand. (at least I didn’t wash it!)
***Just kidding, Mom. I don’t really believe that Easter is evil. I used the phrase ‘The power of Christ compels thee!’ because no matter how much I don’t want to, I like and keep watching the movie Just Like Heaven with Reese Witherspoon and Mark Ruffalo and there is part in there where a completely ridiculous priest says that over and over while spraying holy water all over the floor where I’m sure it burns holes clean through to the apartment underneath where people are looking up and wondering where the acid rain is coming from.
****The part at the end where Paula is standing out on the balcony in the rain? With Elliot’s guitar positively soaked through? And hugging it as if it was the embodiment of Love? That is truly a wonderful moment.
*****Actually, Joe found her. But we share a brain, in a completely un-codependent way, so it’s the same as if I found her. Right? (thanks, joe! xo)
My Guy
Me, singing in a rather loud, operatic voice – ‘I’m going up to SHOOOOWWWEEEERRRRR!’
Joe, mostly ignoring me and continuing his email -’That’s great.’
Me – ‘Well, that was quite less enthusiastic than the response I was hoping for.’
Joe, being the kind of husband that loves me – ‘Thaaaaaaaat’s GRRREEEEEEAAAAAT!’
Today is Joe birthday. He’s 37 and will always be older than me. And smarter than me in many ways, except playing Guitar Hero, loading the dishwasher the RIGHT way, cleaning the house the RIGHT way and never buying enough pairs of pants. My studies show every person needs at least 15 pairs of jeans and his side of the closet is severely lacking. But, that’s all ok because he changes light bulbs, generally always puts away the laundry (THE CHAIR LAUNDRY) and sings in an operatic voice when I need him to. He gets spiders down from the very high ceiling so I can sleep at night and cleans the hair out of the drain.
Joe also has a complete tool set of skills when it comes to deciphering kid-speak, which doesn’t come easy to parents who come into the parent game mid-stream. He hears, ‘No, I don’t have any homework.’ and now immediately translates that to, ‘I So SO do have homework, but I don’t want to do it right now. And if I say no, you’ll leave me alone. But then when I get a D on my test next week, I will blame you for not making me study so if you really love me, you’ll make me haul out my agenda book, with much protesting, and look over my shoulder while I pretend to look by running my finger down the page in a line as I fake check and then when you ask me what ‘Study for Test’ means in the third period slot, I’ll act all surprised and say Oh Ya! I guess I do have homework and I’ll most likely hate you instantly because I’m not getting to play Counter Strike with my FRIENDS ONLINE who need me to WIN THE BATTLE, DUH, but when I’m not working at 7/11 at the age of 28, I’ll thank you.’ He also knows that ‘I barely touched him!‘ means ‘I just smacked him upside the head but he deserved it because he touched my favorite golf putter – the one I stashed under the coffee table so no one would find it and HE TOUCHED IT.’ And, last but not least, teen girls that answer How was your day? with barely a ‘Fine.’ really mean ‘You are old and a man, a man that (eeewwww) has hair on his chest, so there is no way you could ever understand the deep, deep sadness I carry in my heart today when Tammy totally forgot to bring my sweater to school and I wore my white shirt with the long sleeves just BECAUSE she was supposed to bring it and the shoulders on it are weird without the sweater and all day I had to just wear that stupid shirt without the sweater and everyone, EVERYONE stared at my stupid shoulders all day and Tammy didn’t even care or say sorry! You should BE SORRY, TAMMY!’
And, none of that even takes in to account the skills he had to learn just to understand me. That list would be far too extensive, so let me just say, Happy Birthday, Joe. I love you. You are my favorite.
Alex Got Her Braces Off
There has been much smiling. Real smiling. With lots of white, straight teeth.
She has used whitening strips every morning and night to remove the very, very, very slight yellowing around where the braces hit her teeth. And I think at last count she was at 16 trips per day into the bathroom to brush her teeth. Nice oral care, girl.
Also – new hats over at the craft site!
The House
The fridge is slowly dying. First, I noticed that stuff on the door wasn’t cold, the mustard and ketchup were far too fluid. Then came the smell and I noticed that the milk was almost warm. I suppose as someone that likes her milk with tiny ice clusters here and there, normally chilled milk would seem not cold enough, but believe me when I say the cold cereal was colder than the milk. Then, the light stopped working. Now, I realize that the light is probably not connected to whatever mechanism keeps the refrigerator cold, but it is a bit suspicious, no? And now, the things on the freezer door such as the OJ and the 8 Wendy’s cups of leftover Frosty* are barely not frozen. You can squeeze the sides and the stuff inside squishes without a second thought. I’m looking at the meat and the fish and thinking they are destined for the trash, as getting sick to my stomach happens easily enough to me with well-cooked food, let alone slightly bad meat.
This is all in conjunction with the drains upstairs suddenly not working well, the sprinkler system shooting off the tops of some of the sprinkler heads and flooding the neighbor’s yard and the carpet downstairs looking like ass due to our awesome ability to run the rented professional carpet cleaner. The lighter-colored stripe from the front door, through the living room and out to the back door by the kitchen looks like the pelt of a very large skunk. When the commercial tells you that you can just clean the ‘well-trafficked’ area of your home? Be smarter than we were. Clean the entire thing or 2 days later you’ll be very, very sorry.
*I only want 2 bites. Only 2. And then the rest of the Frosty goes in the freezer. I keep thinking one of the kids will eat the rest. But they don’t. I might need to rethink my strategy.
Update On Many Fronts
Thyroid – the meds were working quite well and have now started working not so well. I run out of energy quickly and have been reduced to tears a few times this past week over things like putting salt in my coffee or not being able to find my phone. That is in my front shirt pocket. My throat is still sore. My hair is still falling out at a rapid rate and I could be considered a shedding mammal. I am a shedding mammal. I am managing to work out 5 out of 7 days a week but some days, my body feels so weak that I can’t do much more than ride the stationary bike for 20 minutes at a very leisurely pace. If I were on the street, you would lap me if you were using a walker. But I figure some movement is better than no movement. The very act of my blood circulating and taking oxygen to parts of my body has to be better than nothing.
Work – still freelancing. I hope to be starting more steady work next week. Steady money would be great. Because my health has been so up and down, it’s been hard to commit to something and if there is one thing I can’t stand to do, it’s make commitments and then break them. So, I’ve been cautious about wading in too far. But it feels like the right time and I feel strong enough to handle a normal work routine with out suffering some kind of physical relapse.
Moving – moving plans have been put on hold until May. With Joe starting a new contract position and everything that needs to be done around the house prior to moving, we can use those few extra weeks. But, hello garage, don’t think I’m still not going to move through your bowels of crap and not have a ruthless hand. Because I am. And soon.
Kids – Alex got her braces off this morning. I haven’t seen her naked teeth yet, but she says they are SMOOOOTH. Tony is not in a sport at the moment and it’s the first time in many months that he’s had no practice to go to after school a few days a week. I’m curious to see what he does with that time. Tyler is wrestling and playing volleyball. He’s also doing about a bazillion other activities and has zero free time for anything except the occasional sweaty hug on his way to the showers. Except this weekend. For some reason, this weekend the planets have aligned, Mercury is in retrograde and there is not one practice or game for anything. All weekend. You may all pick yourselves off the floor. Devon is tired. Tired. Tired. Tired. I remember sleeping a whole bunch at his age but I think this might be different. More on him later.
Joe – rocks.
Crafts – People! Upload images of your crafts, please. Thank you. I have many hats that need new homes and I want your stuff. : )
In Like a Lion
This is the time of year when you’ll see a girl in spaghetti straps, her hair swept off her neck and piled high on her head strolling with her boyfriend who’s sporting shorts and sandals right next to the family in coats, hats, scarves and carrying umbrellas.
The weather makes me feel slightly schizophrenic. I’ll start the day in a sweat suit on my way to the gym at 5:30, shivering and hoping not to run over any squirrels or bunny rabbits that I can’t see in the fog. When I get showered and dressed an hour and a half later, I’m pulling on a turtleneck and socks even though out the window I can see the sun shining and the trees positively bursting with blossoms. Oh, you poor trees, completely fooled into thinking the time is right to show how pretty you can be, and flirting with the warmth and the bees. You’ll be twice as dismal when the late freeze comes and takes all your pink and purple away. Sometimes patience is a virtue. I know better and so out comes my zip-up hoodie. And I’m right. Until ten after two and I’m pulling my sweater away from my neck, wondering why I’m so warm.
Last night my daughter calls right before dinner to tell me that she looked everywhere and can’t find the skirt she needs for the assembly. All the other girls found theirs and she’s the only one. She’s going crazy trying to figure out what to do and did I think I could make her one? By lunchtime the next day? I run out, pick her up from the mall and take her to the fabric store that screams GOING OUT OF BUSINESS on every available surface but since everything is at least 50% off, I don’t mind too much. We find a red plaid that will work and I make her a skirt, forgetting about all the work I need to get done. Because I can and she needs it. And because the one I made is two inches longer than the one’s the other girls are wearing and covers up a little more leg.
Somehow, I feel like I won something.
About Last Night
When I woke up this morning I had the phrase ‘You my baby daddy’ in both question and accusatory exclamation form running through my brain. Alternating with those lovely words was the local Outback commercial song, which, as Joe pointed out, could be worse as the tune is genuinely kind of catchy.
Not sure what I dreamed about last night, but I think I was on Jerry Springer and then went out to eat.
And for those of you playing the home game, there are still no clothes on the chair!
(they are on the floor next to the chair.)
Also – I uploaded photos of my hats to the craft trade site.
The Weekend? She Rocked.
Palm Desert is the land of many seniors. I grew up next to a place, which back then, was pretty much the same as PD is now. It was hot, kind of barren with localized sudden bursts of green and flowers and manicured lawns amid the homes that all looked like mirrored images of their neighbors, and lots and lots of older people accompanied with the smell of BenGay. And small dogs. Which is all great because what’s not to love. That town I grew up next to has changed somewhat since then. It’s kind of a college town with young families coming in. You know what happens when you get a bunch of young, procreating Mormons in one place….they go to church, organize the year supply room, finish the quilt, bottle the rest of the peaches and plant the garden. And then they make more babies.
The one major difference between the two places that I could see was money. And with that money in PD, many of the lovely, older ladies had chosen to do strange and unusual things to their faces. We had a sort of contest going on for who could take the best photo illustrating the problem but every time I got close to someone who would have for sure made me the winner, my hands and arms stopped working, my mouth got slightly slack and I couldn’t move. So, Aaryn won, although I can’t seem to find the photo that illustrated the Trout Mouth issue in her photostream. Update: I found it.
We were sitting at lunch, eating great Mexican food and everywhere you looked there were these women that don’t look human sitting next to men that actually looked their age. With their collars pimped up on their pastel-colored Polo shirts. But the women. Yikes. It’s like someone smeared all their features slightly with putty, lightened them up with bleach and then inflated their lips four sizes too big. It’s not pretty. It’s not fooling anyone. Stop it! You’re scaring me!
And then Susan took us to see bunny-headed people at the museum that were straight out of Donnie Darko. (Why? Why?? You’re scaring me!)
Katie has young knees. She spent most of the weekend crouching in one contortion or another, really working to get the shot.
Poor Tam was sick for a good portion of the time but her hair always looked great. I just thought she was crying because it was so hot and my breath smelled bad but it turns out that her cold medication wasn’t working very well. She told the funniest stories. Unfortunately, I can’t repeat them because of the blood pact we made to protect our own, but let me just say that thin walls make a great backdrop to a number of punch lines.
Jessica was kind enough to try on some of my hats. Holy crap, is that woman photogenic.
And Aaryn shamed us all with the size of her equipment.
This weekend we laughed our selves silly. Drank too much. Talked. And talked. Took naps(me). Susan made jambalaya which I’d never had before. We took a buttload of photos. Ate chocolate. And soaked our souls in great company. I slept in the same bed as Susan and I thought I must be snoring because when I woke up she had her pillow wrapped around her head. Turns out she just sleeps in a faux-smothering way every night. Or she was lying and my snoring was peeling the new finish off the kitchen cabinets.
We had our final brunch at the country club. (Where Doug managed to buy us our meal even though he wasn’t there. He’s magic like that. Thanks, Doug.) I was (ahem) slightly hung over. At one point, as Susan was taking my photo, I went to stick out my tongue and food, crumbs of dry bread, fell splatty out of my mouth and on to my shirt. Yes, we are not all good at everything.
We took our final, excruciatingly meta and self-absorbed portrait after lunch. Inside, there was a man in a candy-striped suit jacket singing All My Exes Live In Texas with a banjo. That kind of says it all.
Crafty Crap
Look! I made a craft exchange site! I used Ning to set it up, and let me tell you, it’s never been so easy. They really did a great job making it user friendly. And as far as I can tell, it looks the same across all browsers. And, THAT, my friends, is awesome.
So, go! Sign up! Let’s trade! (I don’t think I’ve ever used so many !!s as I have the past few days. It! Must! Stop!) Upload an image of the craft you want to trade and put the amount it is worth in the image description. Look at the example on my page if you want.
The basic rules are thus:
1. All crafts must be (mostly) homemade.
2. Be sure to give your handmade items a reasonable* worth.
3. No one has to trade if they don’t want to.
4. Play nice! Everyone has different taste. Remember the Golden Rule and don’t say anything if what you want to say is mean spirited.
5. If you are trying to sell your crafts, this is the wrong place for you. Check out Etsy.
6. Although some amount of creative overlap will naturally occur, please try your best not to steal someone else’s ideas. You’re creative! Come up with your own.
7. Have fun!
*Everyone has different ways to come up with the cost of their crafts. One good rule of thumb is to triple your materials cost. You could also look online and find what other people are selling their comparable craft for.
Since you guys are the test group, feel free to let me know here or there what doesn’t work for you. They have a lot of customization features so I might be able to change it ‘til we love it.
Stuff I like: I can feature images that you guys upload to show up in a slideshow on the front page. I can set the Flickr feature to upload all the images in your Flickr account that are tagged a certain thing. We can come up with that together. (Maybe something like leahpeahcraft?)
So Then……
It was all going so well.
And then I remembered I was me. And since I’m me, I want to do about a bajillion projects at one time.
But seriously, let’s just say that there was this place. And when you went to that place, virtually, you could trade a handmade craft that YOU made for one that someone ELSE made of equal value. There would be no money involved except what you spent for shipping your own craft to the other person. Would you want to? Are you a crafter? Is this worth my time? Am I insane?
Well, let’s just leave that last question alone.
But I have to tell you, I have three craft trades of my very own lined up with her and her and her and I am PUMPED and loving this entire idea. Have you seen me pumped before? No?? You are lucky, Pumpkin, very lucky.
But I have a dream! A dream of a crafty exchange! Who’s with me? Unless someone already did this and I missed it. Because I did search, just so ya know.
Different Than I Thought
Published in True Mom Confessions, Berkley Trade, 2009
No one expects to get divorced when they get married. We were no different. My first husband and I were determined to make it work and we fought it out for almost 14 years. We would tell each other, ‘We can do this! We’ll figure it out because we are strong enough to make it work!’ When we finally reached that breaking point, there was nothing I wanted more than for him to marry someone that would love him and my kids. We ended as some sort of odd friends with a long and varied past and had the best in mind for each other. Although, for him, he probably thought the best would never happen for me based on my mental health issues. Thankfully, he was wrong. And I know at this point he’s happy he was wrong.
I wanted his new wife, because there was no question that he would be getting married right away, to really, really, REALLY love them and be there for them. I wanted my kids to feel like she was their other real mom. To trust her. To love her. And maybe that was odd because in a way, it could be looked at as if she was replacing me. But for them to be in a real family would be the best thing for them. For them to have anything less might in many ways be detrimental and there was never a moment when I wished for that. I remember the first time I met who he was going to marry, I went up to hug her because the kids genuinely seemed to like and appreciate her and they were happy and that made me happy. It wasn’t until she didn’t really hug me back, but instead seemed uncomfortable, that I realized the way I was thinking might be different than the other two in our odd adult triangle. But I never stopped hoping that we could be friends and work together on behalf of the kids.
Over the past few years, their step-mom has been everything I wished and hoped for. We might not be best friends, and that is most likely a much more healthy relationship that I originally imagined, but we are always more than civil and most of the time slightly warm. And the kids think of her as their mom. They call us both Mom interchangeably and within the same breath. To them, they are safe in their relationship with both of us and have no reason to differentiate with a Step here or a Bio there unless there is someone else in the conversation that really doesn’t get it and is wallowing in confusion. Then you might hear one of them backing up a bit to explain who is who. Maybe. But it’s just as likely they won’t take the time to explain and figure it is that person’s problem if they don’t get it.
And oddly, there is nothing that I’m prouder of. And oddly still, there is nothing that pierces my heart quite like hearing them call her Mom. It’s a strange revealing moment to be feeling discomfort and then in a shocked second remember that it’s something you wished for. Because on some level, I am still vain and would like to be irreplaceable. I’d like to be the only Mom in their life and have them depend on me for all of their Mom needs. And she could be there, doing a really fine job of being a Step-Mom, but I would be the REAL Mom. This is the fantasy that rides through my brain from time to time. But sadly, it isn’t reality. And thankfully, it isn’t reality. Because being safe on all sides is what is best for them. And I’m happy they call her Mom even when my heart occasionally bleeds a bit on the inside where they can’t see. Maybe hers does, too.
Alternate Ending
Imagine an easy chair. It’s brown, striped, not too big, not too small, and sitting in our upstairs bedroom. Never, and I really for serious mean ever, have Joe or I sat in that chair. We have never used it for its purpose, of housing our bottoms, because it has been, since day 1 in our home, covered with assorted clothing. Periodically, Joe will go through and hang up all the shirts, pants and bras that have been tossed from my body onto that chair and for a brief moment, possibly two, we get to view its soft and cushie seat. But then *snap* it’s gone. Because it’s nighttime and I just got undressed.
Two days ago, as Joe strode in the bedroom and glanced at where the chair should be, he stopped short and stared at the impossibly high mound of clothing, a good four feet above chair level. “What?” I asked. He said, “I’m going to get the camera. This is something that everyone should see. I’m going to post it to my blog.” And then *poof* the pile magically disappeared and we all lived happily ever after. And the pile was never seen or heard from again because I learned my lesson and always hung up my clothes. The end.
Actually, I asked him not to and very thoroughly explained why him doing so would damage me physiologically for years and he couldn’t live with the guilt. He promptly apologized and suggested we make flash cards of all our innermost feelings and meet up in an hour to powwow. Our marriage was strengthened and now we always hold hands.
Actually, I quivered my lips and let a large, single tear gently fall from my right eye while pouting, ‘You just don’t love me.’ Joe then fell on his knees, crying and asking me for forgiveness. I let him squirm for a bit and then laid my hands on his head and blessed him. We never spoke of it again.
Actually, I threatened him with the loss of a limb, a small limb, if he ever made such a rash suggestion again. He knew I meant business, so he ran out and got me a Chai latte and gave me a foot rub for the next two hours.
Actually, I batted my eyelashes and moved my shoulders suggestively and asked if there was anything I could do to change his mind. I can’t tell you the end of this one, but suffice it to say, we both have large hickeys in the shape of Texas, his on his neck and mine on my thigh.
Actually, I told him I would sort all the socks if he would promise not to. And then he hung up all my clothes. Dude, I had the worse deal, let me tell you. Two huge baskets full of dirty, holey, sometimes crunchy boy tube socks. I had to go through and touch them all, about half of which I picked up with two fingers, pinky extended, tossing them directly into the trash bin. The entire time I had the EWWW mouth on my face.
And that’s the truth.
Late Morning in the Coffee Shop
I send Joe a text message that says ‘You look so cute. Profesh Joe rocks!’ I watch from the corner of my eye to see him get it. I keep waiting and then I realize he isn’t going to get it. Of course not. He’s in a meeting. And he’s professional.
There’s a girl in the corner, purposefully facing away from everyone with her book open, legs crossed and sneaking furtive glances over her right shoulder to see who might be watching her. Teen Girl Squad strides in. They are eternally bored in their sheep fur lined boots and shoulderless sweaters and tight jeans with careful and expensive rips in them. They move as if one large life form, a mass of hormones and sadly perfect hair and lipgloss.
I notice the man sitting to the left of the door watching me again. I continue to ignore him. I watch the older couple, he with his Louie L’Amour novel and she with her newspaper, one leg up in his lap. He pats her ankle every so often and it’s comforting to witness.
The man watching me looks as if he might speak. I take a sip from my drink, set the cup on the table and take out my crochet needle and some yarn. I feel the blue and very thick yarn in my fingers, rolling it from side to side, wondering what it wants to be. A hat, I decide. They are all hats right now. Joe is nodding to the man across the table from him outside. Joe looks cute. He looks concerned and he probably really is. Programming questions make him happily involved.
The man watching me is sniffling but otherwise not bad looking. Early forties I think, but any person, male or female who is sniffling repeatedly every five seconds, has a rapidly lowering attractiveness factor and may want to rethink not bringing a hankie. Or sitting in public for long spans of time. Or looking as if they want to hit on someone. I’m annoyed and wishing I’d worn a ring on my finger today.
The youngish-mom in the seat next to me gathers her kids and assorted kid-paraphernalia. There are two children, both under five years old, and they have been climbing over her like Mount Everest wiping snot on her shoulder and saliva in her hair while she good-naturedly wrestles them back to her lap. She attempts two false starts in exiting which fail because of one action figure left behind under a chair and a red shoe wedged in a seat cushion. Her third attempt is successful and the lobby seems much less friendly with them gone.
Romeo makes a quick beeline for the recently vacated oversized chair, leans back and sets his drink on the table in between us. I see him looking at me every few seconds but ignore him. He doesn’t appear to be the sleazy type of guy – that guy is kinda fun to squelch – and I don’t want to hurt his feelings. Every time I look out the window at Joe, whose head is now directly to the right of the man next to me, the man tries to catch my eye. Finally, out of some odd magnetism that must have been pulling from his eyes to mine, I glance at him, smile, and go back to my crochet. He makes a small sound in his throat, then a tiny muffled laugh. I decide the best thing to do is to be friendly so I look up, smile again and say, ‘Sorry if I seem to be staring. My husband is right there outside (and I point) and I keep checking on him to see if his meeting is over.’ He looks where I pointed and says, ‘I see. And here I thought it was my new haircut and my son’s Axe.’ And before thinking I say, ‘Axe is truly one of the stinkiest deodorants I’ve ever smelled. Why do they wear it?’ He laughs a real laugh and says, ‘The cat died last week and I swear it was the Axe.’ I’m confused by that but since he’s checking his watch and getting up to leave, I let it go and am glad to not prolong the conversation.
Left in the lobby is an Asian couple wearing color-coordinated zip-up leisure suits with stripes down the sides. Their very tall and very glamorous daughter is wearing extreme amounts of silver and looking very overdressed for a late morning coffee. There is also a weekend-dad with the name ‘Crusty’ on the side of his coffee with his daughter who has on extremely short shorts and can pull it off because she’s young with firm legs. I like the father immensely because I assume the Crusty is an indicator of his sense of humor, a sign that he tries too hard, which every parent does from time to time. My son would find both their daughters attractive.
My coffee says ‘Nia’ on the side. My voice broke when I said my name and it hurt too much to try and correct her. Besides, Nia is kind of a great name.
A guy sneezing at one-minute intervals sits in the empty chair next to me. I say bless you the first few times and then give up. I think about joking with him that I extend to him a standing Bless You! and to consider it his every time he needs it, but I don’t. I also think about moving but the only empty chair is directly across from him and I figure I’m getting fewer germs from spray on the side of him than a full frontal attack. I think everyone in the city must be sick right now.
There is a thin, small man just outside the door that nods to everyone walking out. He’s talking to himself but trying to include everyone around him. It’s a nice gesture but it appears to creep people out. I decide to talk to him when I leave.
It looks like the meeting is going well. Joe trimmed his facial hair so he has a slight goatee with a tiny Miami Vice shadow working the sides. He calls it the Lazy Man Shave, but it suits him.
A tall woman with long blonde hair has an uncooperative two-year-old who refuses to get up. She scoots her whining child, using her booted leg, at the rate of six inches every minute until she gets to the front and orders. Then she picks up her child in one scoop and whispers, hard, in her ear. The mom’s head is shaking in tandem with her mouth opening and closing. And for the millionth time this morning I miss the kids and wish they were here. Tony would have got an Izze, probably grapefruit, Tyler would have picked a water, or better, brought his own water from the back of the car and waited patiently for us to play out our wasteful consumeristic weekend tradition. Alex usually gets a caramel frappe and Devon a Chai latte, like me, but he gets his extra hot and with extra Chai pumps like his dad. And Joe would have looked over the pastries and then decided he didn’t really want anything after all and then shared my Chai. If he was in here. But he’s out there.
A man has a leak in his drink and little drops of caramel colored coffee hit the floor creating a snowflake pattern next to his shoe. The couple next to him call his attention to it and he laughs saying, ‘I’m glad you can see that too. I wondered if I was imagining it or just having trouble swallowing.’ They all laugh and out of that comes a conversation of ‘What do you do’s and ‘Where you went to college’s. You can make a conversation with anyone if you try.
I’ve taken out my laptop to jot a few notes. My drink is lukewarm at best and the man next to me asks me if I’m a writer. Why is it so hard to say yes? I get nervous and tell him sometimes I am.
And sometimes, I am.














