Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Delusional Winter Break
Saturday, December 20, 2008
On Becoming A Hobo and The Great Depression
Cole came home from school the other day stating that in Social Studies, his class was discussing the Great Depression.
“Yeah, mom, um, during like, a really long time ago, like in the old days or something, there was a really bad time and they called it the Great Depression.” Cole explains.
“And…” I prompt, wanting to be assured our tax dollars are hard at work.
“And, like, well, people were very poor because they lost their jobs and so they didn’t have any money. So then they couldn't work and so then, they couldn’t buy any food and they couldn’t live in their house any more. So they had to live on the street. It was sad. “
And the nine year old version of the Great Depression continues, "And my teacher said that history repeats itself and we’re probably going to have a Great Depression, or somthin', like that, Mom.” He looks up at the ceiling, thinking deeply, tapping a pencil in the space where his two front teeth used to be. Long pause… and then, “Why did they call it the Great Depression, it doesn’t sound like it was really that‘great’…”
“No the Great Depression was not ‘great’, Cole. And your teacher might be right. Things are tough right now, Cole. There are people losing their jobs all over the country. Luckily Daddy and I are ok right now. Our jobs are safe at this time. We are just being careful, watching every penny we spend.”
Patty, the quiet, but soaked little sponge sitting nearby, taking in all of this serious commentary, bursts into tears, announcing dramatically, “I don’t want to be a hobo, Mommy!”
Hobo. Hobo? Where did this child get this term? When we were young, a hobo was someone dressed up for Halloween with a stick resting on a shoulder with a filled, red bandanna tied to the end, black smudges painted on their cheeks and tattered clothes. Nothing gets past Patty.
So this holiday season, let’s hope that if we are headed into a Great Depression, that we can make it somewhat ‘great’?...and that Hobos will be somewhat back in style?
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Thankful for Mom
He wrote, "I am especially thankful that my Bubbie is feeling better from her car accident."
(Bubbie is my mom) I was overwhelmed with pride, amazement and sadness that he thought enough about her ordeal to put it on paper.
In May 2008, my mom was involved in a "freak accident" as many refer to it. That day, an hour before it happened, I actually ran into her coincidentially. I was working with my manager that day. We were heading into a doctor's office to bring them lunch. My mom was just leaving her appointment in that same office. I introduced my boss to my mom, we laughed about what a small world it was. My mom was then off to get her hair colored, her once-every-three-weeks ritual to keep her grey roots from appearing.
The day went on, and because my boss was in my car, my cell phone was turned off till 5:30 p.m. Once we parted ways, I checked my phone to find about seventeen missed calls from my sister, Marcy. Something was up. My heart pounded as I spoke to her.
"Are you driving?" Marcy inquired.
"Yes, just tell me, what is it?"
"Pull over." she demanded. I was relieved she wasn't crying, so at that moment, I knew no one was dead, because I knew she would have been hysterical if it had been something totally horrific.
"No, just tell me." I stammered, still a little scared for what would come next.
"Mom was hit by a car today." she stated calmly.
"Hit by a car?" It didn't make sense since she drives everywhere.
Long story short, mom was sitting in the chair at the same beauty salon she has been loyal to for the past 25 years, processing with color on her hair, reading a book. A woman who was going to park and head in to get her nails done, allegedly confused the brake and gas and ran her Range Rover through a celing to floor glass wall, through a stuccoed 3/4 wall, hitting my mom, who was sitting on the other side and another woman, and kept driving 25 feet to the back wall of the salon. My mom and the other woman were pinned under the Range Rover, holding hands. The paramedics came and had to use airbags to lift the Range Rover up, so they could pull out my mom and the other woman.
The other woman's injuries were minor and she left the hospital and attended a baseball game that night, we heard. My mom had three fractured ribs, sixteen stitches on her shin and a severe contusion on her eyelid, which called for a very young plastic surgeon to work for three hours hours on the eye. We joked this was one way of getting an eye lift, although it wasn't cosmetic whatsoever. The driver walked away with a few scratches.
"Go home and feed your children dinner. I'm fine" she stated when I arrived at the hospital. After trying to remove the many tiny shards of glass and pieces of drywall from her hair, it was obvious that someone had to be the advocate here, and it was going to be me. As long as I could remain bossy to the doctors and the hospital staff, insisting they replace drugs that were not on their formulary with ones that were less sedating, constipating and other awful side effects, I was not upset. I knew that she would recover and that her injuries were not life threatening, and that made the whole thing less troubling for me.
Mom on morphine and other opioids was memorable. Calling the plastic surgeon, "Doogie Houser", because he looked like he was twelve years old was one classic moment. Yelling at uninvited, nosy, psychotic family members, to "GET THE FU%# OUT!" when they came to visit her out of sheer curiosity was another hysterical incident.
Her attitude throughout this whole ordeal has been, "Hey, I'm still alive." This is insanely heroic and realistic and I admire this outlook immensely. Although she is experiencing some post-trumatic stress at the six month mark here, her progress has been surprisingly accelerated.
I, like Cole am beyond thankful that my mom is still here to celebrate Thanksgiving and every other upcoming holiday and just because it's Wednesday and she is still around.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Cinderella Goes To Scottsdale Fashion Week '08
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Patty and I Walked in the JDRF 5K!
It’s not that I haven’t been bragging about my daughter, Patty to everyone with human ears over the last few weeks. I have. OH, I have. Quite annoyingly, some might say. So, now I can officially brag to the world: On November 1st, Patty and I awoke VERY early after a LONG and exhausting trick or treating excursion the night before and walked in the JDRF (Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) 5K in support of her friend, Jack.
When Jack’s mom, Heidi sent the first e-mail about the walk, I had both Cole and Patty watch the quite moving and inspirational video that was attached. The video depicted the everyday life of Jack, who lives with juvenile diabetes and how he and his parents cope. I urge you to watch this raw, emotional video to gain a better understanding of how this disease effects the whole family. Patty and Cole now understand (as much as their 9 and 5 year old minds can process) the general disease state of diabetes. When the video ended, Patty stated simply that she wanted to walk in support of her friend, Jack.
We walked the 5K with approximately 187 supporters of Jack, or Jack’s Pack, as our quite esteemed group was called. It was an uplifting and wonderful day. Despite the intense heat, Patty forged on, taking many, many, many snack breaks, and water dumping over her head sessions to offset the challenging distance or approx 3 miles. She even had assistance from her coach/mommy, who could barely carry her, but did, several times throughout the walk. (I know, I’m a sucker.) She will undergo a rigorous training program beginning immediately, to prepare for next year’s event~ consuming raw eggs, rising at the crack of dawn to walk and walk and walk, building stamina.
Although her little, wobbly legs were weary that night, (and my back was aching from carrying her) Patty feels proud of this great accomplishment. And I am a proud mama. Please take a moment to watch this important and beautiful video that my friend, Heidi created. Thank you muchos!
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Halloween Memories of Diarrhea and Fun!
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
A Day on the Farm
Today, Patty and her kindergarten class (along with four other kindergarten classes at her school and three other schools besides ours) went to visit a farm~ it was a stinky, dusty, fun adventure! I took the day off to attend this fabulous field trip. There were turkeys a gobblin, big and beautiful with mauvy-purple and bright bubblegum pink faces, feathers patterned with copper and black stripes! I never realized how gorgeous (and delicious) these animals are. Patty asked if these were the same turkeys we ate on Thanksgiving. I told her reluctantly yes, and she thought about it a long time and finally uttered, "Ewww." I may have a vegetarian on my hands as a result.
We saw goats leaping over fences, running wild! The next time you can't sleep, maybe count some goats. Of course there were lots o horses complete with an amazingly putrid stench and flies a buzzin' everywhere! The aroma in this animal area was sending the adults into hard core nausea attacks. The "petting zoo" area, where the kids could hold a tween size chick, not the cute, fuzzy, bright yellow ones, but a more skinny, unfluffy, brownish questionable disease-carrying chick type were passed amongst our kids' previously clean hands. Much to my delight, Patty did not want a thing to do with holding the tween chick. Yea!
The kids found their way through a towering corn maze that was fun, except I kept thinking of The Shining, where Jack Nicholson is chasing Shelley Duvall through a maze at night~ RED-RUM! RED RUM! Oy! The nightmares I had from that unbelievable movie~
The little farmers picked enormous zucchini, cucumber, pumpkins and teensy beensy radishes. It was a wonderful harvest feeling day, even though it was 94 degrees out and we were all sweltering in the still intense heat. The kids didn't even notice. It made me think that the novelty of a farm is something that only lasts a short time when kids are small and open to adventure and new things. Seeing the wonder through their eyes made it all worth the dusty, sweaty, horse crap smelling day!
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Honoring Special Women Loved and Lost to Breast Cancer
Greetings and salutations! Hope this finds you well! Since October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, I feel compelled to write about very special people who have lost their lives to breast cancer. Ya might need to grab a hankie for this one.
First and foremost, my paternal grandmother, Janice S. died at the age of 65. Her cancer started as breast cancer, then spread to her lungs and brain. Although she was a long time smoker, she also had a family history of breast cancer. She was ultra-creative, a writer for most of her successful career, writing copy for advertisers, and songs for my sisters and cousins. She was the ultimate devoted grandmother, she lived wherever we did, cooked amazing meals and had a cool dress up drawer filled with gaudy jewellery, clunky heels and wild wigs. My sister, Marcy and I donned the super-cool garb and transformed ourselves into "Rosemary and Tequila", two women of the world. (Not really sure where we got the name "Tequila" from at age 7 and 4...hmmm?)
My mom's very close friend, Cathy Smith, also died in her early 60's (I think), had breast cancer to start, then spread to other areas of her body. She was probably one of the most down to earth, fun people I have ever known. She was "Green Peace" before it was trendy.
My friend, Chelsea, lost her friend Alicia to breast cancer in her 20's. Yes, her 20's. Although I didn't know her personally, I saw the loss through Chelsea's eyes, and it was devastating that a girl in her 20's should be robbed of the vast experiences yet to come.
I was also touched by breast cancer a few years ago, by a girl who I had about 2 brief conversations with, named Sherrie. First conversation was in the cafeteria during lunch with Cole, when he was in kindergarten. If you have ever had lunch recently in a cafeteria with 150 kindergartners, the noise level is equivalent to a Bon Jovi, circa 1985, concert. (Sing with me: "We've gotta hold on to what we got, it doesn't make a difference if we make it or not, we got each other, and that's a lot for love...WE'LL GIVE IT A SHOT!...")
Anyhow, my eardrums throbbing, Sherrie was one of the sainthood moms working in the cafeteria to help control the mounting chaos. I was having lunch with Cole, back when he would let me sit next to him in front of his friends. I was wearing my mahjong tile bracelet that my mother in law gave me (I play mahj on Tuesday nights sometimes, when I can get out of the house) and she asked me if I played. We were really screaming to try to be heard. I screamed to her yes, I play, she yelled that she knows how to play, so I gave her my card and told her to call me if she wanted to join in on a game sometime. She checked out my business card and realized I was in pharmaceutical sales, sharing with me that she was a pharmacist, but now stayed at home to be with her two daughters who, I think were in 5th grade and middle school. The lunch hour ended and I scurried back to work.
The second conversation I had with Sherrie was on a field trip. I took the day off to go with Cole and his class to the fire station. Sherrie was there helping out. She said hello and that she was getting ready to go have some surgery. She didn't elaborate on what kind, but it didn't seem very serious. She was smiley, upbeat and carefree and we were trying to control the kids assigned to our group, so the conversation was short and scattered.
Months later, I heard she was diagnosed with breast cancer. I didn't see her around school again. I often thought of her and wondered how she was doing. I eventually heard that she was very sick and not coming back to volunteer at school.
Time passed, life was busy and hectic and running around all the time, working and taking care of the kids. One day, I was working, visiting doctors' offices as I normally do. I was walking quickly into a medical building, hoping to get in and see one last doctor before they closed for lunch, breezing past a man helping a very weak, sick woman walk. He had his arm around her shoulders, taking baby steps, carefully and lovingly.
I entered the office and was told to sit in the waiting room for a few minutes. Ten minutes passed. I was getting anxious waiting. Suddenly, the door slowly opened and the couple who I zipped by ten minutes ago, inching along, came in. It was Sherrie and her husband. She had lost all of her hair and looked pale and weak. She appeared to be in immense pain. They sat in the chairs across from me. He held her in his arms, while I sat there with my big obnoxious sales bag by my feet. Her eyes were closed and she was quietly moaning. I didn't know if I should say hi to her, would she want anyone to see her in such a fragile state? No. Should I say hi to the husband, sharing that I knew Sherrie from school? I couldn't. Nothing seemed appropriate. There were no words. After all, we had just had 2 conversations, but I thought of her so often and wondered how she was doing. And now I knew just how she was doing. I said nothing. I was empty. My heart hurt.
The nurse opened the door to the completely silent, heavy waiting room, and I came flying through the door, safe from my uncertainty and horrific sadness.
I saw her obituary in the paper several months later. I read it feeling like even though I merely had 2 brief, scattered, casual conversations with this woman, that I lost a friend. I thought of her husband and her daughters and wondered how they were coping. The other day, while I drove through Parent Drop off, I noticed the school dedicated this area to her memory. I feel that I met Sherrie for a reason. Some people come into your life even for a moment and they can touch your heart. I know Sherrie has touched mine.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Ch ch ch changes...
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Windows Slammed Shut
My kids wolfed down their synthetic cheese pizza to my delight, and were salivating at the awaiting golden tokens they would gamble away, all in the hopes of winning a crappy, plastic toy that would be added to the mountains of useless junk in our overflowing playroom.
Patty quickly blew through her tokens, and went to climb up the jungle gym which lead to a curly-q slide. She stood next to a posted, plastic sign that said, “You must be less than 42 inches to play.” The tippy top of her golden, baby fine hair touched the cutoff line on the sign for playing on the germy equipment. Too big. Too big? It was just yesterday that she was too scared to go up the climbing apparatus at all. I blinked and she finally got enough nerve to go up, but panicked at the top, too frightened to slide down, so I had to haul my way out of shape butt up the tiny, back-wrenching climbing thing and rescue her. And now, in just a blink, she was almost too big for it. It seems like our window for these kid things are closing too quickly for words.
As we waited for Patty to finish sliding down, Cole and I were talking about school lunches. “Who did you sit with at lunch today?” I asked him. “Do you have enough time to eat?” I was curious, since last year, that was a common complaint. He named off a few buddies that he often eats with, and explained, that yes, he has time to eat, but out of nowhere solicited firmly and matter of factly, Cole zinged me with: “Mom, you don’t need to come eat lunch with me anymore. No one does that in 3rd grade. No parents come eat with their kids.” Wham! The window of eating lunch with my first born, at school, was gone forever. Slammed shut.
These windows that continue to close so quickly and unexpectedly have taught me that I guess I need to look at each chance to spend time with our kids as a short term opportunity and a privilege. The one thing that is constant in life is change, but the precious times are so fleeting, I wish I could just freeze time, just for a minute or two.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Transitions
Miss Mary Sunshine mentality, still coursing through my brain cells, I hopped off the uneventful, ninety minute flight, grabbed my bag, which was one of the first off the chute, went outside to catch the shuttle bus to take me to the airport parking garage, which waited for me to cross in the cross walk and get on. My shuttle stop was the very first stop in the route, I gleefully hopped off and found my car immediately. I was humming "Zippity Doo Dah" as I climbed in my car, zipped home in 25 minutes. Home sweet home.
I couldn't wait to see the kids, of course, but I had a few things I couldn't wait to do when I walked in the door. I was really needing to remove my contacts that were like little slivers of glass, stuck to my now weary eyes from the recirculated airplane air and I had to go to the bathroom and ensure I did not get toxic shock. Food would have been high up on my list of wants vs needs at that moment as well.
But those needs on my immediate to do list were fleeting. The two seconds in the door were greeted with Cole bursting with happiness and pure joy to see me and show me everything that I had missed in 3 days. It was a giant, excited run on sentence of what his homework was and kickball stories and a presentation of a little apology note he had written to me because he had accidentally broken my little crystal snowflake on my desk. Oh, and his book report project is due Friday and we need to do it now. Right. Now. Like, let's do it this very second. Mom.
So, with my suitcase in the door barely, I was promptly gluing and cutting with my contacts blurring and the toxic shock risk rising and the tummy growling loudly. Game on. Back to mommyhood with no visible transition whatsoever. My training brainwashing fresh in my mind, it was a do-able transition this time, and a welcome one.
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Fingerprint Necklace~ I LOVE IT!!!
Well thanks to Facebook, that my sister, Marcy made me, kind of forced me to join, I have reconnected with lots of friends from grade school, high school and college. It has been insane how people just pop up out of the nowhere. I know you might be thinking I'm too old to be on there, and I'll defend myself in a separate post next time, maybe.
Anyhow, I was fortunate enough to be contacted by my dorm pal, Tina Steinberg. I came to find out that she designs jewelery, really cool jewelery on her site: www. tinasteinberg.com. She takes vintage pieces and turns them into really amazing and unique creations. Each piece is made by her own two creative hands. I just got my fingerprint necklace a few days ago and I LOVE IT!!! She took impressions of my kids' fingerprints and made their little prints into a necklace. Check out her website to see what I mean. I am going to order more stuff from her soon. I just wanted to give her a sincere shout out, since I truly love, love, love her work! Please take a look-see, you'll be impressed!
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Working Mom Girl
We are living in a stay at home mom world, and I am a working mom girl
You know that we are living in a stay at home mom world, and I am a working mom girl!
Ow, Ow, Ow!
These made up lyrics I sing (to myself of course) mostly every day. There is some small happening each day that reminds me that I am odd man out, or in this case, odd mom out.
Every morning, I drop off Cole and Patty at school, before I head to work. It is extremely hectic to get out the door in the morning, as most households with small children all across the globe are. Backpacks zipped. Water bottles filled. Snack packed. Lunch in backpack. Blue ice in lunch. Library books packed. Shoes tied. Teeth brushed. Hair brushed. Homework in folder, in backpack that is zipped. Name on homework.
Dishes on table from breakfast, washed. Flat iron unplugged. Lights off. Tatum’s bowl filled. Lap top. Cell phone. Headset. Bottled water. Mascara? No time.
We arrive at school and are greeted by various kids, moms, teachers. I walk each kid to their classrooms. Big smothering, wet, clingy kisses and hugs from Patty. Kind of a high five, but not too much contact from Cole.
The bell rings. The kids scurry. The moms are left. Moms begin to congregate to chat it up. I love this time since I get to feel like a “real mom”. The difference is the chatting time is limited for yours truly, because I need to get my butt to work. The stay at home moms get to stay and leisurely talk. For however long they want. One mom holds a coffee mug from home, not a travel mug with lid, but an open topped, porcelain, kitchen mug . As if this is a casual, easy morning ritual. Looking like the girl who overdressed for the party, I stand out amongst the casually, comfortably clad moms, the only one dressed to go to work.
How I long to stay and talk about the kids, school stuff, share funny stories, be leisurely. I want to be in this stay at home mom world, and I cannot. I do not live there. Cuz we are living in a stay at home mom world, and I am a working mom girl…
Monday, September 1, 2008
Stuff the Stuffed Animals
Thursday, August 28, 2008
And The Envelope, Please...
Seriously, this has made my day, my week, ok, ok, my year! Just when I was convinced that the only people really reading this blog at all was my mom, Rosemary and my sister, Marcy (Hi Mom! Hi Rosemary! Hi Marcy!) and of course, my only two regular visitors that comment, Sus from http://wigglerooms.blogspot.com/ as well as Alice from http://elegantthimble.blogspot.com/ I think that very well may still be the case, but none the less, I feel special.
So thank you muchos to Sus from http://wigglerooms.blogspot.com/ who chose little 'ol me and four other lucky mo fos to pass this award to! I can't tell you how touched and very surprised I was to be considered in her recipient list. WOW~ Sus is both totally hilarious and deeply touching in her writing style. Her photos are very photo journalistic and have inspired me to get out my lame point and shoot camera and try to capture the moment a little more often. Sus, I know that if you lived in AZ, we'd be amigos for sure.
I am such a lame-o blogger that I am not even sure I cut and pasted the aforementioned blog sites correctly. Will someone please click on those links and make sure they work? Mom? Marcy? Are you sure you don't want to revoke this award? I'M NOT WORTHY! Gulp, I'm really not. But I'll take it!!! Can I put this on my resume?
But alas, my three minutes of fame are merely three minutes. I will now crown the next award recipients, to those bloggers who inspire me, make me laugh and make me cry sometimes, depending on how much PMS I have coursing through my veins. Although I don't have much time to blog or to read others' blogs, there are a few that I try to visit whenever I can. There are many "famous" bloggers that I would like to pass this to, but I know they have already received this award several times, so I'm trying to pick the folks who may not have won this award yet, but are oh so deserving. Fair?
This award comes with rules. (Enter bald, spec wearing, Arthur Anderson guy in a tux)
They are:
You have to pick 5 blogs that you consider deserve this award for their creativity, design, interesting material, and also for contributing to the blogging community, no matter what language.
Each award has to have the name of the author and also a link to his or her blog to be visited by everyone.
Each award winner has to show the award and put the name and link to the blog that has given her or him the award itself.
Award-winner and the one who has given the prize have to show the link of Arte y Pico blog, so everyone will know the origin of this award.
And the envelope please... drum roll in the distance...
1. Sheri from:
http://myminivanisfasterthanyours.com/
Sheri, a friend of my sister, Marcy, was the lucky blogger I initially pestered to learn how to start up this blog thing. She was extremely helpful and kind to such a pain in the ass type, like myself. Sheri, you are a fabulously funny writer. Your clever style is amazing and I always look forward to reading your blog entries. Thank you for your guidance. I owe you a beer.
2. Lauri from:
http://introducingyalltoarizonians.blogspot.com/
Lauri, you rock sista! You are such an amazing person and friend. Your pictures are priceless and you have such spirit about you! Keep on keeping on! Don't give up! There are many more Arizonans who need some "ya'll" in their vocab.
3. Feener from:
http://mommyvents.blogspot.com/
Seriously LOL funny. She can totally relate to my PMS type outbursts. I love your raw, emotional style. Your blog makes us all feel like we are all in this together (Break into a chorus of, "We're All In This Together..." a High School Musical 1 reference, in case you haven't heard that song like fifty thousand times already in your life)
4. Melissa from:
http://takingwhatisleft.blogspot.com/
Melissa cracks me up! She must carry a camera in her purse at all times to capture the great, hilarious shots that she does! I love the big, fun polka dot background in your blog.
5. Kate from:
http://kateinthewild.blogspot.com/
This is my baby sister, Kate's blog. Can we give this award to family members? I think so. This chick is serving in the Peace Corps in Tanzania for the next 2 years. You are the strongest person I know. We can all learn a thing or two from your tenacity and dedication. You made it through a rodent-ridden bed incident, and now, I am confident you can make it through just about anything! Rock on sista! Please visit Kate's blog and give her good vibes! She deserves it!
Thanks again to Sus for this great honor!
Monday, August 25, 2008
Nighty Night, Sleep Tight, Don't Let the Rabid Rats Bite
I cannot complain. I have no right, no privilege to utter a single complaint after I share with you what my baby sister (she's 22), Kate, went through on Saturday. She is serving in the Peace Corps in Tanzania, Africa (I had to learn how to spell Tanzania once she got her assignment) for over 2 years. She will be educating the locals in her small village how to live healthier, prevent the spread of AIDS and other deadly diseases.
She was initially stationed in a family's home, a Mama and Dada (sister), aged 18. The dad (I don't know the Swahili word for dad) is a teacher who lives in the town that he teaches in, and returns home periodically. She was fortunate enough to have a wonderful, caring family, who killed all the cockroaches and spiders on her walls before she went to sleep. There was no running water or electricity in her quite humble, humble abode. She went to school during the day, learning Swahili at a local school with her Peace Corps counterparts.
Once this portion of the assignment is complete, Peace Corps moved her out to a remote village BY HERSELF. Her hut was a simple 2 room set up, a bedroom and living room, completely empty, again, no running water and no electricity. The door doesn't come to the top or bottom of the threshold. You're thinking I must have forgot to mention a kitchen or better yet, a bathroom. Nope. Neither. The potty is a hole in the ground, outside in a courtyard type place. They cook outside on stones with used corn cobs that are lit. The food is boiled in a kettle of some sort over the fire. She managed to find a mattress and a mosquito net. And that's it for home furnishings. No food, no pots or pans, she's got to go get all of that, somewhere. And it's not like there is a local Walmart nearby. She will have to get herself by foot or bike to the nearest town to purchase that kind of stuff.
So, her first night in her new place, she was slumbering as best as possible on the mattress on the concrete floor, when she heard a scuffle. She opened her languid eyes to see a RAT, who had climbed up to the top of her mosquito net, above her head. She screamed bloody murder and the RAT fell INTO BED WITH HER!!!!! INTO BED WITH HER~!!! Oh. My. God. I'm having the heeby jeebys just recounting the story! BLICK!!! She screamed louder as the rat landed in her bed.
So, she spent her first night, terrified and cold in her "living room", sobbing and hysterical. First she called my mom who didn't answer her cell phone because she probably didn't hear it ring inside her purse. Then she called me, and of course, I'm no help.
"Get a broom and..." I begin.
"I DON'T HAVE A BROOM!" she screams.
"Ok, can you throw a shoe at it?" I lamely offer.
"I'M NOT GOING BACK IN THERE! ARE YOU CRAZY?!"
"Ok, in the morning, can you get some towels and duct tape them to the top and bottom of the door, so nothing can come in through those spaces." I advise.
"AMY, THERE IS NO DUCT TAPE! ARE YOU KIDDING?! THERE ARE NO TOWELS!" she is beside herself.
"Ok, how about newspaper or rags..."
"Will you just tell mom to call me as soon as she can?" she gives up on me, since I am offering little or just plain sucky advice.
My last attempt went something like this:
"It's going to be ok. This is the absolute worst thing that could happen to you. This is rock bottom. Everything from here on out will be better. Tomorrow morning, go find some villagers who will help you. Call the Peace Corps people and have them help you. They will. It will be ok."
I seemed to have talked her away from the ledge because she seemed to be chilling out a little.
"Ok", she sniffed. The she added, "I think I'll be getting a cat."
So, the ending to the story is she borrowed a local villager's cat, who ate the rat~ gulp. But, there was...are you ready for this...another rat, but the cat was too full to get that one down, so Kate's neighbors helped get it out of her house and patch the door, and other holes in the roof. So, for now, no rodents...
Please visit her blog. Although she doesn't get to an Internet cafe but once every few weeks because it is so far away, any comment you could leave would be welcomed. Her blog is
on my blogroll listed as: Can I Wear Stilettos In The Peace Corps? And she really asked that question.
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Mall Phases In My Life
Thursday, August 14, 2008
School Rules RULE!!!
Sunday, August 10, 2008
No More Preschool
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
The Buxton Organizer
Monday, August 4, 2008
Three Bitch Slaps
A few times a year, I get a liiittttttle… irked that I have to work. Key words here are: HAVE TO. HAVE TO means there is no choice. Jerry feels overwhelmingly guilty that this is how it is. I insist that he should not feel guilty, it is NOT his fault that I multitask while complaining. I have witnessed many working moms that seamlessly and effortlessly can juggle ignited knives with a sincere smile all the while.
While in my vile, brooding funk this Monday morning, visiting various doctors’ offices, I was humbled, BIG TIME! I had 3 GIANT Bitch Slaps of “Get over it” that I desperately needed.
Bitch Slap #1
I saw a man in his 40’s, who was a dwarf, or I think the PC term is “little person”. He was in an electric wheelchair. His mother was waiting for him in the waiting room. She held the door open for him and asked, “You ready, Honey?” Honey. She still calls him “honey”. I then watched her lift his cumbersome electric wheelchair, which I am sure weighed a ton, into the back of her pickup.
Bitch Slap #2
Walking through a parking lot, I saw two men in their early 30’s, one was hooked up to an oxygen tank, very pale and emaciated. He had to be helped to take his slow, baby steps. They both briefly looked at me and halfway smiled.
Bitch Slap #3
Entering a waiting room, I glanced over at a weary looking mother, who was gripping onto her son’s arm, trying to keep him from fleeing the office. He had Down’s Syndrome and looked to be about 15 years old.
At that moment, I turned on my heel and threw myself back outside.
I actually said aloud, : GET THE F$#* OVER IT!!!
You HAVE TO work to help support your family… SO THE F#@^ WHAT?!?!?!
Your kids are healthy and happy (most of the time) and you just need to GET A GRIP!!! THAT’S IT!!!
You are DONE bitching and complaining!!!
Your life could be oceans worse, SO STOP IT!!!” (Yeah, you could be a crazy woman giving herself an obnoxiously loud pep talk in the middle of a courtyard)
So until the next episode of, “Waaa, boo hoo, I HAVE TO work, pity me!” I will be positive and grateful for all that I have thanks to the 3 much needed Bitch Slaps.
Friday, August 1, 2008
Mommy Camp
Send ME to camp! Sign me up! What a life! Campers swim once and sometimes twice a day, so that would cover my lack of exercise spanning over the last 10 years or so. You get to indulge a leisurely lunch with your friends. I look forward to the rare days that I can schedule a lunch with my girlfriends, so this would solve that overdue catching up.
Campers unleash their creative side in arts and crafts. How great would it be to get out the glue and pipe cleaners and go to town! Archery! Drama! Color Wars! They sing songs without care of becoming the next American Idol. Each stress-free day ends with a popcycle. I could ditch the heels and play in t-shirts and sneakers all the livelong day!
Sad that I am fanaticizing about going to day camp. Pathetic that it sounds so appealing. It’s the next best thing to a spa weekend, I suppose. I have a feeling that if there was a real Mommy Camp, other necessary elements would include some sort of alcohol availability, spa treatments and a no cell phone rule.
Monday, July 28, 2008
I'd Like To Thank The Academy...
First, I would like to thank my uber-cool, hip 60-something Dad, who suggested that I write a blog. I am SOOOO uncool that didn’t even know what a blog was, so thanks dad, for being way more in the scene than I am. When I check into to Blog Rehab, I’ll blame this life-altering addiction on you.
Thank you Sheri at http://myminivanisfasterthanyours.com/. Sheri gave me terrific advice when I repeatedly and annoyingly e-mailed her for help and she kindly directed me to…
Jennifer from http://playgroupsarenoplaceforchildren.com/. Jennifer, aka Ghandi, your wonderful, step by step tutorials were my BIBLE. They were perfect for someone as remedial as myself. I appreciate your responding to all of my freshman type questions. If it hadn’t been for you and your guidance, I would not have a blog. No way. No how. Sniff…you are the wind beneath my wings…Thank you!
Thank you to both Alice from http://elegantthimble.blogspot.com/ and Sus from http://wigglerooms.blogspot.com/. You both were the first readers of my very primitive blog! I will always be eternally grateful! I look forward to your comments and I get so much inspiration from your humor and wit.
Thank you to my mom, stepmom and sister M, for religiously reading this blog and supporting me in this new habit. I so appreciate your love and patience with me. Mostly, thank you to my beloved Jerry for allowing me to sit comatose for hours on end, in front of this computer, neglecting our kids. You have once again picked up the slack and the house and I love you for understanding.
If I have forgotten to thank you, I am sorry. This is beginning to sound like an Academy Award show, and the orchestra music is starting to play, cutting me off.
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Jumping Into An Empty Pool, Head First
My name is Amy, yes, it’s my real name. If I was going to make one up, it would be something super sexy and mysterious, like... Roxanne or... Monique. My husband’s real name is not Jerry. I don’t know why I chose it, and now every time I write it, I think of Tom and Jerry, chasing each other around, stepping on each other's tails and blowing each other up. Jerry and I have been married for 11 fun, happy years. He is an amazing partner and I am lucky to have him. He cleans. He cooks. He cleans some more. He...completes me. (Cornball) He always leaves me the last bite of the ice cream sundae we are sharing.
Our 11 year old coca poo is Tatum, her real name. She was our test run for babies. We thought, if we can’t kill a dog, it's possible we would be capable of parenting human babies someday. Tatum still acts like a puppy when people come over, jumping and licking them. Very annoying, but good to see she still has some spunk in her. Otherwise, she is 10 lbs overweight and stinks despite her monthly doggy spa day. We think she may be rotting inside.
Cole is not our son’s real name. He has a close friend named Cole from kindergarten, and they bonded. He named his first Webkinz Cole and his second Webkinz, Colester. Patty is not our daughter’s real name. A year ago, she announced, “Today, my name is Patty. Only call me Patty.” We introduced her as "Patty" to her teachers and she even signed herself in as "Patty". We don’t know a single Patty. Not a distant relative or a “Hi, my name is Patty, and I will be your server tonight” that we can recall. We don’t know where this bizarre alias came from, but, here it is.
I have worked as a pharmaceutical sales rep in AZ for close to 10 years, full time. I created this blog as a way to figure out how to be a better working mom.
So that's the background stuff. Whew! Now I don't feel like the girl at the party who talks your ear off and you just met her 3 seconds ago.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
45 Back To School Items for $18.95
At Walmart, there were 70 page spiral notebooks for .05, what a smokin’ deal! I searched high and low to no avail. NO 70 page, nickel spirals were in sight. Not one. Just as my eyes started to well up, I asked a clueless, unhelpful Walmart employee where they might be. No reply. Just then, turning the corner on two wheels, an evil, fleeing woman had her cart LOADED to the gills with FULL BOXES of 70 page spirals. Pig. She was running, escaping from anyone in DESPERATE NEED of spiral notebooks, witnessing her overzealous hoard, as she ignored my desperate cry, “WHERE DID YOU FIND THOSE?!?!”
Alone and downtrodden, I was about to give up hope, when a mysterious woman shopper overheard my plea, and with a dirty, cracked fingernail, she pointed in the direction that the coveted spiral notebooks were hidden. The golden treasure was innocently waiting on a hand cart, quietly resting in its cardboard box still, untouched. I took 3 in the colors specified on the list and hugged them to my chest. A successful shopping trip at 4 stores, purchasing 45 out of the 56 items listed for a mere $18.95 in less than 2 hours (kids not present). Go me, go me… I am waiting for the remaining 11 items to go on sale, in which I will probably visit 7 different locations. Think I need a life?
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Psycho Mommy With Fangs
She finally had pushed me to the limit and I reacted by transforming into psycho mommy with fangs. I threw her in time out and topped it off with threatening to “quit and get her a new mommy”, the ultimate stooping to a 5 year old level, I know, I know. She became even more hysterical and I hugged her and apologized for saying such nonsense. She then asked, “If we get a new mommy, you wouldn’t come to the wedding, then, would you?”
The next day I felt so lethargic from the heated interchange, it had exhausted my brain, coupled with intense PMS, led me to the only thing that would cheer me up, a Sunrise from Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf. It’s not on the menu, but they will make it for you. It is reminiscent of an Orange Julius from the mall of yesteryear. If you are unfamiliar with this decadent treat, it’s an orange juice, vanilla slushie. Kinda like a dream cycle melted. I was in such bad shape mentally, I rebelled and got a medium.
I will write nice things about Patty, when I’m in a better frame of mind to do so. In the meantime, I need to figure out how to better deal with her “spicy” personality. What I’m doing now is just not working. Any ideas besides duct taping her to the wall until she’s 18?
Thursday, July 17, 2008
A Pre-Menstrual Sappy Post: For the Love of Boys
A Pre-Menstrual Sappy Post: For the Love of Boys
Our son, Cole melts my heart. I just have to brag about him here. He listens. He fears our threats. He is sensitive and sweet to others. He is kind to animals. The kid puts on clothes and doesn’t care, unlike his temperamental little sis, Patty, whose room looks like a pink, sparkly clothing tornado hit it. He wants to please us and usually does.
Cole and his friends play quietly and without much conflict. Pokemon cards are traded fairly, they take turns while navigating through semi-violent video games. When the light saber battles begin, there are blaring sound effects from their smiling mouths, and death scenes are dramatic and hilarious. If there is some sort of disagreement, it is resolved quickly, without tears or grudges. At times, testosterone levels increase, tempers flare and fade just as quickly as they emerged. Best buddies again in the blink of an eye.
He has become fiercely competitive on the soccer and baseball fields, often talking trash with competitors, and having to sit out. “They cheated!” is a common explanation why our team lost. Good sportsmanship has been a hot new concept in our home lately.
He still cuddles with his Daddy in the morning, just as he did as a baby, except his now 8 year old body stretches close to the length of mine. Cole and I share socks. I can tell when he’s worn mine because the bottom is charcoal black and holes appear.
He still lets me hug and kiss him in public and holds my hand when we are walking into camp. I can’t help but wonder how much longer I’ll have this pleasure until it becomes “not cool”. Oy, cry me a river just thinking about it. I will now go take a Midol, watch Steel Magnolias and wait for my “friend” to come so my hormones can chill out.
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Why Don't My Lunches Look Like Brady Bunch Lunch?
I loathe making lunches. Cole and Patty are currently in day camp for three more weeks. The camp has convenient lunches available to buy, but I’d have to sell one of my children to afford it for the remaining one. It’s not like they are gourmet meals either, folks. We’re talking pizza and mac and cheese. So I will gripe and gripe and gripe some more and make my own lackluster lunches. I usually procrastinate until Sunday night, when I am tired and cranky and dreadfully anticipating Monday’s chaos.
Both my kids are ultra-picky to the point of annoyance. Add that fun factor to the two food restrictions of the camp: no meat (due to religious reasons) and no peanuts or anything made with peanuts out of respect for the peanut allergic kids. This considerably narrows our window of choices close to the menu offered in prison.
Because of my somewhat anal retentive nature (hard to believe, I know), I create an assembly line of 2 rows, 5 bags in each and start dropping the food in, so it’s all packed for the whole week. My sister, a tenured preschool teacher says, “We make fun of parents like you.”
How did Mrs. Brady pack 6 lunches every day for her bunch? Oh, I forgot, they had Alice, who lovingly packed each kids’ special favorites each day. The food groups were probably all represented in each perfect lunch. Why don’t my lunches look like Brady Bunch Lunch?
Some of the delectable choices Cole and Patty agree to eat:
Main course: portable yogurt, jelly sandwiches, edemame, plain bagels and cream cheese, “not too saucy” cheese pizza.
Sides: string cheese, baby carrot bags, individual applesauce cups, Goldfish crackers “the cheddar kind, NOT the rainbow kind, they taste yucky”, Pirate’s Booty, pretzels.
Fruit: apples or grapes (cut in half for fear of choking…ok, I know, my kids are 8 and 5, they can probably handle a whole grape, but I’m paranoid).
Beverage: organic chocolate milk (I make sure you know it’s organic so I can appear somewhat health conscious), Capri Sun fruit juice, “but not Wild Cherry”, this flavor has been permanently vetoed.
As long as my kids have somewhat of a nutritionally sound caloric intake, and are growing at an acceptable rate, I’m happy. If a professional dietitian analyzed this horrific lunch menu, they would sadly inform me that in the future, I can expect lactose intolerant, fat kids. I say, we’ll smash that bridge when we come to it.
Monday, July 14, 2008
Our Wild, Dirty Saturday Night
Our passion paid off...
I haven’t had the desire to clean out this drawer in years. There was a leaky toothpaste tube that was oozing all over the heaping mounds of junk in the drawer that set me over the edge. I had to service the drawer immediately.
There were extra buttons in mini zip-lock bags, the kind attached to a new shirt, incase you pop one off and need a spare. Scattered bobby pins and safety pins attached to dry cleaning paper tags. So many of Patty’s hair accessories. Abandoned barrettes and bows and elastic pony tail holders in a rainbow of colors and sizes, all of which she has rejected. I could open up my own Claire’s Accessories store in right here in my bathroom. Free trial sizes of shampoos, conditioners and lotions lurked in the back sticky corners. Seven, small, blue and white, round tins of Glide dental floss I got from the dentist as a parting gift, and vowed to be a more dedicated flosser every time. It was so exhilarating, I didn’t want to stop.
I was feeling wild, so I went down... below the sink. Ohhh, it was so bad, it was good! There was a pack of horrible, old, cardboard tampons, a crusted calamine lotion bottle, hairspray canisters that were shellacked to the shelf. Rancid cotton balls that missed the trash basket. A dino curling iron with brush attachments. Ahhh, now this is just what I needed to relieve all the tension I have been feeling lately.
Lastly, I climbed up on top and mounted... the sink. I forged into the medicine cabinet. It was sooo neglected and needed my love. I pulled out expired Benadryl, Imodium and Triaminic cough syrup. I even found an ancient mercury thermometer I used when Cole was a newborn. I discovered a murky bottle of 15 year old perfume that Jerry bought me when we were dating. We discovered things that hadn't been touched in years!
What wild and dirty Saturday night! I felt like a new woman. I decided that we need to make a habit out of this. Jerry was thrilled that I finished and was overwhelmingly satisfied with the job.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Thelma and Louise, Minus Louise and Brad Pitt
The furthest point in my sales territory is a 3 hour drive from home. When I initially learned of this far, far away podunk town that I was required to visit once a month, I was quite concerned about the enormous distance away from my kids. I envisioned every far-fetched, horrific, disastrous event that could possibly happen to Cole and Patty and I would be a lengthy 3 hours away . Once I came to grips with the fact that Jerry would be capable of handling the catastrophic situation, I thought this destination might evolve into somewhat of a mini “get-away”.
Podunkville has turned into a “Thelma and Louise” type chick empowerment adventure, minus Louise and Brad Pitt. It does suck leaving the house before the sun comes up, however, I have the luxury of getting ready ALONE, with no little mouths requesting the impossible, no refereeing wrestling matches or meltdowns about wanting to wear a bikini top with a miniskirt.
I drive without neon bouncy balls flying into the front seat, no rotater cuff twists reaching towards the backseat, collecting unwanted gum. I am my own DJ of the fabulous Sirius radio. I am not forced to listen to Hannah Montana or the Jonas Brothers, or Jerry’s fave, the weather station. I pumped up The Clash’s classic: Should I Stay Or Should I Go? on the 80’s station, and there was some serious head-banging going on in my ride. Besides the stellar music, I can catch up with abandoned friends on the cell , without being interrupted constantly that “she hit me!” ,“NO, he hit me first!”
With the exception of a few 18 wheelers, the road is empty. The town I am journeying to is no thriving metropolis, folks. There is open, roasted desert on either side of the desolate freeway, flanked by majestic mountains in the distance, oh, and how perfect, a landfill that you can faintly smell…mmmm. Heaven.
Podunkville is the type of place that you would stop in to pee as a very last resort because you couldn't hold it anymore and your bladder was on the verge of exploding. It’s mostly an impoverished community, dilapidated stores and a few old time gas stations line the crumbling streets. There is a donut shop in a trailer. Yes, a trailer. Popular front yard landscaping trends are ancient, rusted cars up on blocks. There is a nearby casino and grocery store, which are the two major employers in the town. One local exclaimed, “We got a Subway sandwich shop now, woo wee!!!” I remember feeling that way when we first got Nordstrom’s a few years ago. The same thing? Sure it is.
I visit 6 doctors there, who are welcoming and glad to see a rep, which makes the 3 hour trek well worth the haul. It is such a tiny community, when I enter an office, they know instantly that I’m not "from 'round here." Today, a Podunkville citizen affectionately called me, “city slicker.” When he grinned, he resembled a old, leathered jack-o’-lantern, missing a few essential teeth here and there. His wife chuckled at her clever hubby, revealing a matching smile. I guess dental plans are tough to come by ‘round here'.
As I leave Podunkville, I revel in the feeling that I am a strong, independent woman, like Thelma and Louise, out on the open road, living on the edge, well, kinda, after all, I am there to do my job. For just a short time, I get to be just a chick driving with old school music rockin’ in my four door sedan with two booster seats in the back.