Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Your Mama Don't Dance

The year is nineteen seventy-something. I am 7 or 8 years-old, lying on the chartreuse shag carpet constructing a village out of my Lincoln Logs (the ones with the flat, green pieces for roofs, not the new plastic pre-shaped kind), playing on my mom's stereo record player is a little Loggins & Messina. I hum along, I know all the words. Little do I know that the works of this particular artist and others such as Judy Collins, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Linda Ronstat, Barbara Striesand, Rod Stewart, Bread, the list goes on and on, will be forever ingrained in my childhood brain, likely to fester there until just the right time. Today was one of those times.

The scene: The Evergreen State Fair.

The Concert: Kenny Loggins.

The Company: My parents and my husband.

The People Watching: Phenomenal.

This was/is my only concert for 2006, and I enjoyed it immensely. Never before had I been to a concert with such a wide variety of folk, from the tatooed, goth, green-haired to the cane-wielding, orthopedic-wearing, white-haired. All there to see Mr. Kenny Loggins rip it up in his black leather Members Only jacket (remember those?) and, ready for this, gray jeans! I didn't know that they even made those anymore.


Well, the set opened up with some familiar crowd pleasers (Conviction of the Heart, This is It) in which the crowd gently swayed and sang along, and then, brace yourself and grab the tissues, up next is House at Pooh Corner, all the parents and grandparents in the stadium lose it. Throw in a little I'm Alright and you've got my mom and I (and my Dad--I saw you out of the corner of my eye) clapping and bouncing in our seats. All the while, I'm bumping into Brett, trying to coax a little craziness out of him by reminding him that this is the theme song to the movie Caddyshack! He is having a good time, he just doesn't show it like WE do.

A few more memorable tunes and then the most-appropriate-for-being-at-a-state-fair song, Your Mama Don't Dance (the crowd goes wild), and my Mama did dance. Now time for the encore, the silly ritual in which the crowd begs the performer to come back out, and of course the mics are still set up, everything is plugged in and the lights are out, and still some people leave. Which gets me wondering, if you always leave before the encore, are you even aware that they come back on stage and play more songs? But, I digress.

Out comes Kenny and the band and oh boy, they play Footloose. Suddenly, I am staring at Kevin Bacon and Chris Penn and I, of course, am Sarah Jessica Parker, dancing like a fool, trying my best to make my husband laugh (yeah, I saw you smile, just a little, out of the corner of my eye). Another encore and we wrap it up with the middle school dance (you know where the boys were in a line on one side of the gym and the girls were in another line and sometimes the lines would dance together) tune Forever, which I had completely forgotten that I knew, but recalled the words exactly (my mind is a steel trap "forever in your arms, forever I will be..."). And for all his Members Only wearing, Kenny Loggins has a clear, strong and gorgeous voice, not at all in as bad as shape as his gray jeans! Bravo, Mr. Loggins, bravo!

And yes, he did play Highway to the Danger Zone, in case you were curious!

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Happy Birthday


We've all been there, just as I was, slowly strolling up and down the aisles of Target, carefully reading each and every greeting card that doesn't say "mother" on it, because really, I don't call her that. She is Mom, simple as that. Do I go for the overly sentimental 5 paragraph book of a card? No, probably not. It isn't her style, or mine either for that matter, if I wanted to write her 5 paragraphs, I'd do it myself. And so I wander on, picking up this one and that, seeing if it "fits" just right. It has to fit our relationship. It has to be meaningful without a lot of frills, kind of like me. I hold these greeting cards to a very high standard because today is the day that I want to show my Mom just how special she is to me. I want to thank her for always being there for me, and she and I know exactly what that means. We know how far she's gone for me, and how much of herself she's given me every day since before I was born. In as few words as possible, I simply want to tell her I love her, and thank you for being you, the best Mom in the world.

I finally find one suitable, it is beautiful, couldn't be prettier than if I'd made it myself which, I could but my Mom knows how busy this time of year is. She'd rather I'd spend my time dreaming up the order of KFC we traditionally bring to the beach for our yearly picnic in her honor. Yes, we are so fancy. Every year, on my Mom's birthday, we pack up all of the essentials and head to KFC for fried chicken, beans, biscuits, mashed potatoes and coleslaw. We always order enough chicken to ensure that everyone get a taste on the way to the beach because it is sheer torture to smell KFC the 20 minutes it takes to get to our favorite beach. We nestle ourselves in our seats and munch the finger-lickin'-goodness all the way there.

The rest of the day is spent beach combing, sunning, swimming, sand castle making, log-hopping and if you are my Dad, napping in the shade listening to the baseball game on a portable radio.

To my Mom, these are the only gifts she requires, this one special day to spend with her family in a beautiful spot. A spot full of the memories of times past, when I was a little girl and my grandparents would join us at this very beach, sometimes bringing KFC.

Happy Birthday Mom.

I love you.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

No More Teachers, No More Books . . . A Mom's Lament

August is almost over and all week I've been hearing snippets of conversation involving the fact that some children are already back to school. Not in our neck of the woods, not for another 2 weeks. Yes, I am going to admit it, right here and right now. I am ready for the kids to return to school. I am done. The fun times of summer have relented and in their wake lies two, make that three, kids who need their regular routines back.

Instead of happily looking forward to what the day may bring, we are waking up restless, needful for structure and something to do other than swim, ride bikes, play with legos, swim, play firefighter (okay only 2 feel that way), go to the park, swim, go to the zoo and, oh yeah, swim.

When June 16th hit, I didn't think I'd live to see the day these kids were begging for schools return. And now, I don't know how we'll make it until September 6th. I still have a few tricks up my sleeve, a few activities that aren't exhausted and some places we haven't been, but it's going to be a long haul.

Fortunately, we've kept our game faces on during these "dog days of summer". There have been some fun moments and good times in these last few weeks, it isn't all that bad (trying really hard here to see the silver lining, can you tell?).

The boys entertained baby Landon like they were auditioning for a spot on "American Idol" and he was Simon Cowell.

Here they are on the lion (again).

McRae, Katie and Laila.

McRae, Braydon, Lila, Katie and Wyatt on the hippo at the zoo.

When the going gets tough, do a little beach yoga!

No hat? Wear a bucket on your head, the newest trend for the upcoming season, catch it on the runway soon!


Okay everybody, cross your fingers that we all make it through these last few weeks in one piece, we're talking about our Mom, here people.
McRae, Wyatt and Katie

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Painting Through Katrina

Last year, a few weeks from now, I was driving my husband to the airport. He had a backpack, loaded with insect repellant, changes of shorts, flashlights, sunscreen,hand sanitizer, t-shirts, and various items the Red Cross suggested he bring with him on his way south. They arranged his flight down to Houston and gave him a "credit card" with a $500.00 balance for food and anything else he might need to help. They said to get cash at the airport with it, as it would be next to impossible to find a working cash machine once they made it into Louisiana. He had a badge, a Red Cross vest and his enthusiasm to get there and get the job done.

I remember our goodbye hug being extra tight, not like the year before when he left for Florida during the hurricane aftermath. I remeber the lump in my throat that I deny lives there constantly becasue of the work that he does, it wasn't going to be hibernating to it's place anytime soon. I remember looking at the faces of other people travelling or dropping off loved ones on that day, wondering how they could be carrying on with regular life when the worst human tragedy was about to unfold before our very eyes (but then, we didn't know that yet, did we?).

The hurricane had made landfall when Brett left, but was still raging up and down the Gulf Coast. He called me from Houston, and thought he might be headed to the Astrodome to assist in shelter operations there, but he wasn't sure. He described the inland areas as "not that bad", but then, the levees hadn't broken yet. His voice sounded strong, capable and ready to tackle what was to come.

I busied myself with painting over the hideous yellow, sunflower-themed paint in our master bedroom that had me wearing blinders in the middle of the night, glued to CNN, MSNBC and FOX news while I held a roller in one hand and balanced myself on my ladder with the other. I did not sleep. I watched that tv, pretending to paint, as the country stumbled, fell and ignored the people shouting from rooftops and swimming in water so dirty you wouldn't dare touch it if you had a choice. I watched the young, old and fragile souls sweltering in the heat, petrified what the next hour would bring, if they'd live to see the next hour.

Brett called again, it was only the day after and he was being asked to help out in a shelter in Baton Rouge where several violent prisoners were said to be headed. They needed "big strong guys" to help out. He must've raised his hand. I pushed that lump back down in my throat and said that he'd be fine. I knew that he could handle it, and everything was fine at home. "Don't worry about us, we're just fine", "please be careful and call when you can. I love you." I turned to the tv again, I watched the chaos, I felt helpless. I painted.

Another day rolled by, people were still shouting and waving flags from their rooftops. Families were lost, children were lost, people were stranded in hospitals, this seemed unreal. Police Officers had evacuated, yet to return. The President FLEW over the devastation, looking helpless, not a single tear was shed by him. Condoleeza Rice was buying shoes, it was reported. Celebrities were trying to organize, Kanye West made a statement, truck drivers were gathering water from Costco and driving it down there, if only to give a thirty Louisiana resident a drink. Fema was fumbling. The Army Corps of Engineers was absent, the police chief was trying to hold it together, but couldn't. People were dying.

Brett called after he had reached Baton Rouge. There were no prisoners after all. The shelter was at a church with no air conditioning, but seemed to be okay. He was sleeping in the back of a truck, it was hot, it was humid, there were bugs. He was safe. His voice was distant. It is hard to get a clear picture of what was running through his mind at this point and I knew that I had to be patient, he would share it all with me when he came home. I told him that I was "up to something, a surprise" in order to distract him from what he was seeing every second of every day around him. I painted and watched the tv some more. I pushed that undeniable lump a little farther down my throat. I prayed (I am not a "religious" person).

The days passed. Brett was able to call about every other day so that I could tell him a funny story about the kids and hear his voice, forever changed by the stories he was hearing from the people in the shelter. He would tell me how hot it was, how stinky he was, how warm and welcoming the people were and how he had a haircut in a Baton Rouge barbershop. He was certain that he was the first "white" haircut this fella had ever given, and it was one of the best cuts Brett had ever received (even if he had a little shaved line along his hairline, you know, to "define" where his skin ends and his hair begins just in case it wasn't crystal clear). His spirits were good, he was staying hydrated, fed and the shelter was operating pretty well, considering.

I painted and watched more tv. I read the newspaper and became intimate with Anderson Cooper and Mr. Scarborough. Frustration does not begin to scratch the surface of the feelings I was having last September, the feelings that I still have, nearly a year later with another hurricane deployment a possibility in my husband's future. I cannot imagine the betrayal, emptiness, loss and disgust that residents of Louisiana must feel about their government, our government. There is no way for any of us, who did not live through it ourselves, to cast blame on the people whose lives this disaster has affected, to really grasp what they've been through. There is no way.

I want this country to admit it's failures, mistakes and take the necessary steps to make it right. I want our country to do everything in it's so-called "power" to assure the people of the Gulf Coast that they will be protected, taken care of, and treated like people instead of like animals. I want Lousiana to receive compensation for the drilling of oil off it's shores (even if it is 3 miles out). I want the wetlands restored so that a natural barrier will help, granted this is not the only solution, protect the inland from storm surges.

I wish that our government would show us that it cares more for the people than political and economic interests. I want my children to grow up in a country that supports all of its citizens and does not refer to them as "refugees" when they are forced out of their homes, either by evacuation or rescue, and relocated elsewhere. I wish it were different and all I can do is hope and support leaders that I believe in. And cross my fingers that they mean what they say.

Brett came home 10 days after Hurricane Katrina made landfall. The kids and I met him at the airport. As his tanned, strong face made it's way to us, I knew that he was full of so much. I knew that little by little it would come out and he would share and good and the bad with me. He held onto our children tight, tighter than usual when he has been away for some time. The look that passed between us was a mixture of "god, I am glad to see you" and "we are so damn lucky". He entertained us on the way home with stories of the strange foods he ate (grits, prepared smothered, scattered, covered and slathered) and the people he met. He was a favorite among a group of older baptist women who "praised the lord" every time he walked by, he laughed at this and knew we'd always have a place to visit if we travelled to Baton Rouge.

After the kids were in bed, and we were laying facing eachother, talking more about how the shelter worked, how hot it really was and what the people were doing to pass the time and keep their spirits up, he let go of the sadness just a little. He would continue to share the heartbreak that was undeniable each time he met a familie's needs at the shelter throughout the next week or so, until it was all out of his system. I listened and felt that all too familiar lump retreat some more. He talked about going back, but he'd already had to scramble to get his shifts covered at the fire station during the time he was gone. I wished that we could both go back, but we had 2 kids birthdays coming up, Halloween and Thanksgiving. Normal life needed to come back to us for a little while.

Normal life, something I take for granted every day that I spend shuffling kids to soccer practice and taekwondo, to preschool orientations and the zoo. Something that I hope one day will be found again by the people who lost everything, EVERYTHING.

Brett loved the new paint in our room, "fingerleaf" by Benjamin Moore, satin. It is so much calmer than that sunflower yellow excuse for bedroom paint the previous owners thought would be nice to wake up to. I bet if I lived in Louisiana, I wouldn't care what color the paint was, would I? So long as I had paint to call my own.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Why I Love Gallon-Sized Ziploc Bags

Because I live in the suburbs which have been attaining so much rural land that you never need to travel to the "big city" for your shopping needs (because the former farmland now houses Target, Bed, Bath & Beyond, Old Navy and Borders) I do not fully grasp the enormity of the traffic in these parts, especially on a Friday.

My Aunt and Uncle had generously offered to give us a beautiful hutch, buffet and side table that they no longer needed/wanted and all we had to do was drive down there and retrieve it. So, silly me, I thought we'd hitch up the 'ol utility trailer and employ our children to sit still and behave for the 1 hour drive south to Tacoma (because Tacoma is just a little bit past Seattle, right? WRONG!) to get our "new" furniture.

The ride down was fine, we were late of course because I underestimated a) the traffic and b) Tacoma's distance south of Seattle. But, no worries. Brett and McRae artfully fastened, tied-down and secured our pieces in the tralier as Uncle Jack supervised. We dropped in on Aunt Joan at the library she is in charge of for a quick visit and off we go. We made a pit-stop a little north of Tacoma and had an "interesting" lunch consisting of a Papa Burger for Brett and popcorn chicken for the kids, we made the necessary stop to the loo and were back on the road again (I can hear Willie Nelson singing in the background), joining the crawl that was to become our way home.

Two hours later and 25 miles north of Seattle, inching along at a snail's pace at best, I hear the most fearful words in a parent's life: "I have to go potty Mommy".

Quick thinking leads me to this solution, mind you I am aware of the bad expample I set for my kids and the laws that were broken in the process, but what are you supposed to do in a situation like this? I will note that there was not a "safe" place to pull over for miles due to the highway construction. Into the back seat I climb, out comes a gallon-sized Ziploc bag, out come the baby wipes, out of her carseat comes my daughter, off go her underpants and I creatively fold the bag to form a seal around her behind and surrounding flesh, in order to catch anything and everything that may be on its way.

"Go ahead honey, I've got you" I assure her.

We wait, we encourage her (all of us at this time because we really don't want her to have an accident), we plead with her to make good use of the bag hanging between her legs. She gives it a good college try, but with no luck. I really can't blame her though, because even with the tinted windows she can see the cars passing us as our portable honey bucket rolls down the road.

I buckle her back into her carseat and return to my own and we try not to mention the words "water" or "waterfall" on the rest of the ride home. The ironic thing is that during the middle of our little experiment to see if a 2-year-old can potty in a Ziploc bag while standing on her mother's lap in an SUV during horrendous traffic, we were passed by a station wagon with, yup, a potty seat in the back. A real, honest-to-goodness plastic potty catching contraption that, if we had been going any slower, I would've asked to borrow, or buy from the brainiac mom driving the car.

The upside to this story is that Katie made it all the way home and did her thing in the proper location and I will always have a Ziploc bag, or 2 or 3, in the car "just in case".

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Shivers


For all of the seasons that roll past us more quickly each year, there are always a handful of tunes that define them. Each time I hear the music from a paticular year, especially one that isn't overplayed to death, my mind is transported to the time, the feeling and the way I looked at the world then, whether I was six or sixteen.

Summertime always warrants, to me, a musical party that ranges from high-energy pop tunes to mellow reggae and everything in between. This summer, each time I hear Chasing Cars, by Snow Patrol, I get goosebumps. Really, I do. I am probably not the target audience for this band, as I am over thirty (barely, and according to the realage website, I am 31.5 not 33.3 so I will go with that), but this song hits me like a freight train and raises the hairs on the back of my neck like I am a giddy 20-something. Sadly, I've overheard it being played for the upcoming new season of Grey's Anatomy (which is fine, because I loooooove that show), so I hope that I don't get sick of it. Until then, I'll leave you with the soulful lyrics which, in my opinion, rock.

Chasing Cars, by Snow Patrol

We'll do it all
Everything
On our own

We don't need
Anything
Or Anyone

If I lay here
If I just lay here
Would you lie with me and just
Forget the world?

I don't quite know
How to say
How I feel

Those three words
Are said too much
They're not enough

-chorus-

Forget what we're told
Before we get too old
Show me a garden that's
Bursting into life

Let's waste time
Chasing cars
Around our heads

I need your grace
To remind me
To find my own

- chorus -

Forget what we're told
Before we get too old
Show me a garden that's
Bursting into life

All that I am
All that I ever was
Is here in your perfect eyes
They're all I can see

I don't know where
Confused about how as well
Just know that these things
Will never change for us at all

- chorus -

Shiver.



What are your favorite songs this summer?

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Are You Socially Challenged?

When you were born, did you posess the trait to win the world over with a quick glance in it's direction, a coy nod from you and the flash of a killer, toothless smile?

When you were a toddler did you know exactly where and when to turn on the charm, aiming your attention at the adoring relative who waited all day for you to notice her?

When you were a little older, did you engage adults and children alike with your funny jokes and tales of what happened at school today?


When you were a teenager, did you earn the respect of your peers all the while maintaining that you weren't that much of a goody-two-shoes to really have a good time and gain the approval of high school teachers in the process?

Did you greet college and the after-life of high school with gusto, confidence and grace, making friends and finding your way in the real world and at the end, figure out what you really want out of life and easily convert those dreams into reality?

Great, then you are probably not as socially challenged as most people.

Okay, the perfect life, a charmed life, with no obstacles, does not a social butterfly make. But, more likely a shallow, hollow, spoiled baby that can't cope when the going gets tough. We need those roadblocks and hiccups along the way to shape us into individuals who can do for themselves. We need to have the opportunity to wrack our brains in a stressful situation in order to reach a solution that will work, we can then feel good about the fact that we "did it". We can enjoy the post-victory endorphins that race through our bodies.

We may not be able to leap a building with a single bound, but we can do pretty well for ourselves, becasue we've been practicing for a long time.

Some people aren't as lucky.

Take this woman in Costco yesterday.

While standing in an incredibly busy wholesale store during the lunch hour, behind a family of five with a bursting cart of goods and a whiny toddler who has reached her limit, two boys who can't keep their hands to themselves and find the new broom in the cart to have an unearthly pull to their hands, much like a drug, a Dad who is on the brink of insanity and a Mom who just wants it to all end, get the giant hotdogs for the kids with the cheap-o sodas and get home, would you even dare to ask to step in line in front of people like this?

If you anwered "yes" than you are socially challenged, and I fear, have never had to do anything for yourself in your entire life. You had parents who spoiled you to death and the world bent around your needs like chocolate around an almond (or peanut, or cashew . . . yum).

The Mom in front of you has just asked her husband to please take the daughter out to get her some lunch, and while he's at it, take one of the boys too. She just wants to unload her giagantic cart and be on her way. That's not too much to ask.

You feel it appropriate and necessary and, for the love of all that is good and decent, POLITE to ask to step in front of the harried Mom and her son who has already begun helping her disperse her items upon the conveyor belt. You explain that you have been "prescanned" and you only have a few items, and you're in a hurry (the Mom notices that you are alone and cannot fathom a response to this other than a curt "go ahead" and just wishes you out of her sight). A worker comes over (the prescanner goddess with the bar code scanning gun) and bawls you out for unloading your flatbed cart because you've been prescanned and you aren't supposed to do that if you've been prescanned. After much complaining, you get your bahemouth cart out of the way of the other 40 people waiting behind you and on to the register you go.

The Mom behind you can see in her peripheral vision that you are having even more drama at the register, but she won't even look. She is afraid you'll say something more to her and send her over the deep end (of what I have no idea, but I do know that there is a deep end). You shout "thank you" about 4 times, and the Mom just says "whatever" and keeps unloading. Her son says "that lady is weird", to which she pauses, regains her composure and relpies in a whisper "yes, but she is in a hurry, and she really needed to go in front of us". "Yeah, but she's weird."

You are still complaining to the checker that you don't like the flavors of the Propel Fitness Water that you had chosen to buy. Now the Mom and Son behind you are all rung up, they are done, and you are still standing there, making a fuss. You "can't stand the grape flavored water" you bark at the poor gal running back and forth trying to get you on your way, trying not to wring your neck because you are being so annoying, trying to recite in her head "the customer is always right", over and over again so she doesn't lose her cool. The Mom behind you, who you bullied in front of, says "oh, we'll take that water, we like grape" just because. Why? Was she really looking to buy a 24-pack of fitness water, you see she already has plenty of Gatorade in her cart, is she trying to pick a fight? No, she just likes that water, and she enjoys the look on your face when she smiles sweetly at the checker and a knowing look passes between them. And after all of this, you are still in the store, trying to figure it out and the Mom is outside with her family and her ginormous cart and her Propel Fitness Water, grape flavor.

You are socially challenged.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

THE BIG NEWS




I can still hear the waves lapping at the bulkhead below the window of our studio suite at Useless Bay, the occasional seagull celebrating his catch, the clinking sound of a carabeener atop a sail hitting the mast on the sailboat anchored right outside our window. I am sitting in the comfy over-sized chair, feet up on the slate table, eyelids almost shut, tired legs from browsing antique store after antique store and gallery after gallery, the effects of a beer beginning to ease me into a little catnap . . . "heeeeeeey, gimmee that". Oh yes, back from that little trip, we're home again. Aaaaaah, the sounds of home.

The BIG news is that Katie is no longer using these:


or these:


And, she is quite and expert at using this:


The fastest potty training experience of my life is successfully completed. I will let you know where to pick up a copy of the book at a later time.

Friday, August 11, 2006

He Was a Skater boy, I Said See Ya Later Boy . . .

To Whom It May Concern,

Sunday morning, this former skater boy and his formerly snobby girlfriend (now wife and mother of their radical offspring) will take a much-needed sabbatical from their brood (leaving them in the hands of their trusty grandparents) and travel to westward ports to embark on 24hrs. of alone-time. They will spend their time walking the beach, exploring antique stores without worrying about anyone breaking anything, eat whatever they want (no nuggets of any kind allowed) and retire in their quarters without making numerous trips into the rooms of little ones who want another drink of water! Please do not disturb!

Sincerely,

The Formerly Snobby Girlfriend With the Mall Hair

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Life Lesson #59

Do Not Drive Your Kids To School Without Your Shoes

While passing through the 4-way-stop that is the defining intersection of our "downtown" area after buying a truckload of school supplies, I was reminded of a morning last September that I had completely forgotten about.

I will not get into the reason why I didn't let my kids ride the bus to school yet (they do now, and that's all that matters), but instead I drove them to and from school each day. Yes, wasting much gas, public school transportation and time away from my morning, I drove the 2 miles to school and entered the circular hell referred to as "the loop" by our principal.

On this paticularly busy morning, in which I did not rise in a chipper, put-together, I will make you a hot breakfast mood, we were running late. So late in fact, that I nonchalantly guffawed the mere task of putting on my own shoes to drive the boys to school. After all, I don't even get out of the car, merely glide up to the designated "drop off" area and say my "I love yous" and "have a great days" and away I go. Why in the world would one need shoes to do this?

Here it comes, the reason.

Approaching the 4-way-stop a half mile down the hill from the school, and the only official obstacle between me and my front door, I notice an older model Cadillac sitting a good ten feet from the stop sign. I stop behind the caddy and wait. A few noticeable seconds go by and I begin to wonder if this car is ever going to move. The cars start piling up behind me and I can feel the eager mothers on their way to the gym seething with impatientness.

Out comes an elderly gentleman (I say gentleman because at this point, he has done nothing for me to think otherwise). I wonder if he has car trouble, hope that it isn't a flat because, duh, I am not wearing shoes. He approaches my car. Silly me, I roll the window down without even thinking twice that he could be a crazed lunatic and smile at him underneath the baseball hat and ponytail adorning my look-I-just-woke-up head.

"Did you just shoot me in the neck with a laser?" he asks as if this is the normalest of questions.

"Excuse me?"

"I said, did you just shoot me in the neck with a laser? I have been shot at all the way from (insert nearby town) to here and I've got marks all over my neck!"

"Do you mean a radar gun, sir?" I offer.

"No, a laser. They (I have no idea who "they" are) take them out of microwaves and then use them to shoot you."

"I have no idea what you are talking about, I did not shoot you with anything."

"Are you sure?" he persists.

"There is a police station right over there (I am pointing to the visible station a few hundred yards away). You should go there, now. They will help you."

"Hmpf" he mumbles and walks to his gold caddy, idling in front of the stop sign. He gets in, and. . . turns left. Not the direction of the police station, mind you.

What now? I think. Phone. Where is my phone? Call husband at work, he'll know what to do.

I make my way through the 4-way-stop with all the cars around me wondering what in the world just happened and wind my way back home. Katie is in her carseat, completely oblivious to the craziness that she just witnessed, only wanting to make it home in time to catch an episode of Sesame Street.

I find my phone and dial before I reach the driveway. After retelling the story to my husband's secretary (because, of course, he's busy WORKING) I decide that I must at least call the police station and report this weirdness. I had the license plate and make of the car. I knew approximately what year it was (thanks Dad, for giving me your car identifying gene). After informing the desk gal at the police station, I felt a little better. At least this man may get some much-needed help if they could track him down. Hopefully, he wasn't a danger to himself or others. But you have to wonder, should a person who thinks people are shooting microwave lasers at him be driving down the road (in front of a school, no less)?

This crazy, true occurence taught me a lesson. Always wear shoes when you drive your kids to school, you never know what is going to happen.

In case you were wondering, the boys began riding the bus shortly after this. Not because of this, but because I finally gave in to the whole letting them walk 2 blocks to wait for the bus and let a stranger drive them to school. And, to further shoot myself in the foot, you'll be pleased to know that their bus driver was indeed not a stranger, but the very same bus driver I had as a child (and when she's not driving the bus, Grandpa sometimes takes their route which pleases them to no end).

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

I'm a Closet Protestor



Way back when, I had the opportunity to briefly (and I am not even sure if this constitutes a real handshake) shake Bill Clinton's hand. This was my first real "political" experience. As he was passing by the mob of supporters, surrounded by secret service (are they secret service if you aren't even President yet?), at a political rally for his first run at the Presidency, he grasped my outstretched, optomistic, full of hope hand. I think I was 19, maybe 20. If I thought longer and harder, I would know exactly how old I was, but it's late and my brain is running like a chipmunk on speed after just watching Syriana.

It is not often that I find time to really think about the global situation, especially the BIG problem, that being our dependence upon foreign oil. I hear the news about what is going on "over there", I hear people complaining about gas prices and the newscasters casually dismissing the REAL reason they are so high. I see the ads for hybrid cars and SUV's becomming more commonplace and I read in the newspaper the stories about families with loved ones serving overseas. All the information is out there for me to devour, but I can't seem to find the time to absorb it all.

And then, a movie like Syriana rocks me to the core. I get all fired up, blasting questions at my husband like "do they really do that kind of thing?" (the "they" being the U.S. CIA, and the "thing" being killing prominent oil people for the good of our own economy) and "does stuff like this REALLY happen?". I know it is a fictional piece, but just like any film of it's type, it is reality-based. These "types" of things do happen and we'd all be a bunch of ostriches sticking our heads in the sand if we denied it.

So then I get thinking about how humiliating our President is and how I want to move to Canada, and then the insomnia sets in. I cannot justify letting another day go by without DOING SOMETHING about this country that provides me with more freedoms and opportunities than I probably deserve, and at the same time, embarrasses the you-know-what out of me.

And so, my feeble attempt to make a little, tiny difference lies in the bumper sticker taped to my parent's garage door. Read it. Thank you.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

In The Summertime When the Weather is Hot ...


What does our family do when it gets hot around here? Head for the lake, of course! Another day of swimming, sunning and goofing around with nowhere to be and no time to be there! Aaaaah!


Sage and his big sis Katie

Wyatt

McRae

Katie and Mommy goofing around with the camera - say CHEESE!


McRae took this one, not bad eh?

And, up close and personal (he stood on a chair)!

Friday, August 04, 2006

Happy Birthday Lila

August 5, 2006

Dear Lila,


Three years ago today, half the world away, you, this beautiful little soul entered the world. The world is a better place simply because you're in it and I am the luckiest "Auntie" in the world to be able to share your life with you.


Here you are, last month on our shared vacation, living the good life. What more could an almost 3-year-old want than a day at the water park, a cozy towel to wrap up in and a baggie of goldfish all to yourself? May all of your days be as fun as this one was Lila.

Love, Auntie Carrie

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Perk Me Up

"I'll take a grande, split shot, half 2%, half skinny, sugar-free vanilla latte with extra foam please."

This is what I want to yell in the barista's ear at Starbucks after the day I've had. Yes, I live in the Seattle area, and that, by proxy, makes me an expresso fiend, but you'd be surprised to know that I do not drink all that much coffee. Very little, in fact. Today though, I would gladly consume as much caffeine as is thrown in my direction.

At the risk of exposing everyone to a gigantic amount of diarrhea description, I'll hold off on those. I will state that it is hard to a) clean up diarrhea from a toddler with a garden hose at your friend's house and b) not fair that she will only allow mom to deal with her lower-end discomforts, thus letting dad off the proverbial poop hook.

I will tell you about the bees. Or should I say swarm, that found it not only necessary to attack me but dive-bomb my head as I tried to run them as far away as possible from my daughter and her friend.

I shall set the scene. It is a beautiful not too hot, not too cold day here in our corner of the world. After lunching on organic macaroni and cheese prepared by my good friend Michelle, we were enjoying picking blueberries and watching the girls (her daughter is the one with Katie at the beach in the "It's Just Sand" post) play on the playstructure in her large backyard.

We were attempting to wrap up the visit, and corral the girls up at the house when Michelle had to run inside to pay the carpet cleaners she had working for the day. I am left outside to play mediator at the slide end of the playstructure. Now, this is not such a hard task, and one that I am fully qualified for, but today, oh today would test all of my "keep it together" mommy skills.

Just as I am helping Laila take her turn down the slide, I move my head right in front of one of the many gaps where the plastic playground is put together. We all know what likes to live in those cubby holes and should take more care when coming so close to them, but I didn't even think about it. Immediately, I am met by 10 or so angry bees flying out of a golf ball sized nest to give me the "get outta our neighborhood now lady" speech, in bee language. In the form of a couple stings below my lower lip.

Trying to lure the attackers away from our semi-clad girls, I run to the middle of the yard swapping at my head and whacking at each flying torpedo that thinks I am it's target. I must've looked like the mom version of an American Pie sequel, at best. I am so thankful that the paparazzi wasn't hiding in the bushes taking my picture because had I been Britney Spears (and I am not saying that I would like to be her, quite the contrary), it would've been another case of "oops I did it again" and I'd be celebrity road kill.

I finally manage to charm those nasty bees into letting me close enough to the girls (who think I am pretty funny at this point, and I should remember my "bee dance" for future distractions) and I coax them away from the slide and the nest of doom. Michelle comes out of the house, completely unaware of the drama that just took place so I fill her in. "Is there a stinger?" I say as she examines my lip. We determine that there are a couple of swollen white bumps, but it doesn't hurt and I am now almost late to get home so Brett can take Wyatt to the dentist (again) and I can take McRae to taekwondo (with a swollen lip).

I was surprised that it didn't hurt more (I remember languishing in agony when I was stung by a bee as a child - begging my mom for more magic baking soda bee balm) and after a few hours, you could hardly tell that it had happened. I did not have time to stop at Starbucks, but I did find a frosty Diet Coke in the garage refrigerator while running out of the house on our way to taekwondo, and I loved every sip of it (while alternating drinking it and using it as a coldpack on my lip).

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Wyatt, the Jokester




Wyatt: Mom, where do cats put their laundry?

Mom: Where?

Wyatt: The hampurr!

Wyatt: What do stars take showers in?

Mom: What?

Wyatt: Meteor showers!

Wyatt: What do cats go camping in?

Mom: What?

Wyatt: Campurrs!


And then, big brother McRae chimes in with this nugget of comical wisdom:

McRae: Why do stars get up in the middle of the night?

Mom: Why?

McRae: To go twinkle!

Katie: You guys are cracking me up!