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Friday, August 31, 2007

Yippee-ki-yay

Life with small children is never dull. In fact, life is always a surprise, and you never really know what type of surprise it is going to be.

Sometimes, the surprise is: Look at me! I learned how to take my diaper off and finger-paint with poop! (that is one unpleasant surprise I walked into after my 18 month old daughter woke up from nap...eugh, that was awful). Other times the surprises are like: Wow, I'm a big boy now! I learned how to climb up the ladder to the BIG slide at the park and I can now go up and slide down all by myself (yet another, more pleasant, surprise I had with my son...at the age of 13 months old (a mite scary, truth be told). He was so proud of himself).

Life is always interesting, especially with my little rugrats. Take for instance, the morning toddler rodeo. Toddler Rodeo? you say. Yes. Toddler Rodeo.

Every morning life gets extremely interesting anywhere between 6-6:45am (oh, joy, I just love early morning adventures...NOT). Chubbers wakes up with what my husband and I have come to call "monster pee-pee pants"--super soaked and fully filled wet diapers--and needs to be changed immediately (or there are...shall we say, nasty repercussions). Chubbers doesn't like to have his mega pee-pee pants changed. I don't know why he'd like to stay in them. If it were me, after a good 10+hours of marinating in my own urine, I think I'd like a fresh pair of diaper pants to, well, soil all over again. That is not the case with the boy. At least you can't say we don't get our money's worth out of the before-bed diaper.



The toddler rodeo begins with parent A or B walking into Chubber's room and saying good morning, giving him hugs, and gently telling him he has wet pants (we're trying to get that association with potty-wet pants for toileting...it may prove to be futile...) and needs to get his pee-pee diaper off. It is at this point in time that Chub defiantly (and definitely) shakes his head and protests "NO!!". Then he squirms to get down, or performs my all time favorite pose "the dead fish" (where he gets extremely heavy and limp, while simultaneously 'melting' out of my arms).

Once those tried-but-true tactics fail, he proceeds to allow us to lay him down to change him--but it is all a part of his carefully crafted master-plan of escape (too bad that the two-year-old don't realize that when you apply the same tactical strategies every morning, the unsuspecting victim (parent A or B) anticipates your moves...). He looks sweet and innocent laying there, until you start to remove the wet diaper. Then, a la salt water crocodiles from Australia, he begins performing death-rolls. It is amazing just how incredibly difficult it is to pull an angry-doesn't-want-a-diaper-change-toddler out of a death roll.



At this point in time whichever parent is changing him employs his or her own strategy to whip off the sodden (2lb. +) diaper and reposition the boy onto a clean diaper. I, personally, like the technique where I plead, pathetically, for the boy to be still followed up by getting him more or less spread-eagle and pinning his arms and legs with my legs so that I can complete my task.



Changing Chubbers in the morning is one of those tasks that I don't even attempt without at least one cup of coffee in my system. I just don't.



Now, the Rodeo wouldn't be all that awful, really, except for the fact that Chubbers has his own cheering section: The Peanut (heh, heh...like a 'Peanut Gallery'...). Peanut, likes to wander into his room as we're changing him and loves to watch her brother flip and flop around like some sort of game fish landed on 20# test line. She grins with glee while chorusing "I want to see the poop!" regardless of whether or not there is any fecal matter. I can already see visions of my sweet little girl on the playground in the future, being the one to instigate the chanting of "Fight...fight...fight" when Johnny and Isaac have a little tête à tête on the first grade playground. Lord, help me.



By the time that the monster pee-pee pants have made their way into the pee-pee bucket (the Diaper Champ) the elapsed time is approximately 10 minutes, parent A or B is thoroughly exhausted, and the boy toddles off to start his glorious, brand-new day.



Parenting; never a dull moment. Nope.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Le Pièce de Résistance

Okie-dokie. I made it. I am a card wielding member of the elite group of folks who've completed the 'Wilton Cake Decorating Course 1'.
Ain't I somethin' special? (she says while grinning her best Clampet smile)


Here's the cake I did for class 3 (two weeks ago):
This is my first 'attempt' at roses. Notice how they're a lovely shade of orange...and that they appear to have had, perhaps, a bad LSD trip.

What can I say? Roses are a heck of a lot harder to do than they look. Now, every time I go into Safeway (or some store with a bakery) and I cruise past the 'ready to go' birthday cakes that are loaded with roses, I have a whole new appreciation for just what a pain it is to do them (and at the point this picture was taken I could only do roses very badly).

See, I learned (besides technique) that to properly create roses out of sugar and hydrogenated fat (or, if you must, butter creme icing) you need two separate consistencies of icing: Stiff (for the foundation of the rose) and medium/stiff (for the petals). You also (clearly?) need two different icing tips, and as a result, two different bags of icing with their respective consistencies. Furthermore, you need to have a 'flower nail' to build your rose upon. If you're me, this is approximately 3 too many separate objects to manipulate at nearly the same time.

Creating roses, beautiful roses that is, is a true art form. I am utterly a novice.


This Wednesday I completed my final Course 1 class. Sadly, J., my friend whom I was taking the course with, couldn't make it due to a non-life threatening illness (she just felt like crud). I was bummed that she wasn't able to make it (and thus is not a certified Wilton Course 1 card carrying member...oh the division of the classes, will it never end?). But, I carried on and completed the last class, with J. in my mind, and I did my Girl-scout best in her place. Here is the artsy view of my pièce de résistance:


The cool thing about my cake is that while I was making it I really had no idea what direction I wanted to head as far as decorating it. I just started making roses and plopping them onto the cake. I was so thrilled that I was finally starting to get the rudimentary elements of forming the flowers down, I forgot to plan what they were going to ultimately 'do' on my cake. So, due to copyright laws I can't show you the picture of the Wilton cake in the course book, but trust me this one looks pretty dang similar (in the book the roses and sweet peas (on the base) are lavender whereas mine are sort of a pink-ish color). Unfortunately, when I took the photo I had the white balance on my camera set for 'incandescent' lighting, when I truly should have had it set for 'fluorescent' lighting, so the picture is a bit dark, but I think you can still get the main idea.


For your viewing approval (or not):
In the end, I'm glad I took the class. I had a great time, and felt a myriad of emotions that ran the gamut from frustrated and grossed out to a sense of accomplishment and renewal.
It is true what 'they' say (whomever they happen to be): when you run yourself ragged and have given everything you have away and you don't stop and spend some time renewing your own spirit, your reserves do run dry. After taking this class just for something fun for myself, I feel renewed, and I learned a few new skills.
I'm looking forward to being able to improve on what I've learned, and to use the skills to buoy the spirits of others. I need to get back into the habit of giving to others and this might just be one small way I can do that. Who wouldn't be pleasantly surprised (diets not withstanding) with an out-of-the-blue cake or confection?

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Crazy Ebay Auction

This was just too funny not to post. It is an Ebay auction that you just have to check out.

Click HERE.

How I can so totally relate.

Monday, August 27, 2007

The End of an Era


Another milestone

This weekend I was out with my children for a leisurely Saturday morning shopping trip—yes, indeed I did say leisurely. (The secret is to buy them a bag of popcorn and a drink for $1.) I loaded my amply bribed children into the shiny, red, oversized shopping cart and began to amble through the aisles of merchandise. We maneuvered along the freshly polished, gleaming tiles, bypassing many tempting mommy-esque departments (namely, handbags, and the women’s clothing department) to attempt our first objective: buy the toddler a new pair of shoes.

Children’s shoe shopping, for me, is a real chore. I am super picky about the shoes that I allow my children to wear. Clothes, I buy new on-sale or second hand without any problem—I like to save money like anyone else. Shoes, on the other hand, are something else. You only get one set of feet and your feet are the foundation of your body. So, shoes need to be decent quality or I don’t buy them. In fact, I may buy myself cheap shoes from that nation-wide cheap-shoe retailer that advertises “BOGO” all the time, but for the kids, I generally wind up in a honest-to-goodness old-time shoe store, or a higher end shop like Nordstrom—they are the only places I find the quality I want for my kids. In other words, I will often get stabbed with paying $40-60 on one pair of shoes for my two-year-old, whereas I spend $15 (after hemming and hawing whether or not to waste the money) on shoes for myself.

This particular shopping trip I decided I’d give the inexpensive retailer a shot, to find Chubb-chub some shoes. I’d already struck-out at two other stores, so I figured what’s one more before heading to Nordies? I hit pay dirt, almost immediately. A decent pair of shoes that actually wound up being made by the Buster Brown Company. Chub was happy with the pictures and lights on the shoes, I was happy with the quality (and price!). We were doing well.

So, since the little girls’ and boys’ section was just ‘round the corner from shoes, I thought I’d peruse the selection and see if there were any good deals. There were.

This is where the story gets good.

I have shopped in the baby-toddler section, exclusively, since having children. My daughter has never fit into the ‘age/size’ that she should—ever. For instance, she was 2 years old and could still easily wear a size 12 months pair of shorts, with room to grow. She has never been, for example, 3 years old in a size 3T.

Things have been changing.

Peanut is still painfully skinny, but she is so tall now that I can’t squeeze her into ‘baby’ clothes so that they fit. Now, I have to find adjustable waist pants to fit her in the waist and length (usually means I wind up at Gap or if I’m lucky Old Navy—either way, more money than I want to spend). On this particular shopping trip I found one pair of pants, with adjustable waist on a clearance rack. Oh, happy, lucky day. So we continued on.

As the children happily munched on their ‘snack’ I wheeled us around the rest of the store. I was content meandering and ‘window shopping’ and they were pleased to be along for the ride (secretly, I think they were in some sort of preservative-induced trance from the movie theater-style popcorn they were eating—but, I’m not complaining!). As we cruised toward the registers we passed the ‘big girls’ section—elementary age girls’ sizes. I always look at what retailers try to pass off as ‘little girls’ clothes—more often with disgust than anything (Why are we trying to dress them like hootchies? Can someone please tell me?) As I am making my mental critique of what I think is darling and what I think is downright inappropriate I notice the sign says “Sizes 4-6x”. Size 4? If they have adjustable waist…I bet Peanut could wear it!

As it turned out, they had size 4 SLIM with Adjustable waist jeans on sale. I parked the cart next to the rack and slipped a pair of the pants over Peanut’s leotard (she had to wear her Gymnastics uniform to shop…). Hallelujah! They fit! And, they fit her really well. Most of the time the legs/seat are so baggy that she looks like…well…a bag lady. The SLIM jeans fit her perfectly. All we had to do was cinch in the wait a bit, and presto! My little girl is no longer shopping in the baby/toddler section.

My baby is no longer a baby. She really is becoming a big girl.

After the checker handed me our purchases and I was walking to the car, one child in each hand, it completely struck me: we’ve passed a brand-new milestone. Peanut is shopping in the big-girl section.

How quickly they grow up and these milestones sneak up on us. My baby really is becoming the ‘big girl’ we tell her she is.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

The Party is Almost Over...

I have 2 (weekdays) until I go back to work.

I don't officially start until Tuesday, August 28, but I'm going in on Monday because, let's face it, 3 days to get my act together is not long enough. (I'm supposed to work 'contract' days, August 28, 29, 30. And it is supposed to be sufficient to get everything ready. Yeah, right!)

It is always this time of year that I feel like a deflated balloon. I look back at my summer and wonder if I got the 'most' out of it; I wonder if my kids had the best of me, and enjoyed our time together. I know it isn't possible to do 'everything,' but I certainly try.

There's definitely a list of stuff I didn't get taken care of that I'd hoped to do over this summer. For instance, yard work-- I had hoped to get my yard into better shape--trim the 2 gigantic hedges in my back yard, plant more annuals for some color, and, at the least, get some fresh bark-o-mulch down in the front yard. I'd also hoped to get Chubb's baby book finally completed (let's face that one for what it is--I didn't even so much as look at the pictures/scrapbook stuff). He's two, now, I should at least have slapped the pictures into the book (I've given up on cutesy, artistic pages), but I haven't. Sigh. Maybe by the time he hits high-school I'll have it done (forget about remembering what the pictures are about!!!). I'd also hoped to de-clutter my house a bit more. I managed to clean out my dresser of clothes that are too big/that I don't wear. So, at least that counts for something.

It is strange, I have a friend in the same line of work as me who feels this depressed sensation after the end of the year, about a week after she's on vacation. I haven't felt that. She misses the action and the routine and feels a bit overwhelmed by the possibilities of summer. After about a week, though, she feels great. I feel deflated because the time goes by so quickly. I will have to put my kids back in daycare, and be back to the 'daily grind.' I miss my kids when I'm at work. I count myself lucky, though, since I get summers and holidays with my kids. I know it is a lot more than most people get with their kids. And, I know I'll be fine after the first two weeks. I always am. It is just tough to wind through the last two days of summer before I'm back to busy, busy, busy.

I'm trying to decide what I want to do with the kiddos today. Yesterday we played 'Bob the Builder' and drew pictures all morning, followed with two separate trips to the Park. They had a blast (I did, too). I would like to take the kids to the nearby theme park, or to the children's museum, here in town, the only problem is a significant lack of funds. Sometimes, I need to throw caution to the wind and just 'go for it'.

Today may be one of those days.

We can't preserve today and use it for tomorrow. Once today is passed, we can never get it back again. There's a great sticker that I often see on the helmets of Harley riders, it says: 'Ride it like you stole it.' Isn't that great? Sort of live life to the fullest, full-throttle. I want to start to live more of my days that way.

Care to join me? Let's live, full-throttle.

Monday, August 20, 2007

He's Officially a NOT a Baby, but a Toddler

Recipe to Celebrate Chub's Second Year of Life


Ingredients:


1 (or 2) Birthday Kid(s)
A cake
People to celebrate
A gift or two
A song
Lots of Fun

Endless Love


Make a wish, little one, all your dreams will come true.
Cake is fun, candles shine bright, you have your whole life to live, and live it right.
Happy 2nd Birthday to you, my beautiful little boy. We love you.
May the future hold more joys than sorrows, and may your heart always be light.
Here's to 2 years on this Earth.
What a wild and wonderful two years they have been.
I can hardly believe the time has gone by so quickly. Tears rush to my eyes to think that you're no longer a baby, and again a baby you'll never be.
Soon, my boy, soon, you'll be a full grown man.
The Good Lord grant me that I raise you well, and teach you right.
How true it is that we do today, echoes in eternity.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Cake Decorating, part deux


Still not great.
But better than the 'green' disaster.
I tried out a new cake recipe; I tried to go all 'healthy' and use unbleached whole-wheat flour, etc., etc., etc. Let me tell you, it just don't work. If you're gonna make cake (junk food) ya gotta use the conventional white-flour. Othewise, it winds up tasting like this cake: cornbread with lard icing. MMMmmm. Yummy. Doesn't that just totally make you want to gobble up a piece?
Heh.
Yeah, right.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Busy, tired, ugh

I feel like I'm flying around here like a loony-toon. I have about 2 weeks left until I go back to work, and as usual, the time starts to go by fast. Like, someone hit the x32 fast-forward button. Like I'm in the movie 'Click.' It is going by even faster due to Chub-chub and his new bed.



Chubbers is out of his crib and into a toddler bed (or the floor)--on a good day. He can't seem to handle the freedom of not being in a 'cage' (crib). It is kind of like parents who haven't had a day to themselves in months, and they're so excited, nervous, scared, elated that they just run around in circles bumping into objects and walls not knowing what to do with themselves, or how to handle it. Chubbers is the same way. Just without a crib.



Last night B.J. was putting him down to bed (that's his job) and I left the house for some much needed retail therapy. When I got home I found out that Chub-o had been his typical nightmare self. He didn't want to go to bed, so he popped up and screamed, alternately, for about an hour before conking out. Then, he decided that mommy really did need to experience the joy of an angry, over-tired toddler, and woke up screaming at 11pm, 2am, and 3:45am, finally waking at 5:45am.



Oh, what joy. I feel like I have a newborn again. I think I got, maybe, 2 solid hours of sleep last night. At 5:45am I decided, blearily, when it was clear that my offspring wasn't going to sleep, that I'd lay in bed and the boy could crawl into bed with me (which he did, and then proceeded to poke me in the face and randomly on my torso, just for giggles and grins--ANNOYING!!) or run amok in the house tearing things from the shelves, walls, and whipping out a can of Krylon for some preschool art--I DIDN'T CARE!! Let me sleep, please! This system of apathy and loving neglect worked until 6:15am, when the automatic coffee pot began brewing and I finally gave up trying to sleep and succumbed to the draw of my caffeine addiction.



When will it end? This is what I get for having a daughter, whom when we put her int a big-girl bed (directly into a 'Full', not a toddler bed) she laid down for bed, popped up only one time, and thereafter slept peacefully through the night. Oh, sweet Lord, when will the boy simply lay down and sleep peacefully, like a little angel, again?



Thank goodness my coffee maker decided to work this morning. I don't know if I could have faced the world if it hadn't.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Cake Decorating & Other Forms of Torture


I'm becoming so domestic these days.

Times were, many moons ago, that I was a young independent woman who worked a simple little job and lived alone in her own house, and rarely touched a pot or pan. In fact, my friends from 'once upon a time' used to complain when they came over and tried to raid the 'fridge only to find no real food to speak of. I had been accused of having a 'bachelor's refrigerator' and I'd heard many refrains of: 'you have every condiment known to human kind in here but no food. That's messed-up!" (One of my co-workers, if she reads this, is going to throw up at that particular phrase--sorry! Just tellin' it like it is)

These days, I often cook. In fact, some months I cook nearly every night except "left-overs" night. Don't get confused, I still have those weeks where I still have every condiment known to human kind and no food, and well, we simply go out to eat. Yes. It is expensive, wasteful, and causes my waistline to creep further and further out latitudinally. However, for the most part, I cook. Healthy-ish meals, from scratch. I hate boxed 'convenience' food--it all tastes the same to me (bad) and let's face it, anything with a 3 year shelf-life shouldn't go into our bodies (note: I conveniently forget this piece of rhetoric as I order our dinner at the golden arches.)

So, along the lines of my newly donned domesticity, I have decided to take a cake decorating class with my friend, J. J. and I go out for walks on average of 2x a week. We're getting in shape--something other than round, preferably. And on one of our walks J. asked me if I'd be interested. Sure. Why not? Sounds fun. So I have officially signed up and attended my first Wilton Cake Decorating I class.

The tuition was $30.00. Not bad. Especially compared to some of my Grad School classes. On the syllabus it says that an additional $25-50 dollars in supplies may be needed. No biggie. Well, after the first class I purchased the 'essentials' and to date my total investment (not including gas for transportation) is around $90.00. Pretty spendy for a hobby. Or, I'm just a cheap-o.


The first class was great. Friendly people (around 15 of us in all), and a nice instructor. The instructor made everything look like, well, a piece of cake. At the end of the class she gave us our supply list, and our first assignment: bake a cake, frost it using the recipe for butter creme frosting Wilton requires, and bring in frosting for decoration in a differing color than what you use to frost the cake. Easy, right? Well, this is me we're talking about. Heh heh heh.

So, comes the day after class. I'm bored and decided to root around to find all the ingredients I need to make butter creme frosting. Turns out, I have it all on hand, and the Peanut and I whip up a batch of the icing. Super fast, really easy, everything is cleaned up and taken care of in 10 minutes. My kind of project. However, I tried to make blue (we're going to make a 'Rainbow cake' at our second class), since I liked how the blue looked in the demo. picture. I found out that if you use 'butter' flavored Crisco (hint: it is yellow-Hell-o!!) what would have been blue icing is actually...you're gonna love this...preschoolers know how to use the color wheel...GREEN!!! Hahahah. Moral of the story? Use white Crisco, that is unless, you like actually want to have off-colored icing. Anyway, I figured I'd still be able to work with my green-not-blue-icing. I'm resourceful, like that.

Now, today (Friday), I'm stressed because the nearly-two-year-old is being fussy and doesn't want to cooperate (will he ever want to cooperate, at any time during the rest of his life? Magic 8 Ball says: Signs point to no.) so I decided we all need a project to entertain us. We'll bake a cake! I thumbed through my 1940's era McCall's Cookbook (only the world's best cookbook, ever. It was my mom's, so I'm very sentimental about it) looking for a good cake recipe. There's a bunch of them, too bad I was feeling lazy. I stuck a post-it note in the cookbook, and proceeded to get out a red-velvet cake mix (the box kind, yes, I know I'm totally contradicting myself, here) and we slap that together, and bake it.

At class the teacher said that we could use a box cake-mix, but it would be harder to frost because of the crumbs. The teacher is right, box cakes make LOTS of crumbs. Frosting a cake using the decorating tools the right way is much harder than it looks. I did my best to frost my cake. That doesn't mean I'm gonna take home a blue ribbon at the county fair.

I'm glad I 'practiced' tonight. I'd hate to have brought my FUGLY green frosting red-carpet-cake with red crumbs in the frosting lopsided cake to class. How embarrassing! But, it was a good learning experience.

Peanut will wake up tomorrow and see a hideous crumbs-in-the-green-should-be-blue-icing and she will squeal with joy, because, this cake will be her 'birthday' cake that she's been asking for since Thursday, when we made the icing. So, even though it is ugly, and not at all professional looking, it is worth it because I know it will make a certain 4 year-old some one's day.

Once I finished admiring my abstract art and thinking of how much Peanut will like it I was really good. I cleaned up my mess right away, rather than wait until the morning and hope the magic husband fairy would come along and clean it up (never happens, but I can hope, right?). Holy cow! Butter creme frosting is a pain to clean; in fact, it is just plain icky. Let's just say, if you ever want to stop eating sweets, make a batch of butter creme icing, wash your utensils by hand, and look at the residue left in the sink. I now know exactly what the insides of my thighs look like--it ain't pretty. Yech!!! A good thing, though, 'cuz now I won't eat frosting.

Monday, August 6, 2007

If I'm not caffeinated and I have a gun, no one is safe


Coffee.

The sound of the word 'coffee' just rolls off my tongue and drips happiness. Truly. I can walk by a coffee shop (be it a gourmet or greasy spoon) and the aroma of freshly brewed beans crawls up my nose, into my sinuses, and I feel the euphoric 'lift' that the magical South American fruit produces.

Scientifically, if you're feeling 'down' if you walk past a coffee shop (or go inside and shove your snout into a bin and huff it like you're about to 'lose it', if you're me) it will perk you up; science has proved that coffee is a 'natural' mood lifter. Isn't that great? I remember that from a $40,000 public university education, from one of my Psy 400 classes. Seems, if not for anything else, that the information about coffee made the whole 3 years worth it (yes, we know I'm a geek, now you also know my dirty little secret, I finished University early). I can also remember a lot about something called "substance dependant learning." Substance dependant learning, in a nutshell, means that if you're cramming for an exam, and you chug, for instance, a 40 oz. keg of coffee, you'll learn the facts with that 'substance' in your brain and in order to have maximum recall when you take said exam, you'll need that same quantity of coffee in your system at the time of the test. Hmm. That could be one of the reasons why I had my I.V. (a HUGE portable coffee mug) with me at all times when I was in school...or could also be because I am hugely addicted to the substance.

Can't you just meet our Maker, in peace, now, that you have that useless piece of trivia to add to the vast quantities arcana that I can fill you with?

I love coffee. My mother told me that I get my love of the warm, brown, aromatic beverage from my grandmother. I'll never forget my mom telling me about a time when Grandma went to England (can you hear "God Save the Queen" playing, yet?) and how she couldn't get a cup o'joe to satisfy her. When she returned home from her trip all she could do was complain about the fact that the British can't brew a decent cup of coffee (after my own visit across the 'pond' I'm inclined to agree with her). Well, I suppose that makes sense, they drink Tea. Tea doesn't have nearly the caffeine that coffee does. The average cup of steeped tea (think 3 mins.) has between 12 and 20 mg. of caffeine; the Brits, perhaps, are a bit more sedate due to their caffeine consumption. We Americans, loud and obnoxious sorts, chug an average of 2 cups of coffee in the morning to the tune of a super-charged 50 mg. caffeine per cup. That's just regular joe, we ain't even gotten into Espresso, here. No wonder we're as hyper and high-strung as we are. But, then again, could we do it 'all' on less? For me the answer is a resounding "NO!"

I tried (successfully) to kick the caffeine habit exactly two times in my life: Peanut and Chub-chub. I quit coffee when I was pregnant. After all, a responsible mommy-to-be follows a stringent regimen of diet, sans coffee/caffeine. With Peanut it was easy. My favored elixir of life made me ill. Just the smell of it was enough to send me to the toilet retching violently. What a horrible association it was for me coffee-nausea. Now, with the Chubber, coffee didn't make me ill. In fact, quite contrary to my pregnancy with his sister, I craved coffee. I couldn't sniff it enough. In the end, at about 8 mos, I did have an occasional cup (I can hear the authors of What to Expect When You're Expecting rage at this injustice I did to my son).

Coffee, especially in the morning, is great. On the rare occasion where I can't have my coffee, to quote a former professor of mine, Ms. Mary Roe, 'life isn't good;' in fact, life is terrible. The only times I am without coffee in the morning is if: a. There has been a power outage, and my automatic coffee-maker doesn't start because the time is flashing "12:00" over and over again, ever so belligerently, or b. I have had a psychotic break with reality and forgotten to set my coffee-maker. I do not do well when caffeine deprived. In fact, you might say I can be a bit of a b*tch.
Really. I'm sure you could never, ever see me as anything other than sunshine and roses (you can quit laughing, now).

Coffee is the only real 'vice' I have left, these days. I quit drinking and partying; I don't do drugs; I don't buy shoes compulsively anymore; and I haven't smoked since my mother was diagnosed with lung cancer (that was tough for two reasons- 1. mom was diagnosed when she was already at stage IV cancer (terminal), which made me stressed and want to smoke even more, and, 2. because it was already a 10 year old habit). I feel like if I'm going to have any 'vices' coffee is a fairly safe bet. I even heard in the news, a couple weeks ago, coffee is good for you because if somehow contains antioxidants and is a source of fiber. Whoo-hoo!

What can I say? I just love coffee.
8-10-07: Edited to add my favorite 'coffee' graphic--when I originally posted this, my computer refused to let me have access to my pictures/uploads.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Chopitty-chop-chop-chop!

I finally did it!! I have been saying I'm going to chop off my hair for what seems like forever. It is Go-one.

It feels great.

Anyone who has known me for any long length of time knows that (This is for B.J.'s Foster Sister, if she's reading...) my hair style, length, and color changes about as often as the seasons. If you look at photographs of me that are in my home, say in my living room, you'll notice that my hair has been many different shades found in nature (and the rainbow). I have had short (as in shoulder length and a little shorter) hair, and I have had long (down to my bra-strap) hair. I have been blond, brunette, red, and at one point in time a favorite purplish color (I found out the hard way, pumpkin orange, is, truly, for fruits and veggies only).


About the only thing that has stayed consistent over the years is the fact that my hair is fine (yag-I hate it) and that the longer it gets the curlier/kinkier it gets (and, no, it's not meant to be a pun). Curly hair is--great if that is what you want. However, like all people with one hair-type or another, you always want the texture/type that the good Lord didn't see fit to give you--so, in my case, I've always wished for thick, stick-straight hair. It has never happened, and after all these years I've resigned myself to the fact that it may only be able to accomplish straight for approximately 2.3 minutes, or until I walk out my front door and the humidity hits it. *Sigh* Such is life.

So, after about three weeks of serious contemplation (and seriously resisting the urge to purchase a set of Whal clippers) I decided to take the plunge and CHOP IT OFF! I have hated my hairstyle for a while now--I sometimes like it, on "good hair days" but those are too far and few between. [B.J. informs me I always love my hair for a few weeks after I get it cut/styled, then inevitably I decide I hate it. I think he's on to something there...] I decided I wanted the type of hair style that I can shampoo and shake my head and be done. The ultimate 'wash and wear' style. I think I have achieved it:



It is short, baby! Really, really short. And, true to what B.J. says, I love it. I love it so much because I can get up, shower, shampoo, fix my hair, and make-up and be dressed and ready to go in a whopping Fifteen Minutes!!! That just rocks. I am beginning to understand and appreciate just how easy guys have had it all these years. I think I'm going to like super-short hair. It is so incredibly liberating to just have hacked it all off (well, not me personally, my stylist--whom has watched me chop it shorter and shorter each time until I have finally reached this length, or the lack there-of!).

It is funny, how right the writers at Allure magazine got it, when they wrote about cutting off your hair, and the catharsis that you feel. It is like, at the risk of cheezy-ness, being remade, new, all over again. And, I definitely feel new.