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What ever happened to typing “Hahaha” when something was funny?  That was too boring?  Too normal?

I can almost get my arms around LOL.  Because there are the times when you’re sitting at your computer and you read something that actually makes you unexpectedly laugh OUT LOUD which is worthy of note.  Because it’s weird to see someone laughing out loud while staring at an inanimate object.

But ROFLMAO?  Puh-lease.  That’s just plain stupid.

So, if you read something that actually leads you to “roll on the floor laughing your a** off”, then by all means send it my way.   Please.  Then I can determine whether you’re someone with hysterically funny friends or just someone who prefers stupid internet abbreviations to actual words.

Thank you.

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Tomorrow I will enjoy my last morning of Mommy freedom until school commences again in September.  Au revoir to my precious Tuesday and Thursday mornings when both kids are out from under foot.  Am I getting a pedicure?  Watching The Hills?  Going to the gym?  No.

You wanna guess what I volunteered to do from 9:00 – 10:00 am (roughly 1/3 of my remaining bliss)?  Well, you won’t ever guess so never mind.

I’m standing outside of a local voting place holding a political sign encouraging Marblehead to Vote Yes on Question 8.

Huh?

Do I care passionately about this issue?  Nah.

Do I even know very much about this issue?  Not really.

Did Big Brother vomit all over the car of a woman who is both passionate and knowledgeable about this issue?   You betcha.

The “incident” occurred in the end of February.  A very nice fellow pre-school class Mom kindly offered to deliver Big Brother home from a birthday party.  And, lucky lady, the hideous stomach bug of Winter 2010 reared its ugly head roughly two seconds after Big Brother climbed into her car.   And it reared its head repeatedly all the way to my house.   Nice.

I barely knew her.

Well, after that, she sure got to know me.   I was the psycho crazy that couldn’t. let. it. go.  I was so horrified by the repulsion of it all.  I arranged to have her car picked up to be detailed at my expense and returned to her by the next day.  She politely declined my offer and told me that, really, it was fine.  I saw her husband at drop-off a few days later and introduced myself as mother to the puker.  He laughed and told me not to give it another thought.

But, seriously, it haunted me.  Which, I know, is my own silly issue.  Clearly, they were fine with it.  With a collection of their own kids, it wasn’t the first time and probably not the last time they dealt with such yuck.  They were so gracious.

I was still mortified.

So, when she posted on Facebook asking if anyone was willing to hold signs for a cause she cares about deeply?

Hell, yes.  You go ahead and sign me right up.

And, as of 10:01 am tomorrow morning, my obsessive compulsive mind can finally call us even.  I’m almost hoping it rains.  And, you can bet I’ll still be out there.

Phew.

Vote YES on 8.


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(I know you can’t see it clearly yet.  Click on it.)

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…how everyone else’s pregnancies take approximately 9 seconds while yours felt like it took somewhere around 9 years?

I swear, it’s a Bermuda Triangle-esque phenomenon.

Remember I posted (what seems like) last week about how I learned that my matron of honor was pregnant by reading about it on Facebook (which sucked).  Well, now she’s due practically tomorrow.

Being pregnant is weird overall, anyway.  It’s crazy how, like your physical body, your mental state is just so fully and obsessively focused on that growing baby.  I noticed other pregnant women all the time.  It seemed they were everywhere.  I was compulsive about reading and learning and planning and talking about my pregnancy.  I’m sure I was a huge pain in the a** to spend any time with.

About six months in (which was probably actually just six weeks but since I was pregnant for something like thirteen years, it seems longer), Husband was reaching the end of his rope with my insanity.  I was probably reading to him from some book, reciting the latest fruit or vegetable size of the baby.  “Oh, wow!  He’s a rutabaga now!  Did you hear me?  A rutabaga!  Isn’t that amaaaazing?  Husband?  Don’t you even care about the baby?!”

Husband:  (sigh)  Of course, I care.  But, seriously, Cutie.  I’m pretty sure we actually talked about something else, now and then, before you got pregnant.

Well, pffffft to you, mister.  (sticking out tongue sound effect)

Good luck to all my cute friends (and, considering I’m 39, there are a lot of you!) expecting new bambinos.  And, while I feel like your pregnancy lasted six point two seconds, I’m pretty sure you feel like you’ve been pregnant forever.

Hang in there.   And tell that husband of yours to pipe right down if he thinks you’re obsessing a little.   He’s getting a baby and nine months of designated driving out of the deal.    Not bad.

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I’m attending a baby shower in a few weeks and my cute, preggy friend registered for some items at Pottery Barn.  So, I went online today and ordered her something adorable and, as usual, my purchase led Pottery Barn to recommend yet another item to me.

“People who bought your product, often buy this product…”

Tulip Wall Decals for $29.99

Create a cheerful garden of colorful flowers anywhere in the room with our exclusive peel-and-stick wall decals.

  • Decals are easy to apply and remove.
  • Created from original watercolor illustrations so each bloom is unique.
  • Set of 9 tulips.
  • Tulip height ranges from 18″ to 31.5″.
  • Internet / Retail only.

And, here they are (picture from the PB website):

Like ’em?   Yeah?  Me too, I guess.

Almost as  much as I liked the work that Big Brother brought home from pre-school earlier this week.

Here’s that.

I mean, come on PB.  Really?

$29.99.   Silly.

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I’ve mentioned before that I grew up in a beautiful small town in Southern Vermont.  The house in which I was raised sits on a pretty good-sized plot with a nice big front yard and acres of field in the back.   Certainly the land was big enough to farm but my parents (more gray flannel than Carhartt) opted to use the land for other things.   Like a vegetable garden that provided countless summers of wonderful fresh produce but sometimes fed more deer than family.   A somewhat short-lived chicken coop provided some entertainment for all of us, some nice eggs and, occasionally, some hearty meals for wild animals.

To this day, there’s always some discussion of what could be done with the extra land.  Ideas have ranged from a shooting range to a swimming pool to a red clay tennis court to a paddle tennis court to a curling rink.  Nothing’s ever come of it, of course.  And, when I journey home to that house I can tell you my heart warms so much more as I watch my little boys trudge through acres of natural fields than it ever would hearing them splash around in a pool or, god forbid, shooting clay pigeons.

My Dad’s a “hobbier”.  If that’s not actually a word, suffice to say he’s had a lot of hobbies.  And not small piddly hobbies like coin collecting or stamps.  No, no.  He got his solo pilot’s license.  He can build a mean duck decoy.  He’s a fly fisherman who ties his own flies and wraps his own rods.   He built gas-powered model airplanes large enough that I believed him when he offered to send Dick the Cat out for a test flight.   He can smoke his own meat for dinner, top it with his own batch of hot sauce and enjoy some of his home-churned ice cream for dessert.   I kid you not.

Eventually, the large field behind their house combined with my Dad’s never-ending hobby quests led to his longest lasting venture yet.   With a little help from some dear (now, sadly, deceased) friends, roughly 15 years ago he became a beekeeper.   Which probably sounds sort of scary and threatening but it’s really not.  Honey bees really don’t want to sting anybody and no one has ever gotten stung anywhere on my parents’ property that wasn’t screwing around with the bees’ hives in some way.  My Dad’s bees have produced countless bowls of honey-topped cereal and countless jars for clients and friends.  They even provided a little gift for our wedding guests.

** A little story for you as an aside.  Husband and I gave living in Vermont a whirl a few years back.  Full-time jobs, I worked weekends, and no one was making any money to speak of.  Still, we were near my parents and it was a great Vermont life while it lasted.  My Dad even got us set up with a few hives and Husband successfully kept his own bees.  Our house was across the street from a Catholic church.  One Sunday morning, Husband was tending to his bees just as church was letting out.  He’d neglected to properly tie up the wrist bands of his beekeeping suit and, consequently, learned his lesson the hard way when he discovered he had a dozen angry bees inside his suit.  I looked out the window (and church goers stopped in their tracks) to witness Husband leaping around the lawn, arms flapping, stripping off his bee suit with a fabulous array of filthy expletives flying out of his mouth.   It was hilarious.  Well, except for the fact that the doctor told us to just keep an eye out for any indication that his tongue was swelling and we had to spend the next two hours checking on it every three minutes.  “Tho, howthitlooknow?” … “Howthitlooknow?” **

Anyway, there have been some lovely midsummer days, when my Dad’s had as many as five hives buzzing with 50,000 bees each.  You doing the math?  We’re talking 250,000 busy bees who spend their days enjoying sweet Vermont clover, crisp clear water from nearby ponds and fresh air before returning to their happy hives in my parents’ back yard.   Idyllic, dontcha’ think?

There’ve been some bee challenges in the past.  There was a terrible virus that struck hives across the United States not too long ago and it wiped out a bunch of my Dad’s bees.   There’ve been some really bitchy Queens that have produced Angry Hives.   And, there’s always the small issue of how much the local post office just loves receiving packages marked “BEES ENCLOSED.  HANDLE WITH CARE!”

“Um, Mrs. Hills.  You can tell your husband his bees have arrived.  Tell him he can pick them up out back.”

So there’ve been challenges.  But none like this guy…

Yup.  They’ve got a bear.  And, as you know, bears love that honey.  This picture was taken with a motion-sensitive camera.

And, when the bear shows up, he wreaks havoc on the hive, killing thousands and thousands of the bees.

Here’s a hive pre-bear.

And, here’s the hive post-bear.

Yeah.   So, he’s no Gentle Ben.

So, after speaking to the local game warden, they were given permission to shoot at the bear.  Which bothers me a little bit (ok, maybe more than a little bit) but I figure the game warden knows better than I, right?  And, plus, the choice for my Dad is either to give up beekeeping or get rid of the bear.  Clearly, as you can see from the pictures, the two cannot co-exist.

But, keep in mind fellow animal lovers.  The bear comes at night.  And my Dad, despite motion-sensitive alarms and relocating his bed to the living room, continues to SLEEP at night.  He’s slept through the alarm a number of times and, although he’s gotten off a shot twice, he admits he was shooting in the direction of the bear’s obscenely potent stink of BO, rather than at anything he could actually see.  The odds are clearly tipped towards the bear here.

They did have one fabulously inspired idea that I was convinced would do the trick.   Sure, camera-flashes, ear-piercing alarms and gunshots didn’t faze this guy but this next idea was bound to send him running.

A first lady in a pantsuit?

Terrifying.

No?

No.  Apparently, in Vermont, even the bears are democrats.

Stay tuned.

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You be the judge.

* Credit to my clever cousin Sam who discovered these beauties.


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Your major daily newspaper provides the following stat as to how much oil has comparatively spilled into the Gulf:

“Enough oil to…

…fill 161 million medium Dunkin’ Donuts iced coffee cups.”

Thanks, guys.

Because all those complicated math-ey figures just get us wicked confused.

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Nothing of much importance to say today.  Just a little of this and a little of that.

* * * * *

I married a man who believes a week-long family vacation in an RV is a great idea.  I’ve been fighting it tooth and nail since the day we married.   Remember in my last post I referred to Husband as Clark, as in Clark Kent?  Well, apparently there’s a little Clark, as in Griswald, too.   It all sounds god-awful to me, frankly, what with the bugs, the cold nights, cramped spaces and all.  If I’m in a car for a long time, it’s so that I can get somewhere I really want to be.   Like, a suite with a Heavenly Bed and room service.  Lord knows, I don’t really want to be at a campsite surrounded by a bunch of other RV’ers.

Unfortunately, wise Husband has Big Brother all fired up about the idea and whatever Big Brother wants, Little Brother wants so…sigh…I’m out numbered by three boys I love.  It appears to be happening sometime in July.  I’m trying to look at the bright sides.

  • It’s bound to produce decent blog content.
  • He’ll owe me.  Big.
  • There are a good two months between the trip and the start of school.  Which means the entire trip will be long forgotten and is, therefore, unlikely to make it into the kids’ “What I Did On My Summer Vacation” stories.

Stay tuned, folks.

* * * * *

Cutie pie Lee DeWyze won American Idol.  Which I love.  Because I was all about Lee DeWyze.  I was all about him despite the fact that he got completely screwed in the season finale with stupid, lame-o songs.  Telling someone they need to raise the energy level and then asking them to sing “Everybody Hurts” is like telling a birthing mother to relax during a contraction.  Shut up.  Not cool.

You go, Lee.   Atta boy.

* * * * *

Howard Stern should be the next American Idol judge.

* * * * *

No one loves Paula Abdul more than Paul Abdul loves Paula Abdul.

* * * * *

Big Brother starts kindergarten next year.  I’m sure I’ll get all sentimental about this for you in upcoming blogs…probably sometime after I get over the fact that I just sent in my check for public school kindergarten tuition.   Did you catch that?  Public school.  Tuition.  Makes me a little crazy.

* * * * *

I’m getting old.  Today I discovered that Samantha from “Sex & the City” and I finally have something in common.  If you’re a fan, you’ll know what I mean.  If you aren’t, I’m not spelling it out for you.

* * * * *

This dopey dog on my floor made me laugh today.

* * * * *

This poor bird in the Gulf made me want to cry.

What the hell is going on?  How can this still be getting worse?   It’s unfathomable.

* * * * *

I wish I was friends with Brody Jenner.  Husband laughs at me about this but he totally wants to be friends with Pat Sajak which I think makes him even geekier that I am.

* * * * *

I think NBC is afraid to tell Jerry Seinfeld that The Marriage Ref sucks.

* * * * *

Why is it that my 5-year old, while peeing, will look all around in every other direction but is apparently incapable of actually looking down at where the hell he’s pointing that thing?  Good Lord, child.  Pay attention.

* * * * *

Happy Memorial Day weekend, everyone.  Try to take just a little break from all the awesomeness that is the official start of summer and remember our fallen soldiers.

Enjoy it.

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See this guy?  I think I may have married him.

Well, ok, so maybe he doesn’t look exactly like that.  Maybe more like THIS.

Yeah, that’s him.

For the most part, I’m pretty even-keeled.  I don’t get overly excited about good things nor do I get overly upset about not-so-good things.  I may raise my voice but I’m almost always tightly in control of my emotions.  This was actually a bit of a handicap when I was climbing the corporate ladder because, apparently, bosses need to see that you are enjoying yourself.   You can’t just do your job well.  You need to act like you love doing your job well.

When I was working at a PR firm, I placed a story about lightbulbs on the Today Show.  Freakin’ lightbulbs.  No joke.  It was a story I’d been pitching for months.  I’d worked hard on developing a relationship with a certain segment producer and all my work paid off.  When I got word that the story was a go, I sent my client and my boss a very matter of fact email letting them know.  I explained the story angle, the air date, the taping date and the travel arrangements.   Shortly after I sent the email, I received a phone call from my boss, asking that I come into her office.   She was amazed I hadn’t reacted more enthusiastically.  She was clearly bothered by the fact that I had scored such a HUGE placement for my client, on a top television show, and that my email could very well have been about placing a Public Service Announcement in the local weekly.   Where are the exclamation points?   The smiley emoticons?

Ridiculous.

A year or so later, I was working at a giant financial institution doing Event Planning.  It was a great job but a hard job full of travel and details and finicky clients.  I loved it and did well.  Well enough to eventually get a generous raise from my boss who called me into her office to give me the details.  She said very nice things about my work.  She said very nice things about my future within the group.  She presented me with a very nice salary increase.  I said “thank you very much” and smiled.  Then I was ready to return my desk.  She, apparently, wasn’t ready for me to return to my desk.   Because at my next review she brought up the fact that she was very disappointed by how I reacted to the raise.   That I didn’t turn cartwheels and sing “Happy Days Are Here Again” as I leaned over to kiss her fashionable shoes.

Whatever, lady.

I earned that raise.  I said “thank you”.  I’m just not the unbridled enthusiasm type.  Those that know me well, understand this trait.  I’m not a jump up and down, screechy, over-exciteable kind of girl.  I tend to be rationale and calm in most situations.  And while, surprisingly, this trait hurt me in the corporate world, it’s helpful to me in my role as a stay-at-home Mom.  Kids need an even keel to depend on as their own little ships toss about from one emotional outburst to the next.   We weather the storms nicely as a team, the three of us.  Most of the time.

But, sometimes, somedays…it’s the perfect storm.  And the seas have just tossed Mommy around a bit too much in too short an amount of time.  The screaming, the fighting, the whining, the gimmies, they all collide in one big ole’ tsunami.   (Alright, enough with the metaphor.) These are the days when I hear my own yucky Mommy voice in my head and I’m yelling and ranting and rapidly becoming that Mean Mommy.  The one who tells them they’re driving her crazy and doles out time-outs like popsicles on a summer day.

The one who can. not. wait. until. Daddy. comes. home.

Because I don’t often lose it.

But, when I lose it?  I really lose it.

“Losing it” this weekend occurred after a long day of what I viewed to be “Little Boys in Paradise” activities.   The beach, dinner out, playgrounds, sidewalk chalk, play dates and birthday parties.  They were back home and, with bottomless adrenaline tanks,  racing and chasing and screaming and throwing things around the living room.  Darting around the fireplace with its “you’re going to crack your head open on that thing” stone riser.   And, when I discovered Little Brother’s beloved “Bah” (a stuffed rabbit) flung between the fireplace and the screen for roughly the 900th time in the last two days, I snapped.

Without thinking, I rushed over to the fireplace, grabbed “Bah” and threw him as hard as I could across the room.

Which, of course, sent Little Brother into a frenzy of tears.

Stop crying!  Enough! Both of you!  Go to your rooms

And, then I may have heard the sound of angels.  Harps playing softly as the living room entryway came aglow.

Husband stepped in.

He doesn’t intervene in the true sense of the word, though.  He doesn’t swoop in and try to mediate.  Probably because he knows we’re beyond that point.  You know, what with me throwing stuffed bunnies and all.   No.   He doesn’t tell me I’m over-reacting (which of course…I am) and he doesn’t tell the kids that ignoring me countless times is ok.   He just…diffuses.   He steps in and gently takes the parenting reigns from my tightly clenched fists.   And I, gratefully, let him.

Not long afterwards, I hear them all reading a story in Little Brother’s room.   Calm.   A giggle here and there.

And they all eventually emerge.  Happy.

And find me sitting peacefully alone in the living room.  Happy.

I’m sorry, Mommy.

IsowwyMahmay.

Me too, guys.

Thanks, Husband.

Thanks for saving, if not the day, at least the moment.  For understanding me.   For caring for them, and for me, so well.   For recognizing that it was Mom, not the kids, in need of a little time out.

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