Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Turns out mosquitos, Homer Simpson and frat-boys have something in common.  They all love beer.

A recent study showed that mosquitos are attracted to the smell of beer and prefer to bite victims who have been drinking.

Fortunately, drinking copious amounts of beer also makes you care a lot less about getting bitten so it’s sort of a wash.

No?

Read Full Post »

Give me a “Y”!

Wednesday night.  Kids are in bed.  Husband and I settle in to watch a TiVo’d episode of Parenthood.  Are you watching this show, by the way?  We love it.

Well, I guess it’s fair to say that I love it.  Husband likes it but, truth be told, he may just continue watching with me in hopes that Minka Kelly (ie Lyla Garrity or the future Mrs. Derek Jeter) will assume a larger role in the show soon.

He looooves himself some Minka.

Anyway, the show rocks.  I really think they hit the nail on the head on parental emotions.  The comic and not-so-comic emotions as we make our way — dealing with marriage, jobs, raising kids and all the mish-mash of day-to-day life as a family.

Last night’s episode had Mother and Father struggling with Teenage Daughter’s demand for independence, the troubling arrival of a new boyfriend on the scene and the even more troubling arrival of a black, silky, little number in a Victoria’s Secret package.

Good Lord.  It was almost painful to watch as the Mother went away for the weekend, leaving the Father to bumble his way through it all.   Daughters.  Boyfriends.  Bras.

Commercial Break.  TiVo fast forward.   Me to Husband…

The best move you ever made?

Husband:   What?

Me:  Dropping all those Y chromosomes.  Way to go, champ.

Husband nods knowingly.    Yup. Thanks.

Read Full Post »

This Sleepy Dog

These fragrant flowers that were all picked from my front yard yesterday.

The Weekend Forecast

AND, the fact that this has started recording on my TiVo.

Woot!  Woot!

Is it nap time yet?

Read Full Post »

The Journey Matters.

I’ve been going through a little something lately.  Struggling, in fact.  Feeling a deep sense of…of what? A sense of “Now what?”  A sense of “What’s next?”

But, understand that I’m not rushing anything.  Not trying to fast forward my beautiful, thriving boys through their childhood.  Not pushing my loving, hard-working husband towards the next step in our lives together.  But instead wondering…

What’s next for me?

Driving home together a few weeks back, Husband and I passed by Boston’s North End.  Where I lived for a number of years on my own.  Just me.   Commuter.  Event Planner.   Best Friend.   All labels I accepted and wore like badges.  And, while they were certainly each woven into the fabric that was Me at that time, I never felt those labels defined me.  Or confined me.  They were undoubtedly labels of the PRE-Me.  The Pre-that-person-I-will-become.   Someday.    Someday when I would wear new labels.  Today’s labels.

Wife.  Mother.

Back then, living in the North End, I worked.  And played.  And anticipated the time that I would meet my Husband.  And we would marry.   Get a dog.  We would start a family.   And, if all worked out really well then maybe we could move to a small town near the ocean.  And, when I really dreamed big, I secretly hoped I could quit my job.  And stay at home to raise our kids.

So imagine my surprise when what came out of my mouth that day in the car with my husband was:

“You know what I just realized?  Any future happy milestones of my life will be the achievements of someone else.  Big Brother’s graduation, Little Brother’s marriage, Your promotion.   There’s nothing left that will be my accomplishment.   Nothing left to do and say, ‘Look!  I did it!’   Because they’re done, right?  The career.  The wedding.  The birth of our kids.  My big stuff is just…done.   Isn’t that sort of sad?”

Of course, Husband didn’t like hearing that any more than I liked saying it.  He went on about how that’s a terrible way to look at things.  That there’s plenty more for me to achieve.  Write a book.   Go back to work someday.  Run a marathon.   If you choose to be done, you will be.  Don’t choose that.

He was right.  And, I knew he was right.  But still…something nagged at me.

Unrest.

A few days later, I was on the phone with a girlfriend of mine.  She has been my friend since we worked together stopped working together in Boston. (As an aside, the truth is we were actually not friends when we worked together in Boston.  We actually drove each other crazy more times than not and it took NOT working together for us to form the friendship we hold today.)

ANYWAY.

This friend is easily my most successfully introspective friend.  She can analyze a situation six ways from Sunday with me until we reach that agreeable point at which we both say “Yes, yes.  That’s it.  Now we have it.  Aren’t we clever?” When our conversation that day turned to my recent internal struggle around any future personal achievements, she was thoughtful.  She listened.  She heard me.

She knows me well.

She knows who I was back then.

She knows who I have become today.

She also knows we’ve moved four times in the last five years.  She knows I struggled with my first newborn and then was terrified I’d never have the chance for a second.  She knows the inside outs of my relationships with and within Vermont, with and within Connecticut and most importantly with and within Marblehead.   She knows my educational background, my socio-economic background and the goals I may never speak aloud but set high for my children’s futures.   She knows I love my husband.

She knows I’m happy.

So she listens.  And lets me finish.  And then she says…

You know what your problem is, don’t you?  You’ve spent 38 years of your life in search of this.   This today.  What you have.   You’ve found that life you sought for so long.  Seven years ago, you lived in the town but you weren’t yet married.  Then you were married but didn’t have the baby.  Then you had the baby but still had to work.  Then you didn’t work, had another baby but moved away from the town.  And now, here you are.  Happily married.  With the babies.  In the seaside town.  Raising your children.

Honey.  What’s wrong with you?  Enjoy it.

And, she’s right.  Maybe it’s time, finally time, to take a deep breath.  And look around.   And be proud.  And grateful.

And content, damn it.

My boys have a lot of growing to do.  My responsibility in raising them and the pride I feel in watching the people they become is far greater than any measure of my education, my employment or the geographic location of my home.

So, maybe it’s not that my journey is over.  Maybe it’s just that I got over that first really damn big mountain and now, approaching 40, I get to pedal just a little slower.  Breathe the wind in my face.  Prepare to push hard to rise over the next hill (for there will certainly be many more hills) but then make sure to allow myself a minute to enjoy the spectacular views from its crest.

“It is good to have an end to journey towards; but it is the journey that matters in the end.”  – Ursula LeGuin

Read Full Post »

Mealtime Magic

Dear Moms and Dads,

Struggling with new and nutritious dinner items for your kids?   Has your mealtime lost the “magic”?   Kids lost interest in the same old – same old beef, chicken and pork products?

Well, search no further.

New!  Innovative!  And laced with green glitter!

It even comes complete with a small silver spoon for busy kids (and grown-ups) on the go!

Dig in!

Read Full Post »

How is it that sometimes they can seem so big and so little all at once?

Read Full Post »

We’re all happily home from a wonderful stretch of days visiting my parents in Vermont.   Beautiful weather, (mostly) happy kids, many fabulous outdoor activities, drinks with great friends and delicious meals with family.

Plus, my parents scored some cheap child labor in tending their fields.

Kidding.

But, seriously, how cute are they in those giant tractors?

Really, though, it was a great trip.  A perfect trip.

Well, almost perfect.

Except for a minor blip when I took the boys to a local playground and while I was running a 5K, doing a cart-wheel, rescuing my kids from a rabid dog, (oh, ok…) walking slowly along a wooden walkway, I went down like a ton of bricks.  Just fell.  For who knows what incredibly athletic reason.  (I may or may not have been reading something on my iPhone.  You can’t prove it.)  But anyway, down I went — arms splayed, legs askew, ankle rolled.  Ass over teakettle in my flip-flops.  Suddenly, on the grass looking up at a very worried Big Brother.

Mommy!  Are you ok?

Clearly, I am very graceful.   Swan-like, in fact.

Here, Mommy.   I picked up your phone.  It looks ok.

Mommy of the Year.   Yup, that’s me.   Go ahead and send my trophy to the Manchester Recreation Area c/o Grassy Area behind the tire swings.

So, anyway.   Here’s a shot of the right ankle Friday afternoon back at my parents house.  You know, shortly after I got up close and personal with the playground grass.

You like the pedicure?  You do.  Thanks.

And, here’s the stunning beauty that is my ankle (or lack thereof) today.  Sunday afternoon back at home.

Awesome.

It’s fine, of course.  I’m walking around on it without much trouble and, even though it’s hideous looking, it actually feels better than it did yesterday.

But, really.   Gross.

Yup, just another “sports injury” to add to my collection.

Note to self:  really must slow down.   Ha.

Read Full Post »

Since Husband is more than a little convinced that if I blog about going away for a few days, we will return to a house stripped for parts like an old Chevy, I wouldn’t normally tell you this.  But, because he’s not joining us and would therefore greet you with at the door with a Louisville Slugger, I’ll let you in on that fact that I’m packing up the kids and the dog today and heading north to my beautiful hometown of Dorset, Vermont for a few days.

And, I can’t wait.   The boys (lazy yellow labrador included) and I are heading up for a few days filled with tromping through backyard fields, walking the golf course with the dogs, hiking child-sized trails and enjoying the company of beloved Marnie, Jeff and (the anti-lazy yellow Labrador) Daschiel.

Like in Marblehead, they’ve had a boatload of rain over the last month or so.  Which means the Green Mountains will be Ireland-green.  The flowers will be up, the trees blooming and, while I’ll miss the whiff of ocean in my own town, I’ll smile as my children and I breathe deep the smell of fresh cut grass, fresh cut FRESH, fresh cut CLEAN.   Ahhhhh.   Do you know that smell?  If you don’t, go find it.

Between us and Vermont, however, remains the chore of packing endless bags of sh*t needed to sustain two young boys, a dog and me for five days.   While my Mom kindly stocked the fridge of essentials for us, I need to get off this computer and get moving on packing the clothes, shoes, favorite blankets, favorites lovies (Baaah and Bunny), diapers, wipes, Kandoo, kibble, games, DVD player, kid CDs, Zhu Zhus, car snacks, juice boxes and booster seats.   Then I will stuff whatever I can into giant black garbage bags (classy, no?) before throwing them into the new car.  Because the big, hairy dog will be with us (bye, bye new car smell) and I could knit a sweater with the hair he will shed through the trip.

Gross.

But, we will arrive.  And breathe.  And play.  And love.  And be loved.

I used to drive home from college in my Hyundai (seriously), without a darn care in the world, and play this song over and over on my 8-track cassette player.   Of course, I know it’s about West Virginia and not Vermont but it still makes me think about going home.

So, here you go.  Take me home, John.

Read Full Post »

Back in the Dark Ages of my youth, I would eagerly anticipate the arrival of the Sears Roebuck catalogue.  Catalogues, in general, weren’t nearly as pervasive as they are today and Sears was the Grand-Daddy of them all.  That baby was huge.  And, with its giant toy and youth chapters, I spent countless hours lying on my belly on the floor of our living room flipping through it page by page by page.

(Yeah, yeah.  Bring it.  Lonely only child?  Perhaps.)

ANYWAY.

I discovered yesterday that there’s a new “Sears Roebuck Catalogue” in town.  For modern-day children.  It’s called the Yankee Candle catalogue and it rocks.  Nearly every page has a “rub and sniff” candle for the kiddos.  I’m not kidding when I tell you that Big and Little Brother spent nearly 45 minutes with it during the horrible post-nap but pre-dinner witching hour.  Rubbing, smelling, taking turns, commenting, flipping the page, choosing favorites and….not arguing.

I’m thinking about ordering a boatload of candles I really don’t need.  In part, as thanks to and recognition for the brilliant smelly pages idea.   In part, to ensure they keep sending me catalogues!

Read Full Post »

A rainy, cold spring Sunday.  Mom, Dad, boys all together in the playroom.  The Bouncy House has been inflated for the first time in almost two years — finally freed from its moving box prison.  PGA tournament on in the background.   Laughter, rough-housing, giggle fits, rosy-cheeked boys and lots and lots of jumping in the foreground.

Then.

Little Brother (from inside the House):   Oh.   Ahsuemay!

Big Brother:  What did you say?

Little Brother:   I say’d Ahsuemay!  Ahsuemay, Mommy.

Me:   What’s that, J.?

Little Brother (frustrated).  Yells out from Bouncy House door.

Ahsuemay, I say’d!

I tooted!

Me (laughing):     Oh!   You’re excused.


Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »