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November 2007

November 30, 2007

Hats off to Cazza.

I know, I know, I KNOW. I said that the next post would be all about Tony, the little brother of Oscar and the divulger of family secrets. I believe I even optimistically said it would be "tomorrow," which was 2 days ago. But damn, my job kicked my ass this week, and the last thing I felt like doing at night was sitting down and typing even one fucking word. And this morning I only have a few minutes because I really, really, REALLY have to be at work before 7am if I expect to make it through the day without tearing my hair out.  I will have time over the weekend to sit down and tell you about little Tony, and you'll all be, "Oh, Miz S, you're so To Sir With Love!"

But before I run off to shower I would like give a special shout-out to Cazza, my blog friend in Australia. I am very fond of Cazza for many reasons. She has 3 young-adult sons, a husband, and a full-time nursing job. She doesn't update that often, but I always like hearing what she is up to. One of the things I love about her is her calm attitude towards child-rearing. With three lively, handsome sons, one of them is always into something.  Cazza takes it all in stride. She has firm limits, but she is also a believer in kids experiencing the consequences of their own decisions. They are a close family, and her sons confide in her and come home to eat with her and ask her what she thinks about things. She loves the noise and bustle of the 3 kids and all their girlfriends and the raucous conversation. I bet she's hellafun in real life.

But here's the real reason I am telling you about Cazza: 6 months ago, she was fat and out of shape and depressed and unhappy at work.  She was drinking a scary amount of wine every night.

So she decided to change her life.

One of her son's friends, Fireman Sam, took her under his wing. Cazza committed to a training regime that is daunting. Fireman Sam had her out in the park running and boxing and God knows what else at 5am. I don't mean one time she got up at  5am. I mean day after day. She does it on her own now, although I think Sam checks up on her now and then.  And she lifts weights, too. She never went on a diet, but she tried to put mostly healthy food in her body, with a treat now and then if she felt like it. She stopped drinking a bottle of wine every night.

She got a new job.

Do you know how hard it is to make huge changes like that? Of course you do.

She is amazing. Go read her official 6 month update. It's not the weight that she's lost that is so impressive to me. It's the idea of taking control of one's life.

November 27, 2007

All Names Have Been Changed.

My first year at Some School, I had a really challenging group of kids. One was suffering serious abuse at home (some of you might remember Miguel), one could not be taught to read despite his strange, brilliant mind (he floated somewhere on the autistic spectrum, I would bet you money, and oh GOD I loved that boy), one was depressed and angry and had low self-esteem and I didn't do enough for him, to my everlasting shame. There were other challenges that year, but those three boys are always the ones that leap to my mind when I remember how hard it was.

BUT. There was also Oscar.

I adored Oscar, and not just because he was easy and friendly and had an incredible work ethic and never gave me a moment of trouble. He was good, and I mean good to the core, in the sense of honorable and generous and trustworthy and kind. Some kids are good in the sense that they never, ever misbehave and they try very hard to please the adults in their lives. Oscar's goodness is more complex than that.

Here is a little story about Oscar. There was one of those PTA fundraisers at our school. Not the kind where they send home catalogs of overpriced wrapping paper, but the kind where they just send home envelopes and ask parents to make a donation. I usually explain all the papers that go home, because the kids have to explain them to their parents who may not be able to read in English. I didn't make a big deal about the fundraiser envelopes, because most of the families just don't have money to give. But Oscar came to me and asked me what it was, so I told him. And the next day he brought back the envelope filled with loose change. One dollar and twenty-seven cents. I asked him if his mom had given him the money, and he said no. It was his own. He was so proud and excited and happy to give, but he never said a thing about it to anyone else. This made me want to hug him and squeeze him to death.

I was reminded of him the year after that when a very spoiled child named Polly (oh, I know it's mean to call a child spoiled, but I'm sorry, some of them are spoiled) brought me the same fund raiser envelope with ten dollars of her own money, and a story about each coin and dollar bill and how she had earned it or which grandparent and given it to her, and smirked and gloated and "shared" during circle time about how generous and good she was. "And my mom said I should be sure to tell you that it was all my very own money. But I still have 20 more dollars and I'm saving up for blah blah blah."  And you know, think of me what you will, but Polly's contribution did not elicit the same "Awww" that Oscar's did.

Oscar is the eldest boy in a family of 6 children. His mother, Lucia, is a lovely woman in her late 20's, I guess. She is originally from Nicaragua, and she speaks only a little English. She comes to every conference, every back-to-school night or open house, with children in tow and a toddler in a stroller. She is always patient and kind with her children, but also firm. She can quiet them or redirect them with just a significant look or a finger to her lips, and she always makes sure that they clean up the toys that they play with.  Lucia walks home with her children after school, and you can see them all talking at once, the boys clamoring for her attention, the little girl running ahead of the stroller.

The three middle children always have red or blonde streaks in their hair. I usually disapprove when parents dye their kids' hair or let their little boys get a pierced ear (go ahead, laugh at me, I'm just an old-fashioned kind of gal), but somehow in this family I didn't mind so much. It was the cousin in middle school who was in charge of the hair, and Oscar was always so happy when he came to school after his roots had been touched up. I could totally relate. The little girl has ringlets halfway down her back, and this year the color has grown mostly out, so she is blond only on the bottom 6 inches or so, which is funny on a fresh-faced little kindergartener with big gold hoops in her ears and leopard-print maryjanes.

Here is another story about Oscar. Last year he was in 2nd grade, and his little brother Tony was in my first grade class. The family went through some tough times, with an unexpected pregnancy and a bad stepfather in the home. Tony confided in me that his stepfather yelled at his mother a lot. I asked him what he and his siblings did when the parents were fighting, and he told me that Oscar would take them all into another room and play with them or read to them. And God, I could just see Oscar doing that, being so responsible and smart and protective, and it just about killed me.

Oscar goes to a different school this year, because our school only goes up through 2nd grade. I saw him waiting for the bus the other morning, and I went over to say hi. He looks different. Older, of course, but there is a slight wariness that wasn't there before. I asked him how he liked 3rd grade, and was his teacher nice? And he said it was all fine, but he didn't make eye contact or tell me anything about it. (Later, his little brother Tony told me that Oscar doesn't like school anymore but Oscar didn't want to tell me because he didn't want to hurt my feelings.)

I need to find out why he doesn't like school anymore, and I need to hunt down and hurt anyone who is contributing to his sense of unhappiness.

Tomorrow I will tell you more about Tony, who is a dear little thing, a chatterbox, and the divulger of family secrets. 

November 25, 2007

Nothing. I Got Nothing.

Bg_trail_4 So, yeah. Thanksgiving. Gotta love a 4 day weekend. And to those of you who had to work on Friday, I am sorry. Hopefully it was quiet.

We went to my in-laws' house on Friday for a big family/friend reunion-type-thingy. (I'm eloquent, eh?) It would be much, much too hard to try and explain the background. Just picture old family friends, 2 or 3 generations worth. Southern. Gay. Or married to a gay. Or recently divorced from a gay. And abundantly charming, all of them.  It was fun.

On Saturday, I had a private reunion with my good friend, who hails from another branch of the same family that was at my in-laws' house the day before. These people are prolific.  My good friend, (who happens to also be an ex-girlfriend of Josh's, OH IT'S A TANGLED WEB), is going through hard times, and I salute her for hanging in there. Even if she does still secretly want to make out with my husband I JUST KNOW IT.

Bg_trail_2 After that, Josh and I went to the Billy Goat Trail to commune with nature. We hike here now and then. It's fucking hard if you are a clumsy woman like me. Every time that we hike it, and I don't break any bones?  I feel almost athletic.

What Josh likes to do is gallop off ahead of me, leaping with abandon from rock to rock, then turn around and take pictures of me while I slowly and cautiously find my way to where he is.

I like my hair color here.Bg_trail 

Aaaaand, here's one more random picture that I am too lazy to center.

I'm not sure why I am posting. Clearly, I have absolutely nothing to say. You all should be glad that I didn't participate in NaNoPloMo. Because 30 days of this shit would really get tiresome.

November 24, 2007

Lame Thanksgiving Update

Thanksgiving_07_rosieSasha, Josh, and I ate Thanksgiving dinner over at my sister-in-law's house. My sister-in-law and her husband were surprisingly calm and unfazed by the 14 people for dinner.

It was all calm and gracious and really lovely.

I embarrassed myself during the "go-round."  We go around the table and everyone says what they are thankful for. My father-in-law used to always be funny and say that he was thankful for Viagra, but this year he and my mother-in-law both got all serious and said they were thankful that they were both still alive and able to celebrate with us all, so I was already feeling all emotional because of that. Then Sasha said that she was thankful she would graduate from college in May, and that she was thankful she had had the opportunity to go to college. And that made me even more emotional because, God, she's so mature these days and so sensible and so aware. Plus, I was missing Evangeline.
 

Then it was my turn and I started to say something about being grateful that my kids have turned out to be so incredible (the sub-text being, JESUS, how on earth did we not screw them up totally?), and I just about started blubbering at the table. How fucking embarrassing. So I quickly moved into a "Oh, and I'm thankful the Bush presidency is almost over" kind of thing so as to try and not completely lose my shit in front of everyone.  I really hate crying in front of people.

Lately, I am incredibly emotional about Sasha and Evangeline, and also anything to do with my parents, Josh's parents, or old people in general. Also dogs, cats, and horses.

Someone needs her seratonin and norepinephrine levels to be re-uptaken all over the damn place, I'll tell you what.

November 21, 2007

I Love Thanksgiving.

Into_the_woods_099_large_email_view I stopped at Chico's yesterday to see if I could find a pair of jeans there. The answer is, "No! No! A THOUSAND TIMES no!"

Not everything has to have sequins or metallic stitching, you know.

One of the customers there was wearing a cowboy hat.

And why are there no mirrors in the dressing rooms? I'll tell you why. Because after you try something on, they want you to walk out into the mirror area where everyone can see you. And then the salesladies can say, "That color is LOVELY on you."

Also, they had some imported-from-China sweaters there with "faux fur" trim on them that I am sure  was actually dog fur.

Despite all my complaining, I gave my money to the enthusiastic saleslady behind the counter. The corduroy pants fit me very nicely and were very plain and fresh. I will wear them to Thanksgiving dinner at Xila's house. I am saving my fancy dressing-up for the day after Thanksgiving when my mother-in-law is having a big shindig at her place.

Sasha arrived home from college last night. It kills me every single time to see how thrilled the dogs and cats are when she comes home. Yes, even the cats are thrilled. She has a freakish connection with them.

Evangeline is not coming home. I have not seen her at Thanksgiving for 3 years in a row now. Hmmph. She will be eating turkey with Nathanial and his mother and then going back to school on Saturday to do schoolwork. Or so she claims.

I bet a lot of you guys are taking today off from work to start your travels or your cooking, aren't you?

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.

November 19, 2007

Remind me to tell you sometime about my obsession with that John Prine song "Sam Stone."

Grinnell_into_the_woods_115_large_3 When we left the Midwest last Sunday, we flew out of Des Moines. I love the Des Moines airport. It doesn't have any fancy stores or cool fountains like Detroit, but it's small and friendly and very manageable. You can drop off your rental car, zip through security, and be seated at your gate in about 10 minutes.

As we made our way towards the escalator that would take us to the security line, I saw a middle-aged couple approaching us from the opposite direction.

I instantly assumed they were farmers. After all, we were in the heartland, and this couple looked healthy and large and plain. So that means "farmer," right? The sunken-cheeked, bone-thin, hard-eyed people on the streets of Des Moines were the meth addicts, right? As long as I can instantly judge and pigeon-hole, I'm happy. (By the way, what have you Iowans done with all the folks of color? The streets are eerily white.)

Anyway, the woman's chin was trembling and her eyes were glazed over. Her husband held her arm firmly and steered her. She was breathing rapidly and staring straight ahead. Her big, tall farmer looked intently grim.

I decided that they must have just dropped off a young adult child at the security line. You don't panic and cry when you put your mother-in-law or your crazy Uncle Louie on a plane.

I thought to myself that maybe it's their first kid to leave home, and that they don't know yet how fun it will be to walk around in their underwear all the time. I thought to myself, "I know how she feels, but she'll be fine once she gets used to the idea."

But when I got up to the top of the escalator, I saw that the kid just ahead of us in the security line was a boy who looked to be about 19 or 20, dressed in desert camouflage.

He took off his army boots and put them in the gray tub and moved through the security line with the rest of us. He looked like a boy. His haircut was so fresh. I imagined that it was the same haircut that he would have been sporting in the summertime about ten years ago. The summer between 4th and 5th grade. I wondered if he were glad that his parents had finally left. I imagined that he didn't mind so much that his mom cried, but that it might have just about  killed him to see his big farmer dad looking so distraught.  I stood there in line, musing about the reality that so many kids enlist to get an education or training, while my kids and their friends just go straight to college. This makes me feel both guilty and lucky. I thought about the fact that this war is so idiotic and mismanaged, but that soldiers don't get to pick the wars. I thought about how strange it is that the fact that our country is at war has very little effect on my day-to-day life.

The line moved ahead. We all dug out our id's and moved through the metal detector and got our shoes back on. Soldier Boy went to his gate and we went to ours.

I feel like there is something important or intelligent that I am trying to say here but I'm not sure what it is. Something about sacrifice or courage or equity or the hubris of our leaders. Maybe you guys can work it out for yourselves.

November 17, 2007

Thank You, Chubby Old-ish Man.

When I looked at those pictures of my family and me that I posted yesterday,  I noticed that I looked a little, I don't know, matronly. In my jeans, the slope from thigh to ankle looked really pronounced, sort of like a Cathy cartoon drawing. 

"Hmmm," I said to myself. "I wonder if Jane will email me."

Sure enough, I got a message from her yesterday: JESUS CHRIST MIZ S BUY SOME NEW JEANS THIS WEEKEND AND THEY BETTER BE FLARED.

I always take Jane's fashion advice, because she is smart and she knows what looks good. She is like my friend Cindy, who used to come and clean out my closet and chortle at my clothes and take me shopping. Recently, she moved away to Atlanta. Now she consults with me via cell phone while I am actually shopping. How awesome is that?

I calmly accept my lack of fashion acumen. I really like nice clothes and have a horror of looking matronly,  but I don't always understand what looks good on me, and I get itchy and cranky in shopping malls. Also, I have an unfortunate love for comfort. I am 5 minutes away from buying a pair of Crocs, and I know I will be dead to Jane and Cindy when they read that.

Anyway, I totally love it when opinionated people tell me what to wear. Do not beat around the bush and say, "You know, they have some really cute skirts at H&M."  Instead, say, "JESUS, YOU LOOK 60 YEARS OLD IN THAT TEACHER JUMPER. THROW IT OUT TODAY AND GO BUY A SKIRT AT H&M."

Just for the record, I do not own, nor have I ever owned, a teacher jumper.

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What is so funny about this shirt?

This is all a lead-up to telling you the following story:

I bought a really bitchin' pair of pants at Ann Taylor a few years ago. Grey wool, wide-legged pants with subtle, sky-blue pinstripes. Somehow, I bought a size 10 instead of a size 8, and then I never wore the pants because they were just too big. The other day I tried them on, and I was ever so surprised to find that they fit me perfectly now! How convenient that my ass is a whole size bigger!

Anyway, I wore them to work on Wednesday with a really cute sweater-y top and a pretty necklace and shoes that weren't awesome but at least were not hiking boots. I looked HOT, y'all. Well, I looked WARM anyway.

I took the afternoon off from work for a doctor appointment and decided to stop at the mall to see if I could find some similar pants. As I walked across the parking lot, I saw a man looking at me. Okay, I'll tell you right now that he was old, but he was a MAN. Anyway, he kept on looking at me as I approached the entrance, so when we were close enough I smiled and said "Hi," because I am all about being friendly to random people and getting sucked into social interactions.

And do you know what he said, this old-ish man?  He said, "Honey, you walk like a movie star."

I realize that I sound like a complete egomaniac by recounting this story. Do NOT talk bad about me behind my back, y'all. I'm almost 50. And dammit, if I want to feel girlish because a stranger noticed me as I sauntered across a parking lot, I refuse to apologize for it.

That night, when Josh needed fresh cilantro for the awesome soup that he makes, I volunteered to go to the store, just in case some other old man might want to give me a compliment. But no one even gave me a second glance as I marched around the produce department with a leggy, confident stride. Bastards. Are they blind or something? 

November 16, 2007

Some Pictures From Last Weekend.

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We left for the airport early in the morning. Sasha managed to look presentable.

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We saw Jesus at the airport. In fact, he was on our flight.

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We stayed in a gently decaying bed-and-breakfast. Our hostess seemed a little cranky. But she made some damn good Irish Soda Bread.

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Our room was maniacally floral.

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Josh clowned for our amusement.

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We waited for Evangeline.

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She approacheth! She weareth her Javert coat from Goodwill!

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The awkward sister hug.

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We went to this coffee shop.

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I was obsessed with the large, chubby squirrels all over town. East coast squirrels are quite anemic-looking by comparison.

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We hung out in the dorm for a little while.

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Gargoyles wearing ties! What will those crazy college kids think of next? Beer pong?

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We spent a long time in the graveyard on Sunday. It was fun.

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Sasha can still do the monkey bar rings. Well, the first 3 rings.

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Josh is a little competitive. He wanted to prove that he is stronger than Sasha.

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Then it was time to go home.

Okay, that's all I have right now. You can't imagine how long it took me to put that measly assortment of pictures together and center them properly. I am shockingly inefficient. And I just realized that I didn't put in one single picture from the play itself, but there's no way in hell I'm going to rustle one up right now. 

Here.  I'll leave you with Evangeline's bio from the play program:  Evangeline is a third-year Russian major hailing from the great Maryland outback. She has had a fabulous experience as the show's assistant director, taking copious production notes in a heart-shaped notebook and always maintaining draconian order during rehearsal.  She would like to thank the cast and the production team for being really, really, really silly.

 

November 13, 2007

Into The Woods.

LeavesWe left for Evangeline's secret location in the Midwest on Friday morning at the CRACK of dawn.

As usual, the whole "packing" concept eluded me. I forgot my sweater and my deodorant and my shampoo, while Josh's suitcase was neatly organized by color and function, with little Nalgene bottles for shampoo and conditioner and travel-sized Q-tip swabs and 2 jackets (one for cool, breezy weather, a different one in case of rain). I swear, he is such a woman. I envy his packing genius.

We flew hither and yon. Here's something strange, considering my proclivity for anxiety: I realized recently that I love flying.  I adore the moving sidewalks at airports (I can cover some GROUND), and I love hanging out in the gate area, reading magazines and people-watching. I love the feeling of taking-off into blue skies. And, whenever I fly I am going to see someone I love or I am with someone I love, so the associations are all very pleasant. I'm not a big fan of turbulence, or that sudden jolt when the landing gear deploys, but for the most part I am not a nervous air traveler at all. Somehow, that is a pleasant realization.

The weekend was really fun. Sasha was conversational and humorous, Evangeline was relaxed and happy. I was only a little bit mean to Josh on Saturday night, and believe me, you would have been, too. On Friday night we saw the musical production that Evangeline helped direct, Into the Woods, which was clever and funny. On Saturday we went to the bookstore and the coffeeshop and Goodwill and a restaurant. And I napped. Saturday night we were given permission by Evangeline to skip the musical (I'm all about hovering, but it's a long-ass performance and my own personal ass was tired of sitting from the night before). Josh tricked me into going to see Transformers with Sasha and him at the student union. Hence, the meanness.

Sunday was all about walking around a lake and wandering through a graveyard looking for cool names and feeling solemn about the little headstones that just said "infant."

Yesirree Bob, we know how to have fun!

We spent a lot of time with Nathaniel, boyfriend to Evangeline and all around good guy. My girls have a keen instinct for nice boys, which I like to think that they inherited from me.

We got home really late on Sunday night, and I slogged my way through the pure hell that was Monday. Josh had Monday off, the lucky dog.

I have tons of pictures for you, but I think I will wait and put those up tonight or tomorrow, seeing as how it is time to go to work and sap the natural creativity of my young charges.

November 07, 2007

I'm Sad. No! Wait! I'm Happy!

Boy_kittiesPushkin thinks we should go with Carefirst, but Nash thinks that Kaiser will be more convenient.

This week has been both busy and annoying, with no time for frivolous pursuits. I have gone to bed early every night, except for the evening that I had to stay up late reading all about the health insurance options at my job. Which made me want to stab myself in the forehead with a fork. Tonight I have to go to the health insurance "fair." I love how they call it a "fair." Like there's going to be cotton candy and a merry-go-round.

Up until now, we have always been on Josh's health insurance, but last year we figured out that his benefits SUCK. Not only are they charging us an insane amount of money, but they also will not pay for an insulin pump for my poor, itty-bitty, diabetic daughter. And we don't have $6000 lying around to pay for one ourselves.  So, give a cheer for Open Enrollment. We're going to transfer our chronic conditions elsewhere.

I am in a very dark little space right now when it comes to work. I am beginning to hate my school district with a seething, white-hot passion. It is difficult to say how much of this is due to the ridiculous expectations associated with this job, and how much of it is because I stopped taking Cymb@lt@. When I work up the energy to call the doctor and get my brain chemicals reorganized, we can reevaluate, okay?

I must go now, because I need to get to work before 7am. So that I can get a bunch of shit done before my kids arrive at 8:40. Shit that I can't get done during my regular work day because I spend all my time in meetings. See reference above to "ridiculous expectations."

Oh wait! I almost forgot! The only thing that is keeping me afloat right now is that Josh, Sasha, and I are all flying to the Midwest on Friday morning to see Evangeline. I am extremely excited! A family-bonding experience! Airports! Restaurants! Happy little college town! My girls! A day off from work! WOO-HOO!!