Author: Big Mama

  • Turn out the lights, the party’s almost over

    We were sitting around the breakfast table yesterday morning when I heard Will call to Gulley, “Mom? I need to show you something that’s an accident.”

    I wasn’t really paying much attention because I was too busy looking at myself in the magnifying mirror.

    I’m joking. I wasn’t really looking at myself in that mirror, but I totally wanted to be. I’ve had to let it go. Although Gulley and I took great comfort in knowing we aren’t alone in our eyebrow imperfections. It’s like a national epidemic that no one talks about in public. I wish I could offer a cure, but as one commenter named Samantha said, “They’re not twins. They’re sisters.” That’s some wisdom right there.

    Anyway, I wasn’t concerned about Will’s “something that’s an accident” until I heard Gulley say, “Oh Will. What did you do? Those are Mel’s.”

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    Yes. Yes they were.

    It was our first road-trip casualty.

    Later in the day, Gulley let me borrow a pair of her sunglasses and we took the kids to swim at Adamson’s Lagoon which was a delight.

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    They were especially fond of the Lily Pad obstacle course that made them feel like contestants on “Wipeout”.

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    Gulley and I were fans because we saw an activity that was going to burn excessive energy. Energy that causes people to “accidentally” break some sunglasses using brute force.

    We came home from swimming just in time to get ready to go out to eat Mexican food at Abuelo’s with Honey and Big. It had been five days since I’d had chips and salsa so I was in the midst of some serious withdrawal. After we’d all eaten way too much, we made our way outside to stand in the blazing heat and look at the fountain.

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    After standing there for a few seconds, they all decided to run around the entire thing about five times. I know there’s nothing I’d rather do after eating a plate of cheese enchiladas than run as fast as I can in 104 degree temperatures. It’s surprisingly refreshing.

    So that was our day.

    But y’all aren’t going to believe what happened.

    A long time ago, I wrote this post about Gulley and I and our love for the Big Gulp in college. It was a general tale of rambling, but at the end of the story I talked about a cashier named Al at the Quikmart by our apartment who got Gulley’s phone number off a check she wrote for 99 cents to pay for a Big Gulp.

    (Please keep in mind that this was when we were in college almost twenty years ago. Neither of us would ever write a check for 99 cents these days. We’d use a debit card.)

    Last night before dinner, Gulley ran into a nearby convenience store on University Drive to buy some Visine for Jackson’s eyes while I waited in the car. She came back out, got in the car and said, “You aren’t going to believe who I just saw.”

    “Who?” (Thinking maybe it was somebody like R.C. Slocum or another football coach that A&M still pays a lot of money for a vague job description.)

    “Al.”

    “Al who?”

    “Al. AL FROM THE QUIKMART ON VILLA MARIA. HE REMEMBERED ME BY NAME.”

    And she remembered him. Of course it helped that he was wearing a nametag that read “Al”.

    Seriously. What are the odds?

    I realize none of you may find this as fascinating as we found it, but it made our whole night. I mean, it wasn’t better than examining your face at length in a magnifying mirror, but it was a close second.

    Later today we’ll load up the kids for the last time and head home to San Antonio. The kids are already talking about how sad they are that it’s all over, but we’ve assured them a new tradition has been born. In fact, next year we may rent a Winnebago and stay on the road for about two weeks.

    Not really on the Winnebago. I can barely park a car.

    But the two week part? That’s for real.

    Also, on a completely unrelated note, several of you asked about the orange skirt I was wearing earlier in the week. I’m sad to report that I bought it at Gap about two summers ago, but pleased to let you know I got it on sale for $8.00. It may be the best $8.00 I’ve ever spent.

    Anyway, this one from Gap is fairly similar to it and so is this one from Old Navy.

    Y’all have a good Friday.

  • I believe in the science

    Yesterday morning, Hite called on my cell phone to see if we wanted him to bring us some Krispy Kreme donuts before we left Dallas. I kind of feel like he meant it as a rhetorical question because he’s known Gulley and me for almost twenty years and surely he must have known the answer would be YES PLEASE.

    And as if Krispy Kreme delivery wasn’t enough, he also brought hats for everyone.

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    Even Ella.

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    Although she turned down the donuts in favor of one of Will’s matchbox cars, which AJ discovered later in the day when bits of Hot Wheels began to filter out of Ella’s mouth and other places we won’t discuss.

    We ate our donuts, said our goodbyes and got back on the road for the second part of our Texas tour.

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    On the way to Waco, we called Gulley’s dad and asked him where we should stop for lunch. After he made fun of me for being a socialite due to my disdain for public transportation, he suggested we go to George’s Bar. It was a brilliant suggestion, so we played “George’s Bar” by Pat Green on the iPod for the kids (really it was totally for our own benefit) and headed that way.

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    Will didn’t make it into the picture because he was still back at the car searching for his Scooby Doo croc and the rest of us were broiling in the heat. We desperately needed to get in the air-conditioning and eat something fried.

    After lunch, we made our big stop of the day, the Mayborn Museum on the Baylor campus. I have to say that it was one of the best children’s museums I’ve ever been to and was definitely better than sweating at the zoo looking at a bunch of lame birds and a gorilla who looks like he’s totally over the whole being in captivity thing.

    Although I will admit that children’s museums can stress me out a little bit because some of the rooms involve science and exhibits like how a liquid turns into a gas and it’s only a matter of time before Caroline will ask a question and my shocking lack of anything and everything scientific will be put on display for a bunch of other moms to hear.

    “A liquid becomes a gas by a process I like to call MAGIC.”

    Fortunately, there were other things that required little to no working knowledge of anything useful.

    My own little Mona Lisa.

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    Here they are in a Native American habitat formerly known as a tee-pee.

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    This was just like a real school bus but without the ripped green vinyl seats that stick to your legs and a surly, chain-smoking bus driver. Actually, the driver was a bit surly but he gave up smoking for his 3rd birthday.

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    Look! It’s what the ancient bloggers, also known as “writers”, used to use back in prehistoric times.

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    On our way out of the museum, we let the kids stop in the gift shop to pick one small souvenir each. Jackson and Caroline chose a small bag full of polished rocks and quartz. Will chose some kind of clear, plastic ball filled with bugs. When Gulley paid for it and handed it to him, he hugged her and exclaimed, “Thank you for buying this for me Mom! It’s a blessing to my heart.” I believe he absorbed some Baptist by osmosis while on the Baylor campus.

    Finally, we got in the car and drove to the last stop of our trip, Bryan/College Station. The motherland.

    Once the car was unloaded (again) and we settled in, there were three moments that made me so happy.

    The first was this darling little ladybug cupcake cake that Honey (Gulley’s mama) had bought so we could have a little early birthday celebration for Gulley.

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    The second was when Nena came in and announced that she’d been in a terrible mood, but got a new permanent this afternoon and it changed her whole disposition. I’m sad to report that I have no pictures of Nena and her new permanent.

    The third was when Gulley showed me this incredible magnifying mirror that belongs to Honey. She’d told me about it after her last trip because she said she couldn’t quit looking at her pores in horror and was certain it caused her to stumble in the way of over-tweezing her eyebrows.

    Listen. I thought she was exaggerating, but once she showed me that mirror I was like the reincarnation of Narcissus, except instead of falling in love with my own beauty I was completely mesmerized by the fact that I not only have a unibrow, but some stray eyebrows growing down the side of my face. I can’t even discuss the fine lines around my eyes, it’s too painful.

    So here’s my scientific fact for the day; It is never a good idea to look at yourself in a mirror that magnifies your face to 15 times its normal size.

    Also, Gulley and I had a lengthy discussion (seriously, I’m embarrassed to even admit how long we passed that mirror back and forth and discussed it) about how we both have one really good eyebrow and one that is always a little unruly no matter how much we try to pluck and define. Our hypothesis is that all women have this eyebrow struggle.

    Is it universal or is it just us? Do you have one good brow or are they equally appealing? Or perhaps you have a hobby that doesn’t involve staring at yourself in the mirror and have never really noticed one way or the other.

    Whatever the case may be, we need to know. The science depends on it.

  • Scenes from the road

    Yesterday was a big day full of lots of adventure and activity. In fact, I was so tired that I went in to lay with Caroline while she went to sleep last night and Gulley came in and woke me up an hour later. What can I say? The zoo makes me tired.

    We started the day with some tattoos.

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    Rode public transportation which was a great reminder to me of why I am not a fan of public transportation.

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    It would be fine except for all the people.

    Then we made it to the Dallas Zoo. Everyone warned us that the Forth Worth Zoo was so much better than the Dallas Zoo, but we didn’t feel like driving an hour to Forth Worth so we took our chances with the allegedly far inferior Dallas Zoo.

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    It totally paid off because the kids got to see penguins and a gorilla, both of which cannot be found at the San Antonio Zoo.

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    Other than that, they rode the carousel and we saw a bunch of birds. I am convinced that birds are basically zoo filler. It’s basically a cheap way to provide something else for people to look at with minimal investment. Why pay to ship in a tiger or a hippo when you can just put some brightly colored pigeons in a “natural habitat” and call it an exhibit?

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    After paying $8.00 for a zoo cheeseburger that Caroline didn’t eat and realizing the temperature had reached 101 degrees, we decided it was time to take our lives in our hands and hop back on the DART system to get back home.

    Later, we headed to the pool to meet our dear friend, Hite, for some swimming and the hopes of flat wearing the kids out so they’d go to bed at a decent hour.

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    Unfortunately, somebody’s kid decided she needed to go to the bathroom after ten minutes at the pool so we left in search of a restroom and ended up at a neighborhood park with a splash pad.

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    And after a full day of activities and fun, we all still love each other.

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    We’ll even share towels.

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    At least until we get in a big argument over whose turn it is to sit in the “way back” of Hite’s car and it all turns ugly. Fortunately there is no photographic evidence of this unfortunate turn of events.

  • Like a band of gypsies we go down the highway

    Yesterday morning, Gulley and I loaded up the kids and embarked on a road trip, the likes of which hasn’t been seen since the Ingalls family left the Big Woods of Wisconsin for the Kansas prairie.

    Except we were only driving five hours to Dallas. In a car.

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    And I’m pretty sure Ma Ingalls didn’t have to travel with her body pillow. Of course she also made her own soap so what did she know about the struggles that come with being high maintenance?

    My little apple with her travel pillow doesn’t fall far from the high maintenance tree.

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    This is where I have to sing the praises of the new toll road that takes you all the way around Austin. It may be the best thing I’ve discovered this summer, second only to LifeSaver Gummy Sours. I was a little confused about how I was supposed to pay the tolls because nothing seemed to be clearly marked. At one point we stopped at a booth to get some clarification on the toll-paying situation (Thanks anyway, Ray. It may help if you read over your list of frequently asked toll road questions in the back of your employee handbook.) and Will got a little freaked out because he thought we were at a car wash.

    Nope, not a car wash. Just a destination for absolutely no helpful information.

    But, still, toll road=GOLDEN.

    Let’s just hope there’s not a $200 ticket waiting in Gulley’s mailbox when we get home.

    As we made our way to Dallas, we made several stops to keep the trip interesting, including a quick bathroom stop at a very questionable Shell Station outside of Temple, Texas.

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    Fortunately, there were helpful instructions posted for those not familiar with indoor plumbing.

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    When we drove through Waco we decided to make a stop that really goes against everything we believe as good Aggies, but were desperate for something interesting to show the kids so we decided to stop and look at some Baptist bears.

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    Please note we’ve trained them well because they all flashed the Gig’em sign as we took the picture.

    After we spent five fascinating minutes peering through a very small window to watch some bears sleep (it came as no surprise to me that they weren’t dancing), we got back on the road.

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    We continued on down I-35 until we saw what was the best thing I’d seen since the toll road.

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    Who knew that Willie Nelson had his own gas station/rest stop/bar? It’s true what they say, travel really does broaden your horizons.

    And you can’t tell because I am such a poor photographer, but the kids are standing in front of a larger than life picture of Willie.

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    Then, because apparently I don’t get out enough, I had Gulley take one more picture of the kids and me outside of Willie’s Place.

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    Finally, in the immortal words of Willie we got on the road again until we reached our final destination of Dallas, specifically AJ’s house. Which, by the way, is the cutest little house I’ve ever seen and is decorated just darling in spite of the fact that AJ led us to believe she had no decorating skills and might possibly have a T.V. sitting on some cinder blocks. Gulley even told the kids that staying with AJ would be kind of like camping, so imagine their surprise when we pulled up to a fully-furnished house complete with floral arrangements.

    Here’s Caroline with AJ at Wild About Harry’s where we made an essential stop for ice cream.

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    And here is the entire road trip crew at the end of the evening because nothing says road trip success like a picture with a giant hot dog.

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    We went back to AJ’s, put the kids to bed and watched “The Bachelorette” while discussing important matters about how you know a guy really likes you when he makes the effort to cook a stuffed pork chop for you. That probably makes no sense to you, but it made a lot of sense to us around 2:00 a.m.

    I’ll be back tomorrow with more updates from the road.

  • GoodNites Bedtime Moments Winner

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    It’s time to announce the first winner in the GoodNites Bedtime Moments contest. Click over to my giveaways page to see who won and to find out how you could win a tote bag full of cool stuff or even a $2,000 bedroom makeover.

  • My iPod tis of thee

    There are few sounds that always remind me of summer; ice cream truck music, cicadas chirping in the evening, and questionable salmon sizzling on the grill at the pool.

    This summer I’ve added a new sound to my list, it’s the sound of P sawing holes in our attic in an attempt to let out the hot air. At the rate he’s going I’m afraid we won’t have a roof by September, just a tarp with a large fan while he stands under it with his Radio Shack thermometer and says, “Does it feel any cooler yet?”

    “Nope, not yet. Check back with me in December.”

    Anyway, one last sound of summer is a good fourth of July playlist. Granted, we’re not doing anything for the fourth due to my hectic week of keeping my pool commitments, but we’ll still need some good music to listen to as we think about all our friends at the beach and the lake.

    Actually, we’ll probably be at the pool because rumor has it there will be both a seed-spitting contest and a belly flop contest. I don’t mean to brag (Yes I do; I totally mean to brag) but Caroline won the belly flop contest last year and we’re hoping for a repeat championship. It brings a new meaning to the old saying “No guts, no glory”.

    My list is slightly unconventional because, well, it’s my list and you should all know by now that I have the musical sensibilities of a disc jockey at a junior high dance party. Plus, as much as I enjoy listening to Neil Diamond’s “America” and yelling out “TODAY!” during the chorus, I chose songs that weren’t overtly patriotic because I tried to avoid the obvious choices.

    So, without further rambling (sure), here is my list of twelve summertime songs because I couldn’t narrow it down to ten because it felt like I was reenacting a scene from “Sophie’s Choice”.

    1. America the Beautiful – Ray Charles

    Okay, sure, this is an obvious choice, but I have to include it because it doesn’t feel like the fourth of July to me until I hear Ray sing. It’s guaranteed to make me cry every year.

    2. Pink Houses – John Cougar Mellencamp

    John Cougar, with or without the Mellencamp, is a fan of the patriotic song. For some reason this one is my favorite. Maybe because I once lived in a pink house.

    3. Soak up the Sun – Sheryl Crow

    Obviously. One summer before P and I had Caroline we headed to Port Aransas for a little vacation. I remember sitting on the ferry listening to this song and thinking this is what pure contentment feels like.

    4. Vacation – The Go-Go’s

    If this video didn’t make you want to be a part of some sort of all-girl water ski performance team then I don’t know if we can be friends.

    5. Senorita – Justin Timberlake

    Truthfully, I could make a list of only Justin Timberlake songs because they all make me so happy. I chose this one because it just feels summery to me. It’s like a cold drink in song form.

    6. Summertime – DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince

    Because even if it’s 105 degrees outside, it’s not summer until I hear it.

    7. Sing a Song – Earth, Wind & Fire

    Happy. Happy. Happy.

    8. Going Back to Cali – LL Cool J

    Truth be told I’ve never been to Cali and you can’t go back to somewhere you’ve never been, but none of that matters. What matters is that I have always loved this song and it reminds me of summers at the beach when I was in high school, even though Crystal Beach is the polar opposite of anything in California, and by that I mean it’s not even remotely pretty.

    9. Your Love – The Outfield

    It reminds me of being on vacation. I think it’s because the opening lyrics say, “Josie’s on a vacation far away…”

    10. Breathe – Michelle Branch

    There are certain songs I just love the minute I hear them and this was one of them. It makes me want to get in a convertible and drive around with the top down singing at the top of my lungs while my hair whips in the wind. Except I can’t stand to have my hair whipping in the wind. It’s a minor detail.

    11. Bizarre Love Triangle – New Order

    I realize this may seem like an odd choice, given that I’ve never expressed a penchant for any sort of techno-pop, but it brings back vivid memories of the summer after I graduated from high school. To this day, I experience an odd craving for a berry wine cooler whenever I hear it. Not that I drank any wine coolers, I just knew people who did.

    12. Boys of Summer – Don Henley

    I used to think it said, “I can see you, your brow’s getting shiny in the sun” and I’d always think that he’d be better off to not talk about his girlfriend’s sweat issues. Only later did I realize he was singing, “I can see you, your brown skin shining in the sun” and I thought that made a lot more sense.

    Let’s not even pretend that there aren’t countless great songs missing from this list. What’s on your fourth of July playlist? What song feels like summer?

    And, remember as we celebrate the fourth:

    Everywhere around the world
    They’re coming to America (TODAY!)
    Every time that flag’s unfurled
    They’re coming to America (TODAY!)

    God bless America. Y’all have a happy 4th!