Author: Big Mama

  • Sweet reunion

    On Saturday my sister and I packed up our girls and headed to Beaumont to see Nanny. Our mom is also in town right now, so we got more family for our road trip buck and it’s a good thing because I was tempted to head back home sometime around Schulenberg, Texas due to a headphone malfunction that caused some angst in the back seat.

    We’ve had a great time this weekend. One of the personal highlights for me was watching the American Music Awards and hearing my Nanny ask, “Oh! Is that Fifty Cents?”

    Granted, it should be pronounced 50 Cent and it was actually Kanye West, but still, how about the cultural relevance from a nonagenarian?

    All Caroline has talked about since the last visit is Nanny’s cat named Coco or, as Caroline likes to call her, Coconut.

    The minute we walked through the front door on Saturday, Caroline found Coconut and hasn’t let her out her sight ever since. It has been a sweet reunion of old friends.

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    Although I think for Coco it might be more like the dreaded realization that your great aunt Bessie has come for a visit and may hug the life out of you before she leaves.

  • Raising Arizona

    This is a scene from my grandmother’s house last night.

    Which explains all the dolls in the background

    And the Zenith T.V. circa 1982.


    Raising Arizona from Big Mama on Vimeo.

    We’ll be taking these Huggies and whatever cash you got.

  • Because ugly sweaters need love too

    Last year I wrote this post to serve as a cautionary holiday tale. There is nothing like the Christmas season that will make some folks want to put on some apparel with blinking lights and various animals wearing Santa hats.

    As I did my extensive research for that post, I realized that people all over the country are hosting Christmas parties with the specific intent of encouraging their friends to wear the ugliest Christmas sweater they can find. And I thought to myself, “Well that sounds dreadful. How can I be a part of this phenomenon?”

    Apparently I hang out with a circle of friends that are terribly uncreative and don’t drink enough alcohol to make it through the evening in a hideous sweater made of some kind of synthetic knit.

    And since the thought of having to make a big batch of mini-quiches and wassail for a real life party is more than I want to deal with this holiday season, I decided to create Big Mama’s First Annual Ugly Christmas Sweater Contest.

    There will even be prizes for 1st, 2nd and 3rd place.

    I know.

    1st prize will be an original piece of jewelry from Lisa Leonard Designs.

    2nd prize will be a $25.00 gift certificate from CWDKids.

    3rd prize will be a $15.00 gift certificate to Amazon.

    However, you have to provide your own eggnog.

    To enter the contest you will need to send me a photo of the ugliest Christmas sweater you can find. Bonus points if it’s already hanging in your closet. Not really, but it would be impressive.

    Here are the rules:

    1. You have between now and December 17th to email your entries to [email protected]. I will announce the winners along with color commentary on Friday, December 19th.

    It will be like our very own Ugly Christmas Sweater party but without a keg of Miller Lite and drunk fraternity boys.

    2. You don’t have to actually purchase the ugly sweater. Feel free to take a picture of one that you find at your local Salvation Army, department store, or your father-in-law’s closet. I would love to see the sweaters actually modeled on a person, but it’s not a requirement.

    3. Please don’t take pictures of unknowing shoppers all decked out in Christmas hideousness without their permission. However, I’m thinking nothing would be more potentially awkward than asking a stranger if you can take their photo for an ugly sweater contest.

    Have fun! And may the ugliest sweater win.

    Oh! To post your own copy of the cute button Shannon made for me, you can grab the code below to copy and paste to your blog.

    **Any pictures that are sent in may be used on the blog, so just keep that in mind. Thanks!

  • Where is Fashion Friday? I blame 30 Rock.

    Okay, I spent my entire evening watching quality Thursday night television programming and now I am exhausted. However, I’d already decided that I wasn’t going to do a Fashion Friday this week because I just wasn’t up to doing all the extensive fashion research that it requires.

    I know. I have disappointed even myself.

    Maybe Big Mama, Inc. needs a billion dollar bailout to get things going again.

    I’ll even settle for a half billion.

    The good news is I’ll be back before lunchtime with a post about a little contest that I’m working on that involves fashion or the lack thereof.

    And in the meantime, I’ll leave you with this little gem courtesy of Google search. Someone found the blog today using the search phrase “Will Virginia ever get to eat Blue Bell Ice Cream?”

    I’m not sure if they meant the state or a particular person named Virginia. Either way, I hope Virginia has a chance to try some Blue Bell Homemade Vanilla. It is delightful.

  • A little aftershock

    I’m going to be totally honest with y’all today and say that I just don’t have much funny in me at the moment. In fact, I feel a little bit like I’m having the missionary version of post-traumatic stress syndrome, but without the trauma or the stress.

    If I had to compile a list of my talents it would probably be a short list. However, chief among my gifts would be my ability to compartmentalize certain things. If there is something I don’t want to think about or talk about, then I just go all Scarlett O’Hara and decide I’ll think about it tomorrow.

    Yesterday I had the opportunity to speak to a group of high school students about Compassion and my trip to the Dominican. I’ve spent the last few days reading back over the posts that all the bloggers wrote about the trip and then this morning I googled “Everett Swanson” who is the man that founded Compassion back in 1952.

    The last night of our trip, Shaun told us the story of how Compassion came to exist. The short version is that Everett Swanson was an American evangelist who went to Korea during the Korean War to minister to the troops. While he was there, he began to notice all the orphans everywhere. They were huddled in doorways trying to stay warm and starving to death.

    One morning he saw a sanitation truck driving down the street. The workers would jump off the truck, kick what appeared to be piles of rags and then throw them in the truck. It turns out they weren’t just piles of rags; they were orphans who didn’t make it through the night being thrown away like garbage. Everett Swanson knew he had to do something.

    Because of his commitment, Compassion is now in 24 countries and sponsors over a million children.

    I shared that story with the high school students, along with my personal experiences from the trip.

    After I was done there, I drove out to my church to record a short video where I was interviewed about the difference Compassion has made in countless lives.

    Needless to say, yesterday was like the Big Mama Compassion Tour ’08. (Not coming soon to cities near you!)

    Last night, as I drove to meet some friends for Mexican food, my heart was so heavy and I could feel tears right below the surface. I don’t know if it’s because I had talked about it all day or if it’s just taken this long to sink in, but I just felt a heavy weight of sadness settle over me.

    It’s a strange experience to see everything we saw that week, the extreme poverty, the sadness, the presence of hope in spite of the bare minimum of material possessions, and then come back to America at a time when everyone is freaking out about our economic crisis and big industries are requesting multi-billion dollar bailouts.

    We’re a week away from celebrating Thanksgiving, which should be a time to reflect on our many blessings, yet we’re inundated by Christmas catalogs with the sole purpose of making sure we want more than we already have.

    Caroline and I look through the catalogs while she picks out what she wants Santa to bring on Christmas Eve and then I’ll feel guilty because do we really need any more toys in her already packed playroom?

    Do I really need any more clothes in a closet full of things?

    What’s the balance between my reality and the reality of the kids in the Dominican Republic?

    Why do I have moments where I fully realize I’ve seen the worst and yet still have moments where I feel discontent with what I have?

    Am I an idiot?

    Don’t answer that. It’s intended to be hypothetical.

    Most of all, I can’t get this precious girl off my mind.

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    Because the one question she asked me was, “Can I go home with you?”

    And two weeks later I’m still wishing I could have said yes.

  • Doodle O’Malley

    For about the last week, Caroline has been wired. I’m talking about the kind of hyped-up, frenetic energy that would make a Tasmanian devil say, “Wow. You’re kind of a spaz.”

    She’s always been a high energy kid, but I’m talking about levels of activity that defy any relation to my gene pool. I tend to think of napping as a neglected art form.

    Maybe it’s the cooler weather or maybe it’s because the Christmas Toy Syndicate has ramped up their campaign to make sure your child’s Christmas isn’t complete without a Barbie Jammin’ Jeep, but we have reached new heights of enthusiasm for life.

    In fact, last night as I attempted to wrestle her into her pajamas, she suddenly exclaimed, “WAIT! I NEED TO GET SOME KICKS OUT!”

    And then proceeded to move to the middle of the living room floor where she kicked the air with great gusto for the better part of four minutes until P told her she needed to take it down a notch.

    It’s like living with a five-year-old version of Salley O’Malley. She can kick. She can stretch. She can kick.

    But in spite of the fact that all the activity is about to kill me, I still have moments when I look at her and can’t believe she’s mine.

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    I had no idea I could love someone this much.