Another day

  • Just like they did in ye olden times

    The first cold front of the season came blowing in early Monday morning. And I do mean blowing in.

    The winds were howling out of the north causing the pecans in our pecan trees to come raining down on the roof. I woke up out of a dead sleep at 4 a.m. thinking we might be under siege. It sounded like we were being shelled.

    Blame it on watching “Band of Brothers” too many times, but I think I had some WWII flashbacks.

    Anyway, by the time I picked Caroline up from school, the sun was out and it was a better-than-lovely 65 degrees outside. We came home and went OUTSIDE to play, instead of doing what we’ve done since last June and curling up under an A/C vent while cursing the heat.

    The pecans that caused me to yell out “WE’VE BEEN HIT!” around 5 a.m. were scattered all over the yard. Three pecan trees, plus a rainy summer, equals a plethora of pecans. Some might even call it a bushel.

    We began to collect them in a pile on the front walk. It seemed like a good way to pass the time, plus I pretty much just sat down in the yard and collected about fifty of them within a one foot radius while I let Caroline do the serious hunting and gathering. Our pile got bigger and bigger, in spite of the fact that Bruiser and Scout are huge fans of the pecan.

    You know, the pecan is America’s nut.

    I don’t know if that’s true, but it could be.

    And this is completely off-topic and ever so embarrassing to admit, but as I searched for pecans I started singing a song with the lyrics, “You’re just a squirrel, trying to get a nut”. Ultimately I realized the song I was thinking of was “In the Rain” by Oran “Juice” Jones and I was equal parts amazed and horrified that a bad 80’s rap song came to mind so quickly.

    My mind is a vault containing mass amounts of useless information.

    Anyway, Caroline would crack the pecans by stepping on them and then feed them to the dogs. I think, after 4 long years, they finally saw her as a valuable ally, instead of the thing that replaced them and now sleeps in the bed they used to call their own.

    She won them over with the pecan goodness.

    Finally, it was time to go inside. So we left our big pile of pecans on the front walk and I told her we’d find more the next day. She has a phenomenal memory and sure enough, we were out gathering pecans again yesterday. And since it was Bop’s birthday and Bops loves pecan pie, I decided it would be a great idea to make Bops a pecan pie using pecans from our yard.

    After all, how many pecans do you have to crack to find enough for a pecan pie recipe?

    As it turns out, enough to make your thumbs start to bleed.

    Scout and Bruiser must be living right because they were able to procure pecans from the reject pile. Then at one point, an elderly gentleman drove past our house, slowed down and yelled out his truck window, “Don’t let them dogs eat too many of them pecans! It’ll plug them up for days.”

    And interestingly enough, all I could focus on was how I thought pecans would serve as roughage. A natural laxative, if you will. I was so busy thinking about this that it didn’t dawn on me that it was a little odd to have someone yell at me out their truck window about the bathroom habits of my dogs and their possible constipation due to massive pecan consumption.

    I mean they’re pecans, not a cheese log.

    Anyway, bottom line is we gathered our pecans, went inside and made a pie.

    With our own pecans.

    Just like Ma Ingalls might have done.

    And I make a mean pecan pie. If Martha Stewart were to compete with me in a pecan pie contest, I would dismantle her.

    Here are our pecans. One cup of pecans, otherwise known as the reason I have a Barbie band-aid on my thumb.

    Here is the butter as I’m browning it. This is the key to a good pie. Brown the butter, but don’t burn it.

    Caroline gets more joy than should be allowed just by cracking eggs. That’s a blow-pop in her mouth, by the way, not a cigarette. I don’t let her smoke while we’re baking.

    The prepared pie crust. Which I totally made from scratch and by scratch I mean that I took it out of the freezer and opened the Pillsbury package that it came in.

    Y’all didn’t really think I’d make my own pie crust, did you? Keep in mind, I’m the same person who bought pre-made Rice Krispy treats earlier in the week.

    Pouring the pecan mixture into the pie crust.

    And what do we have here? A beautiful pecan pie.

    Somewhere Martha Stewart is weeping with envy.

    And my dogs are trying desperately to have a bowel movement.

  • Hello Kitty! Goodbye Saturday morning.

    A girl I knew once told me, before I had kids, that the worst part of motherhood is having to go to amusement parks. At the time I thought that was an odd thing to say because what isn’t fun about amusement parks?

    Well, other than the bigger than life characters that walk around and pose for pictures. They creep me out.

    I’m talking about you, big stuffed Shamu. Just walk away with your unnaturally proportioned head.

    Truly, I don’t mind the amusement park experience. You start off the day fresh and full of high expectations of all the great fun to be had and that feeling lasts until you’re dragging everyone back to the car at the end of the day, sweaty, hot, cotton candy stuck to the side of your face, and $250 poorer than when you walked in.

    Good times.

    Plus, you always have a chance of winning a Nicole Richie doll.

    The parenting experience that I could just leave behind is the birthday party. All the birthday parties. Who knew there could be so many birthday parties?

    The 4-year-old social circuit is unbelievable. Seriously, it makes my own social life look a little pitiful by comparison. Caroline has 3 parties on any given weekend and I have…umm, well I like to be at church on Sunday morning.

    Don’t get me wrong. I’m so thankful that Caroline has friends and we get invited to the birthday parties. I am. I really am. She’s a huge fan of the birthday party. Telling her we have a birthday party to attend on a Saturday morning is like someone telling me I get to sleep until 10:00, then go get a pedicure and a new outfit.

    It creates new levels of hysteria and excitement. Levels that really aren’t seen outside of anything involving High School Musical.

    So, Saturday morning, we had a double header. 10:00 a.m. birthday party at Kiddie Park, followed by an 11:30 a.m. party at one of her classmate’s homes. That is ALOT of hot pink icing.

    By the time I got up Saturday morning, Caroline was already dressed in her hot pink, bedazzled outfit. She was speaking in ALL CAPS and WAS SO EXCITED and all LET’S LEAVE RIGHT NOW! WE HAVE TO GO RIGHT NOW! LET’S GO! LET’S GO!!!

    Which would have been fine, but it was only 8:30 a.m. And trust me, the workers at Kiddie Park aren’t the type to show up one minute earlier than their scheduled work time. Heaven forbid they get there early and change out the water in the boat ride.

    Anyway, after a long morning of IS IT TIME TO GO YET?!! it was finally actually time to leave. We headed out to Kiddie Park, rode some rides of questionable safety and unmentionable hygiene issues, ate a Hello Kitty! cupcake, and drank from some unknown child’s juicebox. Because, really, she likes to do all she can to ensure that she picks up some kind of illness for the upcoming week.

    Just as she was coming down from her Hello Kitty! sugar high, it was time to leave for the next party. This one had a bouncy castle. With Disney Princesses. And face painting. And even more Hello Kitty! cake.

    Who knew that Hello Kitty! had made such a comeback? I had no idea. She’s very hot right now. Like the next Paris Hilton or something, because she doesn’t really do anything, she just stands around with that blank stare.

    By the time we got home, the party hangover had begun. All the whining and complaining about being hot, tired, and having a headache from all the screaming. And Caroline wasn’t doing much better.

    It took me the rest of the day to recover.

    I’m just glad there wasn’t a big, life-size Hello Kitty! walking around.

    It would have pushed me over the edge.

  • Open letter to an HEB shopper

    To the man ahead of me in line at HEB yesterday.

    Dear Sir:

    You have no idea how much I didn’t want to have to go to the grocery store yesterday. Sundays are by far the worst day of the week to grocery shop. All that cart traffic and the fighting in the produce department amongst the celery and the onions makes me very nervous. Not to mention having to fight the temptation to buy a pack of Nestles’ Ultimates and eat the whole thing without putting even one cookie in the oven.

    However, I had to go to the store because we are in charge of school snack today. Caroline requested Rice Krispy treats, so I did what Martha Stewart would do and went to HEB to purchase the pre-made ones.

    Because who has time to melt those marshmallows, mix in the cereal and press it all down with a buttered spatula? Not me. I am already woefully behind on my T.V. viewing from last week and if I’m ever going to get caught up, I certainly can’t spend 4 minutes slaving over a hot stove.

    That’s why I was at HEB. I quickly filled my cart with the aforementioned Rice Krispy treats, some Ritz crackers shaped like dinosaurs for any child who’s feeling a little more health-conscious, and the always tasty Juicy-Juice because it’s 100% REAL JUICE. I also threw in some Jergens’ Self-Tanner because girlfriend is in need of a little color now that it’s October.

    As you can tell from my shopping list, we are a very all-natural, organic, preservative-free household.

    I believe if God had intended for us to be all natural, He wouldn’t have given us the ability to create hydrogenated soy oil or artificial butter flavoring. Or tan without the sun.

    Anyway, I gathered the items on my list as quickly as possible and then headed straight to the EXPRESS checkout line, where I encountered you. It seemed like a safe bet to get in line behind you because you had followed the rules and had only 12 items. Kudos to you.

    But imagine my surprise when you had a coupon for EVERY SINGLE ONE of those 12 items. Coupons, by the way, that you conveniently forgot you had until after the EXPRESS transaction was completed. And then you pulled them out of your pocket and handed them, one by one, to the cashier as SLOWLY as possible.

    I was especially astonished at how long it took you to find your wallet AGAIN to complete your EXPRESS transaction for the second time. But I understand. I mean, after all, who would have thought to look in your back pocket?

    My favorite part was the way you stood right at the end of the checkout counter after your transaction was completely finished, and it was finally, mercifully, my turn, and you opened up your Clorox wipes and proceeded to wipe down your hands with them. You were very thorough. Trust me when I say there isn’t an amoeba alive that stood a chance against your tenacity.

    I watched you gather up your bagged purchases over your wrists and carry them like some kind of torture device to ensure that the germ-ridden handles wouldn’t touch your well-bleached hands.

    And as I followed you out of the store and watched you get into your brand new Cadillac Escalade (parked in handicapped parking, by the way) I was so relieved that you were able to save yourself almost $1.50 on your purchases. It made the 15 minutes I spent waiting in line behind you, totally worth it.

    Well done, Sir. Well done.

    Regretfully no longer a believer in EXPRESS lanes,

    Big Mama

  • We finally got a piece of the pie

    I am here to tell y’all that what the Bible says is true. “Weeping may remain for a night, but joy comes in the morning”.

    Or, a stomach virus remains for the night, but joy comes two mornings later.

    After two days of wondering if I had been infected with the E.Coli, I finally started to feel better late yesterday afternoon. Maybe it was due to the fact that I was able to get plenty of rest, maybe it was due to the fact that I knew Caroline was going back to school, or maybe it was the fact that P came in and told me he had made arrangements for Ava to come clean the house today.

    Bless P’s heart. He knows one of my love languages is hiring someone else to clean my house. It moved me to tears of joy.

    I’ve gotten to the point where I can clean my own house. The problem is it’s never all clean at the same time. I have time management issues due to my OCD. I start to clean, then notice that the glass on my chandelier is filthy, and the next thing I know I am scouring the chandelier. And then I realize the baseboards in the dining room are totally dirty, but I haven’t noticed because the dust on the chandelier was obscuring the lighting. All of a sudden 4 hours have passed and I have clean dining room baseboards, but little else to show for my efforts.

    So, I go eat an ice cream sandwich and call it a day.

    Anyway, the other reason I was feeling better was because AJ and I had a shopping trip planned. Plus, as a bonus, she was going to let me go to her house first and help her throw some of her old clothes out. It was like Christmas and my birthday all rolled into one.

    Before AJ’s mama passed away, one of her last requests was that AJ’s daddy continue to pay for the girls’ clothing, makeup, manicures, pedicures, highlights, etc. In her words, “anything that will help them find a husband”.

    Do you see why her mother was such a wonderful woman? I mean, talk about looking out for your daughters. That’s a rich legacy.

    My daddy would have never agreed to anything like that, because he knows me well enough to know that I would have never given up the free clothing. P and I would be living in sin, but I would have a fab closet full of Jimmy Choos and weekly pedicures to take the sting out of my wayward lifestyle.

    I’m kidding.

    I’d probably prefer Manolo Blahniks over Jimmy Choos.

    Anyway, AJ enlisted my help because at some point I’ve convinced her I know what I’m talking about. She sees me on an almost daily basis so she certainly knows I don’t always practice what I preach, but she trusts me anyway.

    She told her daddy that we were going shopping, so he got on the phone last night and told me there were a couple of rules. First, don’t even go in Neiman Marcus. Second, AJ is a pretty girl and will look just as good in a $130 skirt as a $400 skirt. I don’t get the impression he shops much.

    Or knows the going rate for your average skirt.

    AJ and I spent a little bit of time going through her closet this morning. At some point I’m going to need to go back for a complete closet overhaul. There were wire hangers everywhere and shirts and pants running amok. And y’all don’t even want to know about some of the fine knitwear crumpled up in little balls and stuffed into rubbermaid containers. It’s just too sad.

    We assessed her basic fashion needs and headed out to La Cantera. First stop, Neiman Marcus. We totally broke the rule right out of the gate. But, in our defense, she needed jeans. Nice jeans. And Neimans really has the best jean selection. I’m proud to say we walked out of there with 2 new pairs of jeans, one of which I made her try on even though she didn’t think she’d like them. And she did. She liked them and bought them. I was so proud and only a little envious of her fabulous new jeans with little front pockets that made me want to take them home with me, and cherish them forever. Or at least until little front pockets are out of style.

    After that, we promptly vacated Neiman Marcus and headed to the more reasonable Banana Republic.

    We found a really cute dress and took it into the dressing room. We couldn’t find any zippers or buttons, so AJ just started pulling it over her head. And got stuck.

    She wanted to give up. She started to pull it back off saying, “This isn’t going to work”. But oh no. I wasn’t taking no for an answer. That dress wouldn’t beat us. I told her, as if she was training for a marathon, “DON’T GIVE UP. YOU’VE GOT TO REALLY WANT IT.”

    True story.

    And then we collapsed with laughter in the dressing room.

    After all that, the dress let us down. It just wasn’t all it needed to be. However, we did find a darling dress at Anthropologie which should come as no big shock. I believe my love of Anthropologie is well-documented.

    Finally, AJ was shopped out. I could have kept going, but I could tell she was fading fast. She’s not really a shopper at heart and, while I don’t understand that, I accept it.

    We ended our day by having lunch on the balcony at The Mariposa in Neiman’s. We drank fresh strawberry lemonade, ate croissants as big as our head, and had the best chicken salad sandwich ever. Y’all want to know what makes a chicken salad sandwich even better? Bacon. And swiss cheese.

    It was delightful. Even better than Whataburger if you can imagine such a thing.

    AJ dropped me off and I walked into my house, which smelled of lemony clean freshness. My floors were mopped, my kitchen was scrubbed and my toilet paper was folded into neat triangles on the end.

    Then, I realized it was about time to pick Caroline up from school, so I headed to my car. A car, by the way, that P had one of his workers completely wash, wax and vacuum for me.

    I’m sorry. Did I wake up as one of the Trumps without realizing it? Did I move on up to the East side? Is this how George and Weesie felt?

    I’ve got to say, I could get used to it.

    Especially since Ava doesn’t backtalk like that sassy Florence.

    And if you were born after 1980, you don’t know what I’m talking about. Which is probably just as well.

    Just know it means I had a good day.

  • 1492: the year Columbus discovered America or the number of times I was sick last night

    Last night, when I wrote that post about my stomach virus, I had no idea that the worst was yet to come. I have never in my life been so sick.

    Before I had Caroline I hadn’t had a stomach virus in probably 10 years. Now, I average one every 6 months. Having a child is the equivalent of having one of those African monkeys that spread rampant disease.

    Except my child is potty-trained and not from Africa.

    I woke up this morning around 9:30. P got up with Caroline and mercifully, let me sleep in. Since the head of our bed is right against the wall to our master bath, no one knew better than him what a horrendous night I had. Every now and then throughout the night, he’d call out, “Do you need anything?”

    Yes. A better immune system.

    And new intestines.

    And some Phenegran.

    Maybe a mallet to put myself out of my misery.

    However, those things are hard to come by at 3:30 a.m.

    Anyway, I stumbled into the living room this morning feeling as if I’d been run over by a bus and then a truck. P took one look at me and said, “You look awful”.

    I do. I look awful.

    It would seem that the evening’s festivities caused me to break little blood vessels all over my face, especially around my eyes. Caroline said, “OH MAMA! You have the chicken pox”.

    I should be so lucky. The chicken pox would look good compared to what is going on in my facial area.

    I have some major complexion issues that don’t appear to be subsiding as the day goes on. Picture deep red freckles all over my face and then multiply the hideousness of that image by 1,000.

    Needless to say, I have had happier Columbus Day celebrations.

    Caroline had the day off school so I had envisioned spending Columbus Day building small scale models of the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria while giving her a rich history lesson of Columbus and his amazing voyage across the ocean way back in 1492.

    Or, I thought we could go to Target.

    Neither of those things came to pass.

    Instead, Caroline spent the morning with P. They made bullets in the backhouse, because that’s what little girls do.

    Around lunchtime she came inside and wanted a bowl of oatmeal for lunch. I figured I could power through making a bowl of oatmeal. I lovingly microwaved the oatmeal and set it in front of her, while desperately trying not to get sick. She took one look at it and said, “That looks BISGUSTING. Did you throw up in this bowl?”

    And I wondered if I could trade her in for one of those monkeys from Africa.

    But instead, had P take her over to Mimi’s house for the rest of the day. Thank God for Mimi.

    I went back to bed and slept for 3 hours because I was too sick to even watch T.V.

    Let your brain wrap around the seriousness of that statement.

    On the plus side, in yesterday’s comments, Leslie reminded me of a line from “The Devil Wears Prada”, “I’m just a stomach flu away from my goal weight”.

    I’m well on my way. Especially since I only ate 2 Saltines today. If I keep this up I’ll be able to go into the holiday season with a 5 pound deficit. That way, when I gain 10 pounds from eating all the pie, I’ll still just be 5 pounds on the plus side.

    But I must be on my way to recovery because I’m actually starting to think about a cheeseburger from Whataburger. For some reason, this is my cure-all. When I had morning sickness with Caroline, I knew that a Whataburger cheeseburger with extra mustard would ease my misery.

    And no, I am definitely not pregnant. I just enjoy the healing properties of mustard.

    With a side of fries.

  • The gift that was delayed, but now keeps giving

    Remember about a week and a half ago when Caroline had that stomach virus? And we were up most of the night?

    I never got sick, so I breathed a huge sigh of relief that I had dodged the proverbial bullet.

    Apparently, the bullet circled the circumference of the earth and has now promptly hit me between the eyes, or the stomach as the case may be.

    Stomach virus.

    Bad stomach virus.

    And remember how Caroline was so cheerful and upbeat the whole time?

    She doesn’t get that characteristic from her mama.

    I’m pretty sure I’m about to die.