Year: 2007

  • I’m still darling and I like diamonds, but I’m no longer a diamond darling

    After yesterday’s post so many of y’all (and by many, I mean Jeana and lurker) inquired about what exactly a Diamond Darling is, that I feel compelled to answer. I’m also sure many others were wondering, but just didn’t want to ask.

    Appease me here, people.

    I started writing this post earlier and realized when I typed the words “Texas A&M was a land grant institution founded in 1876”, that I was, in fact, writing the most boring post of all time. All the two of you wanted to know was what exactly a Diamond Darling is, not the entire history of the Texas higher education system.

    If y’all would have asked me during college what my major was, if I answered truthfully, the answer should have been Diamond Darlings. I spent more time and energy on this extracurricular activity that I did on anything else I did in college, as evidenced by the fact that when my dad came to visit during my sophomore year in college, I pointed at the wrong building and told him it was the library.

    Oh yes, that tuition was money well spent.

    Diamond Darlings are essentially bat girls/hostesses for the Texas A&M baseball team. They are chosen through a series of applications and interviews with athletic department personnel and now there is even a test to assess their knowledge of baseball. The test is part of the tryout process because during my first year as a Diamond Darling, one of the girls kept referring to the umpire as the catcher.

    So, obviously not everyone was trying out for pure love of the game.

    And no, that girl wasn’t me.

    Now, I usually hesitate to mention that I was a Diamond Darling (so why am I posting about it for all the internet to see?) because unless someone went to Texas A&M and knows what all the Diamond Darlings do, there is a certain stereotype that seems to come with saying you were a bat girl. It’s kind of an assumption that all we did was hang out and date the players, which was strictly forbidden and we never did unless there were extenuating circumstances, like if he was really cute.

    The thing is though, being a Diamond Darling gave me some of the best memories of my college career. It’s how I met Gulley, Jen and Tiff, who still remain my best friends in the world. It’s the reason that to this day if I hear Van Halen singing Top of the World on a spring day, I feel an urge to get in my car and find a baseball game to watch. It’s the reason that I watch The College World Series every year and cry no matter who wins.

    My last year as a Diamond Darling, the Aggies actually made it to the College World Series. Gulley and I were dying to make the trip to Omaha with the team, but summer school was starting that same week and we were both supposed to start school. My dad agreed to let me go, but Gulley’s dad told her she needed to stay and go to school. Y’all can imagine his surprise when he turned on ESPN one night to watch the Aggies play and saw Gulley sitting on the bench outside the dugout at Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska blowing a huge bubble while looking at the camera.

    And we both agreed, it was totally worth it.

    So, there you have it. A little history of the Diamond Darlings. I’m sure I could have done other things that probably would have looked better on a resume, but I guarantee they wouldn’t have been nearly as much fun, given me nearly as many good memories, or taught me that you should never bend at the waist to pick up a baseball bat while wearing short white shorts.

    Always bend at the knees.

    There are some lessons that can’t be learned in a classroom.

  • There was no end to the excitement this weekend

    Yesterday was a momentous day at our house. First of all, Caroline slept until 10:00 a.m. Let me say that again. Ten ‘o clock in the morning. Granted, it was really 9:00, but with the time change the clocks said 10:00 a.m. And now that the government conspiracy to force us to spring ahead is upon us, it’s all about what the clocks say, not about what the people may want, such as an hour of their life back.

    Anyway, sleeping in until 10 a.m. was pure, unmitigated bliss.

    By the time we got up, it was way too late to make it to church, so P fixed us all some breakfast complete with honey biscuits. Then, after breakfast, the second landmark moment of the day arrived. It was raining outside and I had been promising Caroline that on the next rainy day, I would set up her ladybug tent. So, I asked her if she wanted me to put up the tent.

    Stupid question.

    OH! MY! TENT! MY! BEAUTIFUL! LADYBUG! TENT! YES! YES! YES! I AM SO EXCITED!!!

    And since I am so astute, I realized that she did, indeed, want me to set up the tent. I set it up in her playroom, put her Cinderella inflatable bed in it and got her portable DVD player out of the closet. Y’all, she stayed in that playroom with her tent for the better part of the day. She played with her dolls, her letters, read her books, and watched her movies. The only peep I heard out of her was when she needed some animal crackers or lemonade.

    So, while she was so wonderfully occupied, the third momentous thing of the day occurred. I did my bi-annual closet clean out.

    Shall we all have a moment of silence and reverence for the winter clothes that are no longer with us?

    Every year at the end of Summer, I do a complete closet clean out and figure out what I need for Fall and Winter. Then, when Spring arrives, I do the same thing. I cleaned, I rearranged, I assessed my wardrobe needs for Spring and Summer.

    Maybe it was because I was a little bitter about losing an hour as I slept on Saturday night, but I showed my closet no mercy. I got rid of things I have held on to for way too long, but couldn’t bear to get rid of them. Brighton belts anyone? I have always saved them before because they weren’t cheap and I kept thinking they might come back in style.

    Today, I realized that even if shiny braided belts with tons of silver were to come back in style, there is no way one of these belts would fit around the waist of low rise jeans. They are made to go with high waist, tapered jeans….and if that look ever comes back the least of my issues will be what belt I’m going to wear. The belts are gone.

    I also purged my closet of all maternity wear. Granted, it’s going to my friend E if she wants it, but even if she doesn’t, it’s not going back in my closet. It will be lucky if it gets a box in the attic.

    I got rid of pajamas I’ve had since the mid-90’s, costume jewelry that was made to go with the Brighton belts, and underwear that I wore throughout nine months of pregnancy that no longer had a prayer of staying up without the use of safety pins and duct tape.

    So, y’all would think with all that extensive cleaning out that I didn’t keep anything that isn’t going to be worn on my body in the next 12 months…well, you would be wrong.

    After my cleanout last season, I posted a few pictures of things that I continue to hold on to and all of those items still remain in my closet. However, I discovered a few more things that still have a home, despite the fact that unless I undergo a complete lobotomy, will not be worn any time soon…or ever again.

    This is my Diamond Darling jacket from college. I had to cover up part of it because it has my maiden name in cursive writing for that extra classy touch. Why do I keep it? It was covered in dust when I pulled it down from my closet and I can assure you that I wouldn’t put it on if it were 30 degrees outside and it was the only jacket in my closet.

    However, I will keep it, along with my beautiful, gold Diamond Darling pendant that spelled out Diamond Darlings in cursive…you know, to match the name in cursive on my jacket.

    Nice.

    Now, these are a pair of black ropers modeled by Caroline (and yes, she was still in her pajamas at 3:00. So was I.). I haven’t worn them in at least ten years and don’t see that I will ever wear them again, but they are a part of a great romantic story. P bought them for me for our second Valentines day when we were dating. Actually, he didn’t so much buy them for me as tell me “Hey, why don’t you go buy yourself some black ropers and I’ll make that your Valentine’s Day present.” Oh yes, he has always been a smooth talkin’ devil.

    The real mystery is why I wanted a pair of black ropers to begin with. I think it had something to do with going to the rodeo that year and I needed them to complete my outfit. It may be the only time I ever wore them.

    This is not a large, mutant caterpillar. It is the removeable fur collar from a leather jacket that I used to own. The jacket was this gorgeous, black leather and was from Harold’s. It was one of the first really nice things I bought for myself with my own money and it was stolen out of the back of my car in a parking garage in Austin, Texas along with a faux fur leopard print coat.

    I can’t talk about it anymore or I’ll start to cry.

    At least I’d have this nice fur collar to wipe my tears on.

    The last item that still inexplicably still has a place in my closet is this.

    The bridesmaid dress that I wore in my sister’s wedding. I don’t know why I still have it other than the fact that I paid more to have it altered than the dress actually cost. This wasn’t on purpose. I was just naive and took it to seamstress who told me what needed to be done and I said “Sure”. After all, how much can some minor alterations cost?

    I’ll tell you, ALOT.

    The thing is even if P and I had some big, swanky party to attend, I would never, NEVER say “Oh, I’ll just pull out that periwinkle blue bridesmaid dress. It will be perfect!”

    But, in spite of the things I can’t make myself get rid of, my closet is all ready for Spring. I am embarrassed to admit how many times this evening I’ve gone in there to admire it. Here, I’ll show y’all some pictures.

    Please notice that there are no wire hangers to be found. I don’t know much, but I am certain that hell is full of wire hangers. They are a menace to society. But in true fashion, opposites do attract because look at P’s side of the closet. It’s where the wire hangers go to die.

    Oh, and the big, white box way up at the top of my closet contains my wedding dress, which of course, I would never even consider throwing out. I’ll just keep it up there and let it take up a huge amount of space so that in twenty-five years Caroline can have the time honored tradition of telling me “There is no way I’m going to wear your wedding dress. I want my own.”

    Maybe she’ll want the Diamond Darling jacket.

  • Some new internet gal pals

    When I started blogging back in July, I wasn’t sure that I would even last a week. I didn’t tell anyone about it until almost a month later when I realized that this may actually be something I’d continue to do on a regular basis.

    Lately the question has been going around asking why you blog. In fact, I was tagged for that particular question by Rachel at RPL Communications. For me, I started blogging because I wanted to record memories and I’ve always felt like I might have a book in me somewhere and writing more often might help it come out. However, I’m not entirely sure there is a market for a book that details one’s experiences cleaning up toddler poop, OCD tendencies and burrito riots that took place in their high school.

    Really, it’s all the makings of a best seller.

    Anyway, the unexpected thing I discovered about blogging is it’s so much more than that. I have made some real friends. P is always just thrilled when I blurt out a piece of information that I learned from “my internet friends”. I realize that in some circles it might make me sound a little dorky, but I’m in my mid-30’s and do plenty of other things that would qualify me for the less than cool crowd.

    The best thing about blogging for me, other than being able to write, is reading about other mamas and knowing that we all share many of the same experiences. It creates a whole new kind of community.

    Shortly after I told my sister about Big Mama, she told me her friend Janet also had a blog. I have only met Janet once or twice, but I started reading her blog because it made me laugh. Then, through Janet and the magic that is the internet, I got to know her whole little circle of friends.

    They are funny, smart and make me laugh, even if some of them are admittedly tree hugging liberals who are affiliated with a university which shall remain unnamed, but is located in Austin, Texas. I forgive them for that and they forgive me for being the new poster child of the NRA.

    We are all mamas and understand the things that are truly important in life, such as trying to maintain some semblance of sanity and a sense of humor while raising our kids.

    So, if y’all are looking for something new and different to read, go take a look at these posts.

    Janet at Life with the Wisners and read about her adventures in babysitting

    Amy at Franklin Five and read about her new love of minivans

    Tracey at More than a Minivan Mom and read her sweet tribute to her Poppi

    And if you’re looking for some gorgeous photos to admire, then go visit Jen at The Sweet Life, it will make you want to pack up your children and take them immediately to wherever she may be so that she can take pictures of them.

    Thanks for the laughs, girls.

  • Beautifully blessed

    P and I have group of friends that are all about seven years younger than us. They were our first students when we started our Campus Life ministry twelve years ago. We’ve watched them graduate from high school and college, and seen many of them get married. But so far, none of them have joined us in the adventure of child raising and trust me, we have encouraged them to take their time, because when people say having children changes your life?

    Yeah, they’re not kidding.

    Last week, our friends W and E announced they are having a baby. We are thrilled for them and honestly, a little glad that now we won’t be the only ones who have to find a babysitter or throw ourselves on the mercy of grandparents to get a night out. We hugged them, told them congratulations and I offered my Babies R Us registry assistance services to E because how is anyone supposed to know that you need three different kinds of strollers and a huge tub of Desitin ointment to raise a child?

    I remember when I went to register at Babies R Us and was so glad when it was over because finally, now that I had gotten that done and had the nursery decorated, the hard part of having a baby was finished.

    I’m totally okay with the fact that God was laughing at me.

    Anyway, two days ago, W called P (do y’all love all these tricky pseudonyms I use?) to tell him they had gone in for a twelve week ultrasound and discovered they aren’t having a baby, they’re having TWO babies. Twins.

    Bless their hearts.

    I told P now that Caroline is three, it would be fun if she were a twin. She’d have a built in playmate and the whole issue of whether or not to have another one would be off the table. I’ve always been a fan of the buy one, get one free system. Of course, I also admitted that the first year or two with twins would probably have been a little challenging. And P said, “Not for you because you would have ended up in the crazy house about two years ago, and I’d be raising them by myself.”

    He knows me well.

    The thing that makes this whole thing so incredibly special is the backstory. We’ve know W since he was in high school. He dated one girl throughout high school, they went to college together and got married shortly after college graduation. P performed their wedding ceremony. We were all worried about his choice of a wife, but swallowed our feelings because it’s hard to tell someone the person they love might not be the right person for them.

    Shortly before their one year anniversary, W called P one afternoon and asked if P could come over to his house. We’d been at the hospital all day while I was getting methotrexate treatments for a molar pregnancy and were exhausted, but P could tell it was urgent and left to go see W. When he got there, he found out that W’s wife had told him she was moving out and wanted a divorce.

    They spent the next few hours talking and trying to get her to change her mind, agree to counseling, anything to make it work. She agreed at the moment, but it didn’t last. Long story short, she was involved with someone else and wanted out.

    Understandably, W was devastated. This was not the way he had envisioned life working out. I can’t even imagine everything he went through during that dark time.

    At one point, he had the opportunity to talk to this amazing, older man who had been through the same situation as a young man. W told us later that this man took him into the basement of his home and showed him a wall covered with pictures of a happy family. There were pictures of kids and grandkids at various stages of life, all displayed as a visible testament to a life well lived.

    He asked W, “Do you see anything missing on this wall?”

    W said, “No.”

    And he replied, “Because there isn’t anything missing. If I hadn’t been through what I went through as a young man, I wouldn’t have any of what you see represented on this wall. God has blessed my life with more than I could have imagined.”

    I’m sure on that day his words gave W some hope, but as we all know, when you’re in the midst of a dark time, it’s hard to imagine there is any good waiting at the end. Over the next year and a half, we watched W change into an incredible, strong man. He had come to a crossroads in his life, a point where many people would have given in to the anger and bitterness, but he rose above it. He faced life head on and became a man.

    Not too long after that, the beautiful, sweet E entered the picture. I can’t do justice to her sweetness. She is an absolutely beautiful girl, but for all her external beauty, her heart is that much better. We adore her and more importantly, W adores her. They’ve been married almost two years.

    Now, they’re having twins.

    It makes me tear up as I write this because I’m sure as W looked at that family photo wall all those years ago, he couldn’t even fathom what God was going to do and how it would ever all be okay again. But he trusted Him anyway.

    It’s a reminder to me that I don’t need to know the “how” or the “why” of things, I just need to trust. God takes the ugly things, the dark things, the scary things and He restores them and makes them more than beautiful.

    “He has made everything beautiful in its time.”
    Ecclesiastes 3:11
  • When good bribes go bad

    On Tuesday night, Caroline called me into her room about five different times for reasons ranging from being thirsty to wanting to discuss the gross national product of Southeast Asia. Around 3 a.m. I was ready to flush the baby monitor down the toilet.

    The next morning in my sleep deprived haze, I came up with a fabulous idea. What I needed was sleep and what would get me sleep was some type of bribe, but since bribe is such a dirty word, let’s call it a “reward system”.

    Anyway, like a desperate door to door salesman, I pitched the idea of a calendar with stickers for every night that Caroline slept through the night without calling for me.

    Oh! The excitement! “A calendar! With stickers! I won’t call for you Mama! I’ll sleep all night! I’ll see you in the morning! Can we hang my calendar right here? I love my calendar!”

    I put her to bed that night and reminded her about the new system. She assured me that she was ready and couldn’t wait to get her princess sticker in the morning. I walked out of her room feeling just a little smug at my brilliance.

    Cut to 3:30 a.m. when I was awakened out of a dead sleep by the sound of “Mama, come get me. MAMA! Come get me!”

    I stumbled into her room and asked her “Why are you calling me? What do you need?”

    She said, “I just wanted to tell you that I don’t want a sticker”.

  • Bringing home the bacon

    One of P’s very best friends is a member of a branch of the U.S. Special Forces. They met each other about six years ago, through a series of random circumstances, and quickly discovered that they shared an intense love of all things gun and ammo related. And y’all know that old saying, friends that kill together, stay together.

    Well, maybe that’s not exactly right, but it worked for Thelma and Louise and it works for P and his friend, except for the part about driving off a cliff in a car.

    The thing that makes me laugh is P will get on the phone with this friend and they’ll talk about lethal weaponry in such detail, and for so long, that you would think they were talking about something really interesting, like shoes or jewelry.

    Back in January, P’s friend realized he was going to get to fly to South Texas for a visit. Y’all have never heard more strategizing in your life. I don’t know what kind of preparation goes into planning a war, and heaven knows I should with all the Military Channel watching that goes on around here, but the U.S. Armed Forces have nothing on these two.

    For weeks, I overheard conversations that sounded like this.

    “Oh, we’ll definitely need three mags, maybe even four.”

    “The best thing about that caliber of bullet is that it will cause massive internal hemorraghing for a quick kill.”

    “With the night vision, we’ll be able to maximize our kill time.”

    And my personal favorite, “Kip is going to rent a helicopter so that we can shoot hogs out of it.”

    I read somewhere one time ( yes, that’s as specific as I can get, if you want sources cited you might want to go read something else) that there are satellites or some other such foolishness that track things people say, and if keywords are triggered that might lead the CIA or FBI or whoever else is listening to believe that you might be plotting something sinister, such as taking over a small country or paying full price at Gap or Banana Republic, then you will be closely monitored.

    If that’s true, then let me take a moment to give a big shout out to the CIA agents who are, at this very moment, monitoring this blog and all other communications that stem from our home address.

    Don’t worry, y’all…they’re just trying to kill pigs. It’s all very innocent, well, unless of course, you’re a pig. And I don’t mean a pig in the 70’s street slang for a cop sense. I mean hogs, wild hogs.

    At the crux of all this plotting and planning was the aforementioned helicopter rental. Kip, who is another of P’s friends, owns a ranch, and the wild hogs are destroying the place. They dig under fences, they tear up roads and breed like rabbits or you know, wild hogs. Kip wanted to seriously decimate the hog population, so he chose the occasion of P’s friend’s visit to rent a helicopter to orchestrate an aerial attack on the pork insurgents.

    Now, I realize the appeal of hanging out of a helicopter and shooting semi-automatic weapons is, for the most part, lost on the majority of females. So, to help y’all envision their excitement, imagine someone helicoptering you into the Nordstroms’ parking lot and telling you to gather up as many pairs of shoes as you possibly can.

    Exciting, right?

    And wait, it gets better. This wasn’t just gratuitous killing because it served a purpose. Our church has a Feed the Homeless ministry that processes wild game to provide meals to people living on the streets. The hogs that were killed were donated to the church to supply them with enough meat to serve over 3,000 meals.

    Ham for the homeless, y’all. What could be better than that?

    Except for this.

    After dinner one night, they lured me in with the night vision equipment and weaponry. Y’all know how I love all things Sydney Bristow and for just a moment, I could pretend like I was about to bust in to some chemical plant in Germany and work somebody over while using terms like “covert op” and “infiltrate”.

    For all of us, the visit was like a dream come true…well, except for maybe the hogs.