Month: April 2012

  • Happy Easter

    I hope y’all have a wonderful Easter weekend.

    May we carry His name above all names.

    And if you live in the San Antonio area and are looking for a place to worship on Sunday morning, my church is having an amazing outdoor service at 10 a.m. Everyone is welcome!

  • My little bunny is growing up

    I was going through old videos the other day because I harbor grand illusions that one day I will get all manner of memorabilia from Caroline’s childhood organized and labeled.

    Judging from the eight packs of photos currently stuffed in my desk drawer, it’s not likely to happen anytime soon.

    But I came across this video and it seemed appropriate to post it since Easter is this Sunday and it clearly has an Easter theme.

    I’m also hoping that someone will be able to tell me how that little chubby-cheeked baby turned into this overnight.

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    I took this before I dropped her off at school yesterday morning. It was picture day and she let me blow dry her hair AND curl it. It was a hair miracle.

    But then she saw herself in the mirror and was so pleased. She looked at me as she fluffed her curls and asked, “Mama? Are you sure it’s school picture day today?”

    “Yes, I’m sure.”

    “That’s good”, she replied as she walked toward the car, “Because I’d hate to waste all this.”

  • Modern day hieroglyphics

    Last Tuesday Gulley and I met for our usual Tuesday lunch and our friend, Donna, joined us. We spent the next hour catching up on life and talking about other important things like hair and jewelry and cute sandals.

    At some point in the conversation we started talking about Donna’s oldest daughter, Avery, who had just found out she’d gotten a really great summer internship. Donna started laughing and told us that Avery had sent her a text where she’d copied a text that she’d received from her Pop, Donna’s father.

    (Are you following this? I feel like it’s confusing but I’m doing the best I can.)

    (Here’s the easy version. Avery got a job. She received a congratulatory text from Pop, her grandfather. She copied the text and forwarded it to Donna because it was funny.)

    (Why didn’t I just say that in the first place?)

    Anyway, the text wasn’t meant to be funny. The problem, Donna explained, is that Pop sends all his text messages using Siri. And I think we all know how I feel about Siri.

    She’s unreliable and has no understanding of the nuances of the Southern accent.

    So instead of sending his granddaughter a sweet, heartfelt message, Pop’s text instead said something along the lines of “That’s great about those mumbo jumbo hookers”.

    Which isn’t really a phrase you expect to hear from your grandfather.

    And it confirmed that Siri is just as worthless as she was the last time I attempted to use her when she translated my request as this:

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    Yes. Please set a reminder so I can remember to “pet Caroline down for a hair”. Siri, are you drunk?

    And because Gulley and I have the sense of humor of two twelve-year-old boys, we decided it would be hilarious to just use Siri as our primary means of communication with each other and see what happened. But first I sent a text using Siri to Donna since she was our inspiration.

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    I don’t know who Donna Hutton is. And I certainly don’t know Gladine. Apparently, Siri thinks I have an alter ego who’s an eighty-four year old woman from Mississippi.

    Later that day, Gulley and I began to send texts back and forth.

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    For the record, I was not satisfied that we couldn’t go to lunch at Alamo Cafe. I was sad. And I didn’t really need any data. And hopefully it all worked out and I was satisfactory, not Beyer.

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    The only part of this that is remotely accurate is that I was driving to San Marcos. I don’t know Stephanie Alamatos, Michelle, or Routhier.

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    I’m sure Sister Garret Allyn is a lovely person. Can’t wait to see her at half right-leaning Steve. Even though it’s a shame Steve only leans half right.

    Then Gulley ate lunch with our friend, Stephanie, (not to be confused with the mythical Stephanie Alamatos) and Steph decided to join us in our juvenile behavior.

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    I think it goes with saying that Stephanie was not “Live in Atlanta”.

    Finally, after several days of our fun at Siri’s expense, Gulley and I realized we needed to go back to normal texting. Mainly because we had no idea what each other was trying to say.

    Gulley texted me later and was concerned that one of her eyes was swollen and sent me a picture of herself so that I could see if she was imagining it.

    (By the way, I’m absolutely sure this is exactly how Steve Jobs envisioned his technology being used. God rest his soul.)

    So I looked at the picture and assured her the eye situation was in her imagination. And then we had the following text exchange. I think it will be obvious that I decided to revert back to Siri in my last text back to Gulley.

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    I have always, ALWAYS, believed that Bajando know how to capture Sarah Fossett.

    Now if I just knew exactly what that meant.

    Other than the fact that Siri and I have a failure to communicate.

  • On the bright side I think they’re house trained

    Well, we had an exciting weekend here. You don’t believe me? What if I told you we added not one but THREE new members to our family?

    Friday was the annual carnival at Caroline’s school. And of course we’d been building up to it for the last week or so. I had to buy raffle tickets and t-shirts and volunteer for a shift in the Cold Drink booth even though I knew odds were good they weren’t going to be selling bottles of Corona with lime.

    Because everyone knows elementary school kids prefer sangria over beer.

    I made my way to the carnival to be there right when Caroline got out of school with what I foolishly believed to be plenty of cash. And I also took the time to make a funny joke on Twitter about how I hoped Caroline wouldn’t win a hermit crab, not really even knowing for sure that hermit crabs were going to be on the menu of prizes this year.

    When the school bell rang, she came running out of school. I handed her a bunch of tickets and the two cans of Silly String I’d already bought for her and hoped that would keep her satisfied for at least thirty minutes. So you can imagine my delight when she came up to me about fifteen minutes later holding a goldfish in a plastic bag and a plastic jar of fish food, completely out of tickets because she’d used them all in her multiple attempts to win a fish. Which means we essentially paid about 100% more for the fish than we’d have paid if we’d just gone to a pet store.

    The thing that worried me was the heat. It was really hot on Friday because God has decided that we’re skipping Spring and going straight to Summer and I didn’t feel like that boded well for a fish in a plastic bag. So I found a block of ice in the drink booth and set it next to our fish in the hopes it would give him (Or her. I do not want to be sexist when it comes to fish.) a fighting chance.

    Then I handed Caroline a few more tickets and went back to working my shift at the Cold Drink booth. I’m sad to say I managed to drop at least a six pack of Dr. Pepper causing it to spray all over me and the interior of the drink booth. Something tells me next year they’re going to put me at a booth that doesn’t require the skill and dexterity of handing out canned drinks.

    Secretly, I was hoping Caroline might show up with some type of winning from the Cake Walk at some point. Maybe some cookies or brownies. But I knew I was in trouble when I saw her running towards me holding some sort of plastic container. A plastic container that didn’t look like it was holding brownies.

    I was right.

    It was a hermit crab. A hermit crab she christened Phillip. Which seems like an incredibly regal name for something with antennae that eats freeze-dried shrimp.

    And, really, I’m not opposed to hermit crabs. I owned a hermit crab when I was about Caroline’s age. His name was Sharples. I named him after Melvin Sharples, the cook at the diner on the show Alice. I really wish I could look inside my eight-year-old brain for the root of that decision.

    Anyway, Sharples died because I thought he might enjoy a day out in the sun. So I left him out all day which isn’t really good for crabs unless you’re trying to bake them. It was tragic. And the end of my hermit crab experience.

    Until Friday.

    We brought Goldy the goldfish and Phillip the crab home. I filled up Caroline’s old aquarium with water for Goldy and put her in to get used to her new digs. I felt like she was on her last fins in that plastic bag and hoped she might be revived by new surroundings.

    And then P and I tried to make a temporary habitat for Phillip. Or as people in the crab business call it, a CRABITAT. He spent the night in one of my glass mixing bowls (that I’m now going to have to throw away) with the jar of a spice lid as a water dish and only a layer of sand and the memories of his time at the pet shop with his old crab friends to keep him warm.

    So we went to bed that night with the satisfaction that only comes with the knowledge you own a fish and a hermit crab.

    On Saturday morning P had to wake up early to go do some work out at our church. We didn’t have a soccer game and I’d been dreaming for weeks about sleeping late on Saturday morning. In fact, I’d had a long talk with Caroline the night before about how she needed to get up, grab a pop-tart, watch cartoons and let me sleep. Which I believe is the same thing that woman told her kids in Proverbs 31.

    You can imagine my dismay when I felt someone breathing on me while it was still fairly dark outside. I opened an eye to see Caroline standing over me. Startled, I asked “What? What’s wrong?” She replied, “I can’t find Goldy. I don’t know where he is.”

    “Is your daddy still home?” I questioned. “No, he left”, she said. And I blame the early morning hour for my heartfelt response of “Well, Goldy probably died during the night and Daddy already threw him out”.

    Cue the sobbing.

    Then she wiped her eyes, looked at me and said “WHY ARE YOU BEING SUCH A DOWNER? You don’t know what happened.”

    Granted, I didn’t know for sure what happened. But death seemed like a logical conclusion for a missing fish and seemed more likely than an alternative where Goldy packed his teeny tiny bags and headed west for bluer seas.

    I handed Caroline my phone and told her to call her daddy. He confirmed her worst fears. All of this happened before 7:45 on Saturday morning.

    She looked at me with tears in her eyes and wailed, “He was so special to me!”

    Really? Because we hadn’t even had him for eight hours.

    But I didn’t say that. I suggested that she look on the bright side. On the side where she still owned a delightful hermit crab named Phillip. This cheered her up a little.

    She rebounded nicely and we ate breakfast and then went to watch Will play baseball. Then we went to the pet store where we spent $40 gathering everything we needed to keep our FREE hermit crab in the style to which he apparently had grown accustomed.

    Oh, and she also talked me into buying a friend for Phillip. She named her Clementine.

    And as for me? You can just call me sucker.