Month: July 2012

  • Taking our show on the road

    On Monday Caroline and I packed our bags and headed to Houston on a little road trip to see Mimi and Bops. They’d been in Houston for about a week already and we’d planned to visit after the fourth of July festivities were over but we had to wait until sometime after Friday because Caroline had an appointment to see the Orthopedist about her arm.

    The doctor said she could quit wearing her splint which is fortunate considering I was about to declare it a health hazard. P said he thought she might give herself a staph infection.

    Then of course I was very busy making pickles over the weekend and so it was Monday morning before we struck out on the open road to Houston. Actually, it was 12:30 before we left San Antonio because it was raining and I didn’t want to load the car in the rain.

    Caroline was playing on her iTouch in the backseat and I was thinking about how boring I-10 is when all of a sudden she said, “Mom? Do you have something I can spit my gum out in? I need to spit out my gum.”

    I searched frantically around the front seat and in my purse while attempting to still drive, looking desperately for a stray receipt, a napkin or a kleenex for her to use. I had nothing. Not one thing. Which is breaking like forty-two laws of motherhood.

    I finally found half a movie ticket stub in the door of my car and handed it back to her. I figured it would be just big enough, but what I didn’t count on was the fact that she’d apparently shoved fourteen pieces of gum in her mouth when I wasn’t paying attention.

    And then I heard her say, “Something is wrong with this gum” as I glanced in the rear view mirror in time to see her attempting to spit an enormous pink hunk of something into the tiny movie ticket stub. And inexplicably there was some sort of foam all around her mouth. It was like she’d contracted rabies in the back of the car.

    “Where did you get that gum?”

    “From the drawer in the kitchen”, she replied.

    Yes. About that drawer in the kitchen. It’s where I store everything that I don’t want sitting on the kitchen countertops. It’s a great place to find three “D” batteries or a hot pink Sharpie, maybe a few pieces of pipe cleaner or some googly eyes left over from a craft project, but it’s not really the best place to find a fresh piece of gum.

    A pack of three year old Juicy Fruit?

    YES.

    And so the gum made a horrendous mess and dripped down the front of her shirt and I wondered once again why I’m not capable of carrying any sort of wet wipes in my car. Nope. I just carry around ticket stubs to movies I saw six months ago. They are much more handy.

    I went into MacGyver mode and suggested that she use some water from her water bottle to wipe the foam off her mouth along with part of a tote bag that she’d packed with books and movies which resulted in her pouring water down the front of her shirt and not really helping with the mess at all.

    The good news is we only had two and a half hours left in the car and in the middle of nowhere.

    By the time we made it to the next town her shirt was almost dry (Hurray for synthetic fabric!) but I felt like we probably needed a DQ Blizzard, an order of fries and a large Diet Coke to get us through and improve our general outlook on life.

    Nutrition is very important.

    Which is why I ordered Caroline’s Blizzard with extra Oreos and mine with extra Reeses Peanut Butter Cups.

    Eventually we arrived at Bops and Mimi’s house and Caroline immediately went outside to catch lizards and frogs in their back yard. It’s her favorite hobby. I can’t really think about it too much, but I do my part by smiling and giving a thumbs up each time she comes to the back door with a new victim.

    And in the last twenty-four hours we’ve eaten delicious Italian food, met friends at an indoor trampoline park (You will probably hear more about this tomorrow in a post entitled “Why I Can’t Walk Today” or “Forty-Year-Old Bladders Aren’t Meant for Jumping”.), ate some Mexican food, shopped the huge sale at Anthropologie and spent at least an hour in the enormous three-story Restoration Hardware where I experienced a bad case of couch infatuation.

    Alas, the couch and I are not meant to be because my bank account would disown me.

    And maybe P too.

    But I could drag my beautiful couch to the street where I’d be living alone.

    I’m not sure what we have in store for tomorrow, but I bet it involves a delicious meal somewhere. And maybe more shopping.

    And definitely more fun.

    Assuming I can walk.

    I just hope there won’t be any gum involved.

  • The best tastin’ pickle I ever heard

    So remember about two weeks ago when I went to the lake with some friends?

    No. You probably don’t.

    I went to the lake a couple of weeks ago with some friends. And when we arrived my friend Jen Hatmaker gave us all our own cute little jars of pickles.

    That she made.

    From scratch.

    Like from cucumbers she grew in her garden.

    (Side note: Jen has a book out called 7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess. Maybe you’ve heard of it. If not, you need to buy it and know it may change your life a little bit.)

    I feel like I need to clarify she didn’t make the jars from scratch. Just the pickles. Although for all I know she may have some sort of glass-blowing set up in her garage.

    Anyway, the pickles were delicious. I’m pretty sure we ate most of them before we ever made it home and I wasn’t even a little sad that Sophie and Angie were afraid to try to take their jars home on the plane for fear of the airlines throwing their luggage and thereby wreaking pickle juice havoc on all their clothing.

    I think I may have said, “Oh, I’m so sorry you can’t travel with them” as I packed them in my car and drove away. Because I have a weakness for a good bread and butter pickle.

    Which is why I was amazed when Jen explained that they were easy to make. Up to this point in my life I’d always believed making your own pickles was for people who fell into one of two categories:

    1. Pioneers

    2. People who would rent a shovel and think it’s fun.

    But it turns out there is a way to make pickles that doesn’t involve the traditional canning method. Not that I know what the traditional canning method is. I just think it involves things like a pressurized device that could blow up your house if you use it wrong.

    So when I got home I got on the Google to find this easy way to make bread and butter pickles. And then I went to the store and bought actual mason jars and celery seed and something called turmeric.

    I also bought cucumbers.

    (Rome wasn’t built in a day, my friends.)

    (I’m going to see if I can keep the plants on my front porch alive for a whole summer before I subject a bunch of innocent vegetables to homicide.)

    And on Sunday I made pickles.

    Honestly, I can’t remember the last time I felt this level of accomplishment.

    Which might be a sad commentary on my life, but whatever because, dude, I MADE PICKLES.

    (And apparently now I say “dude”.)

  • Here we are at some random fraction of the summer

    Is it just me or does the summer seem to be going by really fast? I mean it’s already the week after the fourth of July which always feels like some sort of halfway mark even though the truth is we don’t go back to school until August 27th and have miles to go before we sleep. Or go back to school. Or whatever.

    But I got so distracted last week by all the patriotic festivities that I totally neglected to mention I saw a man at our pool wearing gloves. I have no explanation for this. He wore them in the pool and then took them off when he got out of the pool. I know this because Gulley and I were in the midst of an in depth conversation and were distracted by the loud “CRCKSHSKKKS” sound his gloves made as he ripped off the velcro closures.

    (That’s right. They made a CRCKSHKKKS sound. No vowels whatsoever.)

    P asked me later if maybe they were some sort of hand flippers but I don’t think so. They were full on gloves. With separate fingers. I’d think if they were flippers then they would have been webbed. But these were like gardening gloves. I bet they leave one heck of a tan line.

    (And yes. These are the sort of riveting stories I tell P after he returns from a long day of work. “TODAY AT THE POOL A MAN WAS WEARING GLOVES!”)

    (Somehow I doubt this is really key to our marital success.)

    (But it may explain why I sometimes feel like he’s tuning me out.)

    Anyway, that was on Tuesday afternoon. We hadn’t planned to go to the pool on Tuesday because we wanted the kids to be in full pool mode for the fourth of July, but they assured us they would have fun if we went both days.

    But we started our Independence Day by walking in the neighborhood parade. Actually, P and I walked while Caroline rode her electric scooter.

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    I always love the parade because it just feels like Smalltown, USA. And not just because there was a shark who showed up.

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    Even though everyone knows a person in a shark costume makes everything better and it’s totally what John Hancock envisioned when he signed the Declaration of Independence.

    I also know that several of us dated ourselves by yelling out “LAND SHARK” which is a joke no one gets unless they’re over forty.

    And this is my friend’s little boy who wasn’t really all that enthusiastic about being part of the parade even though he was being pulled in a cushy wagon with a pillow while the rest of us (me) complained that our flip-flops were giving us blisters.

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    We felt like maybe he was having a hard time finding joy because the U.S. economy is in the toilet and we’re in debt up to our eyeballs to China.

    And then P upped the festivity quotient by putting two flag pinwheels in his hat.

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    (I have no idea why I’m standing like a duck. Don’t be afraid to bend your knees, Susie.)

    After the parade we came home to rest for a few hours before we met friends at the pool. Caroline had really hoped to defend her watermelon seed spitting title and her belly flop championship but it didn’t work out. I think her spitting form was off since because front teeth came in since last summer and all hillbillies know that nothing throws off your spitting like a full set of teeth.

    As for the belly flop, she led with her head. It was very graceful but lacked the whole necessary component of sounding like a turkey hitting the cement after being dropped from a helicopter.

    But after she got over her defeat we all had a good time. There was even a DJ at the pool. The official pool email announced there would be “A DJ SPINNING RECORDS FROM 3-6 P.M.” The only problem with that is no one has invented a time machine that allows you to travel back to 1983. So instead there was a man selecting playlists on his computer that was hooked up to some large speakers.

    But he still played “Wake Me Up Before You Go Go” so all was forgiven.

    Later on that night we cooked hot dogs at our house and the kids ran around with sparklers while occasionally yelling “OWWWW” because one of them would get hit with a random spark.

    (I attempted to take pictures of this portion of the evening but my limited photography skills just produced a few hazy photos with random streaks of light.)

    And then on Thursday we spent the day recovering. Honestly, I can’t even remember what we did. It’s all a blur but I think it involved a nap and feeling disoriented that it was Thursday and not Monday.

    So that’s what we’ve been doing around here. Along with feeling like summer is half over when we’re actually only about a third of the way through.

    At least I think that’s right. I don’t really like to do math in the summer.

    Or wear gloves at the pool.

  • Fashion Friday: Edition I’m still recovering from the 4th

    About a month ago (maybe longer but I’ve lost all sense of time and possibly sanity as the summer has gone on) Sophie’s sister (who I’ll now refer to as Sister) was in France. And she emailed me to ask if I’d like to know what the French women were wearing around town. Which, OF COURSE.

    Because everyone knows it’s just a matter of six or eight years before the trends in Paris make their way down to South Texas and I don’t want to miss the boat.

    Now I said “miss the boat” and that makes me think of a cruise and I’m wondering if I’ve ever shared my complete aversion to cruises. I’ve never actually been on a cruise but you’ll never convince me it’s a good idea to get out in the middle of the water on a long ship.

    And if you try to convince me otherwise I will trump you every time with the word TITANIC.

    There isn’t enough Dramamine in the world for some situations.

    Anyway, here’s an excerpt from Sister’s email update:

    “Here’s what I’ve been seeing for the past week, even with the overcoats:

    Stripes, as in Parisian horizontal: black and white striped tops are a staple here, but I’ve seen tops in all colors (e.g., the orange/white)

    Scarves: very long scarves that you wrap around and around and twist and create a work of art; I’ve also noticed long, sort of crinkled fabric scarves that have tiny flowers, almost Provencal looking. Scarves are a must if you are in Paris. Hot or cold weather.

    Shoes in all colors

    Purses/bags in all colors

    The colors I saw most today were all shades of orange, anywhere from reddish/orange to a pale peachy-peach. I saw orange and red trench coats (yes, even though it was warm ’cause they looked darling!), jackets, pants, jeans, shoes, purses and scarves. Orange was everywhere!

    There was another lady on the Metro who had on orange shoes that looked like these penny loafer top-siders that I had in 1980. Her shoes looked darling with her outfit; it was her only splash of color.

    I also saw some adorable black and white striped (horizontal) tiered short skirts today (sassy/flirty styles); saw one on a girl Caroline’s age, too. The other evening I saw a woman with a kiwi green long jacket, black top w/white stripes, slim black ankle pants, and red/orange shoes. Killer outfit – and she was probably going to the grocery store. I also saw a woman walking her dogs with a great looking mermaid green top, white pants and red shoes.”

    And so there you have it. The latest (even though it was about a month ago) report from an on scene observer straight from the streets of Paris.

    Here are a few things I saw this week even though now I wish more of them were orange or had cute stripes or included a kiwi long jacket.

    1. silk top with frilled hem

    Perfect! A cute orange top. I totally planned that.

    2. boxy cuffed sleeve top

    I love the color of this top. It also comes in a pretty blue. Perfect to throw on with white shorts or pants.

    3. striped keyhole tanks

    I realize this is the kind of tank that requires a strapless bra and that’s never going to happen around here. But it can also be worn with another tank under it or maybe just thrown on over a swimsuit.

    I know I’m trying hard to make it work but I just really like the stripes.

    4. white eyelet shift dress

    I am a sucker for a white eyelet dress.

    5. living easy tunic

    This is one of my favorite things I’ve seen in a while. It’s a shame that it’s more than $15.

    6. diagonal print stripe skirt

    I love a good skirt in the summer and this one is really cute with its aqua stripes. Plus it’s an extra 40% off.

    7. cotton shadow stripe smocked neck peasant top

    And this top is really cute. I wish I could post a picture but for some reason the pictures won’t work now even though I totally posted a pic of that dress from Ann Taylor Loft just five minutes ago.

    I don’t understand.

    8. toms chambray wedge

    There was a time when I thought I would never again own any item of clothing that could be described with the word “chambray”. But fashion is a fickle thing and I found myself drawn to all manner of chambray and denim right now.

    Which is why I’m in love with these wedges.

    9. nike free run 3 running shoe

    Listen. I realize a woman in Paris wouldn’t be caught dead in some Ugly American running shoes. But I’m in need of some new running shoes and I think I like these.

    Has anyone tried them? Or have any better suggestions?

    10. rosy plumes dress

    This would be just perfect for a summer wedding. Unfortunately I’m not invited to any summer weddings. But maybe you are.

    That’s it for today.

    Y’all have a great Friday.

  • Happy 4th of July

    I hope your day was filled with fun and hot dogs and maybe a group jump into the pool.

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    God bless America.

  • The last four or six days

    Where do I even begin to talk about the last week?

    The smart money would be at the beginning.

    And the problem is I’d love to do just that but the truth is I’ve barely had one minute to myself in the last week. Which is fine if you’re a normal person but not so much if you’re an introvert.

    That’s right. I’m an introvert. I’ve felt better about it ever since I read something that explained it’s not that I don’t want to be around people ever, it’s just that I need time by myself to recharge and regroup and not drink a bottle of tequila while rocking back and forth in a corner.

    So the good news is I’m not a complete anti-social hermit. The bad news is I sometimes just need to be an anti-social hermit for about six hours in a row.

    And the really bad news is that summer time doesn’t really allow that unless I stay up until 3:00 a.m. Which I’m not above doing except that I’m tired from all the summer fun. Plus I really want to write on the blog but sometimes I’m just OUT OF WORDS by the time I’ve spent all day “MOM! WATCH THIS!” “MOM! LET’S PLAY A GAME!” “MOM, ISN’T BEETHOVEN THE FUNNIEST MOVIE EVER?”

    (No. It’s not. The answer is NO.)

    (I also realize that someday I will look back on these days and be sad they’re over. Sunrise, sunset and all that. I adore my child. I just sometimes need five minutes of quiet.)

    (I’m also sad to put my selfishness on display.)

    But enough about my first world tale of woe.

    I’ll just tell you about the last week. And now I’m going to feel ridiculous because it starts with a ton of fun.

    Last Monday, Sophie flew in from Alabama. And then on Tuesday morning my friend Angie came in town and then we drove to the lake to meet up with Jen and Vicki.

    Here we all are in front of The Bluebonnet Cafe in Marble Falls.

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    Yes. They have a Pie Happy Hour.

    Which I’m also pretty sure they have in heaven.

    It was the first time Angie had ever eaten chicken fried steak. I was sad for her, but the good news is we took charge of the situation and she has now experienced true culinary greatness.

    And then we floated out on the lake and talked about books and kids and hair and books and life.

    Sadly it was a quick trip and by Thursday everyone had flown home or driven home or dragged their sorry behind back to San Antonio to write boring blog posts about how they are an introvert at heart.

    Then the weekend arrived and P went fishing. Caroline and I spent most of it hanging out with Gulley and her boys because the boys had been at camp the whole week before and they missed each other. And now you just died of boredom because who needs to know all that?

    On Sunday afternoon we went to my niece Sarah’s birthday party at the bowling alley and a good time was had by all. Caroline helped my nephew, Luke, bowl and you’d be shocked at how enthusiastic a two-year-old is to just watch a ball roll down the lane and not knock down a single pin.

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    And on a day in between or somewhere thereabout, Caroline and I made a trip to the mall because my new iPhone has been temperamental since the day I bought it about six months ago. Which I guess means it’s not really new but it still shouldn’t die every three hours. At least that’s what I believe.

    The girl at the Apple store was nice but didn’t really seem all that sympathetic to my plight. Her answer was to reset my entire phone. And as much as I appreciate that solution, I’m not sure it helped.

    The mall is also where Caroline discovered the hermit crab kiosk. I mentioned this in the podcast so feel free to skip this part if you’ve heard it already. But Caroline bought two more hermit crabs with her own money. Bringing our hermit crab total to FOUR. Including a crab that can only be described as The Incredible Hulk of hermit crabs.

    He frightens me. It’s like a small dog with pinchers.

    In a hermit crab power play, he pinched Caroline a few days ago and is now dead to her. Except I’m not sure about the logistics of relocating a hermit crab. Sure, I could just set him free in the front yard but that seems wrong since we’re three hours from the nearest beach. I’m looking into a hermit crab rescue program.

    We’ve also watched some of the Olympic trials and in related news I’ve discovered I suffer from a high level of performance anxiety even when I’m just sitting on my couch eating Nilla Wafers.

    And that’s what’s been going on around here.

    Today we’re going to the grocery store. I’m sure I’ll use 1,000 words to tell you all about it tomorrow.