Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas Funnies :D

I have many happy Christmas memories to share, but first I have to share a funny in the car on the way home from my parents before I forget it:

Kendall was playing with her American Girl doll, Mia, and talking to her, having a great conversation. Kyle started teasing Kendall, saying, "Why are you talking to her, she's not even real, she's a doll." Kendall is old enough to know Mia isn't real, but she played along, saying, "She is too real, and she's not listening to you." Kyle responded, "Of course, she's not listening, she doesn't have real ears!" Kendall laughed and said "Uh, uh, not listening, not listening," and Kyle said, "No real ears!" and this went back and forth a few times, getting louder and louder, with more and more laughing. Finally, Kendall said, "Well you love that thing (his cell phone) and it's not real." Kyle, thinking he has the last laugh, said, "But the difference is, I KNOW it isn't real," to which Kendall responded, "Yeah, well if it's not real, why are you always talking to it?"

Touche'

Then, last night (Christmas Eve), our family sang Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer as part of our pre-Christmas festivities, complete with the "echo" part. Near the end, the "echo" can vary, so I was pleasantly surprised when we sang, "Used to laugh and call him names," and all the kids echoed in unison, "like Pinnochio!" We kept singing through to the last line, "you'll go down in history," where the kids yelled out the names of all sorts of historical figures--"like Columbus, like George Washington, like Joseph Smith,"--all answers I expected. What I didn't expect was the name that burst forth from the lips of my 7 year old niece--Pink Floyd!!! Apparently, she don't need no education when it comes to classic rock. :)



Speaking of rock, my sweet 5-month old nephew provided us with some rock 'n' roll fashion and some Christmas entertainment while we opened presents.




Here we have the BOW-HAWK!!!

Then we move on to...



The BOW-FRO!!!

Having a baby around on Christmas really keeps things lively!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Mother Necessity

One Hairy Boy...




Plus one BYU Honor Code:

"Men are expected to be clean shaven; beards are not acceptable. "




Plus one persnickety Cannon Center Cafeteria worker:
"Kyle--No Soup For You!!!"
(denied dinner 3 times for being too facial hairy)



Equals:


One very practical birthday present!!! Happy Birthday Kyle. :)

Monday, December 8, 2008

Catching up with Mr. Mischievious

Colin has always been, and always will be, a big tease. He comes by it genetically through his y chromosome, and no matter how much I try to inflict civility on him, family togetherness always ends up with his sister screaming and tattling, and him trying to look innocent, and perhaps even injured--until now!

I've noticed that since Kendall had her 11th birthday, she is starting to beat Colin at his own game. She still falls for the occasional "fib"--No, Kendall. Eggnog is not made from rotten eggs even if Colin said so...

But more often than not, she is successfully ignoring his shenanigans (that's my word of the month, along with dither). Sunday, Colin made a whole bunch of Taquitos for lunch--I believe there were enough for each of us to have 4. When they were finished, he announced to us that we should eat. Kendall wasn't in the mood. This drove him crazy, because he doesn't like anyone else to still be eating their yummy food once his is gone, lest he feel taunted by their continued eating enjoyment. So, he kept bugging Kendall to eat them, and threatening her that he was going to eat them if she didn't, and offering them to me to eat, but to no avail! She simply refused to react to Colin. "Soon," she kept saying. "I'll eat them soon."

Colin's attempts got ever more desperate until I heard Colin call from the kitchen, "Kendall, come look at your Taquitos," which weren't there because he had hidden them. Not real savvy for a 16 year old, but I guess he was feeling a bit off-kilter. She glanced over and noticed they weren't there, and DID NOTHING!!! No tattling, no screaming, no begging or chasing Colin around. She simply said "oh" and looked back at the computer screen. Colin stood there, completely befuddled.

Finally, about 10 minutes later he flat out told her that he hid her Taquitos in the bathroom, and maybe she should go find them. It's kind of like telling the punchline to a joke--the whole point kind of dies a slow painful death. The real joke, though, was when Kendall finally went down to the bathroom to get her lunch, she wasn't greeted by her Jose Ole Chicken and Cheese Taquitos wrapped in flour tortillas. Instead, she was greeted by Peanut as he tore out of the bathroom, fat and happy from the taquito lunch he just enjoyed thanks to the politics of a couple of silly kids on a Sunday afternoon!

Monday, November 10, 2008

Flat Stanley and Gimpy Yoga

For those of you who have heard of Flat Stanley, I offer a new version: Gimpy Gertie. Gertie's travels are a bit limited, but fun nonetheless.

Here I took Gertie on a field trip to the hospital and home again. "Oh, look Gertie! Many trees. That is because we live in Oregon." Gertie likes trees.

I gave Gertie the premier TV-watching spot on the couch. Ooh, ahh. It's a good thing Gertie likes TV--she has watched a lot in 3 weeks. "Cash cab can be very deep," she said.

A rare snapshot into Gimpy Yoga. We were one with the universe, or at least with the Suburban. You should be especially impressed that I am so one with the universe that I don't even have makeup on and have just emerged from anaesthesia and I will STILL post this for all to see! :)

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Evolution of the Jumping Couch

If you haven't already, please read the previous post on "The Jumping Couch." These are supplemental photos to detail parts of its evolution. Enjoy!

Birthday girl and friends at her Pony Birthday Party--2001.




Scarecrow Love--notice the newly covered couch cushions, but the faded base cover.

Here you see the lovely slipcovered cushions and the nasty uncovered base--recovering in progress.



More beautiful cushions and faded arms--but Colin's pretty cute!



Colin--older, wiser, and still cute! Couch--much more faded.





From ponies to high fashion--Kendall still likes to pose with her friends.






And Preeeeeeesenting--the full potenial of the couch in all its glory.

The Jumping Couch

I've been reading my friend Heidi's hilarious blog and THIS post about the need for creepy houses in the lives of children inspired the following comment from me. As I re-read it before posting (must check for those offensive little spelling errors), I realized the profound truth my words conveyed, so I post them here to enlighten your lives (perhaps with a tad bit of embellishing).


This is exactly why I don’t like living in the suburbs. Everything is too clean and shiny and perfect. Childhood just doesn’t thrive in the suburbs. Where's the adventure? The ability to build secret forts in abandoned places, to find priceless treasures hiding in the alleys, to take your friends to elaborate worlds you've created in your backyard "forest?" This is why I ocassionally allow messiness in my house–spookiness can be found in my junk room, and endless crafts come from the stuff that is piled on counters. In our family room, we lounge on a Clawson family fixture, the "jumping couch"--a 20 year-old sectional inherited from my parents that I have personally slip-covered with denim 3 times in 12 years. Elaborate games of tag could be played on the "jumping couch," while my kids and their friends got out the rainy day wiggles (we have a lot of those in Oregon). Huge forts have graced my house over the years, built with the 13 cushions lounging on that couch. Monstrous pillow slide competitions were held on our flight of stairs, also using those marvelous cushions.


Now that my kids are older, the couch seems a little more tattered. The denim is worn thin where bodies have the most contact. The springs kind of hang out the bottom in some places and my dad can't get out of it without help because the seats are so saggy. Still, I can't imagine ever getting rid of it, and at least one of my children wants to inherit it when I "die" (hahaha). Although I don't want to admit it, grandchildren will be running around my house in not too many years. More than likely they will live in the suburbs. Life will probably be harder for them than for their parents in this ever unstable time, but when they visit grandma and grandpa, they will always have the jumping couch, and everything will be right with the world.

If I Were Living a Seinfeld Episode...

the following experience might become ugly. You see, I've been catching up on my blog reading. As you might notice, my sister Jennie's blog, "My Life is a Sitcom", is the number 1 choice on my blogroll. I used to be number 1 on hers too, but moments ago, I discovered that I've fallen from #1 to #15--that's right--FIFTEEN! That's a hard one to swallow.

If I were Elaine, I might do any number of things: suck up in various ways to move up the heirarchy, break up with her, do a totally embarrassing dance. But I am going to be a bigger person than that. I am going to take a harsh look at myself, accepting the consequences for being an infrequent blogger. I am going to realize that my life is boring, and my daily activities are simply not that funny or entertaining. I am going to acknowledge that after all our years of being related, she might still harbor ill-will for me because I cut all the animals off the mobile hanging over her crib in a fit of 3 year old rebellion. I am NOT going to take offense that this might be revenge for telling her that she "has the same ugly nose as me" in high school. I am going to post multiple, highly-entertaining posts today to show her what she's missing. Neener, neener, neener. 8-P

See, look at the integrity I can muster for myself if I only try. Look at how I look to our forefathers, like Abraham Lincoln and Jerry Seinfeld, for inspiration and guidance. Look how I can yearn for all of you to be more like me in every way--good, and hardworking, and slow to take offense. If you want someone to truly lead you--look no further than Becky Clawson. Give me Liberty or Give Me Death! Ask not what you can do for your country... Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh, what a relief it is. Becky Clawson for President!!!

O'er the Land of the Free...and the Home of the Brave.

There's nothing better...


than October in Oregon!!! And I mean that sincerely, from the bottom of my heart, as I sit here on November 5th watching the wind and the rain, and listening to reports of flood warnings on the news. Just before my surgery, we enjoyed a trip to Bauman Farms outside of Salem. What a Heavenly Day: vibrant colors everywhere, perfect 70 degree weather, fresh "squeezed-as-you-watch" apple cider and hot apple cider donuts. I'm sure this is why the Pilgrims planned Thanksgiving. I think Fall in the northeast looks a lot like Fall here, and if so, I would have planned a feast too. Such bounty deserves a holiday all to itself!











Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Nirvana (or, And There was Joy in the Land)

My sister challenged her kids to write blog entries about what Thanksgiving would be like if the Pilgrims had landed in their state (Arizona). Unless they were on a spaceship, I don't think landing in Arizona would have been an option, but I suppose that is part of the charm of this exercise. LOL So, without further adieu, If the Pilgrims had Landed in Oregon...



Somewhere, in a solid, wooden ship out on the Pacific Ocean, a group of weary travelers spyed land. "Look, we spy land," they said. Disembarking, they traveled inland and came upon a beautiful valley. "Look, a beautiful valley," they said.



And, indeed, it was a beautiful valley, green and lush, full of berries and fruits and nuts of all kinds. Seriously. There were lovely spotted owls in all the trees and hordes of salmon in the streams. There was also an abundance of a new creature, the opossum, that they particularly enjoyed, because of the ease in capturing it. It simply threw itself under the wheels of their wagons, offering itself up for their dinner. These pilgrims brought all sorts of supplies with them, but the supplies were unnecessary because of the abundance in the valley. They thought they had found Nirvana. "We have found Nirvana," they said. And there was joy in the land.



As fall came, these pilgrims decided to prepare for the winter by building sturdy shelters. Everywhere they looked, they saw giant pine trees, just waiting to be fashioned into little cabins. So many were the trees, that they rejoiced again, because they could chop the trees down willy nilly, and there would still an infinite number of trees left. "We are happy for the abundance of trees," they said, "because even if we chop down trees willy nilly to build to our hearts desire, there will still be trees left for hugging." Hugging trees was very important to these early settlers of Oregon.



The landscape turned from greens to magnificent reds and golds, the sun shone brightly, and the days dawned perfectly--not too hot and not too cold. And the pilgrims thought this Nirvana was even more perfect than they thought before. "This nirvana rocks," they said. And there was joy in the land--so much joy, that the pilgrims planned a great Thanksgiving feast for one month hence (or the 3rd Thursday in November, or sometimes the 4th Thursday, but that makes for a real bummer of a Christmas shopping season). They were absolutely giddy with the beauty, and the bounty, and the perfect weather, and their cute little cabins, and all the trees for hugging. But they were the most giddy when they thought of the alluring aroma of Roast Possum, golden and juicy, their choice for the grand Thanksgiving feast.



Alas, November 1st brought an unusual site--dark clouds rolled across the valley and rain drenched all the aforementioned things they were giddy about. "It's okay," they said, "we must needs have a little rain to maintain our Nirvana." On day two of rain they said this, and day 5 and day 14 and day 21. But by day 23, the day before their feast, the horrible truth set in. Especially as they noticed the moss covering their beloved trees and the mold overgrowing their little cabins. The worst, however, had to be the nasty aroma of soaking wet, mangy possum fur. The stench became even more worrisome as possoms lay rotting in the roads. You see, the ease of capturing possums, which was once a blessing, became a curse as no one cared to partake of stinky, mangy, decomposing, moss and mold-covered possum. "There goes Thanksgiving dinner," they lamented. Needless to say, the feast did not go as well as was once hoped.

Never fear, however. These pioneers had hardiness bred into their bones. A plan was quickly hatched for the next year. "We will say nothing of this disaster," they decided. "Instead, we will invent the word, 'Snowbird.' We will live in Oregon during the months of Nirvana, finishing up the season with lavish Oktoberfest celebrations (which we will hold in September), then we will flee to Arizona. We hear they have a lovely celebration complete with roasted cactus paddles, crickets and scorpions and dead rattlesnakes hanging from the branches of the Ocotillo bushes."
Go here for details: http://jenslifeisasitcom.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2008-10-25T16%3A47%3A00-07%3A00&max-results=7
This plan quickly gained popularity, causing exhuberantly frenzied excitement! "Yay," they said.

And there was joy in the land.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Say It 3 Times Fast...


BUNION, BUNION, BUNION! Sounds funnier than it really is, but they say (I'm not sure who, just the cosmic "they"), that laughter is the best medicine, so I'm going to keep on repeating this mantra for the next couple weeks. A little incense, a few "ohms", and I'll be good to go. (bunion, bunion, bunion) 2 days til surgery, so instead of running around madly, cleaning and organizing, I thought I'd post on my blog. The art of avoidance is a beautiful thing. I found a picture of my little problem to share with you. Actually, I found much grosser pictures on Google Images, but they make me feel a little queasy, and I didn't think they'd match the decor, so this will do. If you're one of those weird medical types, feel free to investigate for yourself--there's plenty of deformity, and blood, and "eww"iness to satisfy even the most surgical palate. As for me...I'm off to my laundry and grocery shopping and fridge cleaning...bunion, bunion, bunion.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Fame!

Now that life has slowed down a bit, I thought I'd play a little catch up from summer. Prepare to be dazzled! Prepare to be amazed! Just don't prepare to see any of this in chronological order. Kyle went with the South Salem High School Wind Ensemble to play at the Olympics. While there, he was briefly interviewed for KGW TV in Portland. Check it out!

{{{KYLE'S BIG INTERVIEW}}}

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

My Technological Clock is Ticking...

My computer clock says that the time is 11:18 p.m. on September 30. If I hurry, I can actually have 3 posts for September, which is the most I've had in a month in a very long time. So, I figure if I have 3 posts, maybe people will come back and read again, and I won't be the "lame blogger friend." Of course, many may feel I am just crying "wolf" and that October will be another disappointment. Never fear! I am having surgery on my foot in 2 weeks, so I will have a lot of downtime and plenty of awkwardness in my life to warrant a few posts. Just the fact that the name of my surgery is "Bunionectomy" is enough to provide at least a week's worth of material.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Digiscrappin' with Beck



It's been almost a year since I did any digital scrapbooking, partly because Peanut (our daschund) chewed through my laptop cord 7 months ago. I finally found a good deal on a new cord, so this week I decided to do a little scrappin'. Thanks to Jofia designs at The Shabby Pickle for making such great stuff to play with!

Saturday, September 13, 2008

All the World's a Stage

Being a mother of teenagers, and a woman who does a lot of work with teenage girls, I decided to enter the world of Facebook. Besides making me feel very "cool" (hip...phat...whatever), I can keep track of all the young people in my life. They don't seem to mind, either. My son Kyle is the one who sent me the invitation to have my own "Facebook." I have 77 friends, many of whom actively send me Flair, Poke me in many different ways, and invite me to beat their score on the "Hardest Disney Quiz Ever."

Last week, however, I realized that I will never fully embrace Facebook, the way my younger "friends" do. I logged onto my profile and discovered that my son Kyle had written on my wall, or left a message, for all the world to see. About a week before this post, we dropped Kyle off at BYU to start his Freshman year, and of course, we had to shop at Wal-mart to get him the necessities of life before we abandoned him. Several days later this post shows up on my Facebook page: "you left some tampons in the bag from wal-mart. I don't know what to do"

Bwahahaha!!! I still chuckle when I think about it. We are a modern family with many means of communication available to us. We have a family cell phone plan which allows Kyle to call home on the regular phone or on my cell phone. We have unlimited texting, so he can shoot off a text any time of night or day. His Macbook has ethernet, so any email he might choose to send would arrive in 2.3 seconds. But NOOOOOO! My son posts a question about what to do with the tampons in his room on the front page of my FACEBOOK!!!

That's okay. I can roll with it. I'm flexible. I just posted this response:
And you chose to post this on FACEBOOK for all the world to see!!!???!? Bwahahahaha--Kyle, you are, indeed, random! Well, I'm not going to teach you how to use them, so I suggest you give them away or throw them away. Or decorate your room--no--just throw them away.

To which he responds:
Hmm. Ok. I think I can handle that. I could attack someones room with it.

My sister Sherrie and my friend Kirstin got in on the action:

Kyle... I am sooooo proud that you know what a TAMPON is! You're future wife will love you (cause you'll know what to look for when she sends you out to buy them). Have fun decorating your room. :D

Kyle...as per your comment on your Mom's facebook...I'd suggest keeping them and using them for any nose bleeds you or anyone you know might have. If that doesn't work...soak 'em in water and throw them at people! HAHAHAAAA...

One of the younger people in my life even suggested that he soak the tips in water, at which point they "bloom" into flowers, providing him a lovely bouquet for any occasion.

I don't know what he did with them, but I'm glad I'm old enough that very little embarrasses me anymore.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

My Awesome Nephew Jonah

My nephew has a very cool blog, and he challenged people to write a little essay in Webdings. Here is what his looks like:


My favorite thing about summer is that you can swim all day and you dont have to go to school. My least favorite thing about summer is that you are so hot and the annoying buzz of the cicadas makes you crack up. The bug I hate the most is the killer bee, no contest. MY favorite letter in the alphabet is the letter x because you have to pronounce it differently when it's in different spots. My worst night mare was when I dreamed I got eaten by a shark in my own pool.


But when you put it into Word and change the font, this is what it says:


My favorite thing about summer is that you can swim all day and you dont have to go to school. My least favorite thing about summer is that you are so hot and the annoying buzz of the cicadas makes you crack up. The bug I hate the most is the killer bee, no contest. MY favorite letter in the alphabet is the letter x because you have to pronounce it differently when it's in different spots. My worst night mare was when I dreamed I got eaten by a shark in my own pool.


So, Jonah, I'm taking your challenge. Here is my little essay:

Okay Jonah—here I go. My favorite thing about summer is feeling the SUN on my face. It runs away from Oregon at least 6 months out of the year. The thing I like least is when my kids get bored and whiny. The bug I hate the most is the earwig. The movie Star Trek: The Wrath of Kahn makes that fear even worse. My favorite letter is B because it feels so great exploding out of my mouth, and my name starts with B, and the B book was my favorite as a kid. My worst nightmare is going to teach one of my college classes and I am naked and can’t remember the material. Or, I am a student and I have to take the final of a class I never remembered to go to all semester.

If anyone else wants to take Jonah's challenge, let him know you did. His blog is:

http://bloggernamejonah.blogspot.com/

Life Always Gets in the Way

I'm realizing that I've neglected this blog way more than the usual neglect. It's not my fault, really. Sometimes I just don't have anything exciting happening in my life. (Peanut's latest foray into eating poop simply does not a blog post make)
So, imagine my excitement when I realized my summer was jam-packed with entertaining, blog-worthy events: a week in Sunriver, a week at Girl's Camp, a son traveling to Beijing for the Olympics, the sun showing its face in Salem, Oregon. I'm feeling giddy even now, reliving the giddiness of it all (giddy, giddy, giddy).
One small little factoid escaped my attention, however, with all those endorphins mixing with adrenaline and seratonin (now there's a high you can take to the bank), when you are busy LIVING life, you don't exactly have the time or the inclination to be BLOGGING life--at least I don't. Maybe that's what fall is for--kids go back to school, life slows down a bit during the day, and I write my "What I Did Last Summer" essay.
In the meantime, here are a few photographic highlights to serve as teasers of posts to come.


My diplomatic summit with the Ambassadors of Philomath and Falls City


At a Charity Benefit for "Homeless Heroes on Hootch"


Kyle wondering if the Great Wall of China were to fall down, and there was no one there to hear it, would it make a noise?

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Clawson Look-alike Meter

MyHeritage: Family tree - Genealogy - Celeb - Collage - Morph

Clawson Look-alike Meter

MyHeritage: Look-alike Meter - Roots - Family history

Gra--gee--ay--shun


Yup. It happened. The eldest yungun up and grageeated on us. Now who's gonna slop dem hogs? Ya just get 'em big enuf to hep out and they up an' runn oft on ya! (that's R-U-N-N-O-F-T for you Oh Brother, Where art thou? fans)


Notice Kyle and 3 girls.


Okay, okay--no hogs around here. But, our boy Kyle did it--and he did it right! We couldn't be prouder--National Honor Society, 2 Prestigious Band Awards, a Scholar Athlete award, and more doo-dads hanging around the neck of his gown than I would know what to do with (each representing some activity or honor) He's worked really hard, and I'm so glad to see him rewarded for his efforts.

I didn't cry at graduation. I got that all out at the last band concert, but Stuart and I did help chaperone the All Night Grad Party. Kyle won 2 pairs of boxers (Homer Simpson and Lips), a photo album, and a $20 gift card to Target. I dealt Blackjack and won nothing. Stuart acted as Security be standing by the Fire Exit for 4 hours (probably sleeping with his eyes open) and arrested nobody, but he did hold the door for a parent emptying the garbage. It was great fun to spy on the seniors, including my kid, but staying up all night is best left to 18 year olds (I was a complete waste of a human being for 2 days after that).








All in all, we survived without too much trauma. The end.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

My First Virtual Game of Tag

My friend Nat tagged me to take this quiz on her blog. justphatnat.blogspot.com Cool! I feel popular! (she is one of 3 people who actually read this blog) So, without further adieu...

List three joys-
1. My family- when we are all laying around, laughing our heads off and everything is clicking. Or when I see them commit random acts of kindness toward one another--there's nothing better than that.
2. Reading an amazingly clever, funny, thought-provoking, hopeful book. (I ADORE Holes)
3. Pondering spiritual things.

Three fears-
1. Worms. Don't laugh. I read once that fear of sliminess is in our DNA. Who am I to fight things larger than myself (or, uh, maybe smaller in this case)?
2. Diving in deep water. Stuart and I decided we could really rock on The Amazing Race, because he's afraid of heights, and I love them, and I'm afraid of deep watery stuff, and he loves that. We've got all those challenges covered! (except maybe gross food...)
3. That ABC will cancel Lost before I understand what the heck that island is supposed to be.

Three goals-
1. Love Exercising!
2. Write something I'm proud of and send it to a publisher.
3. Shift from the G chord, to the C chord to the D chord on my Banjo without stopping.

Three obsessions/collections-
1. I buy a charm for my charm bracelet every time I travel.
2. I collect extra pounds on my body in strategic locations.
3. I'm obsessed with all those Characters on the USA network.

Three random facts
1. I love NPR but I don't become a member.
2. My dream job is to write for a clean, off-kilter show like The Fairly Odd-Parents, or VeggiTales, or The Muppets.
3. We should not eat dirt.

There you go. The deep inner workings of my mind. I think I will be tagging Erin and Heidi next, and my niece Hannah.

Monday, April 14, 2008

What do you do when YOU'RE happy?

This morning, Kendall and I were sitting at the kitchen island, eating our bowls of Special K with Berries for breakfast. We are crunching in silence, when all of sudden she reaches out with her fist and punches the box of cereal. I kind of did a double take. That's not really typical Kendall behavior. One of the boys at her age? Absolutely! But a little off center for her.

She doesn't even react, just keeps on chewing. I go back to my chewing, but a few seconds later she does it again. One quick, but lethal jab to the cereal box that sends it teetering , but remarkably, doesn't knock it over. At this point I can't stay quiet anymore, especially because I am almost spewing cereal all over the counter during an uncontrollable explosion of laughter.

"Kendall," I ask, "What on earth are you doing?"

She comes out of a trance of sorts and says, "Oh. I was singing 'If you're happy and you know it' in my head, and after I did 'If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands,' I thought I'd do 'If you're happy and you know it, Punch the Cereal.'

Now that I think back, it WAS a very rhythmic punching of the cereal box.

A few minutes later, she picks up the half full milk jug and shakes it vigorously--once, and then a few seconds later, twice. LOL

I'm thinking that tomorrow I need to make something a little more interesting. Who knows what she could do with a waffle iron or a 4-slot toaster!

Friday, March 14, 2008

Bright Lights, Big Fun

How many moms get asked to go to New York City with their 15 year old sons? It's kind of like the question "how many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop?" The world may never know. I do know, however, that MY 15 year old asked ME to go, and we had the BEST time. Seriously, it was like magic.


We saw an "for real" Egyptian temple, complete with engraved graffiti provided by Napoleon's soldiers. And here is Colin and his friend Evelyn walkin' like Egyptians at the Met.










We had a "jolly holiday" with Mary Poppins.











And hung out with Lady Liberty.






She's quite a photogenic statue, don't ya think?

Monday, February 25, 2008

The Art of Avoidance




There are many things for which I strive for excellence. There is one, however, which requires no effort on my part. I was born a genius--a prodigy--an artistic savant--and that is in the Art of Avoidance. Usually, my skill shows up in mundane tasks. I really don't want to clean out the fridge, so I do 4 loads of laundry. I don't want to wash particularly nasty dishes, so I weed the front beds. It's not really a conscience act--I just find that suddenly I am completing the alternate task. This last week, I've discovered another arena that puts my avoiding into overdrive--the nastiness of life.




When difficult things happen, my sweet sister blogs them in eloquent detail and feels so much better for the effort. Note the following blog entry: Tender Mercies. When difficulties rage in my life, I do anything but face them by writing them down. My mom is in the hospital recovering from a severe case of bacterial spinal meningitis (I know that is spelled correctly because I've googled it many times in the last week). She lay in the ICU for seven days in a coma, while we waited for her to wake up. She spent the next three in a highly confused state, having hallucinations and delusions. Let me tell you, there is nothing worse than waiting in a hospital for ANYTHING to happen, and waiting for anyone on staff to tell you something besides "We Don't Know." On the other hand, there have been many blessings along the way, starting with my dad flying down to Arizona the night before my mom was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance (the subject of Jen's blog entry). You'd think with my love of writing, that somehow I would feel better journaling the experience, but I can't believe the repulsion I feel to writing while I am in the midst of it all. I think I must put up a huge wall, trying to protect myself from fear and sorrow.




It isn't until the experience is approaching the end that I finally decide to write the account in its entirety.




It's been 12 days with my mom, and I think I finally feel safe looking back on what has happened. She's awake, out of ICU, back to a somewhat-normal mental state, and maybe coming off the feeding tube tomorrow. What a relief. A huge relief.




I've learned so much about faith, hope, and the invaluable relationships I have with family and friends. My family is truly blessed. I've also learned how to deal with doctors and hospitals, but this last lesson is one I hope I never have to use again in real life.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

No Longer an Outcast


At 15 1/2, Colin feels that we are parents from the stone age, or another planet, because we have not included him in the family cell phone plan. We explained that because all his friends HAVE cell phones, we could always reach him, but he didn't seem to enjoy that bit 'o' logic very much. Still, we thought 16 was a good age from driving and cell phones (I know, I know, why don't we just give him a beer with those keys and send him on his way...) Anyway, we finally made him a deal: Straight A's at the semester would get him a cell phone 6 months early. Guess what! He did it!!! We are totally excited and just got him the coolest phone, a Sony Ericsson Walkman 580i, with an MP3 player, a 2mg camera as seen above (AND, I saved $30 by purchasing online). Of course I thought that would take care of the problem, but oh, how naive I can be. As soon as we started discussing phones for Colin, Kendall started in on ALL the reasons she needed a phone at 10 years old. And then Colin jumped in about all the reasons she had to wait til she was 16 or the entire universe would be sent topsy-turvy, and the "It's Not Fair" gods would be angered and chaos would reign supreme. Kendall just smiles and tells her friends about the phone she's going to get in "6th grade" when the boys are both gone. I hate to break it to Colin, but she's probably right. Hopefully, by then, there will be some other awesome techno-gadget he'll want and he won't notice the horrible injustice in his life.

We're Going to College!!!


Kyle got 2 coolio emails today--one from BYU and one from BYU-Idaho. Both say that he is accepted!!! Now we just have to hear back from the Music Schools for each one, and the scholarship committees, and then Kyle's got a decision to make. And to think...I knew him back when he was just a Cougar Cub...11 months old...wearing a Ty Detmer jersey to the Miami game with mom and dad...sucking on a football shaped bottle. Look out Ty, there's a new dude in da' house!

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Whoa...Two in One Day

Most people have given up on me ever posting, so most people probably won't even know this happened until groundhog day. Still, I was reading my friend Erin's blog, A Blog Named Betty, and she shared a stream-of-consciousness moment with her daughter. It reminded me of one recently, so I thought I would share.

We were eating soup, which had alien looking mushrooms in it.

DD: What are those weird things?

Me: Mushrooms--just try them, they taste kind of like meat.

DD: So, you know, there was this time when we were mad at Japan, and this thing fell and blew them all up.

Me: Huh? What thing?

DD: You know, that thing that blew everybody up--an atom bomb.

Me: What does that have to do with soup?

DD: It looks like a mushroom.

Me: Ahhhhhhh

I LOVE my mother...

Having a Senior in high school is quite the adventure. We've made so many mistakes that I am totally ready for Colin when he graduates in two years. I've been on the phone and the computer for hours, arranging audition times, clarifying requirements, obtaining financial records for financial aid applications, hounding my eldest to write essays--NOW!!! Whew. I hope we make it through.
It makes me remember my Senior year and how much I procrastinated, and didn't see the big picture, and cared nothing for my mother's time (and father's). And why do I remember this now? Because I find myself saying all these things to my son. So mom and dad, for the record, I am expressing the deepest, most heartfelt gratitude. And just in case it makes you feel better--yes, my son is just like me and I'm getting what I deserve!!! :D Fortunately, he's a pretty incredible kid, so most of what I'm getting is good. (it's just that other 1% that might have me searching for a wig before long...)

Friday, January 11, 2008

The Steak is the Cake


My dad just celebrated his 69th birthday. He's one of those guys who has everything, and we're always searching for the perfect gadget/gizmo/thingamajiggy with which to suprise him. This year my brother-in-law Jared had a particularly brilliant lighbulb moment. When my mom pondered what kind of cake to make, Jared suggested presenting my dad with a 96 ounce Porterhouse Steak with candles in it, since my dad is a Steak-a-holic. While we really didn't care to shell out the cash for a Porterhouse, we came up with the next best thing. German Chocolate T-Bone. Yum!!!
still confused? This is actually a cake with german chocolate frosting, oreo crumb grill marks, and CLEAN rawhide chewy bones. Pretty sweet, huh?


Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Holy Stream of Consciousness, Batman

I think I should NOT have written "It Was a Dark and Stormy Night" in my last post, because it seems all we've had so far in January is dark, wet, cold, windy storminess. Still, there are occasional bursts of craziness and hilarity that shine through the thick gloom (or maybe it's just cabin fever), and the following post is one of those. I help run a leadership training course for Summer Girl's Camp Youth leaders, and our theme this year has to do with Superheroes. As I was working on plans for our first training meeting, I got a little sidetracked and came up with some new Camp Rules to add to the existing list. Just for kicks and giggles, I'm posting them here. :) Enjoy!

Superhero Rules:

1. Superhero name should reflect super-ability possessed, or super-ability wished for enough that it seems real to you.

2. If Superhero name does not contain the designation “man” or “woman”, name should be formed with the article “The” and followed by an appropriately descriptive noun, i.e. The Blob, The Queen, The Master of All Things Chocolate.
3. The suffix “ator” or “inator” may be added for extra emphasis and the illusion that said name is even grander than once thought, i.e. The Mominator. This is also effective to “nounize” a verb, i.e. The Lickinator, or The Cleaninator.

4. Anything to be fought against (weapon) must end in the phrase “of death”, however, since we are kinder gentler superheros, “of doom” will suffice, i.e. The Giant Gravity Hammer of Doom, or The Enormous Smelly Teenage Sock of Doom.

5. None of us are villains, but occasionally you might run into one. You will recognize them in several ways. Some names will start with “evil”, as in The Evil Dr. Flower Pants. Occasionally the word “evil” will be omitted if the Noun is nasty enough: The Scourge.

More rules to follow as the need for them arises!

Thursday, January 3, 2008

It Was a Dark and Stormy Night...

I believe the first entry in a new blog to be a daunting thing. Those first few chosen words can set the tone of the blog for weeks to come. So, how to begin? I decided to check out the winners of a little contest called the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest to get inspired, and found the perfect sentence with which to begin:

They had but one last remaining night together, so they embraced each other as tightly as that two-flavor entwined string cheese that is orange and yellowish-white, the orange probably being a bland Cheddar and the white . . . Mozzarella, although it could possibly be Provolone or just plain American, as it really doesn't taste distinctly dissimilar from the orange, yet they would have you believe it does by coloring it differently.
Mariann Simms, Wetumpka, AL (2003 Winner)

The friendly folks in the San Jose State University English department sponser this contest every year in search of the WORST beginning sentence for a bad novel. It may be the best "worst" first sentence for a novel, but I'm quite enjoying it as a fantastic "best" first sentence for this blog (technically, it's the best 5th sentence, but I consider the first paragraph to be merely a preface to the blog, leaving the immortal words penned by Ms. Simms to start things off with a bang).

Ultimately, I'm just trying to get this entry posted so my sister Jennie, will have something to read. She called yesterday to tell me she was tired of reading the "Test" post, and to ask if I could please get a move on. Here ya go, sis!

Until next time, I leave you the immortal words of the latest winner:

Gerald began--but was interrupted by a piercing whistle which cost him ten percent of his hearing permanently, as it did everyone else in a ten-mile radius of the eruption, not that it mattered much because for them "permanently" meant the next ten minutes or so until buried by searing lava or suffocated by choking ash--to pee.
Jim Gleeson, Madison, WI (2007 Winner)