Family

Family

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

singling out t-shirts

B has a lot of t-shirts, his attire of choice. Over the years he has owned a variety of them, his favorites becoming shabby and threadbare. Periodically, we go through his dresser to remove the most frayed, decrepit, holey and stained, always accompanied with a chorus of “What’s wrong with that one? I don’t see the problem. I can wear that when I’m working around the house.” My duet sings in reply, “You already have 50 work-around-the-house shirts, and still most of the time you choose to work around the house shirtless.” (That’s a fact, not a complaint.)




Eventually we hold a ceremony to severe the bizarre man/t-shirt attachment, and the shirt is surrendered. And over the next few weeks during the customary mourning period, there will be a tear or two welling up in his eyes and a new “favorite” worn almost everyday. I think he wears the same socks, too, in honor of the fallen.



Just the other day, I saw B rolling–instead of folding–his t shirts to fit all of them into his dresser. I wondered if we needed to light the incense and dust off the ceremonial masks. Surprisingly, no. But, somehow a conversation started about some of our old t-shirts, ones that haven’t been seen or worn in, I guess, years.




Me: “What about Eskimo Joe?”


B: “Don’t have him.”


Me: “Me neither.” (We had matching shirts, a gift from my brother.)



B: “I noticed I got back Superman.” (I had borrowed it from him last summer, but now my belly is too big to wear it well.)


Me: “I take it back in the fall after the baby is born.”


(pause)


Me: “What about Singled Out.”


B: “No, I gave that one away.”


Then suddenly I became very sad. You might remember the MTV game show, Singled Out that featured 50 men and women competing for a date with a contestant of the opposite sex. We watched it when we were first married, and I chewed about 20 packs of Hubba Bubba Bubblegum to get that shirt for B, who, every time he wore it, told people that’s how we met. He won me on a game show. His story always made me giggle.




No more Singled Out. I’m not sure what message he’s sending with that, but I think I’m going to take back Superman now.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

the mysterious case of the dish fairy

This morning as B is getting ready to leave for work, and I was fixing breakfast for Ash.

Me: I need to empty the dishwasher.
B: It still needs to be emptied? It didn't happen overnight?
Me: No. Apparently the Dish Fairy did not come to our house and empty the dishwasher.
Ash: There's a Dish Fairy?
Me: If there is, she didn't come to our house last night.
Ash: You know, Mommy, I was going to empty the dishwasher for you and put away all the dishes, but now that I know there's a Dish Fairy, I don't have to.

Monday, May 10, 2010

snippets from mother's day

Ash said, “Mother’s Day is not just about you, Mommy.”

~~~

Brent wrote me a card on Mother’s Day. It read, “I heard a quote the other day that said you don’t only marry someone because you love them but because you can’t live without them. I can’t live you. I will always be here for you. I may be plopped down on the couch in front of the TV, but I'm here.

~~~

Our neighbor stopped by and he said, “I told my wife the other day that Kat looked like she had gained weight and not just a little. She’s getting big.” He didn’t just blurt that out when he walked onto our back deck; he waited until we told him that we were expecting. And then he said, “Congratulations. But, you look great otherwise.”

Friday, April 30, 2010

a rather blue confession

(From the 2007 vault.) This one falls under the category of: You never think it will happen to you, but…well, I don’t think I need to finish this sentence.

It’s was late morning here on the eastern side of the country and with a couple of fun client projects sitting on my desk making good progress, I decided to take a short break and go for a Big Gulp–a college habit I just never seemed to break. Ash and I grabbed some loose change from B’s giant jar and hopped into the car headed for 7-11. As we pulled into the parking lot, she started on her chorus of “I want a Slurpee, I want a Blue Slurpee.”

Innocently and unsuspectingly we walked into the near-empty convenience store. The Slurpee machine, positioned just so under the glistening fluorescent spotlights, shot an unblinking come-hither stare from the back wall.

“Ohhhh, there is Blue Slurpee!” sang the girl.

From its rotating chamber the sweet aerated frost gave us a just peek into the magical, mysterious arctic wonderland of Slurpeetown and entranced us.

We picked out the smallest of the cups and domed lids, and in the course of Ash’s cheers, I put the cup to the machine and gently pulled the handle. Nothing happened. I pushed the handle back to the start position and tried again.

Nothing happened.
I pushed the handle back to the start.

Ash began the second chorus of the Blue Slurpee song, which is just like the first, a little bit louder and a little bit worse. And, ever so determined to satisfy the girl’s desire for the rimy azure substance, I applied a little more pressure and pulled the handle as far as it would go…nothing, nothing and then suddenly the machine rumbled to life. In what can only be described as a blue flash, the machine erupted. All I saw before my eyes was a swirly blue explosion. Blue everywhere. The sheer force of the slurpeeclastic eruption ripped the domed-lidded cup from my hand and spewed icy-cold slush in all directions for several feet consuming all that lay in its path.

A second later when it was all over, the machine stared back at me as it had before, only this time not beckoning but mocking me and the girl, frozen in our tracks, covered from head to toe in Ash’s coveted Wahoo Blue Vanilla.

The Slurpee-machine attendant slowly poked his head from his hiding spot on the other side of the hotdog rotisserie and said, “Uh, here’s a towel. You might, uh, want to wash your face, and when you’re ready, that’ll be $2.50 for the Slurpees.”

Thursday, April 29, 2010

was it the tacos or the pineapple?

Last night, baby was moving a lot. For the first time, I could feel the kicks outside of my tummy. I asked B if he wanted to feel the baby. He rolled over and placed his hand on my tummy just as a super power kick thrust from my belly.

He asked, "Are you sure that wasn't the tacos?"

I know our Mexican food gets a little aggressive, but we had quiche with homemade french bread and fruit salad for dinner.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

walk or run, hamster style

Ash and I like to walk to her preschool when we can. It's exactly one mile door to door.
This morning after a brief discussion on finding sneakers and getting them on to feet as quickly as possible:

Me: I don't know if we have time to walk to school this morning.
Ash: I really want to walk, Mommy.
Me: Okay, but we'll have to walk really fast.
Ash: We could run!
Me: (Five months pregnant) Let's stick to walking really fast.

Ash: (One third mile from home) We should have taken the car.
Me: You said we should walk.
Ash: I changed my mind as soon as we got outside.
Me: You didn't say anything.
Ash: But I was thinking it.

Ash: (Half mile from the house) We really should have taken the car, Mommy.
Me: (Pulling her along, only to increase my calorie burn) We're almost there.
Ash: Mommy, you're walking too fast. What do you think I am, a hamster? I am not a hamster.

We made it to her preschool in 21 minutes. Then I walked home. It took me 20 minutes.