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June 26, 2008

Sir Hollis, Squire Holden and the Quest for the Holy Baseball Cap

Lunch Chit Chat The N----- household, June 25, 2008, 7:45pm.

The scene opens as Hollis a knight in jammies armor and red velvet cloak gallops up on his trusty cat scratching post steed.

With plastic screwdriver sword drawn and blue blankie banner flying, he comes to a halt before the couch royal throne.

Knight: I am Sir Hollis, here to protect you.

Me: To protect me, Sir Hollis?  Who am I?

Sir Hollis: You are KING MOMMY!

Sir Hollis hands King Mommy an Elmo hammer scepter.

T: If she's King Mommy, then who am I?

Sir Hollis: You are a hobgoblin!

Hobgoblin: Where do I live?

Sir Hollis: In a tree with the rest of the hobgoblins.

King Mommy: But wait.  I need a crown.  If I'm going to be King Mommy, I'll need a crown.

Sir Hollis snatches the baseball cap off of T's the hobgoblin's head and places it on King Mommy's head.

Holden A squire pulls up on his red Lego cart strawberry roan.

Sir Hollis: King Mommy has a crown!

Sir Hollis & Squire Holden: Yeah!!!!!

(And there was much rejoicing.)

Sir Hollis: Now hobgoblin, go away!  Go back to your tree.

Hobgoblin (muttering): Jeez, thanks.

Hobgoblin exits to the kitchen Hobgoblin Tree, removing his baseball cap crown from King Mommy's head along the way.

Squire Holden: King Mommy's crown!

Sir Hollis (to Squire Holden): The hobgoblin stole the crown.  Let's go get it!  Wait!  I need a new horse. Hilly! (Our 12 year old cat.)

Sir Hollis (cupping his hand around his mouth): Oh, CatHorse! Oh, CaaaaaaaatHorse!

From behind the love seat hedge comes the sound of yowling and a "Stay still, Hilly!"  Sir Hollis emerges with a scratch on his hand and no new horse.

Sir Hollis and Squire Holden gallop off towards the kitchen Hobgoblin Tree.

**************************

The scene opens with the Hobgoblin standing at the sink washing dishes.  (And a very enlightened Hobgoblin he is.)  Sir Hollis and Squire Holden arrive, galloping into the kitchen at high speed.

Squire Holden: Mommy's crown!  Give it back!

Sir Hollis: Bad, Hobgoblin!  Give us back King Mommy's crown!

Scuffling ensues and Squire Holden and Sir Hollis emerge triumphant.

*****************

Back at the royal throne, Sir Hollis places King Mommy's crown upon her head once again.

King Mommy: I have a gift for you as a token of gratitude for your service and bravery.

King Mommy hands over a sippy cup to Sir Hollis and one to Sir Holden.

Sir Hollis & Sir Holden: Thank you, King Mommy.  Yeah!!!!

(And there was much rejoicing.)

Sir Hollis gets a mischievous look in his eye and snatches the crown from King Mommy's head and puts it on his own.

King Mommy: Whyest doth thou betray me, Sir Hollis?

Sir Hollis: It's my crown now!

Sir Hollis giggles lets out an evil laugh, and gallops off to the kitchen Hobgoblin Tree.

King Mommy: Squire Holden!  Will you rescue the crown from evil Sir Hollis?

Squire Holden's eyes light up and he begins to nod vigorously.

Squire Holden: Yes, King Mommy!  I'll get your crown back!

Squire Holden gallops off after Sir Hollis.

In the distance we hear plastic tools swords clashing and Sir Holden yelling, "Give it back to Mommy!"

Squire Holden returns triumphantly holding the royal crown aloft and places it on King Mommy's head.

King Mommy: Oh, brave Squire Holden, you have earned your knighthood.  You shall henceforth be known as Sir Holden.

King Mommy & Sir Holden: Yeah!!!!

(And there was much rejoicing.)

Sir Hollis comes galloping back with the Hobgoblin close behind.

Sir Hollis: King Mommy!

Sir Holden: King Mommy!

Hobgoblin: King Mommy!

Then Sir Hollis and Sir Holden climbed up onto the royal throne and snuggled into King Mommy's lap.  The Hobgoblin sat beside them and wrapped his arms around his royal family.

(And there was much rejoicing.)

The End.

It's good to be the King.

Family

June 24, 2008

High School is History

*****
Edited to add: After I wrote this post, I read something that made me incredibly angry.  Some people who didn't like me in high school for god knows what reason and have never known me other than by name, have decided to hurl insults at me from afar. Talk about being stuck in high school.  But, sweetie, let me make this clear: you don't want to get into a bitch fight with me on the blogosphere.  Trust me on that.

I write about myself and my family on this blog.  I don't write about the daily bullshit of my life - going to the store, scrapbooking, picking up the kids from soccer.  Frankly, that bores the shit out of me.  If you think I'm self-absorbed because I write about my inner world or that I'm living life as an adolescent because I wrote two posts about high school in the last TWO YEARS, maybe a blog isn't the right place for you.  I'm just sayin'.

And yes, I tend to swear a lot when I'm angry.  My husband loves it.  (-;
*****

Everyone has a gripping stranger in their lives, Andy, a stranger who unwittingly possesses a bizarre hold over you. Maybe it's the kid in cut-offs who mows your lawn or the woman wearing white shoulders who stamps your book at the library - a stranger who, if you were to come home and find a message from them on your answering machine saying, "Drop everything. I love you. Come away with me now to Florida," you'd follow them. 

-- Douglas Coupland, Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture

I've been thinking about my personal history a lot over the last few weeks.  Maybe it's because of my little walk down Boyfriend Memory Lane.  Maybe it's because old friends from my two high schools keep popping up on Facebook or in my email.  (Hi, Brian, Katie, Bobby, Christy, Dan, Scott, and anyone else from high school who wanders by!)

This isn't to say that I live in the past.  In fact, aside from the last week or so, and a moment of discovery here or there, high school, isn't something that I spend much time thinking about at all.  I haven't shared my high school foibles and romances here in Flashback Fridays like so many people do.  I haven't posted my prom pictures or reminisced about the crazy things we did after football games and at Katie's lake cabin.  I don't write about much of that because I don't think about it.

However, I'm afraid that a few people, one person in particular, after seeing the huge number of posts about high school - yeah all two of them - and the people from it, have gotten the wrong idea.  I am not a single post (or two) on my blog.  From that small selection it would be easy to decide that I regret something or someone. 

Nothing could be further from the truth.

Although I'm certainly not a religious person, I do believe that everything happens for a reason.  To understand that about me, all you have to do is read my series on infertility.  Everything in my life has led me to where I am now, with my family as it is now.

There are people from my past that I will always care about and yes, be curious about.  There is one person in particular that someday I would love to sit down and just catch up with, without all that baggage and bullshit that accompanies relationships.  Someone I wish I could be friends with.  Someone I once loved and now wish all the best in life.  Someone I wish I could know would be OK in the end, despite all the bad luck and tragedy.

Does that make any sense at all? 

I'm not a threat.  I shouldn't even be a disturbance or a blip on the radar because, let's be absolutely clear here: I married the love of my life.

T is my soul mate, my bashert, my gripping stranger.  The day I met him changed my life forever.  He is my best friend, the best of fathers, an amazingly caring and understanding husband, and the best man I've ever known.  He tells me that I give him too much credit, but he truly is my better half.

Together we have two beautiful little boys and will hopefully have another baby if my battered body, and my endocrinologist, will let me.  (No, not right now.  Mom, Dad, no need to alert the media.)

These three boys, one big, two small, are my world.  We were meant to be.

Trey

I met T when I was 21.  A mere babe.  We got married when I was 22 and he was 25.  Looking back on our very young selves, T and I both realize how incredibly lucky we've been.  So many of the people we know who got married right out of college are now divorced.  Some are even on their second marriages. If you think about it, 21 or 22 is really far too young for most people to get married.  I didn't know who I was or what I really wanted at 22.  Hell, I'll go so far as to say I wasn't really a grown up yet.

T and I will celebrate our 13th wedding anniversary in two weeks.  We survived because we worked hard at our relationship.  We grew together, instead of growing apart.  Still, T and I are just different enough to keep things interesting.  I'm a Democrat; he's a Republican.  I have a law degree; T has a masters in International Relations and undergraduate degrees in political science and history.  Wanna guess what we fight about the most?

Ah, the fighting.  I think that's actually what made me realize that T and I were going to be together for good.  The first time we had a conflict, he actually fought back.

You see, I'm a pretty stubborn person.  I'm also quite the steamroller.  And I can be a little intimidating.  (Or so I've been told.)  I'd never dated a guy before T who didn't just give in or only put up token resistance to my arguments.  I don't want someone who either agrees with my every thought or, disagrees but hates conflict so much he just lets me have my way.  I've had both of those.  Neither is conducive to a lasting relationship that grows.  Boooooorrring.

I'm convinced that fighting is what makes our marriage work so well.  Some think that any conflict is a sign of trouble.  I think that's ridiculous.  Conflict is a sign of passion.  Conflict is also a sign of two independent-minded people who have to figure out their differences and compromise in a way that works for both of them.  A marriage without conflict is boring as shit.  A marriage without conflict never grows.

So you see, T and I, we're for good.

I spend about 99 percent of my time on this blog talking about myself (well, it is my blog), my kids (they're so darn adorable how could I not?), and my husband (just to keep him on his toes).  The other 1% of my time covers political posts that leak over here from MOMocrats and people from my past.  That pretty much sums up what's important to me and in what proportion.

So read my blog or don't read it.  Pretend I don't exist and delete me on Facebook.  (By the way, ouch. That stung.)  But this is the last post directed to you.  Perhaps your very own blog post seems like overkill, but this is something that I need to say and obviously it's not going to happen through direct communication. That's too bad, but I'm not going to be dragged into a drama that doesn't concern me.

My blog is more or less anonymous.  Some people know who I am because they are my friends or I've let them know.  But if you look at my blog, my full name doesn't appear anywhere on it.  And honestly, if I'd thought anything I wrote here on my blog would hurt anyone, I wouldn't write it in the first place. If passively aggressively hurling insults makes you feel better, knock yourself out.  You're free to write anything you want on your blog, just as I am free to write what I want on mine. 

You don't have to read it if it bothers you so much.

I have the kindest of thoughts, wishes and hopes for you and your husband.  Whether you believe that, and how you feel about me, is entirely within your control.  But don't make me larger than I am.  Don't make me more important than I am.  Don't make him more important to me than he is.  Because he's not.

They are:

My Three Boys

He is:

The Wink

I don't know how to make this any clearer.  Got it?

*** No, that isn't our wedding picture.  It was taken at T's brother's wedding in January of 2002, I think. Jamie, correct me if I'm wrong!

April 01, 2008

April Fool's Day Isn't Funny

My grandmother died this morning.

She landed in the hospital a few days ago from a nasty case of pneumonia she just couldn't shake. Her lungs filled up with fluid, and off to the ICU she went. Nonnie was on a respirator and her body just couldn't take any more. I don't know any of the last details right now. I hope that she was asleep and peacefully dreaming.

It's funny how we never see our parents and grandparents as real people until we're adults. Then, we're always surprised to find that they've had lives and experiences we knew nothing about.

When my grandparents celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary several years back, I had a clock engraved for them commemorate the event. It ended up being a late gift because I discovered that no one knew my grandparents' real wedding date.

It seems the sly couple had snuck off and gotten married about a month before the real wedding. I was shocked! I couldn't believe my sweet, tiny, white haired grandmother had done such a thing.

When T and I visited a few years ago (pre-baby), I had her drag all the photo albums out and show me people and places I'd never cared to hear about as a child. I was struck by how young and beautiful she was as a new bride. I looked at her happy smile in the photos, and her wistful gaze as we paged through her albums, and I realized something. Oh yes! My grandmother would definitely have snuck off to get married. It made her that much more interesting and special.

Over the last few years, as H&H came along and I got caught up in work and my life, I haven't been as good about calling Nonnie or sending her photos. A few years ago she and Poppy got internet access, so I know she saw pictures of the boys on a regular basis. But still, I know how much she loved to get my all too infrequent calls.

My father was already on his way to Louisiana when we got the news this morning. I've been calmly making arrangements to fly down on Thursday and I was amazed at how well I was holding it together, despite the loss of my sweet, sweet Nonnie.

The damn broke this afternoon when I read a post by Amie at Mamma Loves about her grandmother and why she always told Amie she loved her. The long and short of it is, we never know if we're going to get the chance to say "I love you" one last time. So we should say it as often as we can.

I didn't get the chance to tell my Nonnie "I love you" one last time.

So I guess this is my chance. If there is a God, a heaven, or an afterlife, I'm sure Nonnie knows how much I loved her. How I wish I'd been able to see her more often. How I wish I'd stepped out of my life for a moment and called her more often.

How I wish she'd had the chance to meet Holden and to see H&H together. As the mother of three boys, I know she would have loved that. I know she would have loved to watch me, her only granddaughter, in my new role as mom to two boys. She often joked about how if I tried for a girl, I would definitely have three boys. That's exactly what happened to her!

I'll wallow in regret for today, but then I'll try not to do so. I'll try to live my life and remember her every day. I'll remember her patience with me and the way she would play card game after card game with me, endlessly, when I was little. I'll remember how she would whisper in my ear, "Let's go Visa Poppy," and whisk me off for some clandestine shopping. I'll remember her hugs and her soft Southern drawl.

I'll remember her perfume.

I love you, Nonnie. I'll miss you so much.

Stephie

April Fool's Day Isn't Funny

My grandmother died this morning.

She landed in the hospital a few days ago from a nasty case of pneumonia she just couldn't shake. Her lungs filled up with fluid, and off to the ICU she went. Nonnie was on a respirator and her body just couldn't take any more. I don't know any of the last details right now. I hope that she was asleep and peacefully dreaming.

It's funny how we never see our parents and grandparents as real people until we're adults. Then, we're always surprised to find that they've had lives and experiences we knew nothing about.

When my grandparents celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary several years back, I had a clock engraved for them commemorate the event. It ended up being a late gift because I discovered that no one knew my grandparents' real wedding date.

It seems the sly couple had snuck off and gotten married about a month before the real wedding. I was shocked! I couldn't believe my sweet, tiny, white haired grandmother had done such a thing.

When T and I visited a few years ago (pre-baby), I had her drag all the photo albums out and show me people and places I'd never cared to hear about as a child. I was struck by how young and beautiful she was as a new bride. I looked at her happy smile in the photos, and her wistful gaze as we paged through her albums, and I realized something. Oh yes! My grandmother would definitely have snuck off to get married. It made her that much more interesting and special.

Over the last few years, as H&H came along and I got caught up in work and my life, I haven't been as good about calling Nonnie or sending her photos. A few years ago she and Poppy got internet access, so I know she saw pictures of the boys on a regular basis. But still, I know how much she loved to get my all too infrequent calls.

My father was already on his way to Louisiana when we got the news this morning. I've been calmly making arrangements to fly down on Thursday and I was amazed at how well I was holding it together, despite the loss of my sweet, sweet Nonnie.

The damn broke this afternoon when I read a post by Amie at Mamma Loves about her grandmother and why she always told Amie she loved her. The long and short of it is, we never know if we're going to get the chance to say "I love you" one last time. So we should say it as often as we can.

I didn't get the chance to tell my Nonnie "I love you" one last time.

So I guess this is my chance. If there is a God, a heaven, or an afterlife, I'm sure Nonnie knows how much I loved her. How I wish I'd been able to see her more often. How I wish I'd stepped out of my life for a moment and called her more often.

How I wish she'd had the chance to meet Holden and to see H&H together. As the mother of three boys, I know she would have loved that. I know she would have loved to watch me, her only granddaughter, in my new role as mom to two boys. She often joked about how if I tried for a girl, I would definitely have three boys. That's exactly what happened to her!

I'll wallow in regret for today, but then I'll try not to do so. I'll try to live my life and remember her every day. I'll remember her patience with me and the way she would play card game after card game with me, endlessly, when I was little. I'll remember how she would whisper in my ear, "Let's go Visa Poppy," and whisk me off for some clandestine shopping. I'll remember her hugs and her soft Southern drawl.

I'll remember her perfume.

I love you, Nonnie. I'll miss you so much.

Stephie

February 04, 2008

Drinking With My Cousins

What was I thinking????

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Drinking With My Cousins

What was I thinking????

This message was sent using PIX-FLIX Messaging service from Verizon Wireless!
To learn how you can snap pictures with your wireless phone visit

www.verizonwireless.com/getitnow/getpix.


To learn how you can record videos with your wireless phone visit www.verizonwireless.com/getitnow/getflix.


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November 04, 2007

Crabby

I grew up with family seafood boils. I have so many wonderful memories of our extended family gathered around a huge table covered in thick layers of newspaper and piled with steaming crab, crawfish, shrimp, potatoes, and corn. We sat around the table and eat and talk and drink for hours. (Well, they really didn't let me do much drinking when I was 6, but I get to now!)

During those gatherings, I learned my family's stories. I heard about the time Uncle Scott had a burn on him bottom, couldn't wear diapers, and his older brothers charged the neighborhood kids $.05 to come in and look at his naked, burned butt. (And, of course, I learned the story of the burn itself. Your instincts are correct if you guessed that his older siblings had something to do with it.) And then there was the time two of my mom's brothers burned down a garage. And the marijuana plot in the backyard. (I could go on and on, but my mom might never forgive me!) These loud, raucous gatherings are some of the best memories of my childhood and so, of course, I'd like to pass the tradition onto my children.

My parents taught me how to pick crabs when I was tiny. My mother grew up in a household of 9 where it was every man for himself when the food hit the dinner table. Consequently, the rule in our family has always been that once you're old enough, you pick your own crabs and you peel your own shrimp and crawfish. Or you starve.

Last weekend, we got a bushel of live crabs from a friend's connection in Pungo and invited some friends over for a crab and shrimp boil. The kids ran around like wild animals and stayed up way too late. The adults drank wine and beer and ate way too much food. We gorged ourselves on spicy boiled crabs, shrimp and potatoes and crusty French bread. By the end of the evening, my nose was slightly runny from the spices,* my fingers were a little pruned and chewed up from prying sharp crab parts apart, my hands smelled of seafood and newspapers, and my tummy was pleasantly full.

*No Old Bay seasoning will ever enter my house. We use a combination of Zatarain's crab boil and my own special spice combination. Lots of red pepper is involved.

My family may be far away, but I thought of those wonderful family gatherings often throughout the night. T and I shared our family stories with friends. It wasn't the same as my childhood memories, but it was fun. There's nothing better than good food and good conversation. Hopefully, my children will learn who they are and where they came from in the same way I did, even if we have to create our own extended quasi-family.

One thing if for sure though. Hollis and Holden better learn to pick crabs quickly if they want to keep eating them.


Crabby

I grew up with family seafood boils. I have so many wonderful memories of our extended family gathered around a huge table covered in thick layers of newspaper and piled with steaming crab, crawfish, shrimp, potatoes, and corn. We sat around the table and eat and talk and drink for hours. (Well, they really didn't let me do much drinking when I was 6, but I get to now!)

During those gatherings, I learned my family's stories. I heard about the time Uncle Scott had a burn on him bottom, couldn't wear diapers, and his older brothers charged the neighborhood kids $.05 to come in and look at his naked, burned butt. (And, of course, I learned the story of the burn itself. Your instincts are correct if you guessed that his older siblings had something to do with it.) And then there was the time two of my mom's brothers burned down a garage. And the marijuana plot in the backyard. (I could go on and on, but my mom might never forgive me!) These loud, raucous gatherings are some of the best memories of my childhood and so, of course, I'd like to pass the tradition onto my children.

My parents taught me how to pick crabs when I was tiny. My mother grew up in a household of 9 where it was every man for himself when the food hit the dinner table. Consequently, the rule in our family has always been that once you're old enough, you pick your own crabs and you peel your own shrimp and crawfish. Or you starve.

Last weekend, we got a bushel of live crabs from a friend's connection in Pungo and invited some friends over for a crab and shrimp boil. The kids ran around like wild animals and stayed up way too late. The adults drank wine and beer and ate way too much food. We gorged ourselves on spicy boiled crabs, shrimp and potatoes and crusty French bread. By the end of the evening, my nose was slightly runny from the spices,* my fingers were a little pruned and chewed up from prying sharp crab parts apart, my hands smelled of seafood and newspapers, and my tummy was pleasantly full.

*No Old Bay seasoning will ever enter my house. We use a combination of Zatarain's crab boil and my own special spice combination. Lots of red pepper is involved.

My family may be far away, but I thought of those wonderful family gatherings often throughout the night. T and I shared our family stories with friends. It wasn't the same as my childhood memories, but it was fun. There's nothing better than good food and good conversation. Hopefully, my children will learn who they are and where they came from in the same way I did, even if we have to create our own extended quasi-family.

One thing if for sure though. Hollis and Holden better learn to pick crabs quickly if they want to keep eating them.


September 04, 2007

My Family Values


“Values are not just words, values are what we live by. They're about the causes that we champion and the people we fight for.” --John Kerry

Julie's Hump Day Hmm this week is about values. I had planned a post about religion because I have yet to discuss religion on my blog. There's a good reason for that. I'm very conflicted and I'm frequently hesitant to discuss the one area of my life where I have absolutely no confidence.

I can't do it. I absolutely cannot hit publish on that post. So instead, I'd like to share some things I would like to give to my boys:

love
kindness
responsibility
empathy

a love of books
social justice
equality
wonder

a love of music
spontaneity
reserve
swimming

a love of art
trust
openness
an inquisitive mind

a love of nature
originality
thoughtfulness
the ability to lose gracefully

a love of mankind
caution
optimism
a healthy dose of skepticism

a love of laughter
sarcasm
hand farts
silliness

a love of competition
ambition
dedication
the ability to win gracefully

a love of animals and small children
tears
joy
loss and learning

The sun, the moon, and the stars. I don't ask for much, do I?

These are my family values.

************

I have a new review of Nina Garcia's book The Little Black Book of Style up on my review blog, along with pictures of my shamefully decadent shoe collection and my favorite pair of sexy shoes. Go read it!

My Family Values


“Values are not just words, values are what we live by. They're about the causes that we champion and the people we fight for.” --John Kerry

Julie's Hump Day Hmm this week is about values. I had planned a post about religion because I have yet to discuss religion on my blog. There's a good reason for that. I'm very conflicted and I'm frequently hesitant to discuss the one area of my life where I have absolutely no confidence.

I can't do it. I absolutely cannot hit publish on that post. So instead, I'd like to share some things I would like to give to my boys:

love
kindness
responsibility
empathy

a love of books
social justice
equality
wonder

a love of music
spontaneity
reserve
swimming

a love of art
trust
openness
an inquisitive mind

a love of nature
originality
thoughtfulness
the ability to lose gracefully

a love of mankind
caution
optimism
a healthy dose of skepticism

a love of laughter
sarcasm
hand farts
silliness

a love of competition
ambition
dedication
the ability to win gracefully

a love of animals and small children
tears
joy
loss and learning

The sun, the moon, and the stars. I don't ask for much, do I?

These are my family values.

************

I have a new review of Nina Garcia's book The Little Black Book of Style up on my review blog, along with pictures of my shamefully decadent shoe collection and my favorite pair of sexy shoes. Go read it!

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