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I am very odd indeed

The essay was very good.  But why would anyone decide that ladybugs are a good topic for an essay contest?  And this one was blue. 

And I was sore. 

The mountains were crawling with ladybugs and then the big mountain grew legs and walked away.  Someone shot me in the hip – with a snowball I think.  

“Meow,” the ladybug said to me, “all ladybugs are boys.”  This ladybug also wore glasses.  He took the essay from my hand and began to chew on it.

The mountain returned, lumbering along the way a mountain does, and sat on my hip.  The whole mountain vibrated. 

“I bet that hurts,” the boy ladybug said.

“Yeah,” I said and then began to cry.

“Meow,” said the ladybug.  “Meow!”

I woke, laying on my side, with my 18 pound cat balancing on my hip and looking down at me with fuzzy interest and purring away.

My hip was in agony.

Stupid cat.

I am, however, beginning to worry about the Lewis Carroll aspect of these dreams.

Beauty on a Wednesday

A cool $135 million.  That’s how much Gustav Klimt’s 1907 Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer sold for at auction in 2006, setting a new record.  For an artist who, in his lifetime, was little known outside his native Austria and is still somewhat obscure, that’s a lot of clams.  In his homeland, however, Klimt was famous not only for his glowing, erotic artworks but also for the controversy they sparked.  An unlikely  rebel, he led the secession from the artistic establishment in Vienna and pioneered a style known for its rich patterns and gleaming gold.  We may not know much about him, but we recognize in his art uniquely lush depictions of beauty.

Klimt is probably most well known for his gorgeous The Kiss.

It’s one of my favorite pieces of art.

Sometimes Bandaids Just Won’t Cut It

Look at this picture and tell me that mommas aren’t the same everywhere.

Kiss it better

It’s a moment a million mothers will recognize as an orangutan mum displays human-like affection kissing her male baby’s hurt finger. Mother orangutan Deedee and her baby Randee live at Lowry Park Zoo, Fla.

Nothing gets off Sharpie

The other day I came home from work and I felt completely wrung out,  totally exhausted. 

“Mommy, can you play with me?” Sassy asked. 

She asks this every day.  Both feet weren’t even in the door yet.  I feel like a gazelle being stalked by a lioness.  Just imagine my front yard as the Serengeti plain and I’m sure you can picture it.

“Yes, honey.  First I want to change my clothes and sit down for a minute.” 

She makes me feel tremendously guilty.  It’s as if my playing Barbies or Littlest Pet Shop with her will complete her life, and all I want to do is sit down and read the newspaper and relax for a minute. 

This particular day, after I’d changed clothes and pulled my hair into a ponytail off my neck, I found her and  her brother watching Kung Foo Panda in the family room.  I sat down in a comfortable chair in front of the cooler vent and promptly feel asleep to the dulcet screaming of Jack Black as Po, the panda in question.

Remember when you were kids and you had a sleep over with some of your friends and after the first kid fell asleep you did things to mess with her?  Maybe you put her hand in warm water to see if she’d wet her sleeping bag, or you put her underwear in the freezer.

Then later in your adolescence or perhaps in college, the first person that passed out received a Sharpie mustache,or you put makeup on your guy friends.  Maybe you filled someone’s hand with shaving cream and tickled their nose.

All these things have in common is an unwitting and unconscious victim.

When I finally roused myself after approximately an hour or so completely zonked out in that chair, I found what my charming daughter had begun the tradition in style.

Both my fingernails and toenails had been painted.  Well, to be more precise my fingernails, cuticles and part of my first knuckle had been painted.  My hands were a lovely shade of mottled pink.  My toes were a veritable fiesta of color with each nail painted a different hue.

To top it off, all twenty nails had been graced with a sparkly gem.

How I could have slept through this is totally beyond me.  When I went to take it off, I found that she had applied multiple coats.  It seemed almost an eighth of an inch thick in places.  She was quite pleased with herself and her finished product.

And once again, Mommy had no one to blame but herself.  Beware the natives at my house, don’t fall asleep or it’s a Sharpie for you.

“ZZZZZbbbzzgt,” he snored.

My mom talks in her sleep.  I know – this really isn’t that uncommon.  But what makes her different is that she will often require you to participate in some way. 

For example, I remember being a child, sitting on the floor eating cereal with my brother and watching Saturday morning cartoons one morning, when I heard her calling for me from the bedroom.

“What?” I asked after I opened her door.

“Tell Timmy it’s time to go home,” she said groggily.

To this day, no one knows who Timmy was or where he lived.  For that matter, we don’t even know how long he’d been at our house.  I’m certain it was the imaginary Timmy that ate all the popsicles that summer.

Another time she woke me up to tell me she was drowning.  She begged me to throw her a log to save her.

“There,” I said, knowing that if I didn’t reply this would go on all night.

A few minutes of peaceful silence and then she yelled at me, “Well, pull it in!”

How insensitive of me not to pull in the imaginary log.

The reason I bring this up is because the other night I crawled into bed several hours after My Honey had gone to bed.  This is not unusual since he gets up at 4:30 in the blessed morning to go to work. 

I try to slide into the bed as gently as possible.  Not because I fear awakening him.  Rather, it’s to avoid setting off the snore-machine.  My husband can SNORE!  This particular night, I was stealthily easing myself onto the mattress when he sat straight up in bed and shouted, “Nuclear!” and then went right back to sleep. 

Of course, the snore-machine went off.  How could it not when I lay there shaking the bed with my giggles.

Interviews, Twerp-Muffins and Trees

I did a phone interview the other day with another writer for the Examiner.com.  Here’s a link to the interview: Romancing the Tome.

******

Last night it was my turn to put The Bandit to bed.  We were laying in the dark, on the bottom bunk of his bed, giggling and being silly.  I don’t remember exactly how it came about, but I called him “a squeaky little twerp-muffin.”

“Ooooooh, muffins,” he whispered.  “Can we have muffins for breakfast?”

This has been making me giggle for two days now.

******

Now that my dad is recovering from his stroke back in March, he’s developed a completely understandable mild obsession over family.  I totally get it.  In the beginning it was quite inconvenient for me and that produced no small amount of guilt.  He wanted me to take on the elephantine task of creating our family tree and I had to write the entire 2nd half of that book to get it to the agent.

As soon as I shipped it off, I began work on the project.  I’m really enjoying it, but that doesn’t surprise me in the least.  Years ago, my uncle did the same for my mother’s side of the family and he took it back all the way to Charlemagne.  I’ve always found the entire idea fascinating.

I haven’t made it that far yet, but I’m doing really awesome.  I’ve taken one arm all the way back to 1100 Scotland. 

My  dad constantly quizzes me on what interesting things I’ve uncovered – and there have been a few.  One poor ancestor is documented as dying at Tyburn Tree in England, the famous gallows there.  I have no idea why – it could have been for anything.  I’ve also discovered my family has been in America for a really long time – the Morris limb of the tree were Americans back 10 generations before they immigrated from Wales.  I’ve traced us to Germany and Switzerland and England but the bulk of my ancestry is coming here  from Ireland and Scotland – from many of the different limbs.  Yes, we are related to William “Braveheart” Wallace but he was an uncle.  My grandfather of so long ago was his brother.  I find this particularly amusing because on my mother’s side of the tree, we were directly related to Edward “The Longshanks” King of England – Wallace’s arch enemy.

The reason I bring this up at all is because it really gets my brain churning over story ideas.

And not just because I have an ancestor name Jehoshephat, but it helps.

Let’s not take it personally

Kelli was interviewed at Brigit’s World blog last Wednesday.  She didn’t tell you, but don’t feel bad.  She didn’t tell us either.  I stumbled upon it quite by accident.

Pop over there and read her interview.

Phlebotomist is Greek for Vampire

Ava made me go to a Red Cross Blood Drive today that was sponsered by our company.  I say “she made me go” in every sense of the word.  I was shamed and forced into agreeing.  When it looked like I might waver from the agreement, she promised that I would get to see her faint. 

“You promise?” I asked.

“I always do,” she swore.

I used to vomit every time a needle came out.  Once or twice I’ve passed out.  One time very memorably after I warned the phlebotomist that it was going to happen and she ignored me.  Then came along very difficult pregnancies that brought me many trips to the vampires, and my panic began to subside.  Not completely, but I’m definitely better.  Still, I’ve never been to a blood drive, nor have I ever given more than the few vials at the doctor’s office.

Ava herded me and one other brave soul from our office into the makeshift clinic, chattering all the while about how everything was going to be fine.

“You promised you would faint,” I reminded her.  Civic duty blah blah blah. Do it for your fellow man yada yada yada.  I wanted to see some fainting.

We signed in and affirmed that we hadn’t been out of the country, had no new tattoos (Damn! Had I known……), had not been ill, and a bunch of other stuff.  Then we sat in uncomfortable chairs and I slowly simmered into a mild hyperventilation.  I started babbling nervously (I’m sorry Cecelia).  My stomach didn’t feel well.  My hair was itchy.

They called Ava back.  And then Cecelia.  Now I was alone – to think.  For goodness sake, I scolded myself,  you’ve had lasik eye surgery.  You’ve bunjee jumped from a 17 story building!  You’ve driven around race tracks at upwards of 200 mph.  You’ve cleaned your son’s room.  All of these things are much scarier than giving blood!  QUIT BEING A BABY!

The man called my name.  When I stood, my knees were shaking.  He guided me around a privacy curtain and took down all my personal information while I babbled uncontrollably.  He asked my weight.  I lied.  My blood pressure was measured and my pulse was taken.  The phlebotomist asked me if I was feeling any calmer.  No.  Definitely no.  I clenched down on my jaw to keep from talking anymore.  And the last test before I could officially give blood, he pricked my finger to check my iron levels.

Deep breaths.  Deep yoga breaths.  I attempted my tried-and-true calmer and recited Springsteen lyrics.  I fidgeted.

I’ll bet that you are expecting me to tell you that I fainted, right?  That it was me that hit the floor and not Ava.

Nope.  It turns out that I’m anemic and didn’t qualify to give blood.  And no, it has nothing to do about the lie about my weight.  He suggested I eat more red meat.  I’m considering vegetarianism as a response.

Ava on the other hand, had a lovely experience.  Her little Indian phlebotomist flirted with her nonstop through the entire event.  Ava gives blood regularly since she has a rare universal blood type and, she claims, for the first time, she didn’t faint.  Cecelia didn’t do too bad either.  They both ate cookies and we all got t-shirts.

Just like you, Dear Reader, I feel cheated.

Perhaps if it was pink with steer horns…

I learned that The Roy Rogers Museum is closing.  I’m sure you’re shrugging and wondering why this should concern me.  By and large it doesn’t.  I’m not really the generation that would truly appreciate Roy Rogers.  There is a little twinge of sadness associated with the fact that he and Dale Evans and Trigger were a big part of the golden days of Hollywood and TV, but I’ve never been a fan of the cowboys of that era.  I have no love for The Lone Ranger the others of that ilk.

However, The Bandit does.  He has watched every episode of The Lone Ranger on DVD.  I can’t interest him in The Muppets, but put on The Lone Ranger and he’s good for hours.  Honestly, I don’t get it.  Maybe if The Muppets had a horse.

Regardless, the museum is closing.  All the memorabelia is being auctioned off at Christie’s on July 14 & 15th.  Should I put in a phone bid for Trigger?  They are auctioning off the horse!  My Honey told me to tell my dad about it since he’s always threatening to buy The Bandit a pony. 

Does anyone else think it’s creepy to stuff your horse?  I’ve loved my dogs like children, but the idea of stuffing one of them and putting it in my home **shudder**.  They are expecting to get somewhere in the neighborhood of $100,000 to $200,000.  Are you kidding?

I’d consider buying it put I don’t know how I’d keep it from getting clobbered by all the ceiling fans in my house.  I say this like I can pull $100,000 in change out of the couch cushions or something.

I think Roy’s Bonneville is a wiser investment.  After all, I can keep it outside in the yard.  Besides, it has those nifty steer horns on the hood.

T-Shirt Slogans Not to Wear Out of the House

I’ve told you before that My Honey is a musician.  I am required by my marriage vows to go to every gig.  I promised to love, honor, cherish, and attend. 

He had a show on Friday night and, of course, I went.  It was in the little dive bar that has been around for a zillion years, and My Honey has been playing there at least that long.  In fact, the rhythm guitarist’s wife and I were discussing that we’d been coming to that bar longer than many of the little chippys that were there had been alive.  THAT my friends, is a sobering thought.

I arrived at the bar hours after My Honey – he and his bandmates had “load in” (band speak for taking all their crap: amps, guitars, drums, etc) hours before they were to go on.  I showed up there just after Ava’s Husband.  We sat out on the patio and laughed and sweated for a long time before My Honey was to go on. 

There was a pretty good crowd outside and we had a table located right in the center of the patio.  I was at one end of our group of tenish people and My Honey chatted with his band mates and friends on the other end.  At one point, My Honey, Ava’s Husband, and several other musician friends looked over at me from the other end of the crowd.  All at once – as a group – and peered at me expectantly.  I’d noticed a little ruckus and some laughing, but remember, we are at a very loud bar with live music just inside, and he was a good ten or fifteen feet away.  I had no idea what they were talking about or why they were looking at me.  I ignored them, shrugged, and kept on with my on conversations.

About fifteen minutes later, I commented on Ava’s Husband’s T-shirt.  It said, “I Like Intercourse”.  The back had a logo for Intercourse Beer from Intercourse, Pennsylvania.  It really was the perfect shirt to wear to this sort of function.

I said, “My Honey should have worn his shirt that says, ‘Feel My Bottom’.”  It refers to the slogan for his bass amp.  It’s a whole music thing I don’t pretend to understand.

Ava’s Husband’s jaw dropped and he stared at me for a second before he spoke.  “You didn’t see that?”

“What?” I had no idea what he was talking about. 

“Just a few minutes ago.  You were looking right at him.  I thought you were pissed.”

Oh.  It begins to dawn on me.  He must be referring to when everyone turned and looked at me en masse.  Still, I didn’t know why, and what did this have to do with My Honey’s shirt?  Oooooooh, wait. 

“Is that the shirt he’s wearing?” I asked stupidly.  Maybe I should be paying more attention.

Ava’s Husband’s eyebrows rose.  “Yeah.”

I started to chuckle.  “Did someone grab his butt?”

“Yeah.  That girl over there,” Ava’s Husband revealed.  “I thought for sure you’d be pissed.”

Said girl was maybe 21 and 4 minutes old because she’d gained entry to the 21 and over side of the bar.  Blonde.  Pretty in a mostly clothed sort of way.

No, I’m not pissed.  I laughed heartily as a matter of fact.  The story still makes me chuckle.  My Honey was embarrassed – which is pretty typical of him.  He’s fairly shy.  As a matter of fact, I had to make him take me out on our first date then, 6 months later, I asked him to marry me.  I bought him a diamond ring and everything.  I carried that box around in my pocket for two weeks before I got brave enough to ask.  That will be ten years ago in November.

Of course, I made him go buy me a ring, too.  Seriously, diamonds are a girl’s best friend.  And Coach purses but one doesn’t tradionally get those for engagments.   

I’m gonna add another line to the vows.  I promise to keep better eye on My Honey’s butt.

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