Word Wonders

Entries from August 2008

Up, Up, and Away

August 23, 2008 · 7 Comments

Lots of coffee today, but I managed to avoid the crash….by taking an afternoon nap ;)

Just played a hard, but fun board game with K (he won again. Pulled it back on the last turn AGAIN, dammit) and now I feel all revitalized.

Playing a complicated game after the kids go to bed is such a great way to spend time, as a stay at-home mother. It is so healthy to share something with your spouse that isn’t related to the children (love ‘em as we do, little soul-suckers). It feels fabulous to wrap your brain around something challenging and watch yourself getting more insightful, more tenacious, more strategic…BETTER at something that doesn’t involve cleaning fluids. Ahhhh.

And before you ask how I have the energy: it GIVES me energy. Even if I feel like going to bed right after the children, if we sit down to play an intriguing game, I always perk up, then want to keep playing into the wee small hours. I try not to actually do that too often, as the 6 am wake-up call is still going to be there, but it’s good to feel so engaged.

Now, at 11.10 p.m., I feel like I could do anything. (Even though I lost. It was close.)

I even feel like I could stick to the ’sensible eating plan with exercise’ this week.

Hope it lasts.

So, what was the last board game you played, and when?

PS One of my lovely comment-ers just got bitten by the bad economy: her husband was laid off. You can help by buying some of the gorgeous jewellery from her Etsy shop.

Categories: Personal
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On The Road Again

August 20, 2008 · 5 Comments

Thanks to all for the good wishes (hi to the Saucy Sistas who stopped by. Welcome!).

Well, we managed to get into town again and meet our friends on Saturday evening. We’re back at home for dentist’s appointments and a laundry run and will be doing more touristy stuff with friends again soon.

We’re set up with a Dodge Durango now, until our car comes home.

As I drove it off the rental lot this morning I pulled up behind our not-so-little sedan and felt…large.

“Mwah-hah-hah!” I bellowed to no-one in particular as I followed my husband and children home. “I am mighty. You are teeny and puny! Let me roll right over the top of you, tiny foreign car!”

Hmm, wonder what percentage of accidents are caused by over-confident SUV drivers?

Categories: Personal
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Crunch Time

August 16, 2008 · 10 Comments

So there we were, merrily driving down the “Expressway” for a day of fun with our friends from Wisconsin, when the traffic came to a halt at the usual spot.  It looked pretty bad so, on a whim, we took an off ramp, saying,

“The GPS lady will find us another way”.

Just as we came off the the expressway, the off ramp started to back up too. Of course.

Kev braked. Hard. I’ll admit that much. But we stopped in time to avoid the car in front and with a little bit to spare.

Then there was a squeal of brakes and I barely had time to think, I hope that car doesn’t hit us, before that car hit us. Hard.

Then came a second thump and a second dunt as the car behind that one rammed into him, shoving him into us again, in case we had missed it the first time.

Swell.

An hour and a quarter of sitting-in-the-blazing-sun-with-increasingly-hot-and-restless boys later I called the police again and asked if they were actually sending someone or if we were just sitting there for fun. (I was much, much more polite. The police carry guns here.)

“Can you drive?” the dispatcher asked, hopefully.

“Well, one of the cars is leaking fluid,” I said. (Not ours)

He sort of groaned and said they would send someone out, but that they had “a lot going on today”. He was nice but you can tell he could have lived without our little fender bender.

Meanwhile we had called:

  • our friends in the city — to cancel our afternoon of fun,
  • our friends in the suburbs — to come and rescue the boys before they baked,
  • all the rental car companies in the area, all of which were close (nota bene, do not have an accident after noon on a Saturday!),
  • our friends at the autobody shop who are getting to know us quite well this year — to tell them to expect to see the car in the lot when they get there on Monday.

Love my cell phone.

My neck hurts, my head hurts, I’m probably sunburned, and our road trip is going to be costing someone a lot of money, since we’ll be hiring the biggest car we can get…

…As soon as the rental places open on Monday.

I’m back at home now (shout out to Unckie S., who came to rescue us) and Kev just called to say the police are there and the tow-truck is there, but he’s given it to the clueless folks behind us who hadn’t thought to call one, and he’s driving our car home, without its rear bumper.

(You’ll note our front bumper is fine since WE weren’t travelling so fast that we couldn’t leave a little stopping distance.  Thank goodness.)

Still, at least this’ll take Kev’s mind off the big talk he has to give at the American Boffin Society meeting on Monday morning.

Categories: Personal
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Sir Penguin

August 15, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Every day at Edinburgh Zoo, the penguins come out for a walk.

They meander around, mingle with the crowds and are generally charming.

I was there quite a lot while a student in Edinburgh, even meeting up with my Mum when she brought her classes on school trips. The penguins always delighted everyone.

Apparently, back in the 70s, they delighted the Norwegian King’s Guard so much that they adopted one as an honourary member and mascot. He was called Nils Olav and has worked his way up through the ranks over the years to become Colonel-In-Chief.

(You think your boss is bad? At least you don’t work for a penguin. Or maybe you do…)

Today, they took things a step further.

The king had Nils knighted.

You can watch the whole thing, with citation and sword-bopping here:

BBC NEWS | UK | Scotland | Penguin becomes a ‘Sir’.

Those wacky Norwegians.

The worst part? It’s not even the original penguin…

Categories: Personal
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Sir Salman

August 15, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I never thought much of Salman Rushdie as a celebrity and I don’t know much about his writing, given that I’m only part-way into his latest book and haven’t read any of his stuff before….

[pauses for breath]

BUT

I’ve been listening to a talk he gave at the Free Library of Philadelphia recently and it’s like a masterclass in fiction writing.

He’s is surprisingly unpretentious, self-deprecating, and generous with praise and advice. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in writing fiction.

Salman Rushdie at the Free Library (right click to save it to your hard-drive, unless you’re on one of those new-fangled “MacIntosh” things in which case you’ll have to work your own voodoo…)

It’s not a ‘how-to’, but it is one of those experiences that makes you want to jump up and run to your notebook and write your own novel.

I love that.

Thanks, Sir Salman!

Categories: Writing
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New Site

August 14, 2008 · 4 Comments

So, this is my first official post on the WordPress blog (as opposed to something I posted in tandem with, or imported from, the livejournal one)

The Livejournal one is still there. I just got wanderlust. So here I am.

Come on in, look around, make yourself at home.

The plan is to incorporate all the articles from my old webpage, as pages here, then cancel that hosting deal and use the domain here. Maybe. If I have the time. Otherwise, I’ll just be posting and playing here.

If you were reading this on livejournal you can befriend the jwords username and these posts will turn up in your friends page** (it’s an RSS feed in case you’re interested, but if that means nothing to you don’t worry. It just means it will work the way I described.) But please try to click on the little blue ‘comments’ thing within each post so that comments live here, instead of on the livejournal version.

(**To do this, go to ‘manage friends’ and then add ‘jwords’ as a new friend in the appropriate section. Customize to taste.)

New and Fun Stuff:

Pages!

Look up. This site has pages. One of them is busy collecting posts related to publishing and is built on articles from my self-help/self-publishing website of seven or eight years ago. Another is supposedly “about me” and a version of this post might find its way there.

Twitter Feed

Look over there –> There are short little tweets from me whenever I have a random thought. These can be and sometimes are posted from my cell phone. The premise of Twitter is that you send a short message answering the question ‘what are you doing?’, whenever you feel so inclined, so that all your fans can know. Egotistical? A little, but hey, I have four blogs…

Boy Feed

Also over there –> (currently). No, not food for boys, but headlines from the boys’ journal, in case you’ve missed it and in case I ever update it. (It still lives at livejournal. For now…)

Enjoy!

Categories: Personal
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Associated Blobfest

August 13, 2008 · Leave a Comment

My local newspaper is not great. I subscribe because I want to know what’s on and who’s up to what and because, frankly, I used to work for a local newspaper and I pine for that time.

Today I was kind of surprised to see an article on Blobfest, which happens in mid-July. Our paper is nothing if not topical, and it seemed odd that they would have a front-page article on something that happened last month.

Then I started to read it. And it was good. The writing was really good. Even after reading the first sentence I knew something was up.

And indeed it was not written by our local staff reporter who loves nothing better than reporting on small town crime (ooo! Man charged with drunk driving. Ooo! domestic altercation) and talking like a police officer (“the suspect was apprehended…”). It was an Associated Press feature about movie tourism hung on the framework of our Blobfest, and it was insightful, well-researched, and portrayed our town in a great light.

A fascinating read for me, since I remember the town as it was 12 years ago: depressed and a little bit dodgy but with great ‘bones’ under the slobby exterior. And a fine read for anyone who enjoys good writing.

Here’s the link. (not sure how long it’ll be ‘live’.

Oo, oo, and there’s a photo slideshow/documentary, complete with spooky music and commentary (and screaming)!

Cool!

Categories: Writing
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Millennial Mom Monday — Gadgets

August 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Mondays are for the Millennial Mothers (and dads too. And aunts and uncles, grandparents and friends. It’s just more alliterative this way…)

Post a reply in the comments. Or write in your own blog and leave a link in the comments. Invite your friends to join in.

This weeks’s theme: Gadgets

A while back, I wrote a Modern Baby Shower Wish List that was slightly tongue in cheek, but not very.

So I started thinking about all the gadgets we have available to us now.

When my mother first saw our motorized baby swing she swooned.

“We used to sit rocking the baby with our foot and joking that someone ought to invent a motorized one,” she said. It seemed so ridiculously extravagant back in the 1960s that they joked about it. Now, no modern parent would dream of leaving off their list some sort of jiggling, bouncing, vibratey-machine.

But how much did you use yours?

Honestly, I used the swing a bit with the first child but eventually I packed it up and used this chair, which took up less space and which, once the baby’s neck was strong enough, converted to a seat that I could, yup, rock (silently) with my foot. I used this as a feeding chair before I got my small high chair, too. With the second child, I mostly carried him around in a homemade sling, because leaving him where his two-year old brother could attempt to swing him around in a circle, or rock him right out of the rocking chair, wasn’t what you’d call relaxing or secure.I did use my little plastic baby baths (this one was good when they were little because of the bump that helped hold their bums in place a seat was good when they were bigger) and I did use my pack’n'play when the babies were sleeping beside my bed.

I loved my Baby Bjorn for a couple of months with my first child, but then he got heavy and it was just a bit of a kerfuffle to put it on and take it off, and it took up a lot of space in a bag, that I didn’t use it for shorter trips.(I repeat it was great for a new parent, it’s brilliantly engineered and much easier to put on than most of the others the same type. It holds the baby beautifully and is super-secure).

Eventually, though,I switched to a sling I made myself (with these sling rings). It folds flat, opens up to become a blanket, works as a dribble-rag, tie a knot in a corner of the flap and use it as a distracto-toy or teether, it goes in the washing machine and dryer, and was very comfortable once I’d watched the video secured by the sling rather than held by me. I even carried the baby around the baby pool in the sling while my toddler toddled in the summer. Can’t recommend this enough as a gadget. about how to put it on properly. I am no seamstress, and I managed it. Never did much use the store-bought padded No-Jo one, which was bulky and awkward and felt insecure. The homemade one got lots of use, especially with the second child. Sometimes I had the baby in it, and sometimes the baby was in the stroller, while the two (and even three) year old rode on my hip,

We mocked up a video monitor with a webcam that published pictures to a private web page, because we still had a computer in the baby’s room at the time. That was priceless for catching evidence of the first time the ‘baby’ climbed out of the cot! But the store-bought monitor didn’t get much use. Kept picking up conversations from the neighbours’ houses (there were lots of babies around here at the same time).

I’m not sure why they still sell play yards. I’m sure babies since time immemorial have simply rattled the bars and screamed to get out. The Exersaucer on the other hand, earned its keep.

I did use Stair gates. I have friends who put stair gates across their kids’ doors once they were in a toddler bed, so that they couldn’t escape. We never thought of that and used door knob locks. I suppose the stair gate would have been a bit more humane, since the kids could have felt like they were still part of the world…

My favourite gadget (because I had been wanting something like it) was the Bumbo. We only used it for a while, but it was a great bridge between the time when the baby wanted to be sitting up and watching what was going on, and when they could actually do it themselves. They have trays and all kinds of things for it now, but I spotted my favourite use of the Bumbo on a blog recently. The mother of triplets, this woman uses two Bumbos to make supermarket trips workable.

But the Bumbo tells the sad tale of most baby gadgets. No matter how much you love them, your kid is going to grow out of them faster than you can imagine when you’re being seduced by the advertising.

The things on my Modern Baby Shower Wish List however? I’m still using them, five years on!

Some other things that I’ve used a lot, although they’re not on the traditional baby list:

*My iPod (the type that plays video). When combined with an iPod dock (or more recently a headphone splitter and two sets of ‘phones) this can magically allow me to have half an hour of peace and quiet, even at the supermarket. I can see the eyes of other parents light up as I pass….

*Pop-Up Playsets. I take a bag to any family restaurant, that contains a pop-up-playset and some cars and we get to make our dinner choices without wrestling tiny boys. It doesn’t last but it serves as a bit of a distraction.

*Crayons. Everywhere you go, there is some way to amuse a child with crayons and paper. Draw a race track, a train track and give them a toy. Draw rudimentary steam trains in blue, red, and green and any two-year old boy will tell you you’ve drawn Thomas, James and Percy.

*Balloons. If you can trust your child not to put it in his mouth, always have a balloon about your person. You can blow it up and let it go: hilarity ensues. You can blow is up and tie a knot and ping it all over the room: instant fun. You can fill it with water or cornstarch or rice, and let them squish it. You can draw a face on it and give your child an instant ‘friend’. If you’re at all adventurous, buy the kind you can twist and learn how to make a dog, a sword (really not hard) and a crown, and you’ll be a hit at parties forever (hint, adults want complicated things. Kids want really simple shapes that you can make in a super-human timeframe and they can play with NOW. Kids have better imaginations than adults.) Talk about value for money.

So, in short, things that make noise and require batteries and are designed for a specific stage of your child’s life= disappointing and a trip to the consignment shop/listing in the classified ads. Things that may not be intended for children plus a little ingenuity= happy families.

Just like in the 1960s. And the 1860s. And the 60s…

Categories: Millennial Moms · Parenthood
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Hob Nobbing

August 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Fun night out with Sally & George tonight — our friends who should, by rights, be our parents’ friends, since they’re about that age.

But they’re cool.

And Kev might have kidnapped their cat if not for my allergies. I suppose I should take that as a compliment.

Categories: Personal

Millennial Mom Monday — Things I Never Thought I Would Say

August 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Mondays are for the Millennial Mothers (and dads too. And aunts and uncles, grandparents and friends. It’s just more alliterative this way…)

Post a reply in the comments. Or write in your own blog and leave a link in the comments. Invite your friends to join in.

This Weeks’ Theme: Things I Never Thought I Would Hear Myself Say (Before I Had Kids)

Here are some of mine, off the top of my head:

“…oh, look at my husband’s “boys” wriggling around on that big screen!”
“…and then the nurse grabbed my boob and shoved it into his mouth…”
“…Well done! You pooped!”
“…Don’t stand on your brother’s head!”
“…Don’t bite [me/your brother/that kid].”
“…can I have my iPod back now? [to my two-year old]“

Categories: Millennial Moms · Parenthood