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	<title>motherload &#187; Husbandry</title>
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	<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com</link>
	<description>diary of a modern-day housewife superhero</description>
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		<title>My Peter Pan Complex</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2012/01/my-peter-pan-complex/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2012/01/my-peter-pan-complex/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2012 15:41:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bad Mom Moves]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Extended Family]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Other Mothers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4338</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I used to spend Christmases at home. And by &#8220;home&#8221; I mean at the house I grew up in&#8212;my mom&#8217;s&#8212;in Rhode Island. Then a number of things happened to change that, not the least of which was that she died. But aside from that even, I got married and became a mother myself. And a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I used to spend Christmases at home. And by &#8220;home&#8221; I mean at the house I grew up in&#8212;my mom&#8217;s&#8212;in Rhode Island.</p>
<p>Then a number of things happened to change that, not the least of which was that she died. But aside from <em>that</em> even, I got married and became a mother myself. And a few years ago, despite my inclination to still do my winter migration to Little Rhody (now to Dad&#8217;s), Mark started lobbying for us to stay at our <em>own</em> house for Christmas.</p>
<p>Imagine!</p>
<p>&#8220;The girls should wake up in their own beds on Christmas morning,&#8221; he opined, ever the rational one. He also likely tossed in something about holiday travel being a hassle, expensive, and particularly taxing with young children and cross-country flights.</p>
<p>WHATever.</p>
<p>Sure, I saw his point. But what about <em>me</em>? What about me waking up in <em>my</em> own bed? What about Santa delivering presents to <em>my</em> house, not that place where we live in California?</p>
<p>And the thing is, Mark&#8217;s <em>right</em>. Well, I&#8217;m not actually sure I&#8217;m ready to embrace his stance entirely. Let me downgrade that to, &#8220;I can see his point.&#8221; It IS kinda expensive and it IS kinda a hassle to get there.</p>
<p>Sometimes I let him make the decisions, you know, to empower him. So for the past five years I&#8217;ve done some supremely selfless parenting and allowed my kids to be the kids&#8212;not <em>me</em>&#8212;at Christmastime. I <em>must</em> be up for some kind of mothering award.</p>
<p>A couple weeks ago Mark helped me with some blog stuff. He is both husband and IT consultant. (In this economy you&#8217;ve gotta be able to wear several hats.) If it&#8217;s not glaringly apparent, I&#8217;m embracing a fairly scaled-back user experience here. But I sometimes fall prey to blog peer pressure (self-imposed, mind you). I&#8217;m the world&#8217;s biggest <a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=luddite" target="_blank">luddite</a>, but every now and again even I realize I should implement some sorta new feature to keep up with the other kids.</p>
<p>So Mark helped me add a Facebook &#8220;like&#8221; button to the bottom of each post. So now you can not only &#8220;like&#8221; motherload on the whole, you can &#8220;like&#8221; any individual posts that rock your world.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a regular like fest.</p>
<p>Amazingly I have not obsessed over this. I have not checked every four minutes to see if I have more likes. (Good thing too, since they&#8217;re not exactly pouring in.) I will cop to having had a small obsession <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2008/12/help-me-make-the-country-a-whole-lot-greener/" target="_blank">several years ago when we sent out an Evite</a> for a party. I spent the better part of a day compulsively hitting &#8220;refresh&#8221; to see who&#8217;d RSVPed. It was not healthy.</p>
<p>Anyway, the new, more mature me will manage this &#8220;like&#8221; button much more rationally. (Though I&#8217;ll still be your best friend if you use it every once and a while. In fact, I double-dog dare you to do it right <em>now</em>.)</p>
<p>Speaking of Le Face Livre, in the new year I&#8217;m reversing an ill-formed personal policy that I&#8217;ve been foolishly adhering to. What is that you may ask? 2012 is the year that I will finally friend my mother-in-law.</p>
<p>Now I&#8217;m curious to hear how you all manage this yourselves. Initially my take on the parental-level Facebook friend was this: Who knows what they might see. Who knows what they might read. And moreover, who knows what I would have to edit, avoid, or otherwise regret.</p>
<p>But now, a few years in to seeing her friendly face crop up in my &#8220;People You May Know&#8221; list, I&#8217;m wondering what the hell I&#8217;d been thinking.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not like I&#8217;m selling crack on Facebook. (I do that on my other website.) It&#8217;s not like I&#8217;m publishing skanky pictures of myself. It&#8217;s not like I&#8217;m really doing anything much other than making snarky comments on the often dizzying state of motherhood, a topic that, of all people, my mother-in-law is very much in touch with.</p>
<p>Keeping her at social-media arms length was apparently my way of maintaining a foothold in the world where I&#8217;m the kid and the grown-ups are the grown-ups. It may have taken me 44 years, but I&#8217;m finally willing to throw in the towel and admit that I&#8217;m an adult.</p>
<p>Of course, I have no intention of ever acting my age. And Facebook is the perfect outlet for my raging immaturity. The way I see it now, my mother-in-law and I can act immature there together.</p>
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		<title>I&#8217;m a Loser</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/im-a-loser/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Nov 2011 10:14:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4243</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant. Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Mark and my first wedding anniversary we&#8217;d recently moved into our house, and I was pregnant. Extremely pregnant.</p>
<p>Before heading out to a celebratory dinner (where Mark would drink expensive wine and I&#8217;d sip water), he gave me a present. We were in what would be the baby&#8217;s room, sitting on the floor. And Mark handed me a little turquoise box from a brilliantly-branded jewelry store. I think you know the place.</p>
<p>Inside it was a beautiful necklace&#8212;a platinum chain and a diamond solitaire pendant. I absolutely LOVED it.</p>
<p>Mark put it on me, and we sat there on the floor for a while, looking at the new crib and rocking chair and the pile of laundered, twice-rinsed baby clothes, marveling over how much our lives had changed in one year&#8217;s time.</p>
<p>Then Mark had to stand up and grab both my hands in order to pry me up off the floor.</p>
<p>Ah, good times.</p>
<p>A few weeks ago we went to Seattle. We had an amazing weekend with wonderful friends. We ate at great restaurants, got a private tour of <a href="http://www.chihuly.com/" target="_blank">Chihuly</a>&#8216;s studio, went for walks on the beach, and even saw two bald eagles up close and personal.</p>
<p>But somehow in the course of all that fun I lost my diamond necklace. And I&#8217;m just sick about it.</p>
<p>The thing is, I was insanely organized that weekend. Like even <em>more</em> so than usual. Our hosts don&#8217;t have children, so I tried my utmost to keep the sprawl of our stuff controlled. I folded clothes and placed them neatly back in our luggage. I paired shoes closely together and set them at the edge of our beds. I gathered wayward toothbrushes, detangling spray, and princess panties that had been flung around the bathroom and tucked everything away in its place.</p>
<p>So I&#8217;m not sure how that necklace got away.</p>
<p>Damn my recent growth spurt around accessorizing. A couple years ago I wouldn&#8217;t even HAVE another necklace to change into. But recently I&#8217;ve made an effort to mix things up a bit. I&#8217;ve bought some bold, statement-ish jewelry hoping to up my maternal style quotient.</p>
<p>All I know is that beloved diamond necklace went to Seattle and never came back.</p>
<p>This is the WORST feeling. That pit-in-your-stomach, beating yourself up, woulda coulda shoulda feeling.</p>
<p>The thing is I also know what it&#8217;s like to feel this way then to suddenly find the lost item and to snap out of it. To feel awash with sudden relief and renewed love for that once-lost thing. I keep hoping I&#8217;m at the brink of finding the necklace on the bottom of my toiletry kit (even though I&#8217;ve emptied it out and shook it upside down eight times now).</p>
<p>But as the weeks march on and it doesn&#8217;t turn up, I&#8217;m losing hope.</p>
<p>All this would be bad enough on its own, but a couple weeks before Seattle I pulled another regret-laden move. It was a rainy, stormy, low-visibility morning. I was driving to work in a crazy slew of traffic. My 20-minute drive took nearly an hour.</p>
<p>I finally arrived at the parking garage in downtown San Fran. Hurray! I made it in one piece.</p>
<p>But when I pulled into the garage and took a sharp right to get into the row of to-be-parked cars I heard a loud scraping sound. No, it was more like a crunching. I looked up to see that I&#8217;d hit the edge of the doorway&#8212;a wall covered with a black rubber bumper and bright yellow reflective tape.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m such an optimist that I hopped out of the car, hopeful that&#8212;despite the horrific crunch of metal&#8212;the damage wasn&#8217;t too bad. [Let me throw my head back here for some hearty rueful laughter.]  Yeah, well, no luck there. I pretty much took out the front passenger-side door AND the rear passenger-side door. Oh, and I scraped up the edge of the bumper too, just for good measure.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure why I&#8217;m in this self-destructive mode. Maybe my moons are in retrograde? Or my insurance company is controlling my actions like a marionette? Maybe&#8212;despite my age, my marital and maternal status, and my professional standing&#8212;I&#8217;m still that irresponsible, reckless teen who crashed her car into a snow bank, lost her mother&#8217;s pearls, and had her Kelly green rugby shirt stolen because she didn&#8217;t lock her locker.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t <em>feel</em> like that girl any more, but try as I will, maybe I just can&#8217;t shake her.</p>
<p>The other night at dinner Paige asked me to tell her a story about when I was &#8220;a little girl.&#8221; I find these requests both sweet and annoying. The egomaniac in me loves the invitation to hold court on my favorite topic: myself. But the tired old mom in me just wants to clear the dishes off the table and start running the bath water. Haggard Mom thinks summoning up some story to tell takes more energy than she has.</p>
<p>But egomania won out.</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;Okay, so when I was a little girl my mother used to save all the old stale cereal and crackers and bread that we didn&#8217;t eat. She&#8217;d put it in the trunk of her car. And whenever she drove past the golf course or the pond on Poppasquash Road she&#8217;d pull over and feed the old crackers and stuff to the ducks.&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: [wild-eyed] &#8220;You&#8217;re not supposed to do that!&#8221;</p>
<p>Me: &#8220;What?&#8221;</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;Feed bread to ducks! We just learned this on our field trip. If ducks eat bread they get this disease where their wings get stuck like this [holds her arms straight out behind her]. Then they can&#8217;t fly!&#8221;</p>
<p>For some reason in my wrung out, end of the day, slaphappy mode, I found this utterly hilarious. And I started to laugh.</p>
<p>Kate: &#8220;No, Mom, it&#8217;s <em>true</em>! Their wings get like this [holds her arms out stiffly again]. It&#8217;s NOT FUNNY.&#8221;</p>
<p>And really, it&#8217;s not funny. But something about my daughter&#8217;s sweet earnestness, and something about how all those years my mother was trying to do something <em>good</em> but was essentially crippling the object of her affection&#8212;gave me a taste of how powerless we can be as we make our ways through the world. Try as we may to do the right thing, sometimes the universe conspires against us.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Opposites Attract</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/opposites-attract/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/11/opposites-attract/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Nov 2011 15:08:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Holidays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=4180</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We recently survived a terror-filled evening at Casa McClusky. It was bedtime and we couldn&#8217;t find Baba, Paige&#8217;s beloved stuffed animal lamb. The one thing that&#8217;s essential for getting Paige the f**k to sleep. Other breeders can no doubt appreciate the world-rocking misery of losing a sleep-critical item like this. The fact is, Baba is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We recently survived a terror-filled evening at Casa McClusky. It was bedtime and we couldn&#8217;t find Baba, Paige&#8217;s beloved stuffed animal lamb. The one thing that&#8217;s essential for getting Paige the f**k to sleep.</p>
<p>Other breeders can no doubt appreciate the world-rocking misery of losing a sleep-critical item like this. The fact is, Baba is irreplaceable. He&#8217;s very much like that <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_KrSWI8F2E" target="_blank">Busy Bee</a> dog toy in <a href="http://bestinshowonline.warnerbros.com/" target="_blank"><em>Best in Show</em></a>. Even if we were to ever find the same stuffed lamby in a store somewhere, it just wouldn&#8217;t be Baba.</p>
<p>So that night, what started as Mark casually asking if I&#8217;d seen Baba anywhere quickly turned into into a full-bore all-family search. We tore through the house like looters, up-ending tables, dumping out toy boxes, and running our arms through the contents of cupboards, searching every frickin&#8217; inch of the house desperately, frantically. We were like FBI agents on the prowl for a tiny digital chip. Like Matt Damon in <em><a href="http://www.universalstudiosentertainment.com/the-bourne-identity/" target="_blank">The Bourne Identity</a></em>.</p>
<p>You get the point.</p>
<p>Okay, so we really didn&#8217;t swing our arms through all the cupboards (though I <em>would</em> like to do that sometime). But man, we <em>did</em> look everywhere. Mark even went outside and dug through <em>the garbage cans</em>&#8212;what a saint! In a less messy but equally-desperate move, Kate and I looked in the fridge.</p>
<p>All this to no avail.</p>
<p>The cleaners had been at the house that day, and I conjured terrifying images of three women making their way across the border with Baba. I pictured them mistakenly grabbing Baba with a rag and using him to scrub the mildew off our shower tiles. The thoughts running through my mind were delirious and frightening. I was one step away from pledging myself to a nunnery if Baba was just returned to us safely.</p>
<p>A shaken, tear-drenched Paige went to bed with some random stuffed sheep I dug out of a toy box. A pathetic, inept imposter. It felt like our three-year-old was having an affair with some <em>other</em> stuffed animal. It was just wrong.</p>
<p>And after getting Paige to sleep&#8212;which I have to admit wasn&#8217;t all that bad&#8212;we continued to toss the house, with no luck. We felt so sad for little Wigs. And at 3AM, when she woke up and called out, &#8220;Mama, Dada, did you find Baba?&#8221; my heart ached when I bellowed back to her, &#8220;No, honey. No yet.&#8221;</p>
<p>So the next morning, with renewed fervor, Mark pulled apart everything in Paige&#8217;s room. And suddenly, from the depths of the closet he leaned out, holding Baba with an outstretched arm. He said to the girls who were lounging on Paige&#8217;s bed with some books, &#8220;Look who I have&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>They looked up and both casually said something like &#8220;Ah!&#8221;</p>
<p>When I high-fived Mark later in the kitchen&#8212;our long national tragedy drawn to a close&#8212;he reported, &#8220;I&#8217;ve got to tell you, I was really hoping for a bigger reaction.&#8221;</p>
<p>To which I said, &#8220;Oh, sure. Story of my life.&#8221;</p>
<p>I mean, what turbo people-lovin&#8217; extorvert can&#8217;t relate to that sentiment? Especially on the heels of Halloween, the ultimate attention-seeker&#8217;s holiday. I&#8217;m renowned for obsessively assembling elaborate reaction-gettin&#8217; costumes. Me? I&#8217;m all <em>about</em> the big reaction.</p>
<p>But not Mark. Mark is low-key. Mark is mild-mannered. Mark is&#8230; Midwestern.</p>
<p>We recently spent a weekend with friends of mine who&#8217;d only met Mark once. After knowing me, I think his low-impact, mellow ways surprised them. But, as one of my super-extroverted friends says about her shy husband, &#8220;Thank <em>God</em> he&#8217;s so quiet. Can you imagine TWO of me in a relationship?&#8221;</p>
<p>Word to that, sister.</p>
<p>Yes, Mark does not wrap up his self worth in how many people stop him to admire his costume on Halloween. In fact, he rarely even bothers with a costume. Though this year he did. Well, <em>kinda</em>.</p>
<p>We bumped into some friends at a neighborhood Halloween parade last weekend. They took this picture of us. It does an excellent job of conveying our individual approaches to Halloween.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Halloween2011_smaller.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-4187" title="Halloween2011_smaller" src="http://www.motherloadblog.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Halloween2011_smaller.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="400" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>It says so much about us, really.</p>
<p>I know (and adore) my husband. And does he ever know me. It&#8217;s one of the things that blew me away about him when we first met&#8212;how after being together for such a short time he knew me better than anyone.</p>
<p>And so we&#8217;ve come to laugh at the fact that I go for big drama, and he rolls on the down-low. He&#8217;s a little bit country, I&#8217;m a little bit rock and roll. And I couldn&#8217;t imagine it any other way. (Though some day when I set a homemade lasagna on the table in front of him I wouldn&#8217;t mind him setting off a fireworks display to convey his appreciation. Just once.)</p>
<p>Anyway, standing there in the kitchen The Morning Baba Was Found, we had a good laugh and decided I should write a memoir entitled <em>I Was Really Hoping for a Bigger Reaction</em>. That is, unless Joan Rivers gets to it first.</p>
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		<title>20 Things I Learned after 20 Years in California</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/milestone-pile-up/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/08/milestone-pile-up/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2011 07:25:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[City Livin']]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eating Out]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Milestones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3837</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s been a big week for milestones &#8217;round here. Monday was Mark and my seven year wedding anniversary. Say what you will about this marital mile-marker, but we have thus far experienced no itchiness. Phew. Yesterday was Kate&#8217;s first day of first grade. It was like some meta first-ness. Like first to the first power. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s been a big week for milestones &#8217;round here.</p>
<p>Monday was Mark and my seven year wedding anniversary. Say what you will about this marital mile-marker, but we have thus far experienced no <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048605/" target="_blank">itchiness</a>. Phew.</p>
<p>Yesterday was Kate&#8217;s first day of first grade. It was like some meta first-ness. Like first to the first power. But things like this don&#8217;t phase my unflappable girl. Within the first minute of being on the playground she was acting like the First Lady of Elementary School. By tomorrow she&#8217;ll have the kindergarteners handing over the cookies from their lunch boxes. Bless her heart.</p>
<p>And today is another biggie. Today marks 20 years to the day since I moved to California.</p>
<p>20 years!!! It&#8217;s totally unbelievable.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve lived here longer than I lived in Lil&#8217; Rhody. Which must mean that in another bat of an eyelash I&#8217;ll be wielding a walker with tennis ball wheels. I plan to have lots of flair on my walker by the way. In-n-Out Burger stickers, fuzzy clamp-on koala bears, and magenta bike handle streamers.</p>
<p>So there&#8217;s that to look forward to.</p>
<p>Anyway, in light of my 20 years as a Californian, I thought I&#8217;d share the top 20 things I&#8217;ve learned since living here.</p>
<p>1. To some people local artisan cheese is Kraft Singles. This is a good thing to think of when you are paying your astronomical rent or mortgage bill and feeling jealous of your friend&#8217;s McMansion in Sioux City. Compared to much of the rest of the country, the Bay Area offers many pains, but also many pleasures.</p>
<p>2. Redwood Trees are really tall.</p>
<p>3. Parallel parking is a Darwinian skill that one develops while living in SF. After driving around your neighborhood for 45 minutes on a parking spot quest, you can bet your pins-and-needles ass you&#8217;ll wedge your chippy-paint-bumpered Jetta into a space better suited to a Mini Cooper. On a 30% grade hill no less. After living in San Fran, going anywhere that has an actual parking lot makes you feel spoiled rotten.</p>
<p>3 1/2. (Turns out I had more than 20 things to say, so I&#8217;m trying to slip this one in here unnoticed.) You know how you go into an ice cream store and you ask the people who work there, &#8220;Wow, do you just eat ice cream all day?&#8221; and they just squirm and look uncomfortably annoyed because you&#8217;re the seventh person who&#8217;s asked them that in the past half-hour? You know that? Then they say, &#8220;Actually, <em>no</em>. When you work here eventually you get over it.&#8221; Well, I never REALLY believed them. Come ON. They&#8217;ve gotta be running in the back room stuffing themselves silly with Pralines and Cream, right? Well now that I live so close to Napa Valley I know exactly what those ice cream scoopers are talking about. Napa is stunning,  close by, and a world-renowned destination&#8212;oh, and it&#8217;s overflowing with <em>wine</em>, of course. Yet we don&#8217;t go there <em>every</em> weekend. We somehow also manage to not to always bring visitors there. It&#8217;s so close! It&#8217;s so fabulous! But I&#8217;m ashamed to say that we&#8217;ve grown to <em>take it for granted</em>. (Wait, you all don&#8217;t have hundreds of world-class wineries an hour&#8217;s drive from YOUR house?!)</p>
<p>4. Divorce West Coast style means that your father and his wife (who is younger than you) comes to your house for Thanksgiving with your mother and her girlfriend. And not only do they all <em>talk</em> to each other, they&#8217;re all best friends.</p>
<p>5. My scariest California rookie experience was ordering a burrito at <a href="http://www.yelp.com/biz/taqueria-la-cumbre-san-francisco" target="_blank">a Mission taqueria</a>. There&#8217;s a huge long counter behind which 15 or so women take orders from a constant stream of patrons. They sputter out questions like, &#8220;Black, pinto, or re-fried?&#8221; and you must use all your energy to ante up an answer&#8212;any answer&#8212;so as to keep pace with the next question they&#8217;re going to hurl your way. They move down the line two steps to the chicken and meat section where more un-decipherable questions are asked, and you whimper lightly and point. By then, sweating and disoriented you lose track of your burrito-maker, who is down by the salsas bellowing out &#8220;Hot or mild?&#8221; while a dozen other people are calling back to <em>their</em> nice burrito-making ladies a cacophony of &#8220;Pinto! No lettuce! Carnitas!&#8221; Then what happens is you start talking to The Wrong Woman. You <em>lose</em> your Burrito Maker and then suffer a sudden crushing white-girl shame because all the long-black-haired Mexican women look the same to you but you don&#8217;t want to accept that you really think that because that would be BAD and WRONG. Yet, uh, was <em>that</em> her? In the gray t-shirt? Or the one with the braids? And then suddenly she is back and in your face and yelling something and beckoning you down the long counter because you are creating a hungry human traffic jam so you wave an affirming that&#8217;s-great-thanks gesture her way so she&#8217;ll just stop asking you questions then you&#8217;re shunted to the cash register having no idea what it is that you ordered. And you have also <em>not</em> been handed your burrito. It&#8217;s been tossed in a pile with 8 other tin foil tubes that all have different letters scrawled on them. At the register they say things to you in questioning tones like &#8220;Super Veggie Burrito?,&#8221; or other phrases that include words like &#8220;Deluxe&#8221; which appear to be names for the kindsa burritos they make, but you have NO IDEA what it is that you got. Someone could offer to pay you $10,000 to tell them what is in your burrito and you&#8217;d just sit down and cry and say, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know! It all happened so fast! And she had an accent that I&#8217;m ashamed to say I really couldn&#8217;t understand!&#8221; But you manage to somehow buy something (that may or may not be yours) and don&#8217;t cry from the trauma of it all. And whatever the hell it is you eat it and decide that the holy terror you endured was SO worth it. Then eventually, 8 years or so later, after coming back about once a week, ordering a burrito becomes easier.</p>
<p>6. I sometimes feel un-cool for not being gay.</p>
<p>7. I&#8217;m more afraid that one of those <a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_5s67MJWOeAg/TNhW_Sxi-EI/AAAAAAAAEEc/fbqptiul5tk/s400/coyote_acme_anvil.jpg" target="_blank">Looney Toons anvils</a> might somehow fall on my head than I am about earthquakes. When you live here, you don&#8217;t hang pictures framed with glass over your bed, and you don&#8217;t think much about earthquakes. Because really, not wanting one won&#8217;t prevent one from happening. Besides, we&#8217;re all too stoned out of our minds every day to worry about anything other than when the pizza is going to arrive. (See #12.)</p>
<p>8. You have not really gone out dancing until you&#8217;re the only woman in a gay club and by the end of the night you find yourself dancing in a black lace bra. (Just kidding, Dad! Well, as far as you know&#8230;)</p>
<p>9. It turns out Spanish would&#8217;ve been a more useful language to take than my 12 years of French. Who knew?</p>
<p>10. San Francisco Victorians are painfully cold in the winter <em>and</em> summer. They sure may look purdy, but most Turkish prison cells are more comfortable.</p>
<p>11. Everything Mark Twain ever said about San Francisco summers and witch&#8217;s tits is totally true.</p>
<p>12. Of my native-Calif friends, some scored pot from their parents with the same regularity and lack of big-dealness that I had hitting my parents for an allowance.</p>
<p>13. Whenever I was home sick from work in New York, I felt like I was the only one in my apartment building aside from the crazy old ladies who never threw out newspapers and bred cockroaches. EVERYONE else was at work. But in the Bay Area I think that people in offices feel like the outsiders. Cafes and coffee shops are thrumming with people hanging out (working? checking Match.com? betting on the ponies?) all day long. And a good drinking game, if you ever need one during the day, is doing a shot every time a man with a baby strapped to his chest walks down the sidewalk past your house. THEY ARE EVERYWHERE.</p>
<p>14. When it rains here it rains and when it doesn&#8217;t rain it doesn&#8217;t rain. These weather patterns are strictly relegated to seasons and they nearly always play by the rules. This seems odd to you at first, but later when you go on vacations outside of Northern California and after a sunny morning there&#8217;s a rain storm in the afternoon it freaks your shit right out.</p>
<p>15. There&#8217;s something warm and romantic&#8212;but also prone to knocking over your porch plants&#8212;called the <a href="http://www.atmos.ucla.edu/~fovell/ASother/mm5/SantaAna/winds.html" target="_blank">Santa Anna winds</a> that pass through the Bay Area every once and a while. It&#8217;s fun to say Santa Ana winds, and even funner to have an unusual weather pattern crop up that you&#8217;ve lived here long enough to recognize. &#8220;Oh yeah, those Santa Ana&#8217;s are blowin&#8217;!&#8221; you call out to your neighbor over the bluster while getting into your car some mornings. And you think you&#8217;re really cool.</p>
<p>16. Don&#8217;t be surprised if you are waiting at a stop light and a man wearing black leather pants, a black leather captain&#8217;s hat, and a &#8220;shirt&#8221; comprised of crisscrossing leather straps, is walking another man across the street who is on all fours, and on a leash. I don&#8217;t know <em>what</em> those wacky gay boys are up to, but it seems like good clean fun!</p>
<p>17. Speaking of leather pants, don&#8217;t wear those to the <a href="http://www.rainbow.coop/" target="_blank">Rainbow Grocery</a> cooperative. Really. Take my word on that.</p>
<p>18. And speaking of crossing the street, people in California actually stop for pedestrians in crosswalks! All that time on the East Coast I never knew what those lines on the street were for.</p>
<p>19. The <a href="www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/" target="_blank">Berkeley Public Library&#8217;s</a> library cards look like they&#8217;re tie-dyed. <em>Somebody</em> had a great sense of branding (and humor).</p>
<p>20. There is <a href="http://www.golden-gate-park.com/buffalo-paddock.html" target="_blank">a field of bison</a> in Golden Gate Park and the first time you see them you will feel certain someone slipped you a hallucenogen.</p>
<p>Thank you, thank you, Mark, for a dazzling seven years of marriage, and for being the funniest, smartest, cutest, best-cookin&#8217; husband a gal could ever have. I adore the ground you walk on, and could you pick Kate up from school today? Listen, I&#8217;ll just call you about that later.</p>
<p>And thanks to you California, for the wild, wonderful ride these past twenty years. I <em>must</em> have been having a good time, because man, that time FLEW. Here&#8217;s to the next twenty.</p>
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		<title>My Hubby the Hobbyist</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/06/my-hubby-the-hobbyist/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/06/my-hubby-the-hobbyist/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2011 15:18:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3104</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Years ago my New Year&#8217;s resolution was to eat more sushi. This might not seem like your typical self-improvement-type resolution. But after being with Mark&#8212;a die-hard disliker of seafood&#8212;for a while at that point, I&#8217;d come to realize just how seldom I was eating the stuff. Something that I happen to love. And I&#8217;m not [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Years ago my New Year&#8217;s resolution was to eat more sushi.</p>
<p>This might not seem like your typical self-improvement-type resolution. But after being with Mark&#8212;a die-hard disliker of seafood&#8212;for a while at that point, I&#8217;d come to realize just how seldom <em>I</em> was eating the stuff. Something that I happen to love.</p>
<p>And I&#8217;m not one to deny myself.</p>
<p>I sent an all points bulletin out to my friends. &#8220;Available for any and all outings for sushi. I&#8217;ve deprived myself needlessly for too long! Seeking seafood redemption, and a good wasabi-induced nasal passage clearing.&#8221;</p>
<p>Okay, so I didn&#8217;t send out that <em>exact</em> email. But I <em>did</em> tell my possee I wanted to get my unagi on more often.</p>
<p>And I posed it to Mark this way: If I went on like this indefinitely&#8212;putting my own desires aside for the greater good of the couple&#8212;well, who knows? I might suddenly implode one day. I may do something irrational and regrettable, like, well&#8230; like smother him with a pillow in his sleep.</p>
<p>And neither of us wanted that to happen.</p>
<p>I recently got breakfast with a mom from Paigey&#8217;s school. We don&#8217;t know each other very well, and in the course of conversation she mentioned that she coaches her son&#8217;s little league team. And here I&#8217;d been thinking that, along with taking the trash out, that was <em>men&#8217;s</em> work.</p>
<p>It was the last thing I expected her&#8212;she of the fabulous over-sized designer purse&#8212;to say. And I <em>love</em> that she does it.</p>
<p>I told her how Mark worked for <em>Sports Illustrated</em> for years covering baseball. How he&#8217;s been to every spring training venue, took a road trip after college with his BFF to tour ballparks, and he used to write a popular blog about the Oakland A&#8217;s.</p>
<p>Oh, and sometimes? Sometimes he does that sports-nerd thing where he tracks the scores at games on those little cards.</p>
<p>None of this makes a whit of sense to me. But I gather it&#8217;s what baseball fans do.</p>
<p>And Mark is definitely a fan. Or, at least, he <em>used</em> to be.</p>
<p>Because, sadly, after years of me whining whenever a game was on TV and I wanted to watch something estrogeny like <em>Friends</em>, and after producing two time-sucking kids, and after getting older and lazier about actually making it out to ball games, the truth is, Mark indulges his baseball fandom about as often as I eat sushi. Which is, sadly, not so much.</p>
<p>I told Little League Coach Mom that Mark also used to be in a band. (She did too!) But now, heck, he rarely even picks up his guitar.</p>
<p>I walked home from our breakfast wondering, &#8220;Has parenthood&#8212;or marriage&#8212;beaten our old interests out of Mark and me?&#8221; Over time have we morphed into a common entity, unwittingly abandoning our personal passions in deference to those we share? And have even some of <em>those</em> been swallowed up by our children?</p>
<p>One block further in my promenade I came to the realization that the answer was&#8212;thrillingly&#8212;<em>no</em>. Blessedly, all that is unique and interesting about us has not been lost.</p>
<p>Mark and I still appear to be different people. Sure, folks say we <em>look</em> alike, but we steadfastly remain one introvert, one extrovert. One cooker of savory foods, one dessert-maker. One Midwesterner, one New Englander. One techno-file, one <a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/luddite" target="_blank">luddite</a>. And, despite a brief period of confusion (when we both had blue ones), we still even use separate toothbrushes. (I have a friend who shares a toothbrush with her spouse, claiming the result&#8217;s no different than what happens when you make out. But <em>still</em>.)</p>
<p>So back to my contemplative walk&#8230; What <em>was</em> a bit distressing, was the realization that Mark&#8217;s done a far better job that I have of pursuing non-kid-related interests.</p>
<p>But honestly? Nearly anyone would be challenged to keep pace with the man. Not to be overly fawning, but the guy<em>&#8216;s</em> a kinda <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_Man" target="_blank">Renaissance Man</a>. Or at least, one in training. It&#8217;s like he&#8217;s being guided by some unspoken imperative to educate himself on a super vast array of stuff. Or maybe he&#8217;s just training for some reality show I&#8217;m unaware of.</p>
<p>And when he gets engrossed in some new thing, it&#8217;s not like he takes a cursory dip. When Mark&#8217;s interest is piqued, he goes <em>deep</em>.</p>
<p>When we were dating he got into cooking. Lots of folks like to cook, right? Mark began amassing cookbooks (and knives and pots and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Swissmar-Borner-V-1001-V-Slicer-Mandoline/dp/B0000632QE/ref=sr_1_3?s=kitchen&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1303011183&amp;sr=1-3" target="_blank">mandolines</a>) on a grand scale, took a week-long class at the <a href="http://www.ciachef.edu/admissions/california/default.asp" target="_blank">Culinary Institute of America</a>, and became obsessed with obtaining a perfectly cubical dice on his <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirepoix_(cuisine)" target="_blank"><em>mirepoix</em></a>. And when I say perfect, it was as if Thomas Keller were going to bust through our kitchen wall like <a href="http://www.comicsbulletin.com/rage/images/050401/koolaidman.jpg" target="_blank">the Kool-Aid guy</a> to inspect Mark&#8217;s knife skills.</p>
<p>Generalized cooking over-achieving eventually gave way to Mark&#8217;s interest in molecular gastronomy. More gear and high-tech equipment was gathered (taking up even <em>more</em> storage space), and strange chemical agents made their way into our cupboards alongside old-school standards like cinnamon and garlic powder.</p>
<p>Mark practically began making the girls&#8217; morning oatmeal <em><a href="http://www.cookingsousvide.com/" target="_blank">sous-vide</a></em>. He placed plates of pink dust before me at dinner. &#8220;It&#8217;s salmon, but I altered it using bio-sodium-carbonate-hydroxy-something-or-other. It&#8217;ll just melt in your mouth. It&#8217;s the true <em>essence</em> of salmon!&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.usacycling.org/cx/" target="_blank">Cyclocross</a> came onto Mark&#8217;s radar at some point before or after techy geek cooking. (It&#8217;s hard to keep track.) It turns out his  love of road biking was just the gateway drug to cyclocross&#8212;a seems-miserable-to-me sort of obstacle-course laden bike race. Mark woke early on weekends to meet up with other mad men who took pleasure in repeatedly grinding their way through hilly punishing courses that forced them to intermittently run carrying their bikes over their shoulders to get over stairs or streams or tree stumps.</p>
<p>Race mornings that were especially drizzly or muddy had him giggling with glee. In his free time (sometimes in our living room) he&#8217;d practice jumping on and off his bike. Or throwing it over his shoulder and sprinting.</p>
<p>He returned from races splattered in mud and nursing minor injuries, happy as a clam. If I didn&#8217;t know him better I&#8217;d have guessed he was having an affair with some raucous barnyard animal.</p>
<p>The first &#8216;cross race the kids and I went to was weirdly family-friendly. Most of the 30-something guys were former road or mountain bikers who, after fatherhood, became cyclocross weekend warriors. (The sport serves up a large dose of action to the time-constrained maniac.) Cheering sections formed in small mud pits alongside the race course, made up of hipster mamas and kids clanging cow bells howling, &#8220;Goooo Daddy!&#8221; After the race grilled sausages and beer were <em>de rigeur (</em>in the Belgian tradition), despite the fact that it was 10:30AM. It wasn&#8217;t uncommon to see a mom pushing a stroller with a kid balanced on a case of Trappist ale.</p>
<p>Mud and pain aside, attending that race helped me see the allure of it. But one morning, scaling some slippery hillside with his bike slung on his shoulder like a backpack, Mark wrenched his knee. And faster&#8217;n you can clang a cowbell, his obsession with cyclocross was replaced with sessions with a physical therapist. (He still fervently watches races on YouTube. Very weird to suddenly hear a crowd cheering in Flemish from the other room.)</p>
<p>I set one of Mark&#8217;s obsessive hobbies into motion when I gave him a food smoker a couple Christmases back. He&#8217;s spent hours pouring over food-geek websites, sussing out subtle differences between brisket recipes, contemplating cuts of meat, and photographing (and Tweeting about) every step of the smoking process. He&#8217;s woken up in the middle of stormy nights, and gone outside in his boxers and raincoat to check on the progress of his pork butts with a flashlight.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d call it excessive, unhealthy behavior if it weren&#8217;t for the fact that his pulled pork is so damn good. (His ribs don&#8217;t suck either.)</p>
<p>We&#8217;re at least three months into Mark baking bread every weekend, never quite content with the rise in his proof or the airiness of his crumb. He&#8217;s also been golfing a damn lot. And like his bread loaves, no golf outing ever seems totally satisfying. At some holes he birdies, but bogies at others. The first 17 holes rock, then he falls apart on the 18th.  There&#8217;s always the hope that <em>next</em> weekend his sourdough will be surreal in its perfection and he&#8217;ll get 18 holes in one.</p>
<p>And while my ass grows rotund from succulent smoked meats and home-baked bread, Mark&#8217;s decided to also come down on my liver. Which is to say the man has become Mr. Cocktail. He&#8217;s a high-ranking amateur mixmaster, who blessedly has not incorporated <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yto9tqXhPik" target="_blank">flair</a> into his bartending prowess. That&#8217;d just be tacky.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m currently living in a world where a pre-dinner drink could include something as obscure and colorful as Creme de Violette or as oddly-named as John D. Taylor&#8217;s Velvet Falernum. <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Essential-Cocktail-Mixing-Perfect-Drinks/dp/0307405737" target="_blank">A cocktail cookbook</a> I bought him for his birthday has become his new Bible, and man, we are sipping some lovely fizzy ginny deliciousness &#8217;round here.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s great is these drinks are such time-honored classics. Like, I&#8217;m a huge fan of the Tom Collins now. So preppy-sounding and old school! And recently at a friend&#8217;s house Mark took a mobile tote-bag bar and busted out some lemony minty bev called a&#8212;I love this&#8212;Southside. How smooth-sounding is that? &#8220;Yes, I&#8217;ll have a Southside, please.&#8221;</p>
<p>And all this is coming from the woman whose first act as President was going to be a law that states coconut-flavored rum is bad-ass. Up &#8217;til now I&#8217;ve had the booze palette of a 12-year-old. It&#8217;s up just a notch from those who have an affinity for wild strawberry wine coolers. (I prefer peach&#8212;much more refined.)</p>
<p>Anyway, to discover that there are some excellent classic cocktails out there that I like? That I wouldn&#8217;t be ashamed to order in public? It&#8217;s immensely liberating. Plus it frees up my first Presidential mandates to focus on outlawing the use of mushrooms in restaurants, and requiring all children to stay in bed until 9AM.</p>
<p>Speaking of kids, Kate has recently abated her two-week compulsive balloon animal making binge (going everywhere clutching a balloon pump to her chest like it&#8217;s her pacemaker). These days she is fervently focused on crafting friendship bracelets.</p>
<p>God help those who deign to darken our doorstep for even a moment. She&#8217;ll accost you with a demand for your favorite two&#8212;no, three!&#8212;colors, then start furiously knotting. Two Jehovah&#8217;s Witnesses pushing pamphlets left our porch after a five-second &#8220;no thanks&#8221; from me, and I could swear each of them was sporting fashionable new thread bracelets from Kate. &#8220;When it pops off some day, make a wish!&#8221; is her cheery manufacturer&#8217;s tip.</p>
<p>Mark and Kate&#8217;s hobbies have yet to intersect, but when they do&#8212;fly fishing? cartography? Beanie Baby collecting?&#8212;I can only imagine how the sparks will fly.</p>
<p>But thankfully, before Paige and I have reason to be fed up with the onslaught of new gear, or the dining table be overtaken, or them being absent for chunks of the weekend, they&#8217;ll be on to the next thing.</p>
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		<title>Campfire Classroom</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/06/campfire-classroom/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2011 14:13:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Firsts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kate's Friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3325</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You think you know everything there is to know about someone, then out of the blue they bust out something new. Mark did this to me on Sunday. He told me that two of the best showers he&#8217;s ever taken took place since he&#8217;s known me. Okay, I admit this is NOT the most scintillating [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You think you know everything there is to know about someone, then out of the blue they bust out something new.</p>
<p>Mark did this to me on Sunday. He told me that two of the best showers he&#8217;s ever taken took place since he&#8217;s known me.</p>
<p>Okay, I admit this is NOT the most scintillating tidbit. Not like finding out he&#8217;d been a prodigy on the tuba. Or that he had a tail surgically removed after birth. (Neither of those things, sadly, are true.) But, you know, when you&#8217;ve been married to someone for a while, any fresh little nugget is compelling.</p>
<p>So about these showers. The best of his life, he claimed. And before you envision some steamy <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091635/" target="_blank"><em>Nine 1/2 Weeks</em></a> acrobatic-sex scene, the showers he was referring to he actually took <em>alone</em>.</p>
<p>One of them was after a several-day backpacking trip we took through the <a href="http://photography.nationalgeographic.com/staticfiles/NGS/Shared/StaticFiles/Photography/Images/POD/b/boundary-waters-77098-sw.jpg" target="_blank">Minnesota Boundary Waters</a>. Back when we were dating. It was the kind of grueling balls-out adventure that had the potential to cement our relationship or squelch it. After several days we emerged from the woods exhausted, sucked-dry by mosquitoes, and with Mark missing a toenail. But strangely, still in love.</p>
<p>We were both chicken-fried in sedimentary layers of sunscreen, bug spray, and dirt. Oh, and sweat. Did I fail to mention we were comprehensively coated in deeply-funky homeless man strength sweat?</p>
<p>Well, yes sirree we were.</p>
<p>Mark remembers that first shower back in civilization quite fondly.</p>
<p>Then there was the bath Mark took in a fancy L.A. hotel room after completing <a href="http://www.aidslifecycle.org/" target="_blank">the AIDS Ride</a>. (Okay, so this wasn&#8217;t a <em>shower</em> per se, but his second best &#8220;bathing experience.&#8221;) Turns out that after a 580-mile bike ride, a soak in the tub does you justice. In the same way that doing anything other than pedaling your bike would probably be pleasant.</p>
<p>Since having had kids, neither Mark nor I have gotten much chance to do the kinda things that result in severe abstention from cleanliness. No long camping adventures. No immense feats of athletic endurance. And I don&#8217;t mean to show off here, but even when the kids were newborns we somehow managed to shower regularly.</p>
<p>So it wasn&#8217;t until a few weeks ago, when we went camping for a weekend with Kate&#8217;s school, that we returned to the Land of the Stinky.</p>
<p>Yes, we&#8217;re the people who put camping equipment on our wedding registry, got a bunch of great new gear, then I immediately got pregnant. And say what you will about the merits of a <a href="http://www.google.com/products/catalog?q=Thermarest&amp;oe=utf-8&amp;rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&amp;client=firefox-a&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;tbm=shop&amp;cid=2174935897083567432&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=t0MDTojOJo_2tgP-junqDQ&amp;ved=0CGcQ8wIwAg" target="_blank">Thermarest</a>, I had no intention of settling my preg-o whale-like carcass atop a thin air mattress and hoping for any semblance of a good night&#8217;s sleep. I mean, even a world-class optimist like me knew that was too much to hope for.</p>
<p>But now Paigey&#8217;s well over three years old. We no longer have a baby as an excuse. (Take my notions of poor sleep as a pregnant camper and magnify those to the tenth power at the thought of bunkin&#8217; in a tent with a <em>baby</em>.) So when Kate&#8217;s kindergarten sent out an email about a school-wide weekend in the wilderness, how could we say no? It seemed like high time to dredge up and dust off our sleeping bags, <a href="http://store.nalgene.com/category-s/3.htm" target="_blank">Nalgene bottles</a>, and moisture-wicking clothing. Oh and those great <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Aquis-Microfiber-Hair-Towel-39-Inches/dp/B000FFFP96/ref=pd_sim_bt_1" target="_blank">little super-absorbant towels</a>.</p>
<p>Sure, we were staying in a cabin. With bathrooms just a path&#8217;s walk away. And&#8212;get this&#8212;there was even a dining hall where we were beckoned by bell for meals three times a day. So it was hardly roughin&#8217; it. But it was a perfect re-introduction to the wonders of the wilderness. A great way for Mark and I to revisit the concept of camping, and to envision it as an activity for our party of four.</p>
<p>And beyond re-igniting our desire to starting camping again, our whole family learned a little something new that weekend. So much so, that I started noting our various discoveries.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s that list:</p>
<p><strong>Electric Kool-Aid Gummi Bear Test</strong><br />
For the first time, Kate and Paige drank Kool-Aid. Paige dubbed it &#8220;gummi bear juice&#8221; and became immediately, devastatingly addicted. After polishing off a large cup she&#8217;d plead, &#8220;More, more, MORE gummi bear juice, Mama!&#8221; I started wondering what we could use as a methadone to ease her off the stuff on the long drive home.</p>
<p>And to top it off she had a big, smile-shaped, red Kool-Aid stain on her face. Kinda like a milk moustache, but larger and more terrifying. By weekend&#8217;s end I feared it was essentially tattooed on. She looked like <a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_qIbU7ptOt4E/Snuy5Nbb6zI/AAAAAAAAAus/Tyv3KNLyNR0/s400/heath+as+joker.jpg" target="_blank">The Joker</a> from <em>Batman</em>&#8212;and with her sugar high, was acting only slightly less demonic.</p>
<p><strong>Boys Like Fire</strong><br />
At the bonfire our first night, I learned that boys&#8212;especially 4th and 5th grade boys&#8212;really REALLY like fire. Trust me on this. My eyeball was almost on the receiving end of a flaming marshmallow several times. Some boys were skipping the s&#8217;mores altogether to focus all their attention on setting branches and leaves on fire. The way things were going it was only a matter of time until bratty siblings and controlling parents were tossed into the flames. I bugged out before the real pyrotechnics kicked in.</p>
<p><strong>Tricks for Keeping Warm</strong><br />
On our first morning in the cabin, Mark handed Kate and Paige their clothes for the day and suggested they put them in their sleeping bags to warm up. Mind you, it was May, but still <em>chiiiiilly</em> where we were. (Saturday night dropped down to 40-something.) Anyway, I thought this idea of thawing your clothes before getting dressed was sheer spousal brilliance.</p>
<p>It pays to marry an <a href="http://www.nesa.org/" target="_blank">Eagle Scout</a>, ladies.</p>
<p>And the other thing? On Sunday morning when I was nearly swan diving into a cup of rank camp coffee to warm up, I learned that I&#8217;d bungled my attempts to not freeze during the night. I&#8217;d layered on lots of clothes before climbing into my super-schmancy hi-tech sleeping bag. (I am, after all, <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2008/05/living-in-the-lap-of-product-testing/" target="_blank">The First Lady of Wired Magazine Gadgets</a>.) Anyway, in a not altogether flirtatious fashion, one of the dads from the school informed me that &#8220;less clothing is more&#8221; in one&#8217;s sleeping bag. As in, your body generates warmth that bounces off the sleeping bag and gets trapped there&#8212;keepin&#8217; ya toasty.</p>
<p>But me? I&#8217;d intercepted my 20-degree sleep sack&#8217;s ability to be warm and womb-like by foolishly layering on leggings, a t-shirt, and a hoodie.</p>
<p>This explains why mountain men like to sleep in the buff. (Someone said that who was listening to our conversation that day, so I thought I&#8217;d say it too. But I actually don&#8217;t know any mountain men, and certainly have no insights into their proclivities for night-time garb&#8212;or lack thereof.)</p>
<p><strong>Moths to a Flame</strong><br />
The first morning at the dining hall many of Kate&#8217;s classmates were clamoring around the industrial cereal dispensers&#8212;those long clear-plastic tubes that&#8217;re filled with different cereals. You churn a knob at the bottom to dump some in your bowl.</p>
<p>And you know what was in one of them? FRUIT LOOPS.</p>
<p>This, like the Kool-Aid, was life-changing for many of those all-organic, low-sugar, earthy-groovy-healthy California kids. Suffice to to say they were like moths to a flame. Or rather, like little robots aimed at a target who kept blindly walking towards it, bumping into it, then charging it again.</p>
<p>All those lies us parents had been spewing all these years&#8212;that the flavorless cardboardy organic Cheerio-shaped cereal was the most delicious and indulgent of breakfast options&#8212;were brutally laid bare.</p>
<p>I actually had some Fruit Loops myself that weekend. What a taste flashback!</p>
<p>And you know, they ARE pretty damn good.</p>
<p><strong>Four-Legged Stroller</strong><br />
I have long contended that I will be pushing my children to their proms in strollers. Because they are the world&#8217;s wimpiest walkers. I know I should really just dispose of our Rolls Royce-quality double stroller altogether. But now I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ll have to. Now that Kate&#8217;s been on a <em>horse </em>I&#8217;m convinced she&#8217;ll be more game for a pony than a Porsche when she turns 16.</p>
<p>I too rode a horse for the first time! Took a glorious hour-long trail ride on an amazing gorgeous trail. Even saw a real-live beaver out swimming in the river.</p>
<p><em>Nature!</em> Real living nature!</p>
<p>I&#8217;m currently considering an urban-girl-goes-country wardrobe overhaul. The next time you see me wearing turquoise jewelry, a silver belt buckle, jeans, and boots, please just play along with it. I&#8217;m sure, like all good phases, it will pass.</p>
<p><strong>When in Rome, Speak Roman</strong><br />
On the second morning in our one-room cabin, Kate rolled over and started yammering on about something to Paige. This was a thrilling chance for Kate to start her 12-hour-long Daily Talk Marathon a few minutes earlier than at home, where she has to walk from her bedroom to her sister&#8217;s before lurching into uninterrupted streaming chat.</p>
<p>Paige was groggy. She was un-used to the late bedtimes brought about by night-time bonfires. She harumphed. She whined. She rolled over. She pulled her blankie over her head. And finally, fed up, I heard her clearly, unemotionally say, &#8220;Suck it, Kate.&#8221;</p>
<p>I was stunned. And I think Kate was too&#8212;even though I&#8217;m pretty sure neither of them knew what it meant.</p>
<p>Kate quieted down. Paige dozed back off, and I lay trembling and speechless in my sleeping bag, not believing what I&#8217;d just heard my baby say. (Mark, as it turns out, was in the bathroom during this.)</p>
<p>Clearly the girls picked up more than just how to wield hot marshmallow-tipped sticks from the older boys that weekend. They learned a new nearly-swear. But blessedly&#8212;maybe because I didn&#8217;t react to it&#8212;it was one lesson that they totally forgot.</p>
<p>Kate is doing an overnight camp-out with her most-excellent super-expensive summer camp tonight. They&#8217;re sleeping under the stars, having a bonfire, s&#8217;mores, and lots of other good clean fun. At nearly six years old, this will be a big dose of independence for her. She&#8217;s stayed away from us with her grandparents before, but an overnight camping trip is truly the Big Girl big league.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m in that weird maternal place of feeling half thrilled for her and half sad about how quickly my girl is growing up.</p>
<p>And I&#8217;m looking forward to getting out to camp more this summer with our whole family. No doubt Kate will have a thing or two to teach us then. Hopefully it won&#8217;t be about being naked in your sleeping bag.</p>
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		<title>Glory Days</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/06/glory-days/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/06/glory-days/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jun 2011 14:33:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[City Livin']]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discoveries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Little Rhody]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3360</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The older I get, the younger I dress. I came to this disturbing realization on Friday, while digging through my wardrobe. I unearthed tweed blazers, thin brown belts with gold-tone buckles, and high-necked woolen herringbone dresses. This clothing phase was like some sedimentary layer of my life I&#8217;d dug down deep enough to hit. Geologists [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The older I get, the younger I dress.</p>
<p>I came to this disturbing realization on Friday, while digging through my wardrobe. I unearthed tweed blazers, thin brown belts with gold-tone buckles, and high-necked woolen herringbone dresses.</p>
<p>This clothing phase was like some sedimentary layer of my life I&#8217;d dug down deep enough to hit. Geologists would likely call it The Neutral Tones All-Wool Un-Sexy Professional Era.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s no wonder I married so late in life, dressed as I was.</p>
<p>The thing is, there was a time in my younger days when I dressed even <em>older</em>. From age 9 to 14 or so I was painfully, excessively preppy. I worked damn hard at it too. I layered shirts will devout precision, sometimes wearing two turtlenecks (in the dead of summer) just to reveal the slim perimeter of an extra pastel color at my chin-line.</p>
<p>I wore Bermuda shorts with ribbon belts, <a href="http://www.lillypulitzer.com/" target="_blank">Lilly Pulitzer</a> golf skirts, or any bright seashell-patterned jack-ass pants I could convince my mother to buy. I draped fair isle sweaters over my shoulders with surgical precision, and accessorized with a nautical <a href="http://www.nantucketknotworks.com/info_files/family.html" target="_blank">rope bracelet</a> and a gold signet ring with the monogram KEB. (Like everything else I wore, the initial &#8216;E&#8217; was just for show. I don&#8217;t have a middle name, but I couldn&#8217;t bear the shame of a two-letter monogram.)</p>
<p>Yes, in my early teens, tragically, Talbots was my punk rock. I looked like a 75-year-old woman who got lost en route to Garden Club and mistakenly wandered into a middle school.</p>
<p>And the sad truth is that the look I was going for was utterly un-ironic. I even embraced the short-lived nickname Kiki that was bestowed upon me after <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Official-Preppy-Handbook-Jonathan-Roberts/dp/0894801406" target="_blank"><em>The Preppy Handbook</em></a> came out.</p>
<p>Ah, youth.</p>
<p>Anyway, on Friday I was getting ready to go to a clothing swap. A fabulous friend I rarely see had invited me. And although I assumed I&#8217;d know only one or two gals aside from the hostess, I had a hunch it&#8217;d be an interesting crowd.</p>
<p>But I was un-prepared. That working-mother frantic &#8220;oh-shit-I&#8217;m-supposed-to-bring-something-to-this-thing-that-starts-in-20-minutes&#8221; kinda unprepared. And so I dove into an armoir in the basement to dredge up some clothing to contribute. I was hoping to find something chic that just didn&#8217;t fit any more.</p>
<p>Instead I came up with <em>tweed</em>.</p>
<p>If I had any hope of hitting it off with these San Fran sisters, I&#8217;d have to swiftly dump my Nancy Reagan-esque clothing cast-offs into the mass of &#8220;clean, gently-used garments,&#8221; and slip away before the dowdy duds were linked to me.</p>
<p>Turns out I&#8217;d been right about the evening being fun and fabulous. I had reason on many occasions to laugh wine out my nose. (And thankfully the good sense <em>not</em> to.) I ate a tremendously delicious slab of lasagna, met some hilarious gals, and made off with a stunning new skirt and a great little black dress.</p>
<p>I even broke my own No Used Shoes Rule thanks to some other Size 8 whose adorable, unstinky, next-to-new heels were too cute to resist&#8212;especially when surrounded by a sea of gals who were ooh-ing and intoning in serious voices, &#8220;Those look SO GOOD ON YOU.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was like being in a dressing room with 30 other girlfriends who you just met. Who were a little drunk.</p>
<p>But the other half of my fun didn&#8217;t even happen at the party. It was getting there. My exceptional spouse was tending to our small humans, allowing me the unbridled freedom of slipping out into the evening in our non-kid-transporting vehicle, cutely clad, radio blasting. I had a bottle of wine in my purse, and not a single wipe or diaper on me.</p>
<p>The hostess lives in a dazzling Victorian in my old San Francisco &#8216;hood. A jealous-making home they bought back when mere mortals could afford digs that grand.</p>
<p>Cruising down familiar streets lined with new unfamiliar shops and restaurants felt like connecting with a long lost friend. Ah, the ole coffee shop. Ah, that soap and shampoo shop. (How <em>do</em> they survive?) That dump of a grocery store, reborn as a Whole Foods.</p>
<p>I gazed out my car window at the inhabitants of my old stomping grounds walking around doing their Friday night things. Oh those cute child-free folks, I thought smiling and shaking my head. Spilling out of that Irish pub onto the sidewalk. Wandering through that used book store. Eating raw fish or spicy kid-unfriendly foods in white-tableclothed restaurants that don&#8217;t hand out crayons or booster seats.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s so cute that they know no other life!</p>
<p>And it was so thrilling to be amidst them. Even to just be driving down the street, looking at them like fish in an aquarium. Not so long ago I didn&#8217;t have this C-section scar! I ate off hangovers in that greasy spoon! And that the bar sign &#8220;Be quiet when you leave here, our neighbors are trying to fucking sleep&#8221;? That was aimed at me The Drinker, not me The Tired Old Neighbor.</p>
<p>I <a href="http://www.pandora.com/" target="_blank">Pandoraed</a> Bruce Springsteen the other night, and after Mark cleaned the kitchen from dinner he turned the volume way up and declared Family Dance Party. (This is something one can declare, like war. But it generally involves less casualties and more disco.)</p>
<p>Anyway, Mark grabbed Kate&#8217;s hand, stretched out her arm and frenetically strummed her stomach like a guitar. This is apparently the most hilarious, funny thing a father can  do. On the scale of Fun Paternal Activities, this makes making chocolate chip you-name-the-shape pancakes on a Sunday morning seem like as much fun as running an errand at the hardware store.</p>
<p>Put simply, the child-as-guitar game <em>rocks</em>.</p>
<p>The whole time Mark&#8217;s working Kate like some <a href="http://hothardware.com/newsimages/Item9668/van-halen.jpg" target="_blank">Fender Stratocaster</a> he&#8217;s wowing an arena full of crazed fans with, she&#8217;s nearly barfing she&#8217;s laughing so hard. And Paige is almost hyperventilating wanting it to be her turn. &#8220;Play ME, Dada! <em>Plaaaay meeeee</em>!&#8221;</p>
<p>I posted something on Facebook about Mark playing the kids like guitars to <a href="http://www.brucespringsteen.net/news/index.html" target="_blank">The Boss</a>, and people posted comments like &#8220;Just as long as he doesn&#8217;t have to prove it all night,&#8221; and &#8220;Glory days, they&#8217;ll pass you by.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ah, good times.</p>
<p>Anyway, after everyone put back on the clothes they&#8217;d come in and the clothing swap wound down, I skipped out through the rainy night to my car. I pulled my hood over my forehead with one hand and clutched a bag of fabulous new-to-me clothes in the other. And I felt smug knowing that various women managed to take home all the weirdly drab, woolen clothes I&#8217;d contributed to the evening. (Perhaps mixed up in the fray as they were, each item on its own seemed less, well&#8230; <em>Amish</em>.)</p>
<p>I was giddy even admiring my parking job&#8212;squeezed into a tight spot on a steep hill. You can take the girl out of the city, but you can&#8217;t take the city out of the girl.</p>
<p>Life was good, right? I&#8217;d gone into a house knowing three people and came out with new friends and their old clothes.</p>
<p>And it was too early to know that <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/make-new-friends-but-keep-the-old/" target="_blank">my work husband</a> would heckle my adopted long skirt when I wore it to work on Monday, asking, &#8220;Who was AT that swap? Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman?&#8221;</p>
<p>When I got back to my quiet, dark house, I dropped my sack of duds by the door, slipped off my boots, and tip-toed into Paigey&#8217;s room. She was snoozing in her usual sweaty, curly-haired way, head flopped to one side and cheeks flushed pink. In Kate&#8217;s room, my big girl was lodged between the edge of her mattress and her wall, blankets kicked off, and her stuffed dog Dottie draped across her neck like a string of pearls.</p>
<p>Before setting foot in either of their rooms, I could have described to you exactly how each of them were going to look.</p>
<p>Teeth brushed, email checked, dress yanked off and tossed into the dark of the room, I climbed into bed alongside Mark. He was snoring the very smallest little snore, deep asleep. I edged towards him to steal some warmth.</p>
<p>Say what you will about my single-gal city livin&#8217;. What I&#8217;ve got right here and now? Glory days for sure.</p>
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		<title>All Hail to Principal Kate</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/05/all-hail-to-principal-kate/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/05/all-hail-to-principal-kate/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 May 2011 16:12:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Firsts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kate's Friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kindergarten]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Miss Kate]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3159</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mark and I are so going to rock the nursing home scene. I know it may be a bit premature to get fired up about this now. But if our Bingo skillz are anywhere near as on-fire as our knack for winning raffles, we&#8217;re going to DOMINATE those oldsters. Here&#8217;s the thing: Last year at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mark and I are <em>so</em> going to rock the nursing home scene.</p>
<p>I know it may be a bit premature to get fired up about this now. But if our Bingo skillz are anywhere near as on-fire as our knack for winning raffles, we&#8217;re going to DOMINATE those oldsters.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the thing: Last year at Kate&#8217;s preschool auction we were ready to dart out the door early. The school was providing childcare and we had one hour of babysitting left. This compelled us (and some friends) to want to bee-line to a bar to guzzle as much booze as possible in that remaining window of freedom. (What is it about being a parent that makes you want to drink like a frat boy sometimes?)</p>
<p>So we&#8217;ve got one foot out the door. Quite literally. And we hear the auctioneer bellow, &#8220;Now wait a minute folks! We still have the raffle drawing for the instant wine cellar!&#8221;</p>
<p>With a dramatic flourish he sunk his hand into a glass bowl. He withdrew a stub, looked at it, and scrunching up his face he muttered into the mic, &#8220;I&#8217;m so <em>bad</em> at pronouncing these names.&#8221;</p>
<p>And Mark and I looked at each other. Because we knew.</p>
<p>Yes, thank all that is holy and bad for my liver&#8212;we won! (And the guy actually did a commendable job of pronouncing McClusky.) Yup, we took home more than four cases of vino that night. All different kinds, and all pretty good stuff&#8212;each family from the school having contributed a bottle.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve found that many things labeled &#8220;instant&#8221; are not as good as their slower alternatives. Instant coffee, instant rice, instant mashed potatoes. But an instant <em>wine cellar</em>? Now<em> that&#8217;s</em> a good thing. Trust me.</p>
<p>Hic!</p>
<p>A couple months ago, I dragged Mark by his ear to Kate&#8217;s elementary school auction. He&#8217;s not a fan of those sorts of big, canned social events. Here we were on a Saturday night having spent $40 a ticket to come to the school&#8217;s auditorium&#8212;a place we schlep through every weekday in far less fancy attire. But we bought the tickets and gussied up because private school is kinda like going to a chiropractor. Your back is <em>never</em> totally better. And private schools never have enough of your money.</p>
<p>So anyway, they had a silent auction, a live auction, and, I noticed as I stumbled across the dimly lit prom-like room towards the bar, a <em>raffle</em>.</p>
<p>I diverted my wine mission, and sashayed over to the raffle table, heady with optimism and the cheap pinot I&#8217;d been drinking. I requested two $25 tickets, and proclaimed to the mom-volunteers workin&#8217; the table, &#8220;I&#8217;m gonna win.&#8221;</p>
<p>Oh it&#8217;s so BORING being this lucky. Yes, yes, we won AGAIN. (Yawn.) I mean, it&#8217;s nearly at the point where it&#8217;s just unfair to the other naive, hopeful raffle ticket buyers who we go up against.</p>
<p>But get this: This time there was no physical prize. Mark wasn&#8217;t making several trips back and forth to the car heaving heavy boxes of wine into the trunk, or worse, cramming in some over-sized blindingly-colorful classroom art project. This time we won something intangible, something experiential, something that would make our daughter get a taste of power she may never cleanse from her mind&#8217;s palette.</p>
<p>We won that Kate, our little kindergartener, was going to be principal of the school for a day.</p>
<p>Brilliant! We were beaming. You would&#8217;ve thought they&#8217;d awarded us Neiman Marcus matching his and hers hot air balloons.</p>
<p>The <em>real</em> principal emailed me a couple weeks later to set it up. &#8220;Would April 28th work for Kate?&#8221; she asked. I wondered what she thought Kate might have planned for that day, other than circle time, chasing the boys around the playground, and singing rainforest-themed songs.</p>
<p>Let me see&#8230; No meetings with heads of state planned. No bereaved families to visit. No fundraiser luncheons.</p>
<p>April 28th? Why&#8230; yes! She&#8217;s available!</p>
<p>At  drop-off one morning I bumped into the principal. She suggested that Mark and I brainstorm with Kate about what she might like to do for her day at the helm. &#8220;Let me know what she comes up with,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Then I can pick out some of things that&#8217;re realistic for us to put in place.&#8221;</p>
<p>We hadn&#8217;t yet mentioned this whole thing to Kate. Why, her teacher suggested, get her all hopped up about it when it was still a ways off? (That poor woman is painfully aware of Kate&#8217;s relentless tenacity when she wants something to happen NOW.)</p>
<p>Our brainstorm with Kate at dinner that night was an off-the-cuff chance to bounce around ideas. But minutes after introducing the concept to Kate, it seemed like she&#8217;d been planning for it for a lifetime.</p>
<p>She started spewing out ideas at a staccato pace. And what was dazzling was how damned realistic and implementable all her plans were.</p>
<p>&#8220;I want ten extra minutes of recess. For <em>both</em> recesses.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Pajama Day for the whole school.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Extra long reading time.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like for everyone to be able to make postcards. Oh! And to send them to people they love.&#8221; (No surprise, this coming from <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/01/its-rocket-science/" target="_blank">Ms. Hallmark</a> herself.)</p>
<p>If she&#8217;d hooked a laptop up to a projector and started reading from a PowerPoint presentation I wouldn&#8217;t have been surprised. The gal was apparently made for this job.</p>
<p>She was ready.</p>
<p>And as she rambled on, and I started envisioning her in a smart, trim, gray flannel suit, I found myself getting annoyed with all her efficiency and pragmatism. She was getting a shot at doing whatever she wanted to for a day, yet everything she dreamed up was so drearily restrained. So maddeningly practical.</p>
<p>Like, get this. At one point she threw out: &#8220;I want the snack in the after-school program to be fruit salad.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fruit <em>salad</em>?</p>
<p>Have we really been withholding sugar from her so comprehensively that her idea of unbridled food glee is FRUIT SALAD? What about candy bars? Chocolate cake? What about a frickin&#8217; make-your-own hot fudge sundae bar for God&#8217;s sake?</p>
<p>I emailed the erstwhile principal the list of Kate&#8217;s annoyingly-reasonable demands. Then, a few days before her rise to power, a school-wide email went out announcing Kate would be the temporary Head of School.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s when everything changed.</p>
<p>Yes, what came next was the adrenaline-amped dizzying swirl that comes with anyone&#8217;s sudden rise to fame. And as her mom&#8212;playing a minor role in Principal Kate&#8217;s posse&#8212;I was sucked right into it alongside her.</p>
<p>At the playground after school the next day swarms of children gathered &#8217;round me, jumping up, waving their arms, and vying for my attention. &#8220;Kate&#8217;s gonna be principal tomorrow! We get extra long recess! Kate made it pajama <em>daaaay</em>!&#8221;</p>
<p>I pushed past the throng wishing I had a security detail, and entered the relative sanctuary of the building. A couple older kids were slumped against the hallway wall, backpacks slung over their shoulders. They looked up at me from their conversation and said casually, &#8220;Hi Principal&#8217;s mom.&#8221;</p>
<p>It was almost creepy.</p>
<p>In the arts and crafts room I finally spotted Madame Principal herself. She stood there like some hot molten core, the focus of all the energy in the room. She was surrounded by a pulsating ring of pumped up, over-tired, I&#8217;m-friends-with-the-boss kids. Some were Kate&#8217;s real homies. Others were clearly making a play to get on her good side.</p>
<p>And then one child called out in a scrawny voice, &#8220;All hail to Kate!&#8221; And I kid you not, they all joined in the chant. &#8220;All hail to Kate! All hail to Kate!&#8221;</p>
<p>Over the din the guy who runs the after-care program mouthed to me, &#8220;It&#8217;s like she&#8217;s a celebrity.&#8221;</p>
<p>Walking to the car later, my little principal reached to hold my hand and asked, &#8220;What does &#8216;all hail&#8217; mean?&#8221;</p>
<p>I swear, this is the kinda stuff Michael Jackson must have gone through as a kid.</p>
<p>Anyway, in the same way that it&#8217;s cool for a bartender to know your drink order&#8212;how it&#8217;s nice when someone shows how they know you&#8212;it&#8217;s also validating and happy-making as a parent when other people show how they really know your kid. Which was how I felt when I told various friends that Kate was getting a crack at running her school for the day.</p>
<p>My dad let loose his famous, booming expression of affirmation: &#8220;Oh ho <em>ho</em>!&#8221; (No, my father&#8217;s not Santa. But he does talk like him.) Others imagined how perfectly poised Kate would be in the role. And more than one <em>amiga</em> said something like, &#8220;When she becomes president some day, she&#8217;ll say she got her first taste of power in kindergarten when she was principal for the day.&#8221;</p>
<p>I adored every implication that Kate has confidence, smarts, and leadership qualities. I mean, folks were probably just thinking about how she&#8217;s bossy as hell. But in a silly proud way I indulged in the jokes about Principal Kate being the gateway to President Kate. I imagined myself feeling how <a href="http://media.onsugar.com/files/2011/04/17/5/192/1922398/f3e5bc77c053da49_carole.jpg" target="_blank">Kate Middleton&#8217;s mom</a> must have on her daughter&#8217;s wedding day&#8212;watching in amazement at all that her little girl had grown up to be.</p>
<p>I can see it all now. She&#8217;ll no doubt appoint Paige to be her secretary.</p>
<p>I wish I could outline the activities of Kate&#8217;s actual day in power. I wish, like a fly on the wall, I saw exactly what went down that fateful day. But this is one of those stories that gets you to the part you&#8217;ve been waiting for and then it turns out there&#8217;s no there there. If you were at the movies you&#8217;d probably walk out feeling ripped off, left to form your own unsatisfying conclusions about what really happened.</p>
<p>Put it this way, if you&#8217;re able to get a reliable detailed account of <em>your</em> child&#8217;s days at kindergarten, you&#8217;re a better mother than me.</p>
<p>All I can say for sure is that I dropped her off at school that morning to more playground fanfare. She was clutching a clipboard with a sign on it saying &#8216;Principal Kate.&#8217; And she and the rest of the kids pouring in for the day were in their PJs (which, I&#8217;ll note, dramatically reduced the professional effect we were going for with the clipboard).</p>
<p>I snapped a few pictures of her sitting at the principal&#8217;s desk, and left as she and the temporarily-overturned Head of School were discussing the merits of lunching in the staff room.</p>
<p>I can&#8217;t help but think that one day, the incoming White House staffers will be elated to have finally made it to the big league. After all their over-achieving, the glory and glamor will finally be theirs. But then, for President Kate&#8217;s inaugural dinner, she&#8217;ll insist that fruit salad is served for dessert.</p>
<p>[Insert that "waah waah" sound effect to indicate disappointment.]</p>
<p>Ah well, at least they&#8217;ll get to wear their PJs to work.</p>
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		<title>Make New Friends but Keep the Old</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/make-new-friends-but-keep-the-old/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/04/make-new-friends-but-keep-the-old/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 2011 05:28:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[City Livin']]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eating Out]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Friends and Strangers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Working World]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=3148</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I know I&#8217;ve mentioned I have a new job. But I&#8217;ve failed to report even bigger news: I have a new husband! A work husband that is. And he&#8217;s dazzling&#8212;smart, funny, handsome. And 100% dyed-in-the-wool-Prada-pants GAY. I know, I know, I&#8217;m gushing. But I&#8217;m telling you, no more than three minutes into meeting each other&#8212;an [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I know I&#8217;ve mentioned I have a new job. But I&#8217;ve failed to report even bigger news: I have a new husband!</p>
<p>A work husband that is.</p>
<p>And he&#8217;s <em>dazzling</em>&#8212;smart, funny, handsome. And 100% dyed-in-the-wool-Prada-pants GAY.</p>
<p>I know, I know, I&#8217;m gushing. But I&#8217;m telling you, no more than three minutes into meeting each other&#8212;an introduction where sparks of sass and sarcasm blazed off us like an electrical fire&#8212;we were in <em>luv</em>.</p>
<p>The next morning he sashayed past my desk to announce that he&#8217;d confessed his feelings for me to his partner. &#8220;I told him,&#8221; he said conspiratorially, &#8220;that I have a <em>new</em> BFF.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Oooooh</em>!&#8221; I squealed, clapping my hands and beaming. &#8220;I told Mark about <em>you</em> too!&#8221;</p>
<p>On my second day of work he analyzed our astrological charts at lunch (we&#8217;re compatible), and we discovered our birthdays are two weeks apart. We were even born the same year!</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve continued this way for days now: &#8220;<em>You</em> love neutral tones<em> </em>with a dash of orange as an accent color?!&#8221; I bellowed in disbelief. &#8220;Me TOO!&#8221;</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve discussed our yoga preferences (His: &#8220;Original Recipe&#8221; Hatha, Mine: Power Vinyasa ) and our current efforts to get bikini-ready for summer. And he&#8217;s managed to assess nearly every piece of clothing I&#8217;ve worn, rubbing the fabric between his fingers, raising an eyebrow then muttering his approval.</p>
<p>By next week we should be belting out duets and performing elaborately choreographed dance moves through the office. We&#8217;ll outshine Travolta and Olivia Newton John. I just know it.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m planning to consummate our union at his fabulous beach house. It&#8217;s off some island or other near Seattle. I picture myself poised on 900-thread-count sheets&#8212;blissfully alone, of course. I&#8217;ll do snow angels in the bed, soaking up the unbridled thrill of a weekend away from the kids, while he and his lawyer-cum-yoga-instructor partner slavishly cook for me and deliver mimosas and <em>Vanity Fair</em> magazines to what I can only imagine is a lavish guest suite. (The guest <em>house</em> is still under construction.)</p>
<p>It&#8217;s like a dream. A fabulous, exhilarating dream in which we spend lunches at the cafe at his gym ogling the hot guys working out.</p>
<p>The other day, while outlining the guest list for his birthday par-tay&#8212;old friends from high school, former co-workers, his San Francisco set&#8212;he pointed out matter-of-factly, &#8220;I collect people.&#8221;</p>
<p>And when Mark got an email last week, inviting him to a dinner in the city, I couldn&#8217;t help but think of just that.</p>
<p>One of the bennies of Mark&#8217;s job is that he gets to meet some pretty cool, accomplished folks. Well, I mean,<em> I</em> see that as a benefit since I like people. But Mark? Well, not so much. He&#8217;s kinda like those dogs people apologize for at parks &#8217;cause they don&#8217;t like other dogs.</p>
<p>Now, I don&#8217;t want to imply my hubbie&#8217;s some social nitwit. He&#8217;s just discerning about who he&#8217;ll make an effort for. His attitude: He&#8217;s already <em>got</em> five friends. Why&#8217;d he ever need more? And while Mark&#8217;s not taking resumes for new friends, I go through life chatting up baristas while they steam my milk, and wanting to invite Jehovah&#8217;s Witnesses in for lunch.</p>
<p>But sometimes, someone Mark meets penetrates his Cone of Social Reluctance. And recently, this happened.</p>
<p>The New Friend is someone Mark&#8217;s interviewed and hung out with for work. The dude&#8217;s a crazy-accomplished genius. He seems to have the Midas touch with everything he does. And he&#8217;s done just about everything.</p>
<p>And whatever, so they&#8217;ve kinda become friends. It&#8217;s not like they go bowling every Wednesday, or have slumber parties and braid each others&#8217; hair. But they&#8217;ve hung out a few times now for no work-related purpose.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not <em>so</em> terribly strange, even considering Mark&#8217;s inclination to keep his friend count low. The thing that&#8217;s gets me about this new alliance is&#8212;well, it&#8217;s kinda embarrassing to admit&#8212;I mean, what&#8217;s weird about it is that the guy is rich. But not like rich by any mortal standards. Like, stratospherically mind-bogglingly <em>loaded</em>.</p>
<p>So, when this chap came to town recently (he lives up north) his assistant contacted Mark. Would he like to get together for dinner? New Friend was traveling for work and his wife wasn&#8217;t with him. So he and Mark and a another of the guy&#8217;s pals from San Fran grabbed some grub.</p>
<p>You know, 15 or so courses.</p>
<p>Then last week Mark gets another call. The assistant asks again about dinner. And this time I&#8217;m welcomed along. It turns out we&#8217;re going out with a couple other folks, and one of them who&#8217;s a chef picked some divey Korean joint as our venue. Because, hey, what&#8217;s more fun than slumming with a gazillionaire?</p>
<p>Aside from his immense genius, and a guess that he probably wouldn&#8217;t have holes in his shoes, I wasn&#8217;t sure what to expect. And I don&#8217;t mean to get all <em>Us</em> <em>Magazine</em> &#8220;Just Like Us&#8221; about it. (Look! He wears sunglasses outdoors! Wow! He covers his mouth when he coughs!) But to be honest, for the first fifteen minutes or so, I was TOTALLY like that.</p>
<p>The thing is, the guy is totally <em>normal</em>.</p>
<p>It was like any other night you&#8217;d spend in a dumpy Richmond café eating gut-cleansing kimchi with friends in your own tax bracket.</p>
<p>And sure, there were things that came up&#8212;the  mention of a dinner with Jane Fonda and Ted Turner&#8212;that weren&#8217;t the typical conversational grist my homies and I bandy about at the taqueria. (&#8220;Oh that JANE&#8230;&#8221; I chortled, slapping my thigh. &#8220;She <em>IS</em> that way after a couple Pisco Sours, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;) There was a mention of <a href="http://www.hawking.org.uk/" target="_blank">Stephen Hawking</a> liking really spicy Indian food. And an anecdote about a dinner he&#8217;d had at an inn in Montana or somewhere. The place was so remote (How remote <em>was</em> it?) that he still had to drive for an hour after the plane landed. Pause. &#8220;And I have my <em>own</em> plane!&#8221;</p>
<p>Weirdly, none of this came off as snooty or name-droppy. Just the opposite, in fact. The guy was totally comfortable with who he was (even if I wasn&#8217;t at first). He was tellin&#8217; it like it was from his side of the tracks.</p>
<p>I mean, why <em>pretend</em> to fly Continental?</p>
<p>At one point, we got on the topic of Mark&#8217;s exploits in bread baking. I mentioned that one recipe he&#8217;d been struggling with produced loaves like pancakes. (Though I think I actually said &#8220;limp breast implants.&#8221;) This fast became a opportunity for the group to razz Mark on his inability to &#8220;get a rise&#8221; out of his dough. And quickly deteriorated to jokes about him &#8220;getting it up.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yeah, so not so much pretense at our table.</p>
<p>In fact, my favorite thing was how super-brilliant New Friend is, yet how often he says &#8220;fuck.&#8221; It turns out he says &#8220;fuck&#8221;<em> a lot</em>. (I&#8217;m going to remember how cool I thought this was when I make my gazillions. &#8220;What a fuckin&#8217; nightmare,&#8221; I&#8217;ll confide to my chauffeur. &#8220;My new jet is totally fucked!&#8221;)</p>
<p>After dinner he asked us about how he could get a taxi. Most San Franciscans would agree that the best way to get a cab is to go to New York. So instead of making the guy wait, we offered to drop him at his hotel. This required us to remove a car seat from the back of our beater Subaru. And to wipe away some Cheerios. And to toss a pile of <em>Captain Underpants</em> books and a mermaid-shaped Barbie in the trunk. While smiling sheepishly over our shoulders.</p>
<p>&#8220;Ah, <em>you&#8217;ve</em> got kids!&#8221; I said a bit too loudly, scraping a withered fruit roll-up into the gutter. When what I was really conveying was, &#8220;Remember? This is what <em>most</em> family cars are like.&#8221; (I did resist bursting into the chorus of &#8220;<a href="http://www.allmusicals.com/lyrics/camelot/whatdothesimplefolkdo.htm" target="_blank">What Do the Simple Folk Do</a>.&#8221;)</p>
<p>We wove our way through the drizzly, dark city to The Ritz Carlton. And saying our goodbyes, he bid Mark a last word of luck getting his dough up, then grabbed the door handle once, then twice, finally leaning into the door with his shoulder. Fail.</p>
<p>&#8220;Ah <em>yeah</em>,&#8221; I said realizing what was happening. &#8220;That&#8217;d be the child lock.&#8221; And I hopped out to come around and release him.</p>
<p>D&#8217;oh!</p>
<p>As Mark turned the car out of the hotel lot and headed us home to Oakland, he put his hand on my leg and asked his typical end-of-the-evening question, &#8220;You have fun?&#8221;</p>
<p>And, trying vaguely to remember what I&#8217;d thought the night would be like, I said, &#8220;Yeah. I did.&#8221;</p>
<p>Then I smiled. Man, this&#8217;ll make a nice little story for my work hubbie.</p>
<p>And speaking of him&#8212;Happy <em>happy</em> birthday, darlin&#8217;! I <em>cannot</em> WAIT to hear about every last detail of your weekend over a quinoa salad at the gym. xoxoxo!</p>
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		<title>Uncle!</title>
		<link>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/03/uncle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.motherloadblog.com/2011/03/uncle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 Mar 2011 02:27:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>kristen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Husbandry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paigey Waigey Wiggle Pop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Parenting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sleep]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.motherloadblog.com/?p=2938</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;So, Louie next door?&#8221; my mom said. (This was some years back). &#8220;Turns out he&#8217;s a necrophiliac.&#8221; She announced this quite matter-of-factly. Louie, our long-time neighbor at the house I grew up in, certainly qualified as a small-town eccentric. One of those men who never married. Not that that&#8217;s so odd, but he always lived [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;So, Louie next door?&#8221; my mom said. (This was some years back). &#8220;Turns out he&#8217;s a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necrophilia" target="_blank">necrophiliac</a>.&#8221; She announced this quite matter-of-factly.</p>
<p>Louie, our long-time neighbor at the house I grew up in, certainly qualified as a small-town eccentric. One of those men who never married. Not that that&#8217;s so odd, but he always lived with his parents. Eventually&#8212;years ago when I was a kid&#8212;they died of old age, and he just stayed on in the house.</p>
<p>Louie must be in his seventies now, and I doubt the guy&#8217;s ever had a girlfriend. But I also couldn&#8217;t imagine him with, well&#8212;with a <em>corpse</em>.</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Whaaat</em>?&#8221; I bellowed at my mother. She was imparting this freakish tidbit with the emotion she might use to mention we were out of paper towels.</p>
<p>&#8220;Well the other day I was in the yard,&#8221; she explained, somewhat defensively. &#8220;And I went to the side of the house to rake. I looked up and there&#8217;s Louie, lying down in the middle of his garden. I thought, &#8216;Ohhh <em>God</em>, he&#8217;s had a heart attack!&#8217; I thought he was <em>dead</em>.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Wait, so <em>what</em>&#8212;?&#8221; I asked, wondering how this was going to tie into his predilection for necrophilia. &#8220;Was he spooning with a dead body?&#8221;</p>
<p>Mom looked at me confused, and forged on with her story. &#8220;So I dropped my rake and ran toward him and the closer I got I started to hear snoring! And it turns out he&#8217;d been out weeding and&#8212;&#8221; she snaps her fingers, &#8220;he fell asleep! Just like that! Keeled over on top of his tomato plants. After I shook him awake he told me he just got diagnosed with necrophilia. You know, that disease where all of a sudden you fall asleep.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Mom</em>!&#8221; I moaned. &#8220;Necrophilia is when people are into having sex with dead bodies. What Louie has is called <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001805/" target="_blank">nar-co-lep-sy</a>!&#8221;</p>
<p>Ah, what a difference a few syllables make.</p>
<p>When I was just in Little Rhody, I bumped into Louie when I was in the old &#8216;hood. And as it turns out he didn&#8217;t nod off during our brief conversation. But I nearly did.</p>
<p>I wish I could peg my exhaustion to something glamorous like jet lag (&#8220;Just in from Paris and <em>mon Dieu! Je suis fatiguee!</em>&#8220;) or a night of reckless partying. I&#8217;d even accept staying up late writing as an enviable reason for sleepiness. Alas, it was none of those. Just standard mommy fare.</p>
<p>And I don&#8217;t want to name any names here, but it&#8217;s all Paige&#8217;s fault.</p>
<p>Miss Paigey came home from the hospital a star sleeper. She snoozed through 12-hour nights consistently as an older baby. You&#8217;d toss her in her crib and she&#8217;d fall asleep on her own&#8212;no excessive nursing or rocking required. It was brag-worthy stuff.</p>
<p>It wasn&#8217;t until age two-and-a-half, newly installed in her Big Girl Bed, that our taken-for-granted nights of sweet slumber were suddenly shot to shit.</p>
<p>Yes, any glimmer of desire I&#8217;ve had to ever have a third child has been beaten out of me slowly and painfully by Paige. Because she&#8217;s been waking up several times a night since last July&#8212;let&#8217;s see, that&#8217;s NINE LONG EXHAUSTED MONTHS AGO.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the routine: She&#8217;s miserable getting to sleep&#8212;coming out of her room or bellowing from her bed multiple times. Then in the deep of night she calls out to us (or rather me: &#8220;Mama!&#8221;) and Mark or I get up and tell her it&#8217;s time to go to sleep. And she does. Until the next time she gets up and yells for us again.</p>
<p>So I&#8217;m getting all the sleep deprivation a newborn provides, without the weight loss from breast feeding. Though if this continues much longer I&#8217;m considering getting the girl back on the boob. Hey, I mean, she&#8217;s three years old, but I&#8217;d like to get <em>some</em> benefit from all these REM interruptions.</p>
<p>If each night isn&#8217;t grueling enough, we&#8217;re all too aware that every new one we pass this way cements this despicable pattern more firmly into place. We know we have to make it stop, but we&#8217;ve got NO IDEA what to do.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m a huge champion of calling the pediatrician for anything. And I&#8217;m always telling other folks to do the same. Someone&#8217;s kid is being weird about potty training? Cawl the dawk-tuh, I say. Toddler won&#8217;t eat anything but mac and cheese? See if your pediatrician has advice. Don&#8217;t know what color to paint your living room? You&#8217;d be surprised what that man can help you with.</p>
<p>So, of course, when Paige suddenly started erupting in the night like Old Faithful, I took my own advice and dialed the doc. I had, for all intents and purposes, a monkey jumping on the bed.</p>
<p>Mama called the doctor and the doctor said&#8212;? Well, the doctor said, &#8220;Say the same thing to her. Don&#8217;t make it fun for her to visit with you in the night. Be boring.&#8221;</p>
<p>Boring. Right-o!</p>
<p>So, we&#8217;ve tried that. Our sentence: &#8220;It&#8217;s time to go to sleep, Paige&#8221; is droned with such emotionless monotone that Mark and I should both be awarded Oscars for how fantastically boring we can act.</p>
<p>Weeks&#8212;now <em>months</em>&#8212;have gone by. Boring has gotten us nowhere.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve threatened to close her door if she doesn&#8217;t stop yelling at night. We&#8217;ve made <a href="http://www.motherloadblog.com/2010/09/please-review-the-chart-doctor/" target="_blank">chart after chart</a> to recognize her (rare) full nights of sleep. We&#8217;ve warned the neighbors and spent nights trying to ignore her wails. I&#8217;ve stayed with her until she&#8217;s fallen asleep, and brought her into our bed after her sixth wake-up.</p>
<p>NOTHING works.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve scoured <a href="http://www.babycenter.com/" target="_blank">BabyCenter</a>, <a href="http://www.themotherboard.com/" target="_blank">The Motherboard</a>, and <a href="http://www.mamapedia.com/" target="_blank">Mamapedia</a> seeking the wisdom of pediatric pundits, sleep specialists, and other mamas. I even posted on some message boards seeking advice&#8212;something I&#8217;d never done before. I got gratifying misery-loves-company responses: &#8220;I have no advice, because I am going through the same thing you are. I just wanted you to know that you are not alone in this! My 3yo does the same thing.&#8221;</p>
<p>And I&#8217;ve gotten tips&#8212;most of which we&#8217;ve already tried&#8212;or couldn&#8217;t. We don&#8217;t, for example, have a dog that can bunk in Paige&#8217;s room with her. And we&#8217;re leery of approaches that involve Mark or I huddled in a sleeping bag on the floor by her bed. Seems some things just substitute another bad habit we&#8217;ll eventually have to break.</p>
<p>But one piece of advice drew me in. A mama suggested we get this <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000BNQC58" target="_blank">$23 turtle</a> that&#8217;s a hybrid stuffed animal and nightlight. Said her kid loved it. There are buttons on the turtle&#8217;s shell so the kiddo can turn it on easily themselves. It projects stars onto the walls and ceiling, and stays on for 45 minutes then turns itself off. Paige gets up in the night? Don&#8217;t call for Mom or Dad, just hit the button, see the lights, and go back to sleep!</p>
<p>Brilliant.</p>
<p>I clicked the &#8220;Two Day 1-Click&#8221; button on Amazon with the smug sense that I&#8217;d solved this nasty problem. I showed Paige a picture of our dazzling sleep solution (so simple! a turtle!) and she loved the idea. In fact, she was heartbroken that night when I told her it hadn&#8217;t already come in the mail. (She&#8217;s got high expectations for Amazon Prime.)</p>
<p>When it did arrive, I gently carried the box in from the porch like it was a fragile priceless relic. Herein laid the solution to our endless stream of shitty nights of sleep. I nearly wept with joyful optimism.</p>
<p>At bedtime that night we turned on the turtle she&#8217;d named Tina and Paige screamed, &#8220;No! Light off! NO TINA!!!&#8221;</p>
<p>Alrighty then. On to Plan G. Or are we on Plan H by now?</p>
<p>Big Sis Kate, who I think of as my Second Lieutenant Mother, even has some skin in the game. Last week she made a totemic construction paper chain and gravely taped it to the headboard of Paige&#8217;s bed. &#8220;Here&#8217;s how it works, Paigey,&#8221; she explained in her most patronizing tone. &#8220;If you wake up in the night, you just reach up and shake it. Then you&#8217;ll fall back asleep.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yeah, a nice idea, but that hasn&#8217;t worked so much.</p>
<p>Finally, finally, we can&#8217;t take it any more. Mark and I are crying out &#8220;Uncle!&#8221; to anyone who&#8217;ll listen, and lying in our bed, limp with fatigue, waving white flags.</p>
<p>Which is to say, we&#8217;ve decided to pony up $150 an hour for a sleep specialist.</p>
<p>But here&#8217;s how it is with me. On the days of my long-awaited haircuts, my hair looks fabulous. I bring my car in for a rattling noise, and on the drive over it suddenly disappears. If I want to get over the flu, I just make a doctor&#8217;s appointment.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure what this means. That I procrastinate long enough that whatever was ailing me gives up the fight?</p>
<p>Of course, the thing is, once you see one of these patterns emerging you think you can harness it, right? Like how many couples do you know (or have you heard of) who&#8217;ve had fertility issues then decided to file adoption papers&#8212;with no real desire to adopt. I mean, everyone knows you get knocked up the second you have your home study, right?</p>
<p>Yawning and bottomed-out, I finally emailed the Sleep Whisperer&#8212;a nurse who got several five-star Yelp reviews from formerly irritable parents who have, under her guidance, successfully gotten their kids some shut-eye. All without mention of restraint straps, door locks, or duct-taping mouths&#8212;though God knows at this point I&#8217;m open to anything.</p>
<p>And the next night, A MIRACLE HAPPENED. <em>Paige slept through the night</em>. We woke up Sunday morning&#8212;at like 8AM. Feeling oddly well-rested I turned to Mark and ventured, &#8220;How many times did she get up?&#8221;</p>
<p>And he said, &#8220;SHE DIDN&#8217;T.&#8221;</p>
<p>I immediately emailed the friends we&#8217;d hung out with the night before. I was mildly hysterical. &#8220;Paige slept through the night. So we are now coming to your house for dinner every night. We must  replicate everything about last night, including outfits, food&#8212;even conversation. Think of it like <em>Groundhog Day</em>. Eventually we&#8217;ll come to love the ritual of it all.&#8221;</p>
<p>I was certain that the Universe laughed at me the minute I was willing to shoot up a flare for help. But I didn&#8217;t care. It was over. Our long national tragedy was coming to an end.</p>
<p>But then the next night she got up roughly a million frickin&#8217; times.</p>
<p>Our meeting with the sleep specialist is Monday. I have no idea what she is going to recommend, but I can assure you we will follow her directives with OCD precision.</p>
<p>If this fails, I&#8217;m not sure what we&#8217;ll do.</p>
<p>I guess we could spring for a plane ticket to have Louie come visit. Maybe if he and Paige spent some quality time together she&#8217;d pick up on his knack for falling asleep.</p>
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