Birthdays

A Birthday Rebus

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Categories: Animals, Birthdays, Family, Humor, kids, Life, Love, Music, Wildlife | 2 Comments

Twistered

Gotta love modern technology.

Today I went to a birthday party for the daughter of an old friend. One of the gifts was a Twister game, and after the kids had played with it the adults took a turn. It ended up being a draw between me and my friend Mia, and Mia’s husband snapped a pic of the heated final round with his iPhone.

Within minutes the pic was up on Facebook.

Modern life is like one big reality tv show where everyone is part of the cast and the audience at the same time. I sorta love that.

Categories: Birthdays, Friends, Humor, kids, Life | 10 Comments

Life And Stuff

We’ve been having some glorious sunsets lately. This is also the kids’ favorite time of day to play on the rope swing, when it’s not so hot outside.

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Wednesday we went to the Ingalls* homestead for a playdate. They live pretty close to us, a ten-minute drive away, so I was hoping the kids would have lots of fun and we could start doing that more often, at least until school starts. (The homeschooling idea was nipped in the bud by Steve; I think my mistake was telling him that I know the Ingalls from church.)

Luke had a blast at the playdate. He and the two boys closest to his age spent hours playing manly games with forts and such, and every time I asked him if he was ready to go home yet he responded with a definite “No!” I never get tired of watching him frolic happily with his own kind, after spending the first seven years of his life so distrustful of other people in general and males in particular.

Elizabeth was a little off that day. At our urging she hung out here and there with various Ingalls children, but she kept gravitating back to a half-grown black kitten, one of two litters there, and when it was time to go she got very adamant about bringing it home with us. I sympathized, because her own black cat disappeared last May (the attrition rate to owls and coyotes is very high around here), but we need another kitten like we need an outbreak of swine flu, and I told her so. It turned into a Whole Thing, and when we left without the kitten she was Vexed and Sulky. I suspect that we’re rolling into that adolescent phase everyone’s been warning me about, because Elizabeth’s temperament swings between “Affectionate and Agreeable,” “Distant and Secretive” and “Vexed and Sulky” like a three-way metronome these days.

*Not their real name; they’ve asked that I give them an Internet pseudonym.

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Friday I captured photographic proof that while childhood is temporary, immaturity is forever.

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(Yes, that’s the male “kitten” of Stripes’ litter.)

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Saturday there was a party at Oceanside Beach in honor of Geoff’s girlfriend’s daughter’s birthday, and most of the worship team went to that. It was a lot of fun.

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The ocean was very warm this time; nothing like the icy waters of last fall. I guess that means a warmer winter this year. I can totally live with that.

There was another near-death experience on the same jetty that Elizabeth nearly met her demise on last October, but at least it wasn’t one of my kids this time. The worst part was that I saw it coming and got there too late to avert it but just in time to see a giant wave slap down on a group of boys and actually wash one of them off the rock he was clinging to. He snagged on another rock on his way down though, so no fatalities. But the four of them had actually had to walk past a “Jetty Closed Today” sign to get out there, so while I was very glad that the kid hadn’t died, I considered the big scrape on his leg to be a useful reminder about respecting warning signs in the future.

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Since that last hearing three weeks ago Steve has been more courteous and friendly to me in our brief interactions than he has ever been before at any point in our entire relationship. I’m sure it’s some sort of ruse to lull me into a false sense of safety or somesuch, but whatever. It’s easier than dealing with Hostile Steve. Pretty much my only complaint on that front is that Elizabeth has started coughing all night after visits with him, because Steve and the woman that’s moved in with him smoke in the house. That is irksome.

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I’ve gotten a few fall crops planted in the garden. I’ve discovered that some stuff actually does better here in the fall and winter than in the heat of summer, but the trick is to plant them early enough that they really hit their growth stride before the first frost when everything slows way down. So far I’ve planted snap peas, broccoli, cabbage, lettuce and radishes. I’ve also started digging up garlic bulbs and replanting the cloves in new beds, because for once I actually planted enough to have a surplus this summer. I’ll need to do the same with my shallots and bunching onions soon, but I’m running out of garden beds to transplant into. The perennial section of my garden needs to be enlarged, but alas, I’m having a hard time finding the motivation to do that since I’m just waiting for the chance to move out anyway. And there are signs of that all over: the weeds are running rampant in the orchard and my house hasn’t had a really good cleaning in weeks. I have lost my desire to tend to this place. I really want to move on, but this is apparently where I’m supposed to be for now, because events keep conspiring to keep me right here. I can accept that, and even plant a fall garden to prepare for another winter here, but I can’t CARE about this property anymore, and it shows.

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There are other things that I’d like to write about, but I can’t. Those of you who have been reading here for a while may be astonished to learn that there are people in this town who Do Not Mean Me Well (I know, hard to believe, right?) and I think some of them read this blog. There have been too many times that I’ve posted about some plan or prospect or new friendship only to have it fall apart within days after hitting the blogosphere. I think I might need to fire up a new private, password-protected blog for journaling all that stuff so I can keep my venting outlet without compromising my security.

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School starts in less than two weeks; I can hardly believe the summer’s gone already. Elizabeth will be starting middle school this year and I think she’s looking forward to being on a different campus than Luke. The events of the past few weeks have had the side effect of making him cling tightly to her as the one stable feature in an everchanging landscape, the one person who’s always with him no matter whose house he’s in or who else he’s with. I understand that and sympathize, but now it’s time for him to start developing his own inner strength to sustain him when she’s not around. And frankly, Elizabeth needs a break from the little barnacle.

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I think that’s everything bloggable. The heat wave has broken and the air feels like autumn, at least for a little while. I wish it could be just like this until November or so, except with some rain thrown in. And as long as I’m putting in requests, I wouldn’t mind meeting some nice heterosexual single guy who likes kids, has mastered basic communication and relationship skills, and lives at least a few miles away from Silkotchland.

That would be swell.

Categories: Birthdays, Christianity, Family, food, Friends, frugality, Gardening, kids, Life, Love, Self-Sufficiency, Uncategorized | 6 Comments

So Am I Officially Old Now?

If I have to turn 40, y’all have to hear about it.

It’s been said that life begins at 40, so it seems kind of appropriate that my birthday fell on Easter Sunday this year. The kids and I began the day at a sunrise service in Aguanga, and the ancient and forever-fresh Easter messages of salvation and joy and victory over darkness suited my frame of mind perfectly.

Later there was the regular church service, which was wonderful, and then an Easter egg hunt there on the grounds for the kids, and then we drove over to the Trinity pasture to check on the new baby (first calf of spring, about two weeks old now and doing great!), and then Luke and Elizabeth went to see their dad and I spent a couple hours down in the garden planting stuff and preparing some new beds and rejoicing over the latest new seedlings (and bulblings and crownlings) (it’s my day, they’re words if I want them to be) pushing their way up into the sunshine. Because there was also lots of warm sunshine today, for the first time in about a week, which just goes to show that Mother Nature can appreciate a birthday as well as anyone. So basically I celebrated my 40th year of bornfulness by doing most of my favorite stuff and surrounded by most of my favorite people (at least the local ones), and it was good.

There’s a bunch of philosophical stuff I wanted to put into this post, but now I’m thinking that that subject is going to run really long so I’m going to save it for another entry. But there WILL be navel-gazing, oh yes indeed. I just happen to be so spastic on Easter-candy-overdose right now that I’m seeing two navels, and that can’t be good for waxing philosophical if one wishes to be taken seriously.

And I’m a middle-aged grup now. I DEMAND to be taken seriously! Get off my lawn, you damn kids!

Wait. I’ve resolved to stop using profanity now that I’ve left my tempestuous youth behind.

Get off my lawn, you darn kids. Please. Thank you. Have a cookie.

I don’t actually have a lawn, of course.

I have cookies though. I’m having cookies right now. They have jelly beans on them.

I think I may possibly have three navels. {twitch}

This calls for another round of chocolate eggs….

Categories: Birthdays, Gardening, kids, Life, Ranching, Weather | 5 Comments

Happy Place, Day Two

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I had only been to California Adventure once before, a few years ago, and I hadn’t felt well that day, and there was this weird fake-vanilla smell pervading the park and making me nauseous, and also Steve’s parents came with us so I only rated about 0.5% of Steve’s attention at best. I had no nostalgia-based awkwardness to overcome here, is what I’m saying.

Yesterday’s visit was completely different from that first one. This time it was just me and the kids and the world was our oyster! As soon as we arrived and saw the crowds we grabbed some FastPass tix for Soarin’ Over California and then headed toward Redwood Creek Challenge Trail. On the way there we passed the Grizzly River Run, saw that there were no lines for that, and made a snap judgement that it wasn’t too early in the day to get soaking wet. Because did I mention that we scored FABULOUS sunny weather for this outing?

After our drenching we continued on to Redwood Creek, where the kids proceeded to scamper about happily for over an hour.

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I found a spot in the sun to dry off while they climbed and slid and swung and ran to their hearts’ content. I think that officially makes me an Old Person, but it was nice and relaxing.

Then it was on to Paradise Pier, where they spent another half-hour or so frolicking around on the SS Rustworthy.

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This was Luke’s favorite part of the whole park. Eight-year-old boys don’t need fancy-schmancy roller coasters or flight simulators; just give them an old fireboat to play on and they’ll never want to leave. Literally. When it was time to go back to Soarin’ Over California to use our FastPasses he came along willingly enough, but apparently he was under the impression that as soon as that was done we’d be coming back to the Rustworthy and, I don’t know, spending the rest of the day there? After Soarin’, when he realized that Elizabeth and I had other plans, he got very grumpy and gradually descended into Downright Obnoxious.

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Elizabeth rode the California Screamin’ roller coaster by herself because Luke refused and I had to stay with him. He scowled his way through A Bug’s Land while Elizabeth amused herself by stirring up the locals.

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When we headed over to get FastPasses for the Tower Of Terror and Luke growled that he wasn’t going on that one either, I’d had enough. I told him that he WAS going on it, we ALL were, and to GET OVER IT already.

For some reason that didn’t improve his mood at all.

But! As we were leaving the Hollywood Backlot area we passed the Muppet 3-D Vision Theater and even though I had no idea what that was about I reasoned that no one could remain grumpy for long in the company of Muppets. So in we went, and the Muppets totally ungrumpified my boy and when we came out he was his normal happy self again.

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And then…

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The Tower Of Terror turned out to be a little more intense than we’d expected (who’d have thought, with a cheery name like that??), but Luke recovered quickly with only a slight facial twitch afterward. By then I was hungry enough to gnaw my own hand off, and the pizza place I wanted to eat at just happened to be right next to the SS Rustworthy, so Luke got to play there for another 45 minutes or so, which should totally not be interpreted as an apology for forcing him onto a nightmare-inducing death-by-broken-elevator thrill ride. I just WANTED SOME PIZZA, okay?

One thing that I found amusing…as you’re leaving the Tower ride you step into this little room where there are monitor screens displaying photos of everyone’s faces the first time the elevator drops. As we stepped into that little room a dozen camera/cellphones were whipped out as people snapped pics of their screens. Ah, modern technology.

The park was scheduled to close at seven, but around mid-afternoon there was an announcement that it would remain open an extra hour. Not that it made any difference to us, because by five-thirty or six we was Worn Out and ready to call it a day. Just as we were leaving we caught the Pixar Play Parade, and that was pretty awesome — the perfect end to a great trip.

And then we went home. And it was good. And we all overslept this morning and missed the school bus so I had to drive the kids to school, and then we all had eggs for supper because the chickens laid about three dozen while we were away and I didn’t feel like fixing oatmeal.

Happy Birthday, precious girl!

Categories: Birthdays, Family, kids, Life, Love | 2 Comments

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