Rain ahoy

I’m so glad that last week was pretty decent, weather-wise. It was pretty hot and humid but it was bearable and we got to be outside quite a bit. Yesterday was overcast but the weather held and I took the kids to the park for an hour or so after supper. I was glad to be able to – I had spent pretty much the entire weekend cleaning like a crazy person. It was that insane sort of cleaning where you just can’t stop. I’m glad I’m not pregnant because it was really similar to the nesting that happens about a week before the baby pops out.

I think I can blame it on my friend Joanne. When we stopped by to see them for St. Jean last week she mentioned how she was just getting rid of all kinds of stuff and trying to take control over the clutter in her house. It must have struck a chord with me because I swear to God, on Saturday morning all I meant to do was fold the clean laundry sitting on the chair in the bedroom. That was at 11 am. After that I sat down for five minutes at lunch, ten at supper, and a few times to pee. I didn’t sit other than that until about 9:30 pm. When I did, I discovered my feet were throbbing.

But damn, yo, my home looks pretty spectacular.

Anyway, since I had been cleaning like my life depended on it, I really wanted to take the kids out to play for awhile. That’s what’s nice about not having to get up early to get Hayley ready for school, I didn’t need to keep an eye on my watch to rush them home to bed; the only thing I was watching was the dark clouds in the distance. A large family that lives in two apartments in our building had gone to the park as well so Hayley and Breanna had six other kids to play with and I chatted with the two moms for a bit which is nice.

And well, yay for that because I woke up to pouring rain this morning. That’s not bad in and of itself but the week-long forecast shows nothing but rain, rain, and then more rain. It makes it hard to take the kids to the pool, you know? Alas. Here’s hoping we’re not going to get a re-run of last summer with all the rain we got.

At least Breanna has her four new 48-piece puzzles to keep her busy all summer long.

Accomplishment

(She’s so proud of herself for doing them all on her own. She’s REALLY into puzzles.)

And speaking of summer (nice segue Sherry!), the always awesome Angella (who is also one of my favorite photographers) asked me if I’d be interested in submitting a guest post to The Daily Grommet with the topic being summer activities. Of course I said yes! My post is up today – because to me nothing screams summer like the smell of a BBQ!

Friday Flashback: Worlds collide with NKOTB paying tribute to Michael Jackson

The music of my childhood and the music of my teen years totally collided after seeing this video. Last night New Kids on the Block performed in Detroit and upon hearing the news about Michael Jackson not long before taking the stage, they set up an impromptu tribute with photos of Michael while the crowd sang the words to “Man in the Mirror”. Then they went way back to a time when Joe used to sing “I’ll Be There” and even though they were out of practice, it didn’t matter because the sentiment was there and that was all that mattered.

George and I watched a MuchMoreMusic special today with some of Michael Jackson’s best videos. I’m glad so many people are playing his music today.

(This is why I love Twitter. I never would have even known about this if it wasn’t for the fact that I follow Donnie Wahlberg over there.)

Celebrating fathers, partying for St-Jean, and mourning

This is what happens when you slack off on updating your blog – you end up having to fit a bunch of stuff into one post. Sorry about that.

Last Sunday, we had a low-key but nice Father’s Day for George. We didn’t get him a gift per se, but he had gotten himself what he wanted, a GPS unit for our upcoming summer vacation. He said that was basically his gift, so that was easy. The kids did use a mosaic art kit they had to make him a couple of things though. Hayley made him a small dish that can hold his guitar picks in his music room and Breanna made him what was meant to be a mirror, but the “mirror” part was crappy so I put a photo of her sitting with him at the park instead.

What was a lot of fun for them was that they made him breakfast in bed. At about 11 am Hayley made some scrambled eggs for him at the stove and then Breanna made and buttered some raisin toast for him. I handled the coffee because, you know, boiling water and all. They were so thrilled to make him breakfast since he makes it for us on weekends quite regularly.

Father's day chef

Father's day chef

We took it easy the rest of the day and that’s really not a bad way to celebrate.

*******

People outside the province of Quebec may not be aware, but June 24th is Quebec’s “national” (sigh) holiday, St-Jean Baptiste. I’m sure it’s got some original meaning, but at this point it’s basically an enormous party. It’s turned into a Francophone celebration in general but truly it is an epic province-wide party. It’s actually illegal to have your business open unless it’s considered an essential service so most of the population is off work.

We ended up going to a BBQ with some friends that we hadn’t seen in ages, which was really nice. We ate way too much food and I spent a good portion of time out on the back deck with a cold glass of rose wine, watching my kids play with their young daughter. She’s not quite two so she was easily entertained with a bottle of bubbles.

Bubbles

After we left, we ended up dropping by to visit another couple – George has seen them frequently but I hadn’t in a good four months or so. They just got a fire pit in their yard so we had a beer or two, got a fire going, and we toasted marshmallows while people all over the city set off fireworks. It was a lot of fun and I had such a great day.

Toasty

Holidays are fun but when they happen on a Wednesday it just totally throws off your week. I was so sure it was the weekend today. Alas.

*******

I was saddened to wake up this morning to find that Farrah Fawcett had succumbed to her fight against cancer. She was such an icon it’s almost impossible to imagine that she could have passed away.

And then the shocking news broke about Michael Jackson. I was stunned beyond belief to hear that he had died of cardiac arrest.

I know that there were so many horrible stories about him in the recent years, terrible things. But the fact is that I grew up with Michael Jackson music. From the second I heard “Beat It” I was hooked. I still remember BEGGING my mother to let me watch the full “Thriller” video. She was uncertain if it was a good idea, I was still pretty young but I didn’t want to be the only one to go to school having missed it. In the end, she let me watch it, I loved it, I screeched a few times, and then… well, then I went to bed with the damn light on because I was scared. But it was so worth it because “Thriller” was awesome.

I had ever single album he put out – in some cases I literally had the ALBUM, back when music came on vinyl. I memorized the “Thriller” dance moves with the zombies with a friend of mine and we used to perform them. I owned an imitation of his famous red leather multi-zippered jacket. I tried my best to moonwalk (I was really only good at it in socks in the kitchen). I had a raging crush on him. I always wanted to see him perform live and now I never will.

Whatever he did or didn’t do, he was still a father, a son, a brother, a friend. No matter what, there are people who knew him and loved him who miss him. I will miss the Michael Jackson I grew up with and listened to over and over again. A piece of my childhood died tonight and will never come back.

I’ve listened to a lot of his songs tonight. Here’s one of my favorite songs he ever put out, “Dirty Diana”:

Rest in peace MJ.

Because sometimes I care about bigger causes than my own little life

George has been teasing me lately. I’ve been so concentrated on what’s been going on in Iran ever since the farce of an election that I talk about it regularly, I frequently have at least three relevant tabs open in my browser to news coverage, and I’ve gotten a little overly passionate about it. He likes to bug me by saying that if the RCMP shows up because I’ve incited riots he’s going to step aside while they escort me out the door and he’ll tell them to take my “soap box” of a laptop with them – “It’s all in there, guys, thanks!”

(He’s kidding. I think.)

Anyway. But yes, when I blog here about my life it’s easy to get all caught up with me, me, me, and the people around me. I do have certain causes that get me riled up though so just for something different, here you go.

In the past couple of years I have read many books – some fiction with historical fact, others memoirs – about the Middle East. I have become so interested in the Middle East, particularly WOMEN in the Middle East. It’s to the point where, honestly, if I could change the past without changing the important things of the present (meaning George, Hayley, and Breanna) I would go back in time and tell my aimless younger self to get a double major in Middle Eastern Studies and Women’s Studies and DO SOMETHING dammit.

As an offshoot of this interest of mine, I have been all over the Iran election and the subsequent Iran protests. While I am disgusted by the deaths that have occurred with the regime shooting into crowds (not to mention all the arrests that we will never know in full detail, such as the students who were arrested from their own dorms in the University of Tehran), I am all but breathless with the awe of seeing so many Iranians take to the streets to protest and to stand up and say, “HEY! This is not what we want and you can’t keep silencing us!”

Whether Ahmadinejad manages to hold on to his false win or not, history is happening right now and Iran will never be the same country that it was this time a month ago.

(Yes, that is indeed a “support Iran” image link over in the upper left corner of my site.)

The photos in this article are incredible.

*******

Championing human rights in oppressed countries isn’t my only interest thought. I’ve also been fascinated by the work that the UNHCR does for years now. They made a great choice when they made Angelina Jolie their Goodwill Ambassador because it was through her that I learned about the organization in the first place. I’m so passionate about the UNHCR that I raised funds for them twice now during the (almost) yearly Blogathon. The last time I did it, I was already writing for PittWatch and told my readers there about what I was doing. I ended up raising about $2000 to help refugees.

Right now I’m reading Angelina Jolie’s: Notes from My Travels which is not a formal book really, it’s actually her journal notes during her first missions with the UNHCR when she went to Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Pakistan, Cambodia, and Ecuador. Because of that, the writing is occasionally scattered, but not necessarily in a bad way – just that, because she was writing a few sentences here and there throughout her day what you get instead of flowery prose is raw emotion and blunt honesty about what the refugees are facing day after day after day. It’s a stunning read. I’m only about 45 pages in, but I only started it last night. I don’t think it will take me long to finish because it’s just fascinating.

Tomorrow (June 20th) is World Refugee Day. The UNHCR has organized an amazing live stream that you can watch from your computer. The stream comes through from various refugee camps around the world where you can look in and see what life in a camp is like. What’s amazing to me about what I’ve seen is the same thing that Angelina said in interviews yesterday with Anderson Cooper (here) and Ann Curry (here), that there are people there who have gone through hardships that we can barely even imagine but they smile, they laugh, and they have an incredible spirit. It’s so inspiring. Please do check out the live stream over here today and tomorrow.

Okay. Enough of my “soap box laptop”! Here, enjoy a totally un-related and non-political picture of Hayley with a dandelion almost as big as her head.

See what I mean?

Whew.

Work at home, stay at home, work out of home… Can't we stop arguing?

I should know better than to immerse myself in controversy on the good ol’ Internet. God knows I’ve been online long enough to know that. But this time I can’t seem to help myself.

Today I read this entry which essentially says that a mother who works from home is just fluff and can’t compare to working outside the home where you have to deal with daycare drop-offs and pick-ups, traffic during the commute, working for people who don’t give a shit if you have a sick kid at home, blablabla. It was justified by the fact that she currently works out of the home AND from home. She added this:

There is no comparison. None. I don’t care how high up on the blogging ladder you are: working from home is not even in the same realm as being a Working Mother.

(Emphasis is hers.)

You know what? I’m not going to pretend to know what she’s talking about as far as daycare and commutes. I’ve worked outside the home before, of course. I worked in fast food, in (God help me, and please let me never do it again) technical support for two different ISPs, and a music studio. I dealt with the traffic, the long commutes, and with the exception of the studio which was more like a small family than a workplace, I dealt with bosses and shareholders who didn’t give two shits about what was going on in your personal life no matter how major it was.

The thing is, I’ve never done all those things with children. I’ve never had to race frantically to pick my children up from daycare before the cut-off time where you have to pay a late fee. I’ve never had to argue with George as to whose job is most important today and which one of us “has” to stay home with a sick kid. I’ve never had to whisper on the phone, trying to hide that I’m calling home to see if someone’s fever has broken. I’ve never been bawled out for taking too many days off or running late or other such things because of my kids. I’ve never had to try to cram an entire day’s worth of fun and love into the two hours between arriving home and the kids’ bedtime.

I’m sure it’s hard. And that’s the difference. I will FULLY acknowledge that it must be extremely hard. I don’t know how I would handle it all with younger kids. Maybe with older kids in school full-time it gets easier, though I’m betting it’s not. But just based on the way life is with my kids right now at age 3 and age 6 I just can’t imagine having to spend eight hours in an office plus commuting time, and then dealing with all the things I listed above (not to mention the things I haven’t listed because I can’t even fathom them).

But here’s the thing: Just because one person’s life of working outside the home can be hard, it doesn’t automatically make everyone else’s situation easy. It doesn’t mean it can’t compare. I think I would be less offended if the original post had said that in HER experience, HER work at home didn’t compare in any way to HER work in the office. But to make a grand sweeping statement that includes all of us is unfair.

When I first started blogging for b5 media, yeah, you could definitely say that my work life was easy because it was a very small time commitment. It’s three years later though, and my freelancing has grown a whole lot and now my day is really packed. On an average school day I get up and take Hayley to school, then I get Breanna breakfast, get her started on her day (which usually involves dinosaurs), get started on my own work, and then it’s literally an endless juggling act of trying to keep up with my commitments for a variety of different bosses, keeping Breanna happy and entertained and fed, getting Hayley from school, helping her with homework, remembering to occasionally get the wet clothes into the dryer so I don’t have to wash them for a third time in a row, make dinner, clean up, do baths, do bedtime, and then…

… well then I’d like to put my feet up and watch television or read a book, but usually I’m back at the laptop finishing all the things I couldn’t complete while the kids were still up and about. Last week I even wrote over here about my fear of how I’m going to handle it all when summer hits for real and I have two kids at home with me, how I’ll get everything done without missing out on the fun while also avoiding having to work until 3 am each night to get it all done.

Some days it’s so ridiculously smooth and easy that I practically laugh and I love my life. Some days I feel so incompetent and hate myself and my work and what I’m trying to do so badly that I want to run screaming out the door and not come back until I have a job somewhere outside the four walls that surround me much of the day and night.

Just like anyone.

My job isn’t easy and my job isn’t hard. It’s all relative to ME and MY life. My job is harder than someone’s I’m sure but I’m not even going to try to pick an example because there are probably days that that person’s job sucks hard and they wish they could do something as “easy” as what I do. Meanwhile, although I feel like my job is hard sometimes, it’s certainly not as hard as, say, someone on the front lines in Iraq or someone working for the FBI who defuses bombs for a living.

And I’m not even going to get into the poor stay at home mom who gets slammed for not contributing financially in ANY way because they don’t work for pay at all, never mind that they typically bust their ass all day taking care of kids and keeping their home in shape and making up for the finances in countless ways. I’ve been there too and the vitriol can be nasty.

It all comes down to this: We all have hard days. Our jobs – whether they’re outside the home, in our living room, or unpaid – are easy and hard depending on the day, the kids, the time, the life we’re currently living. We can all complain about how hard life is, and it’s our right to do that, but please for the love of God, stop comparing.

Because – just like I said in a comment on the original post – all this stupid moronic fighting about who has it hardest does is it provides fodder for the parts of the internet that thinks Mom bloggers are all a bunch of idiots. All it does is take women down a notch by making us fight amongst ourselves instead of standing in solidarity. Instead of saying that someone else’s life is so much easier and yours is so hard, why not just say, “hey man, I had a really fucking hard time this week” and let us all stand together and SUPPORT you, and then when someone else has a bad week you can do the same. If we all supported each other as much as we tear each other down we’d be a whole lot better off (except for the people who earn a living by writing books about the Mommy Wars; they probably wouldn’t be better off if we all got along!).

For God’s sake, after all this bullshit fighting all these years, can’t we all just GET ALONG for while?

(For what it’s worth, the original post references another post as well – I’d like you to go read that one too, because Miss Zoot explains how hard it is to be a mom working outside the home WITHOUT alienating and belittling an entire demographic of working mothers who do fluff work at home. THAT post is fantastic.)

I may regret this post in the morning. I don’t have time to regret it right now because I have to go help my daughter with a ludicrous amount of homework for a grade one child, while simultaneously washing dishes, entertaining Breanna, prepping a chicken for dinner, and trying to get at least one more work task out of the way before the bedtime rush starts. OMG MY LIFE IS SO MUCH HARDER THAN YOURS! Sorry. Couldn’t resist.

Outside all day = good sleep for everyone

Blues

Yesterday we decided it was the perfect day to just get out of the house and not come back until the day was done. So that’s exactly what we did.

We started the day off by going to our favorite used bookstore. I love books and I love bookstores, but USED bookstores are my favorite. I can easily spend hours poking around – or I could if I didn’t have two kids following me around. Breanna was funny, she kept pointing out totally random books to me, suggesting that I get this or that. I went with a list of six books I would like to read and found a grand total of none of them. But hey, that’s part of the fun with used stores, you may not always find what you want. In the end, I found The Second Summer of the Sisterhood. I read Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants last year and really loved it, so I’ve been meaning to get this for awhile.

After our time amongst the books, we were hungry so we stopped at “La Belle Province” for some lunch. Because we’ve gone there several times for lunch, Breanna always refers to it as “Lunchtime”. Once we had stuffed ourselves full of greasy yet tasty fast food, we drove over to the West Island Blues Festival. We had gone last year too, but it was so hot and humid that I felt pretty awful and George ended up not enjoying it at all because the sound guy sucked. This year was hot and a mix of sun and clouds but it wasn’t humid and there was a nice breeze so we were all very comfortable and the sound was way better. We only stayed for two hours, seeing two of the bands, but it was fun.

Trio
Tiny Dancer
Burning off energy

Breanna barely sat down the entire time we were there. She danced almost constantly, at one point even getting right in the middle of the space in front of the stage and shaking it like a crazy person.

We planned to go home then, but whenever we go to the West Island, Hayley likes to go down to the water. She asked if we could please just go for a little bit, and it wasn’t very far away so we went down and watched two Labs fetching sticks in the water, checked out some ducks, and enjoyed the cool breeze coming off the water.

Fetch
Horizon
Quack quack

The kids were a bit tired when we got in the car to come home. Not that it showed.

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

By the time we got back home it was too late (and I was too tired) to start making our original plan for supper (chicken in an Indian mango curry sauce on rice) so we just got some fresh take-out meals from the grocery store (I love their Thai chicken and vegetables on noodles) and settled for that. We had also planned on having a family movie night but the kids were so tired that we stopped the movie after an hour and put them to bed. There was mild complaining but they were each conked out in five minutes flat so it was obviously the right choice.

George and I had some tea and watched some stand-up comedy on TV, then I took the dog for a walk around the block – it was so nice outside that I would have gone longer if I hadn’t been tired. I ended up crawling into bed right at 11 pm and I think I fell asleep before the clock changed to 11:01. We all managed to sleep until about 8:30 this morning and that felt GREAT.

There’s a lot to be said about being outside, especially when your two kids spend most of two hours running back and forth across the music festival park or dancing.

Today we’re heading out to see my parents for a couple of hours since it was my dad’s birthday on Thursday, then it will be back to the grind once I get the kids to bed – Hayley has one more week of school, then two days of “fake school” (in other words, the 22nd is Fun Day where they play all day long and the 23rd is the last day which means cleaning up the classroom, having an assembly, then watching a movie in class). Then summer is here, and we can look forward to a whole lot of outside time!

Park time

I have a love-hate relationship with the park closest to us. It’s great because it’s not far at all, it has some fairly decent if not exciting play stuff, and it backs on to what’s left of the woods around here. And of course, we all know how much I love to go walking in the woods. On the other hand, I loathe it when the summer weather hits because they stupidly stripped all the trees away when they put the park in; sure there are plenty of trees along the perimeter but not in the actual park itself. Which means there is zero shade where the swings, slides, and whatnot are located. There used to be two trees that provided a wee bit of shade but they got sick and were cut down last Spring. They’ve also recently planted some new ones along the path so there’s that at least, but they’re too young to provide any relief from the sun just yet.

Tulips

Usually we go to the park during the day so that there’s less rush to get back home. Yesterday, though, we were busy during the afternoon so I promised the kids that we’d go to the park after supper. We ate at a decent hour and since we had ordered in some Chinese food which meant few dishes I figured the world would not fall off its axis if I left the plates in the sink. I constantly struggle to keep on top of housework, but as much as I hate doing dishes I also hate when they aren’t done. There’s something incredibly discouraging about a sink that is full of dishes when you wake up in the morning (oh, to have a dishwasher…). Still, taking the kids out to play was a bigger priority so off we went.

We ended up spending almost two hours there and I can tell you right now that once school is out (just over two weeks to go), we will be doing that a lot more frequently. Not only is it more pleasant to be at the park when the sun isn’t directly overhead, and not only does it usually provide a bit of relief from the daytime humidity spikes that plague Montreal, apparently that’s when most of our neighborhood goes to the park.

Usually it’s just us at the park. It’s so rare for other kids to be there that it’s like a huge novelty to see one other kid show up. Last night there were so many people at the park all at one time. There was a family flying kites, another packing up some soccer balls to go home, some kids who were playing a land version of Marco Polo, and it was awesome. It was noisy in that really great “look at all those children having fun” kind of way and all the parents seemed to be in a good mood – myself included.

I definitely want to go back at the same time from now on. I’m sure we’ll go during the day sometimes too, especially when we have those days that are nice and sunny without being oppressively hot, but it seems evening is the time to go for our park! I was even thinking that I could pack up their before-bed snack stuff and we could have a snack picnic there, then come home and get them into bed. That would be fun to try.

I managed to get some better pictures of the kids in their glasses too. Hayley is still loving hers (but I have to remind her frequently that she doesn’t need to demonstrate this love by taking them off to clean them every five to ten minutes) and has been reading a lot more lately, just like she used to. It’s unbelievable how much her vision troubles cut into that, and reading is something she loves. Today I put Breanna to bed for her nap and then sat on the couch with my book (Eat, Pray, Love, totally awesome), and Hayley curled up beside me with Charlotte’s Web and we read quietly together for half an hour.

Breanna asks regularly if she can please take her glasses off now, but since her vision is apparently worse than Hayley’s is, it’s really even more important for her to wear them at all times. She’s still feeling under the weather (and as of this moment has been napping for an epic two and a half hours, I’m going to be screwed at bedtime but she really needs the sleep) so I know it’s annoying for her to wear them, but so far a bit of distraction has helped a lot.

And I still think they look adorable in them.

Posing

Still modeling

Getting used to the glasses

Ooooo-oooh.

Too bad today is overcast to the point that it looks like it might pour rain at any moment. Good thing we’ll soon have endless summer days for park time!

Two girls in glasses

On Friday I called to find out what was going on with Hayley and Breanna’s glasses; it had been almost two weeks and they had told me it would take about a week and a half. The guy who checked the file said the glasses were already there and they had called on June 2nd to let us know. A quick scroll through Call Display showed this to be a total LIE but I shrugged it off because other than that their customer service had been great and the prices were reasonable.

I had to go out in the afternoon because Hayley’s school held their volunteer tea. It was way more fun this year because I knew a lot more people. I sat with some of my friends and we had such a good time laughing and just enjoying some pleasant afternoon time while our kids all ran around outside with the daycare. The drummer in most of George’s bands over the years is also a lunchroom monitor at the school so he was there as well and it was good to catch up with him after not seeing him for awhile. When it was time to leave I invited him to come drop by and see George for a bit so that was nice too.

After supper George had to work, but his dad was nice enough to come pick us up and we drove over to get the girls’ glasses. I realize that I’m seriously biased, but they both look *ridiculously adorable* in them.

Sisters in glasses!

Breanna has a cold that’s been keeping her up at night and driving her crazy so she was less than keen to pose for me but I got a couple at least.

Sisters in glasses!

Hayley is ecstatic. She was so happy to be able to see more clearly. The optometrist told me that she would have had trouble seeing clearly beyond three or four feet, which explains why she was having trouble seeing the board at school. However, she also said she has trouble seeing right up close, and that it would affect her concentration levels. That struck a chord – she’d been having more and more trouble getting through her homework and I thought it was just a combination of being tired after seven hours of school and being too much work, and that may be part of it, but the optometrist said that it may also be from her eyes tiring out from the effort of reading and writing.

I also didn’t really realize it until last night, but she hadn’t been reading in bed much lately. She used to read books every night before falling asleep but it was too hard for her eyes. Last night she was really tired but when she hopped into bed she pulled out one of her favorite books and forced herself to stay awake long enough to read it just because she could.

Breanna is mostly ambivalent. She didn’t really want to keep them on last night but she was tired and not feeling well. This morning she refused to put them on again and I didn’t push it, but once she saw Hayley wearing hers she went back to the bedroom and brought them out for me to put on her. So far she’s had them on for about three and a half hours without any complaints or requests to take them off. I think that there’s a huge difference in how she sees now. She told me everything is bigger.

The optometrist was surprised last night because she said when kids put on glasses as strong as Breanna’s are (+5 and +6) they sometimes have trouble adjusting and walk funny but Breanna walked and ran all around the store for us so they could see how she reacted and she didn’t have any issues at all. She had never been able to tell us she had trouble seeing because she didn’t know anything different, but I’ll bet it’s a whole new world for her. She didn’t want to leave the store but then I said, “come on and you can look out the car window and see all the stuff you didn’t see on the way over” and the staff all laughed.

I think it’s really helpful that they both had to get glasses at the same time. It probably would have been harder to get Breanna to keep hers on if it was just her, but seeing her sister in glasses makes her want to do the same thing. Meanwhile, even though I hate my glasses because they’re old and need to be replaced, I’m wearing mine today just so they can see me in them too. They make me a bit woozy after too many days in a row because the anti-reflect coating is mostly worn off, but I can wear them for today at least.

Hayley is so excited to go to school on Monday now that she can see properly – she can’t wait to sit and look at the board and actually see things clearly. I’m so glad their glasses are working well for them so far!

A lack of sleep makes me ramble

My favorite

Breanna is either going through a growth spurt or she’s turned into a tiny teenage boy. It’s unbelievable how much food she can eat in one day. Right now it’s 10:45 am and she’s been up since 6:30. She actually only started eating at about 7:30 though, so we’re talking about just over three hours of time, and this is what she has eaten so far:

- A bowl of Raisin Bran cereal (except she takes the raisins out. I have a three year old who would be thrilled with a box of Bran Flakes.)
- A bowl of strawberries
- A strawberry yogurt
- An apple
- A piece of bread with peanut butter
- A slice of cheese

That all also includes milk in her cereal and a juice box.

I’m going to need another job just to cover the amount of food she eats on a daily basis, although maybe this will push her over the weight limit and we can start using a booster seat in the car soon!

*******

Flutter

Speaking of jobs, I just started a new blogging job. It’s part of b5 media, where I already write for three other blogs, but this one is a member of the beauty & style network. (Let me pause for a second while I struggle not to laugh over the idea of ME working for a beauty & style network.)

It’s still keeping me in touch with my niche roots – celebrities – but it allows me to branch out a bit. The site is called Celeb Look and basically I detail what various celebrities were wearing while they were out and about, then I link readers to places online where they can buy the same outfit or similar knock-offs.

I only started yesterday but I’m already enjoying it. It just never fails to strike me as hilarious that I work on fashion sites (I write for this one too) and most of the time that I’m writing I’m often wearing such fabulous outfits as pajamas, track pants, or jeans. I almost feel like a fraud, but I figure it’s just my way of living vicariously through people who make enough money to afford to wear Calvin Klein and Versace.

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Thistle and friend

This coming Friday I get to go to Hayley’s school for a Volunteer Appreciate Tea in the afternoon. I went to one last year as well and it was a lot of fun – it was very British-style with fancy china cups, a variety of teas, some coffee, and tons of cookies, biscuits, and other baked goods. It was really nice but I’m looking forward to going this time even more because I know more of the parents this year. I’ll have to take pictures this year too, last time I was a little shy about it since I didn’t really know anyone.

Before the tea, there’s an assembly in the gym where they have the whole school come and sit down and the principal gives out an appreciation certificate to all the parents who volunteered over the year. It’s almost like an awards show where each person is called to come down and pick up their certificate and it’s fun because all the kids applaud and cheer – it makes you feel a little like a rock star. Last year I remember most of Hayley’s class was reaching out to give me high fives as I walked past. It’s the closest I’ll get to being a celebrity at this point in my life!

Hayley’s extra excited about it because the tea goes past the end of the school day so she gets to go down to the daycare with her friends to play. Every once in awhile she asks me why I can’t put her into the after-school daycare and I point out that it’s because I work from home and therefore we DON’T NEED IT, but sometimes she wishes she could play with her friends, so this will be fun for her too.

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All wet

I stayed up past midnight two nights in a row and got up with Hayley for school at 6:30 two mornings in a row. It’s not a good combination, I’m exhausted today and not in that good, hilarious loopy kind of way. It’s more of that “holy hell I’m going to pass out and sleep for 36 hours straight” kind of way. Perhaps tonight I could try to get to bed before the day is actually over, yes?

(Magic 8 Ball says: Don’t count on it.)