I love the way she always holds her own, and fits right in with the boys.
They don't know her, and yet they never question her presence, or give her a hard time, because she is...
Olive.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Sunday, July 08, 2012
Do Not Wake the Parents
"There is cat poop behind the cowch. It looks like it is fresh. If you need my help I will be in my room. 8:15"
We especially love the time stamp. Yes, we are lazy motherfuckers who sleep way past 8:15am on weekends. Yes, our life is hard.
We especially love the time stamp. Yes, we are lazy motherfuckers who sleep way past 8:15am on weekends. Yes, our life is hard.
2am
As we all piled out of the car into the hotel the baby was thrilled. Adventure!
Teeth x 3, jammies x 3, tucked in x 3. Exhausted parents x 2.
Even in the dark in a hotel crib Callum was still having the time of his life. Thrilling!
"AAH DA NAH-NAH! AAH DA! AAH DA! NAH-NAH AAH DA!" and so on, for a good 20 minutes.
For those of you who don't speak our baby, that would be: "All done night-night! All done! All done! Night-night all done!"
Giggling kids = 3, laughing parents = 2.
Good road trip times.
Teeth x 3, jammies x 3, tucked in x 3. Exhausted parents x 2.
Even in the dark in a hotel crib Callum was still having the time of his life. Thrilling!
"AAH DA NAH-NAH! AAH DA! AAH DA! NAH-NAH AAH DA!" and so on, for a good 20 minutes.
For those of you who don't speak our baby, that would be: "All done night-night! All done! All done! Night-night all done!"
Giggling kids = 3, laughing parents = 2.
Good road trip times.
Labels:
All in a day's work,
California,
Callum,
If You Say So
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
Go Ahead and Stroke My Ego
Presenting us with charts of developmental milestones for 3, 4, and 5 year olds, Olive's teachers place her solidly into the 5 year old category page after page. She is only 4 years and 22 days old.
"Honestly, both her peers and the preschool curriculum are really holding her back. She is one smart little cookie!"
(Again, NAEYC accredited school, not someone's grandma running daycare out of her living room blowing smoke up our asses.)
Which is good, because we can continue to devote all of our energy to her...ahem...behavior at home. At school she is a perfect little angel.
"Honestly, both her peers and the preschool curriculum are really holding her back. She is one smart little cookie!"
(Again, NAEYC accredited school, not someone's grandma running daycare out of her living room blowing smoke up our asses.)
Which is good, because we can continue to devote all of our energy to her...ahem...behavior at home. At school she is a perfect little angel.
Tuesday, May 08, 2012
Living the Dream
Husband: "I love the way you dress, but I am so tired of seeing you in the same thing over and over again. Go buy some new clothes!"
Thursday, May 03, 2012
Comedienne
Teacher: Olive told us a wonderful joke over lunch.
Me: She did?
Of course the punch line involves urine.
Me: She did?
Of course the punch line involves urine.
Olive on Evolution
(Used as greeting) "Did you know I used to be a chimpanzee?"
"Wow!"
(Sensing 'dult placating bullshit.) "No! Really! Gwam told me. It was a really long time ago, before Pappy was born."
"Oh! Okay. Actually, humans..."
"You mean people."
"Fine. People evolved..."
"UGH! I AM PEOPLE!"
"Wow!"
(Sensing 'dult placating bullshit.) "No! Really! Gwam told me. It was a really long time ago, before Pappy was born."
"Oh! Okay. Actually, humans..."
"You mean people."
"Fine. People evolved..."
"UGH! I AM PEOPLE!"
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
Eleven Months Old. Also, Hair.
Yesterday, during a diaper change, Mr. Stinkermuffin Pooper-Doodle grabbed his hair brush and was like, "Momma, this is a hairbrush, and this is how I brush my own hair. See?"
Oh, melty heart! Momma needs to write that down!
(Except that I forgot. Until the next diaper change when there was an encore presentation. And then I forgot again. And then he did it again again. Third time's a charm.)
And now a picture of the back of my kid's head.

DO NOT TOUCH THE CURLS.
I never thought I'd be that mom, but hair + teething necklace, and strangers, who always knew he was a boy before, have begun telling what an adorable little girl we have. Plus that picture is already three weeks old. Ahem, length is not helping.
So how long can I hold out? Scary question. Olive has never had a haircut, and she's turning four next week. Husband doesn't care/is scared of crazy baby-loving woman, so no pressure there.
If only they'd stop growing for just a little while.
Oh, melty heart! Momma needs to write that down!
(Except that I forgot. Until the next diaper change when there was an encore presentation. And then I forgot again. And then he did it again again. Third time's a charm.)
And now a picture of the back of my kid's head.

DO NOT TOUCH THE CURLS.
I never thought I'd be that mom, but hair + teething necklace, and strangers, who always knew he was a boy before, have begun telling what an adorable little girl we have. Plus that picture is already three weeks old. Ahem, length is not helping.
So how long can I hold out? Scary question. Olive has never had a haircut, and she's turning four next week. Husband doesn't care/is scared of crazy baby-loving woman, so no pressure there.
If only they'd stop growing for just a little while.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Lucky
Oh March, you emotional bastard, you.
Tomorrow I will celebrate my mom on the two year anniversary of her death. The very next day I will celebrate my son as he turns nine.
Two years.
Time moves faster now. I laugh more, I laugh harder. I save less for rainy days, I eat way too much dessert. I am quieter, a better listener. I internalize more, I am less argumentative, and I do not want to talk politics with you. I try not to say "I don't know how you do it" because I know you don't know either.
I love more.
Most days I know I'm lucky to have had my mom as long as I did.
Because on Monday, a friend who'd already lost her mom to cancer, lost her dad, too.
Because two weeks ago marked the 4 year anniversary of my former brother-in-law taking his own life, leaving behind my then 8 year old nephew.
Because another of my son's friends, 8 years old with a 6 year old brother, just lost his dad to kidney failure, joining three more of his peers and their siblings who already lost their dads to cancer, all in the very small circle of people we know.
I am grateful for the thirty-two years we had.
On the hard days I look at my two youngest and I am ungraciously jealous.
There's the enchantingly feisty granddaughter she so badly wanted and didn't really get to know, who has doubled in age and has hair on her head and opinions and says something brilliant every day; my little girl, who dreams out loud about how wonderful it would be to have a grandma, just like Max & Ruby on tv. The baby, and oh did she looove babies, especially mine, who uses his security blanket and smiling eyes to drag random strangers in games of peek-a-boo from 25 feet away, who is so charmingly himself that admitted non-baby-loving people are constantly stopping to tell us that for him they'd convert. And for my almost nine year old, who told me again recently that he can no longer remember her voice, but remembers how she made him feel.
I am so very lucky for all that I have, but tonight my heart wants more.
Tomorrow I will celebrate my mom on the two year anniversary of her death. The very next day I will celebrate my son as he turns nine.
Two years.
Time moves faster now. I laugh more, I laugh harder. I save less for rainy days, I eat way too much dessert. I am quieter, a better listener. I internalize more, I am less argumentative, and I do not want to talk politics with you. I try not to say "I don't know how you do it" because I know you don't know either.
I love more.
Most days I know I'm lucky to have had my mom as long as I did.
Because on Monday, a friend who'd already lost her mom to cancer, lost her dad, too.
Because two weeks ago marked the 4 year anniversary of my former brother-in-law taking his own life, leaving behind my then 8 year old nephew.
Because another of my son's friends, 8 years old with a 6 year old brother, just lost his dad to kidney failure, joining three more of his peers and their siblings who already lost their dads to cancer, all in the very small circle of people we know.
I am grateful for the thirty-two years we had.
On the hard days I look at my two youngest and I am ungraciously jealous.
There's the enchantingly feisty granddaughter she so badly wanted and didn't really get to know, who has doubled in age and has hair on her head and opinions and says something brilliant every day; my little girl, who dreams out loud about how wonderful it would be to have a grandma, just like Max & Ruby on tv. The baby, and oh did she looove babies, especially mine, who uses his security blanket and smiling eyes to drag random strangers in games of peek-a-boo from 25 feet away, who is so charmingly himself that admitted non-baby-loving people are constantly stopping to tell us that for him they'd convert. And for my almost nine year old, who told me again recently that he can no longer remember her voice, but remembers how she made him feel.
I am so very lucky for all that I have, but tonight my heart wants more.
Monday, March 26, 2012
First Words
Last week it was "up," which I pretended was my mind playing tricks on me, screw the witnesses. Yesterday it was very clearly "ballballball!"
Ten and a half months has gone so fast...
Ten and a half months has gone so fast...
Friday, March 16, 2012
First Year Bellylaughs
In the sandbox:
Whiplash recoil. What the?!
Tilt head, raise eyebrow.
A moment to ponder.
One finger test.
Sit back, think.
Light touch, five finger test.
Reflect.
Again. And again.
Threat assessment complete.
Lightbulb!
Hysterical, maniacal laughter and squealing.
Looking to me and his brother,
OMG YOU GUYS! Did you know that our sandbox has...wait for it...a bottom?
Whiplash recoil. What the?!
Tilt head, raise eyebrow.
A moment to ponder.
One finger test.
Sit back, think.
Light touch, five finger test.
Reflect.
Again. And again.
Threat assessment complete.
Lightbulb!
Hysterical, maniacal laughter and squealing.
Looking to me and his brother,
OMG YOU GUYS! Did you know that our sandbox has...wait for it...a bottom?
Monday, February 27, 2012
Like Grandmother, Like Granddaughter
Thursday, February 09, 2012
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Lessons in Olive
At Olive's glowing parent teacher conference last week we were told, "She can read," and we were all, "Yeah, she has a lot of sight words," and they were like, "That's not what we mean." Apparently she has also already reached many end-of-the-year goals for the pre-kindergarten program she will attend next school year. (They are NAEYC accredited.) This, they emphasized, is especially mind-blowing since she only goes two mornings a week and has missed more than two months of school due to illness and her mother being a mysophobe. They asked us for goals, and we were like, "Can you make her scream at us less? Be a little more reasonable about, say, everything?" And, of course, they were like, "Whaaa? She's a delight! We've never seen her cry! Or have a tantrum!" She also doesn't swear, or yell "Don't pee on my leg and tell me it's raining!" Oh, I see, she's not comfortable there yet. No problem, we'll stick our apologies back into our pockets and save them for next time.
Tonight Jason pulled out a book she'd never seen before, buried deep from her brother's learning to read days. She read the first 4-word sentence with 100% accuracy, and then the 5-word sentence that followed, and so on, until she realized Jason and I were making holy shitballs our 3 year old can read faces at each other.
She immediately threw the book aside and bellowed, "I don't know how to read!"
It sure was fun while it lasted.
Tonight Jason pulled out a book she'd never seen before, buried deep from her brother's learning to read days. She read the first 4-word sentence with 100% accuracy, and then the 5-word sentence that followed, and so on, until she realized Jason and I were making holy shitballs our 3 year old can read faces at each other.
She immediately threw the book aside and bellowed, "I don't know how to read!"
It sure was fun while it lasted.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Burn Notice
Olive has a doll that we are to refer to as her baby. It goes everywhere, except school.
"I was talking with your teacher today. I told her about your baby..."
Horrified whining. "MOOOOOOOMMM!"
"Wha?"
"SHE'S A SECRET AGENT!!!"
Fuck invisible friends. We've got spies, y'all.
"I was talking with your teacher today. I told her about your baby..."
Horrified whining. "MOOOOOOOMMM!"
"Wha?"
"SHE'S A SECRET AGENT!!!"
Fuck invisible friends. We've got spies, y'all.
That's My Daughter
So I'm getting out of the shower and over the baby monitor I hear 3 year old Olive raging @ "Gwam":
"YOU'RE A BABY! AND YOU'RE A DUMB-ASS! YOU'RE A BABY DUMB-ASS!!!"
Forget my strict no name-calling policy. Way to raise the insult bar and rip him a new one, dear.
Disclaimer:
I say a lot of things, but she didn't get this one from me.
(I think.)
And my 3rd grader thinks "darn" and "heck" are punishable by death naughty.
(He doesn't swear at all. For reals.)
Just finds ways to casually mention that he has a penis.
(All the time.)
(Like his father.)
My hands are full.
(Jason, not with penis, but I thank you in advance for the offer that I know is coming.)
(I know...hehe...coming.)
Fin.
"YOU'RE A BABY! AND YOU'RE A DUMB-ASS! YOU'RE A BABY DUMB-ASS!!!"
Forget my strict no name-calling policy. Way to raise the insult bar and rip him a new one, dear.
Disclaimer:
I say a lot of things, but she didn't get this one from me.
(I think.)
And my 3rd grader thinks "darn" and "heck" are punishable by death naughty.
(He doesn't swear at all. For reals.)
Just finds ways to casually mention that he has a penis.
(All the time.)
(Like his father.)
My hands are full.
(Jason, not with penis, but I thank you in advance for the offer that I know is coming.)
(I know...hehe...coming.)
Fin.
Finally one of my children gives a frick about penmanship.
And so declares Olive "I am going to practice my s's!"
"Knock yourself out."
Blessed quiet for 3 whole minutes, suddenly interrupted with mad scribbling.
"What happened?"
"I don't like this one! It looks like a dumb 5!!!"
Tears. The end.
"Knock yourself out."
Blessed quiet for 3 whole minutes, suddenly interrupted with mad scribbling.
"What happened?"
"I don't like this one! It looks like a dumb 5!!!"
Tears. The end.
Thursday, December 08, 2011
I'm 34 now. Send crutches. And condoms.
You missed it? No worries, it just happened like an hour ago.
So on the eve of my 34th I sat down, knee fine, stood up, knee not fine = fell down, in a most ungracious manner. Now I can't walk. What a great reminder that I'm getting older. Did I mention that the sitting down/standing up/falling down thing happened on the toilet? With a sober stomach? Cause yeah, that makes me feel so much not better.
My dear husband assures me it's a late onset injury from last night's sexcapades, because we found a new style of condoms at Target last night, weeeeeeeeee, and because our over-sized garden tub has not grown with us. And all that last chance sex with one of us not being a mid-30-something.
Sad.
Really.
Us: "Ooh! Look at those! Jinx! Get those! Jinx!"
Third grader, again: "What are condoms?"
Me: "So there's like...30 in a box. One or two?"
Him: "Duh. Two."
Me: "It is a great value, but really?"
Him: "30...that's like two weeks worth, and they expire in...2014."
Me: "But we come to Target every day..."
More wine, please. And condoms. Because we're down to 56. And it's not even bedtime yet.
So on the eve of my 34th I sat down, knee fine, stood up, knee not fine = fell down, in a most ungracious manner. Now I can't walk. What a great reminder that I'm getting older. Did I mention that the sitting down/standing up/falling down thing happened on the toilet? With a sober stomach? Cause yeah, that makes me feel so much not better.
My dear husband assures me it's a late onset injury from last night's sexcapades, because we found a new style of condoms at Target last night, weeeeeeeeee, and because our over-sized garden tub has not grown with us. And all that last chance sex with one of us not being a mid-30-something.
Sad.
Really.
Us: "Ooh! Look at those! Jinx! Get those! Jinx!"
Third grader, again: "What are condoms?"
Me: "So there's like...30 in a box. One or two?"
Him: "Duh. Two."
Me: "It is a great value, but really?"
Him: "30...that's like two weeks worth, and they expire in...2014."
Me: "But we come to Target every day..."
More wine, please. And condoms. Because we're down to 56. And it's not even bedtime yet.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Watch Your Tone, Mister
An Olive storm blows in from the other side of the house and makes a screaching halt right in front of my dad and me. Arms outstretched by her sides, elbows bent, palms up, she emphasizes her point with exaggerated up and down action.
"Momma! Gwam is talking to me like he's a dult. But he's not a dult, he's a kid like me!" (Shaking little fists of fury.) "ARGH!"
"Momma! Gwam is talking to me like he's a dult. But he's not a dult, he's a kid like me!" (Shaking little fists of fury.) "ARGH!"
A Sorta Epilogue
When I look back at my life over the last year all I can say is "Wow, I didn't see that coming."
In September 2010 I was preparing to mark six months since my mom's death. Slowly I was shedding all the stress and tension that came along with cancer, the stuff that had changed me into a person that I didn't recognize or like. Have you ever been 100% conscience of your bad behavior but unable or unwilling to stop yourself? That was me. And while the journey back continues to be longer than I ever would have expected, one year ago I was on the road and headed in the right direction. Approaching six months down without her I patted myself on the back for a job well done. That was until I realized that all the big firsts, like her birthday, my birthday, my dad's birthday, their wedding anniversary, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, blah blah blah were all going to be back-loaded into the second six months. Fuck.
So I started getting myself all worked up, because of all the firsts that had not yet passed. I was back to counting exactly how long it had been, though honestly, I'd never really stopped.
The plan was to give myself a year to grieve and breathe and recover, to find a new normal before plunging back into fertility treatments. I did not want to jeopardize a pregnancy with fresh grief -- I knew it would be hard enough to have a baby my mom would never hold.
And then one year ago today, the day before the six month anniversary of my mom's death, I found myself pregnant by surprise, from baby-making the good old fashioned way. It wasn't that getting pregnant on our own was impossible, just not very likely. Thirteen married years without birth control + an active sex life + lots of figurative standing on our heads trying to make a baby and here I was with an unplanned pregnancy. It was as funny as it was welcome.
And in the moments that followed the stick screaming pregnant I heard my mom saying she'd given me my silly six months and enough already! You want something to count? I'll give you something to count! Count how pregnant you are, and then when that's done, count how old he is.
This is Callum. Today he is 4 months, 2 weeks, and 5 days old.
He has blue eyes that everyone agrees look like the kind that will stay blue, the blue eyes that my mom always teased about.
"Why don't my grandchildren have blue eyes? Our family all has blue eyes!"
"I married a redhead! Okay, a redhead with brown eyes, but still...what do you want me to do? He's English, he's Irish, maybe even Scottish. Hell, we're practically inbreeding here."
Fourteen pounds of delicious blue-eyed baby love. Funny how you make plans only to have them tossed right out the window, and the life you didn't orchestrate turns out so much better.
For those of you trying to figure out the math he was born straddling the prematurity line amidst mucho drama. But that's a story for another day.
In September 2010 I was preparing to mark six months since my mom's death. Slowly I was shedding all the stress and tension that came along with cancer, the stuff that had changed me into a person that I didn't recognize or like. Have you ever been 100% conscience of your bad behavior but unable or unwilling to stop yourself? That was me. And while the journey back continues to be longer than I ever would have expected, one year ago I was on the road and headed in the right direction. Approaching six months down without her I patted myself on the back for a job well done. That was until I realized that all the big firsts, like her birthday, my birthday, my dad's birthday, their wedding anniversary, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, blah blah blah were all going to be back-loaded into the second six months. Fuck.
So I started getting myself all worked up, because of all the firsts that had not yet passed. I was back to counting exactly how long it had been, though honestly, I'd never really stopped.
The plan was to give myself a year to grieve and breathe and recover, to find a new normal before plunging back into fertility treatments. I did not want to jeopardize a pregnancy with fresh grief -- I knew it would be hard enough to have a baby my mom would never hold.
And then one year ago today, the day before the six month anniversary of my mom's death, I found myself pregnant by surprise, from baby-making the good old fashioned way. It wasn't that getting pregnant on our own was impossible, just not very likely. Thirteen married years without birth control + an active sex life + lots of figurative standing on our heads trying to make a baby and here I was with an unplanned pregnancy. It was as funny as it was welcome.
And in the moments that followed the stick screaming pregnant I heard my mom saying she'd given me my silly six months and enough already! You want something to count? I'll give you something to count! Count how pregnant you are, and then when that's done, count how old he is.
This is Callum. Today he is 4 months, 2 weeks, and 5 days old.
He has blue eyes that everyone agrees look like the kind that will stay blue, the blue eyes that my mom always teased about.
"Why don't my grandchildren have blue eyes? Our family all has blue eyes!"
"I married a redhead! Okay, a redhead with brown eyes, but still...what do you want me to do? He's English, he's Irish, maybe even Scottish. Hell, we're practically inbreeding here."
Fourteen pounds of delicious blue-eyed baby love. Funny how you make plans only to have them tossed right out the window, and the life you didn't orchestrate turns out so much better.
For those of you trying to figure out the math he was born straddling the prematurity line amidst mucho drama. But that's a story for another day.
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