Snowcation.

Here’s a few shots of what early March was looking like in my yard on Tuesday.

 And Wednesday morning we woke up to this:

Lots of heavy white stuff.

About this much of it:

Okay, so the owl isn’t a good indication of how much snow we got, but I thought it looked cute with it’s little snow cap.

Needless to say, schools were closed and because of the weight of the snow, there were many downed tree branches and power lines.  Our beloved pink dogwood in the front yard lost a few limbs – mostly smaller ones at the top – we were lucky there. We lost a huge limb off a tulip popular in the back yard, the oak lost some limbs and there are still roads closed around town due to downed trees. We have a gas stove and hot water heater, so we had coffee, hot showers and hot food.  We didn’t have heat, but as the temperature hovered above freezing and we don’t keep our house terribly warm anyway, that wasn’t too awful. Wednesday night after dinner, the three of us climbed into our bed upstairs with books & flashlights and curled up for the night. 

I have to say, I immensely enjoyed the snow day.  Already, spring and the busy schedule that seems to be our norm for that time of year has kicked in.  This unexpected holiday was the last big hunk of time the three of us are going to have together for at least a month, if not more.  The rest of March is about to be insanely busy for me – I have lots of exciting projects that I will be talking about over the next few months.  A day unplugged where I had no excuse to not sit curled up with a book and my family was pretty delightful.  As I was waking up to Day 2 No Power wondering if I could do another day, the power came back on, we were able to run the dishwasher we had spent all day Wednesday regretting we forgot to run before going to bed Tuesday night, I popped the lemon cheesecake buns I had ready to go into the oven and we enjoyed another day unplugged, for while we had power, we had no cable or internet.  We worked some more on our 1000 piece puzzle that is taking over the dining room table, we watched some movies.  It was a nice farewell to winter, a most welcome chance to catch our breathe before we hit the ground running for the next few weeks and months…..

Guest Shots.

One of the badges the girls in my Girl Scout troop said they wanted to earn this year was the Digital Photography badge.  We got to it this past week with some help from the lovely photographers behind Beyond The Flavor, Sarah and Andrea.   After a brief introduction by our guests in which they shared some of their photos and gave the girls some tips on photography, the girls spent the rest of the meeting taking pictures.  They warmed up with a few shots of our surroundings – which happens to be the library at their school as well as the adjacent science lab.
The girls were encouraged to not use their zoom function, but to get as close to their subject as possible.  As a result, there were a number of ear shots.  
 

It would appear that headbands & ponytails with pearl earrings is a common look among my girls. Something I hadn’t noticed before.

They didn’t limit themselves to ears though.

Another tip Sarah & Andrea gave the girls was to try different angles and perspectives.

Which they clearly embraced.

 
 
After warming up, the girls were given the first of a few assignments.  These are some of their texture shots.
Their next exercise was a portrait of someone.
 
The girls were encouraged to try for some candid shots.
Then came the self  portraits. 
Lastly, the girls were to snap three pictures that told a story.  Lauren & Alayna teamed up for a fabulous Goldilocks and the Three Bears narrative that used Alayna’s flair for drama but I don’t have those photos. You’ll just have to take my word on the awesomeness of it.  What I do have however, is this photo of a Pokemon character that lives in the library and has become our unofficial mascot this year.
I had every intention of capturing the ‘behind the scenes’ of our meeting, but as one of the girls had a snafu with her camera, I handed her mine, which she figured out how to use in about the time it took me to hand it to her.  Kids seem to have no fear in picking up things like cameras and iphones and immediately figuring them out, while us grown ups take forever to get the hang of them.  Or maybe that’s just me. Anyway, only the first two shots in this post were taken by me, the rest by various members of my girl scout troop.  I love their creativity, don’t you?  The self portraits just slay me.  I watched Hannah set hers up with her violin.  So stinking cute.
Thank you again Sarah & Andrea for taking time out of your busy schedules to share some of your knowledge with my girls.  And thanks to the parents of the girls in my troop for sharing your girls and their photos with us. I love seeing the world through their eyes.

Go big or go home.

I come from a game-loving family that as you might guess, is also slightly competitive. We play to win and we don’t always lose well.  On a beach trip 30 years ago, I beat my cousin Bob in one miniature golf game, a loss that he has yet to let go of, even though the entire trip after that became a nonstop rematch where he trounced me every time, at every last putt putt course in Ocean City, MD.  There are pictures from my wedding of us visibly arguing about that game. It is the one time I’ve ever beaten him at a game and he will never ever get over it.

There was a beach trip with my extended family a few years ago where Pat discovered that I came from a game playing family.   “How did I not know this about you?  How do you come from this family and you hate to play games?” he asked.  “Give it a few days and you’ll see” I answered.  By the end of the week, my cousins had announced they would never again play poker with Pat – who managed to take most of their cash in a completely annoying idiot savant way.  “Wait, I won?” he was quoted as saying when he laid the cards down on the winning hand in question.  There may have been  tears involved. He did indeed figure out by the end of the week why I don’t play games, especially with my family.

This means of course, that Edie comes by her competitiveness honestly.  Once, during one of our marathon power outages that lasted days on end, the neighborhood gang started a monopoly tournament.  The big boys taught Edie to play, I’m sure thinking they could easily win, only to realize that she was incredibly cut throat and serious as a heart attack about beating them at their own game, which she did of course.  She has since been banned from their monopoly games and they are steadily realizing that it’s not just monopoly she plays to win at, it’s every game.  She might think beating them at Madden Football was a fluke, but they don’t.

A few weeks ago, The Civility School announced a “Messiest Room Around” Contest on their Facebook page. Given my lax housekeeping skills combined with my hands free parenting philosophy of letting my daughter express herself in her space, I thought for sure this was a contest we stood a chance of winning.  However, when I mentioned it to my daughter, she quickly dismissed it.  After all, the prize was a credit with the school or a $100 gift certificate to Amazon.  I snapped some shots of her art supply dump in the sun room – which this time of year is too cold to be used for anything but storage.  It’s February, getting very close to the annual deep cleaning of that room, so it was in prime condition to win a messy contest.  However, once my girl saw the shots as well as the rest of the competition being posted, she mumbled to herself, “I can do better than that” and so she set out to make her room look like this:

Not that it was a great deal of work – 20 minutes, one loud crash with a very mama sounding “I’m okay!” and she was ready for me to capture it and submit it.  In it to win it she was. And win it she did.  Saturday morning the winner was announced, which is when Pat realized I posted the above photo on the Internet.  Go big or go home I say, so if a photo of our house is going to be plastered on the Internet, might as well make it the entire web, right?  (Although I am holding back on pinning it.  We’ll see if it shows up on there.)

I do have to follow that shot up however, with the announcement that after trashing her room, she then proceeded to clean it and has kept it neat ever since (and I will get around to shooting photo of it and posting that one as well, really).  Because she’s kept it clean, I’m going to let her choose her prize.  While I’m disappointed she won’t be choosing a credit for the Civility School, I do take comfort in the knowledge that she has fairly impeccable manners – knowing her, she’d have herself a job lined up as a T.A. by the end of a modern manners course there because that’s just how she is.  In it to win it as politely as possible.

How she rolls….

My friend Erin has started a blog, Notty Pea.  You’re sure to love it – just like me, she’s crafty and admittedly not a type A personality.  Go check it out now and follow it. You won’t be sorry.  She’s pretty awesome. I don’t just say that because she could out drink me back in our wild, kid-free days. 

Speaking of introductions, Edie had no school on Monday, so I let her stay up and watch some Downton Abbey with me.  Of course, I crashed out about 10 or so because I cannot stay up past 9:30 without serious caffeine that then keeps me up all night.  It’s early or nothing with me.  Anyway.  She has no such problems.  Who needs the internet for spoilers when you have an 11 year old daughter?  That’s right, the first thing she told me in the morning was everything I’d missed the night before on Downton Abbey.  And she wants to go back and watch the entire show now.  There’s a character named Edith don’t ya know.  Not a whole lot of Ediths out there, at least that she knows of.

So she’s been walking around practicing her British accent, announcing that she wants to live in a manor house.  I think she thinks the show is set in the current British country side. She really won’t hear otherwise.  I hate to ruin a dream world, so I’m letting it go mostly.  Except for the duchess thing. It seems she’d prefer to be called “Duchess” after watching that.

I really need to be more on top of her TV watching habits.

That’s what is currently on my living room coffee table.  Sunday’s NY Times magazine, coasters and a deer jaw she found while going off trail in the woods at the park across the street.

Duchess indeed.

The time I fell off the roof.

I like to tell the story of why Valentine’s Day is special to us – how it was the day that prompted Pat to call, leaving me a message even though I was out of town, so we really sort of consider the day the start of us.  We’ve also told the story of how we met when I fell off the roof at a party which leaves some wondering, how did we go from me falling off the roof to him leaving me a message on my answering machine on Valentine’s day?

One of my favorite things about Auburn during my time there in the late 80’s and early 90’s was that were like 3 bars in the entire town.  It wasn’t that there weren’t things to do – there were plenty of things to do – it was just all at someone’s house. Far cozier (and cheaper) than a bar. My second year there, I lived in a great big old house near campus with a yard and a large screened in front porch – perfect for parties no matter the weather.  I think we threw parties there just about every weekend that year.  I was friends with a few guys in bands, so the idea came about that we should have band parties.  Band parties were a great thing in those days – they’d set up a stage in someone’s back yard (or house), access to the yard would be restricted to one entrance, you’d pay a cover, bring your own beer or maybe pitch in for a keg and it was a party. My not quite (there was a house between ours, but it was set far back from the road and ours were quite close to the street, so at first glance, our houses appeared to be adjacent) next door neighbor, Stuart E, had some legendary band parties that year, including the time Green Day played in his kitchen.  I remember seeing them on Behind the Music talking about the time they played in someone’s kitchen and remembering fondly that the keg for that show was at my house. (Stuart & I would plan parties so that if one of us had a band, the other would have a keg.  It was inevitable, if one of us had a party, the other one would end up with a spillover party.  I’ve been blessed with great neighbors throughout my life, but Stuart E was hands down, one of the best. I miss that guy.)  At some point though, the town council instituted an noise ordinance that basically said only frat houses could get away with having outdoor band parties.  By that point, I was living in a different house – a smaller one not quite so conducive to huge parties every weekend.  I also had roommates that were not on board with them – although they still happened occasionally.  You can take the girl out of the party, but you can’t take the party out of the girl….

Anyway, I’m not entirely sure how it happened, but someone noticed one day that my house, with a vacant lot next to it, was a little more than a block in either direction from two different frat houses – and the sounds of their outdoor band parties.  It was suggested that we try throwing an old school back yard band party – I think someone even managed to make sure it was the same evening as a party at one of the houses, with the idea that only our closest neighbors (of which, one was a religious center that no one lived at) would know the difference.  It was a  brilliant idea – although I do remember that we had bail money as part of the deal should it get busted by the authorities.  Turns out, we didn’t need it – the plan worked and it was a good party.  It was the last big band party of my college career, one last free-for-all in a long line of free-for-alls.

The house had a detached garage in the back.  The stage was set up along the side of the garage.  I couldn’t help but notice there were a few folks sitting on the roof peak of the garage and good hostess that I was, I decided I should go up there to mingle and see if those guests were having a good time.  A good hostess always greets all of her guests, yes?

It was pretty easy to hop up on the chain link fence separating my house and the building next door and launch myself onto the roof from there.   I sat up on the ridge, took in some of the band, talked to two gents before deciding I needed to head back down to the rest of the party.  As I sat on the lowest edge of the roof, I grabbed a tree branch from the neighbor’s yard, put one foot on the edge of the fence and as I was placing the other foot on what I thought was the fence, I proceeded to hop down.  Only the other foot missed the fence and I somehow landed tangled up in the tree in the back yard of the building next door.  Thankfully, my dear friend Pat Shaw witnessed this and came to my rescue, fishing me out of the tree and bringing me back to the ground.

A year later, I was hanging out with my Pat and he asked if I remembered falling off the roof.  I did I answered, telling him about the bruise that covered the top half of my left arm for weeks on end as a result and how did he know about that?  Turns out he was one of the boys I was talking to just before I slid down the roof. (He actually tells a great version of what it was like to hear the fall.)

It wasn’t the first conversation we’d had – that one took place a few years before that when he came in to pick up a pie from the pizza shop I worked at and I asked him and his buddy if they knew of any parties that night. But it was the longest conversation we’d had up to that point.  Up on my garage roof at the very last free-for-all band party of my college career.

He really did know what he was getting into.  Nineteen years and counting later, he’s still here and not at all surprised when I do things like fall off roofs or throw a party for our closest 300 friends.

So while some might dismiss Valentine’s day as an excuse to push cards, flowers and candy, what I love about it is that it made a boy think to call a girl who fell off a roof.

Mama Brag.

(Consider the title your fair warning of what follows.)
My girl has been on quite a roll lately.  She brought home a stellar report card, making the honor roll again. She made orchestra recitals- a performance that she had to audition for.  She won first place in the paper airplane distance competition in her Saturday morning enrichment class.  She made the cut-off for drama club this semester. And she’s been making some incredible treats in the kitchen on the weekends.
Drama club is due more to timing than it is anything else.  She has looked forward to being in drama club since Betty’s son Ben (now in 8th grade) was in 5th grade and we attended his first play, his first semester at Walker.  Edie decided then and there she was going to join drama club when she got to Walker.  She would tell people when asked if she was looking forward to going to school there, that yes she was because she was going to be in drama club.  When the club sign up list came out last semester, she waited a day to turn it in, pondering her choices for the other days of the week.  As a result, she didn’t get drama club.  She was quite bummed, but eventually she ended up pretty content with her second choice of yoga club.  And when the club sign up sheets came out this time around, she made sure she was at school turning it in bright and early the next morning. Lesson learned.
As for the paper airplane, she’s not really entirely sure how she managed to construct a winning airplane.  Pat signed her up for the Saturday morning class through the Curry School over at UVa. He thought that “Intro to Applied Sciences” sounded the most interesting of all the choices presented.  When I dropped her off for her first class, I was handed a letter and a course description by the instructor and realized it was a kids engineering course.  I also realized that she was one of four girls in the class and definitely the only blonde haired blue eyed child.  When we went to pick her up that first day, she stood in the doorway, glaring.  You have to sign your child in and out, and of course we were behind in the queue.  She stood there, glaring, while other kids had to wiggle past her to leave as their parents signed them out. I actually heard other parents commenting on the glaring girl who was scowling in the doorway.  Ah yes, that would be mine. She’s quite good at math and wants to be a fashion designer – so our attempt at showing her there are any number of careers in design out there in the world utilizing all her skills was not fully appreciated.  However, the second week of class, Edie came home quite proud of herself for constructing the paper airplane that flew the longest AND was the prettiest in the entire class.
Of course it was.
Edie’s orchestra instrument of choice is the stand up bass. She plays this in addition to piano – which was her choice.  She started piano last year, enjoyed it and wanted to continue with it while picking up another instrument.  We talked to her about what playing two instruments meant – mostly having to practice two instruments.  All summer long we talked about it, trying to give her an out.  She stuck to her guns.  School started and the reality of the commitment of playing two instruments hit her.  I was ready and willing to let her give up piano, so when she came to me wanting to quit, I at least thought I’d make it seem like she needed to argue the point.  Only her argument for why learning to play two instruments was hard was that “it makes me have to think”.  Oh kiddo.  You so do not get to quit things because it makes you have to think.  Wrong answer.  You just bought yourself a year’s worth of piano lessons.
And now that she sees other kids she knows playing multiple instruments in jazz band, an ensemble she has stated she is interested in joining, I’m guessing piano lessons aren’t going away anytime soon. 
This cooking thing has got to be hands down, my most favorite trick of hers since becoming potty trained.  I think not having cable has helped nurture this – you see, Saturday mornings when she wants to watch television, there is pretty much nothing on that appeals to her.  She started watching the PBS Create channel and absolutely fell in love with Julia Child.  That lead to her watching Jacques & Julia and discovering Jacques Pepin.  Which in turn, inspired her to walk into the kitchen one morning, pull out a cookbook and make us breakfast before we woke up.  This is fast becoming her new Sunday morning habit, one I can very quickly become accustomed to.
The only downside to this is the mess that she makes.  Oh, and sometimes breakfast isn’t ready until noon.  But that’s okay.  She’s learning mise en place, the importance of reading the recipe and assembling her ingredients before beginning.  So what if that requires the use of every last bowl in the house.  She’s also learning how to clean up after herself, which I love almost as much as I love her making Sunday morning breakfast.  Definitely my favorite trick on the path of independence since potty training.  Now if I could only get her to put her laundry away…..

That kind of day.

I thought the yoga class started at 9:15.  It started at 9.
I thought it was an hour long class. It was an hour and a half.
It was yoga – I thought it would be like the “Easy Does It” class I regularly attend.  HA!

While I did stretch out some of the soreness from the workout the day before where I totally had my ass kicked by an instructor old enough to be my mother, I woke up this morning to all sorts of new sorenesses (I don’t care if that’s a word or not.  It’s perfectly describes how I feel.) thanks to that class.

It’s one thing to get your ass kicked by the perky little 20 & 30-somethings at the gym, something else altogether to get it kicked by someone’s grandmother.  

I futzed around at the gym afterwards, chatting with the friend that convinced me I should give that yoga class a try.  By the time I headed out, it was well after 11.

I ran some errands, came home and started cooking meals for the week for the families that I’m personally cheffing for.  (Another word I may have made up.) Spent the afternoon alternately trashing and then cleaning the kitchen.  Went to the garden to pick some herbs, was spotted by the chickens, most notably Ozzy, who came running at me, babbling away. She followed me all around the yard, chattering away.  She may have been looking for food, but I like to think she was telling me about her day.

I ran a quick delivery, came home and plopped down for a few minutes to just breathe.  Thought I should double check the address of the meeting I’d been invited to attend at 7:00 that evening.   As I pulled up the email, I noticed it started at 5:30.  The clock on the wall said it was 5:12.  I was still wearing the clothes I’d worn to the gym.  Which actually were the pants I had slept in the night before.

Muttering a string of expletives similar to the opening scene of “Four Weddings and A Funeral”, I took a shower, got dressed, ran out the door and made it to the meeting on time.  I think the universe stopped time for me for a few minutes to enable this.  This is the only explanation I can come with how I showered, changed and drove across town in 18 minutes.

I came home at 7:30 to find there was exactly one glass of wine left in the very last bottle of wine in the house.  I was so tired and sore it was all I could do to stay up past her bedtime, but I made it.

Thank goodness that day is over.

Something New.

I’m sick of my winter clothes, so I thought I’d make myself something new. And I’m trying out this blogger app on my new iPod touch. All sorts of new things.

Found.

Saturday afternoon as I was standing in my friend Rieman’s kitchen, I looked out and realized there was a great photo opp sitting there.
Despite the fact that it was snowing and cold, there was something beautiful about the day.  I actually woke up the other night at 2 am  mourning my MIA creativity and wondered how was I going to go about getting it back. For someone who’s goal in life to is to live creativity, this was troubling.  
I understand these things have an ebb & flow, but the last few weeks have completely and totally sucked it out of me.
I was really hoping that after the holidays, we’d get into some sort of groove again.  You see, since before Halloween, someone in this house has been sick.  That’s also about the last time Edie had a full week of school.
Holidays, sick days, snow days have all had a turn as to being the reason why she’s home from school.  This past week, she had a holiday, was ill with strep throat, had a snow day and then, when she finally went to school on Friday, was dismissed early. 
Part of why I do what I do – attempt to live life creatively, free lancing my way through life, juggling multiple projects, is so that I have the freedom to take off when she is sick.  Or on school holiday.  Or has a snow day.
I just didn’t think they’d all occur the same week. 
Over the last 10 days, thanks to all of it, she’s had exactly one half day of school.
She’s alternated between velcrobaby moments, where she wanted me nearby, holding her and moments where it would absolutely kill her to be nice to me, thank you very much.  At 11, she is starting to get very close to those teen years.  I remembered today that she started practicing her terrible two’s the day after her first birthday and it wasn’t the terrible two’s, they were just a warm up for the truly terrible three, which was promptly followed by four, which starts with F for a reason.  If it’s true that the toddler years are a glimpse into what the teen years hold, then we are screwed. 
And if she started practicing being two the day after her first birthday, then it would make sense she’s doing the exact same thing this time around.  After all, she’s been 11 for a week now.  Time to get cracking on that teen angst.
All of this regrouping and last minute changes mean that I have to had to regroup every week for months.  And this last week, this week of no school, well, it’s about done me in.  I’ve had some great ideas of projects I have been wanting to pursue, that keep getting pushed to the back burner because life keeps popping up.  And popping up.  And popping up some more.
On one hand, I’m grateful that I have the flexibility to scrap everything at the last minute.  On the other hand, scrapping everything at the last minute for months on end has had a disastrous effect on my creativity, productivity and inspiration. Among other things.
So feeling inspired yesterday to wander about the farm and take some shots?
It felt good to get those creative juices again, knowing they were there.  It felt good to be able to work on something without being interrupted, without having to stop and fix anyone a snack or water bottle or dinner.  It was nice not having to ask anyone to please keep it down, please can you not see I’m working or have anyone (everyone) sit in the same room as me and talk at me as I attempt to get something done.
The camera I have is a point and shoot- and while I’ve gotten quite good at manipulating it to take some great shots from time to time, it’s a point and shoot.  It’s not capable of doing some of the things I want it to do, that I know a nicer camera would do.  It doesn’t do well with low light at all.
But the black and white setting is quite forgiving.  Especially on a grey, snowy January day.
When I happened to find my creativity hidden amongst skulls on a picnic table in the snow.