• My kids are weird

    Last night when I was tucking Miss Beccaboo in for bed, she showed me her newly outfitted Anne of Green Gables doll.


    She had altered a Barbie doll dress to fit Little Anne.


    She proudly showed me how she hemmed it and how the extra length of dress fabric could be used as a shawl.


    This morning I took my camera up to her room to document her seamstress abilities (which already far exceed those of my own). While I was up there, I snapped some pictures of her one-of-a-kind decor. It shows you how her mind works, I think.

    Behold! A vandalized night-light house with a Santa atop the roof:


    Stickered fish swimming in the Atlantic Ocean:


    A bridled porcelain duck:


    A plastic spider patrolling the bookshelves:


    Someone recently asked me if Miss Beccaboo likes to draw. After thinking about it for a minute, I was mildly surprised to realize the answer was no. A couple days later I found out just how right I was when I happened to ask her to draw something and she burst into tears and loudly expressed her hatred of drawing.

    She’s a textile girl all the way, that child is. And she loves her fabric.

    Which is too bad for her since I detest sewing as much as she detests drawing. Perhaps it’s time for me to barter some sewing lessons for her.

    And then I went into her sister’s room and found this bear staring at me.


    My kids are weird.

    When I came downstairs from my little photo tour, I found the three youngest playing cards in the bathroom: Miss Beccaboo on the lidded toilet seat, Sweetsie on a kitchen chair, and The Baby Nickel on the floor.


    “Why are you playing cards in the bathroom?” I asked.

    “Because I had to go to the bathroom,” Miss Beccaboo informed me.

    My kids really are weird.

    This same time, years previous: the selfish game

  • Wild

    I’m still a little shocked at myself. I can’t quite believe that I pulled it off last night.

    That I went through with it.

    That I was able to smile in the face of bright lights and with a whole crowd of people smashed up around my feet.

    Gulp.

    I think I’m having an identity crisis.

    I mean, I had eyebrows for the first time in my eyebrow-less history, for crying out loud! (For all you eyebrow-endowed people who don’t know of what I’m talking—some of us blondies have only invisible fuzz where our eyebrows ought to be. We have eyebrow envy, so getting to sport a set of eyebrows for an evening is wicked awesome. I kept popping my eyes open real wide just for kicks.)

    My hair appointment was at five that night—

    But wait. I should back up a little and tell you that before the evening even started, I was completely whupped. We had had a dress rehearsal in the morning and when I got home, I was so exhausted, so hungry, and so sore (heels, jutting hips, and stress don’t mix), that I scarfed down a plate of eggs and toast and crashed on the sofa for three hours. When Mr. Handsome came home from work, he took one look at me and ordered me to go soak in a tub of hot, Epsom-salted water. I obeyed.

    But maybe I should back up even farther. Do you have any idea what all this talk of hips and heels and stress is about? Have I actually told you the what and why of what I was doing?

    Our belly dance group (otherwise known as Wahad Tani, which means “one more”) was asked to perform at a fundraiser for Virginians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. After we danced, there was to be a fashion show (all items made by some super-gifted local-yocals) followed by a silent auction. I was to dance in an outfit that had been designed and made by Rose and then model it in the show.

    The belt, by Rose (smashed dimes by Yo-Yo)

    The event was spear-headed by the best therapist that Yo-Yo ever had, a young woman (who gave me this recipe, and this, and oh, this one, too) who is adamantly opposed to the death penalty. Her father and stepmother were killed by her stepbrother and his friends (you can read one of her statements here—it makes me cry), so she knows firsthand of what she preaches. I adore her. She’s awesome and kind and spunky and wise.

    And she assigned me two more outfits to model. It’s a good thing I love her.


    So anyhow. That’s how it came to be that at five o’clock last night I was getting my hair spritzed and curled to high heaven.

    And that at six I was at a beauty spa getting a set of eyebrows and bright red lips.


    We were outrageous. There was tousled hair.


    There were ringlets.


    There were little braids.


    There were half up-dos (or whatever you call them).


    And then there was this: the Rod Stewart look.


    I don’t know who Rod Stewart is, but everyone else does so I assume you do too and thus can understand the comparison. In any case, she seriously rocked.


    We waited downstairs in the restaurant lounge until our 9 o’clock dance time. People kept coming in. The place was filling up before our very (anxious) eyes. At 8:30 we received word that they were no longer letting people in. Suddenly the room was very short on oxygen.

    We finally got the call to come upstairs and then—boom—we were on stage.


    We danced, we did, did we.

    Four whole minutes later, it was over and I was back in the changing room (one posh room, one toilet, forty-plus outfits, 10-plus models, shoes, safety pins, water glasses, adult drinks, and big hair—wow)—belt off, shirt off, snaps and pins undone, leggings on, black cami on, magenta shawl (with a safety pin for good measure), black boots, and then I was standing in the hallway, peeking out around the corner.

    What I saw made my heart thud to my feet and all my blood rush to my head. Every inch of the runway was surrounded. And it wasn’t just a nice orderly row of people. No sir. Those people were pressed up against the 14-foot-long, 4-foot-wide black catwalk. They were three, four, five, ten deep, laughing, talking, cheering, whooping.

    I don’t know what I expected, but I didn’t expect that. Terror threatening to overwhelm, I did the only thing I knew to do. I marched myself straight up those stairs, stared straight ahead into the lights, smiled, and started walking.

    Ho-boy people! Let me tell you, modeling is NOT as easy as it looks. I proceeded to put my hands on the wrong hips at the wrong times, not pause long enough, repeat pivots too many times, and go blind from all the bright flashing lights.

    It was an .. an … An Experience. Totally surreal. Wild. Bizarre.


    And then—boom—I was back in the changing room, putting on the belly dance costume again and then—boom—out on the runway doing snake arms. Another switcheroo, this time into a green tango/mermaid dress and those black heels—above the announcer’s voice, the music, the crowd, I heard my honey’s catcall.


    And then we were all out on the runway in our anti-death penalty t-shirts, grinning and waving and so, so glad it was over.

    I joined Mr. Handsome and the other husbands at their table. Mr. Handsome brought me a margarita. I took one long sip, felt my eyes cross, and announced, “I need food.” A hamburger soon followed, but I was too exhausted and it was too loud (a band had taken over the stage) for me to do any recovering.

    Not until the wee hours of Saturday morning, though, did I finally laid my still-painted and curly head down upon my pillow. Upon waking, the kids would see the traces of the wild woman their mother had been.

    Or, “has become?”

    Or, “is becoming?”

    Only time will tell which verb fits best.

    The end.

    P.S. If you haven’t already done so, watch Kinky Boots. Do it in honor of me and my walk on the wild side, okay?

    This same time, years previous: raisin-filled cookies and chocolate truffle cake

  • Everything else

    I’m too addled to think coherently long enough to write a blog post.

    (A one-hour later update: The first line was supposed to read, I’m too addled to think long enough to write a coherent blog post. See? What did I tell you? I rest my case.)

    Then why, you ask, are you here?

    Because I wanna be. Stuff it.

    It’s probably not a good omen to go on and on about an event that hasn’t even happened yet, so I won’t. Instead, I’ll rattle off about everything else that flits through my head. Thinking about other things should help me relax, right?

    Ha.

    ******

    We’ve been doing a lot of sorting of closest and clothes.


    Piles got obliterated, packaged up, or reorganized, depending.


    Bedrooms have been rearranged. Shoe shelves built. Clothes ironed.


    More closets await overhaulage. Bookshelves must materialize ASAP.

    News flash: There is NO END to projects such as these. Nothing is EVER done. BRINGING ORDER OUT OF CHAOS IS A LOSING BATTLE.

    My rational brain has made peace with the fact that I will forever be in this constant state of war.

    My emotive brain has not.

    ******

    I made a turkey dinner last night.


    There was a roast turkey (of course), stuffing, gravy, corn, the cabbage slaw (recipe to follow and then be made pronto because you will LOVE it), butternut squash gratin (we, it turns out, prefer our unadorned version), and cranberry relish. My kids were shocked that there was no dessert.


    I was shocked they had the nerve to point that out.

    The ungrateful wretches.

    (Not true, really. They were thrilled—thrilled—with the turkey. I think the Baby Nickel ate half the bird.)

    ******

    One Sunday a couple weeks ago, a miracle happened:we were ready for church ahead of time. So I ordered everyone outside and made them stand there, shivering, while I took some pictures.


    Not a one of them turned out picture perfect (i.e. everyone looking at the camera and smiling beatifically).

    Which leads me to conclude that we’re not a picture perfect family.


    Darn.


    Then I hopped in the car (we were getting dangerously close to the EVERYBODY GET IN THE CAR RIGHT THIS MINUTE-WE ARE LATE-HURRY HURRY HURRY moment) with my camera in hand and snapped pictures the whole drive in. This is what we see when we drive to church on Sunday mornings. (The hot air balloon was a bonus.)


    While I, black box pressed to my eyeball, enjoyed the frosty morning, the kids bickered and yowled and Mr. Handsome hissed at me to please put the camera down NOW and Attend, Bob! Attend! (name that movie). I, however, blithely turned a deaf ear and clicked steadfastly on. In this here bat house/car, one must fight tooth and nail to cultivate any artistic yearnings.

    ******

    I am (slo-o-o-wly) turning my attention to the upcoming festivities.


    Today, Mr. Handsome is (hopefully) procuring some white lights, snow flurries are in the forecast, I assessed the votive situation (deplorable), and then, before lunch, I plopped down by the fire to make a to-bake list of cookies.


    Heading up the list were butter cookies and gingerbread men, cranberry-orange biscotti and raisin-filled cookies. A smattering of new-to-me recipes followed, recipes that involved anise, lemon, dates, and figs.


    Soon, next week, I shall commence to don an apron and brandish a set of beaters. Life should be very sweet indeed.

    ******

    But now. That cabbage salad I told you about.


    It’s really just an alteration of the two cabbage salads that I already have on this blog, but seeing as it’s so blessedly swoony, it deserves its own little spot in bloggyland.


    Mom’s New and Improved Cabbage Salad

    ½ large head of green cabbage (Chinese would work well, too), finely chopped
    2 yellow/golden/green apples, unpeeled, cored, and chopped
    1 ½ cup white cheddar cheese
    3/4 cup buttered pecans
    1 recipe olive oil-sour cream dressing

    Toss the apples and cabbage with the dressing. (At this point, the salad can be stored in the fridge for several hours, maybe even a day or two.)

    Immediately before serving, stir in the cheese and sprinkle with the pecans.

    This same time, years previous: Beef Bourguignon and Potatoes in Cream with Gruyere