Thursday, June 30, 2011

Little Miss Sunshine--Almost

Chloe's 11th Birthday brought a freakish summer deluge of rain-two inches of it to be exact. Not a good thing when all she wanted for her birthday was a brand new bike. And when she got her wish, the poor girl was left sitting on the thing under the eaves of the house longing to take it out for a spin. But Chloe's never been one to be impeded by anything. She might be small but she's a tenacious little bugger.

After about an hour she couldn't stand it anymore and decided hell or high water,  she was gonna ride her bike no matter what.  And so she did.  She rode down the driveway in no particular hurry, getting totally soaked but ever so determined to have her day in the sun regardless of whether the sun actually showed up for it or not. She took her sweet time and then returned home with a converse skunk streak on the backside of her new birthday clothes.

The next big rainy day birthday hurdle was her party plans. She had decided she wanted a campout in the backyard with a few of her friends complete with tents, flashlights, and smores--and again, despite the weather, Chloe was completely undeterred. When there was no sign of the downpour letting up she simply insisted the garage be cleared of cars and left us with instructions to pitch the tent in there. (She also left us with a directive to plug in extension cords, a TV, DVD player, and a fan. Chloe displays true Skillman style--we like to camp but we certainly don't rough it when we do.)

Nothing seemed to deter her birthday splendor.

...That was until Little Miss Sunshine didn't get enough beauty sleep.

One thing that has been consistently Chloe is that from day one she has always gone to bed early and gets up waaay waaay too early--just like her dad. But her friends at her slumber party had other plans. Imagine that?! A gaggle of girls NOT wanting to go to sleep at a slumber party??  This was the only glitch in Chloe's plans that she could not outflank.

Very early the next morning, Chloe was the only one to arise and head in for breakfast. She deserted the tent and it's slumbering contents and came in the house and made a most serious proclamation like she was channeling the fervor of Martin Luther nailing his ninety-five theses to the church door:
"Mom, I will NEVER do that again. Nobody wanted to go to sleep. I have tried and tried but no matter what I do, I am just NOT the sleepover type."
Apparently our birthday girl has a limitation on how many tragedies she can overturn.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Gone European

We've gone European around here lately.

No, no. Mark hasn't switched to wearing Speedos or Man Capris. Nor has he been sporting a Messenger bag to work.

What we have done is go ice free. Something I vowed I'd never do since I'm hopelessly addicted to ice. But when our fridge went on the fritz, life deteriorated into a loathsome and iceless existence. Everything we drink nowadays is tepid--which, I might add, would thoroughly please our European counterparts.

When traveling abroad, it's always easy to be picked off as an American. The tell is that you've ordered a diet coke and asked for ice. Usually this sort of pitiful shenanigan merits a wrinkled brow and mildly perceptible scoff from your waitperson. You have just declared yourself hopelessly American and it's just a matter of time before your waiter expects you to ask for an offending bottle of ketchup.

Once, on a particularly hot day in Edinburgh, I was served a warm glass of coke. Just coke. Strait up from the can. I took it over to the bar and ever-so-politely asked for ice. I was rewarded with what could only be described as a disdainful glare as if I'd just knocked over a helpless old lady and begun stopping on her head with my foot. The man behind the bar didn't say a word. He didn't have to. He reeked of disappointment and shame at my willingness to wallow in such icy squalor with all the other foreign human debris.  He grabbed some silver tongs and dropped a single cube of ice into my warm coke.  One cube. Apparently he momentarily forgot I was American and that Americans are notoriously wasteful consumers who don't do just "one" of anything  (just watch us shop at Costco).

Now I'm not sure if they've got refrigeration problems overseas or perhaps suffer from severe dental distress when drinking cold drinks, but the whole of the European block, these otherwise fine and lovely folks, all have a strange contempt for cold beverages and for anyone who drinks them.

So when our fridge's ice maker died we were all left dying for ice. I must confess that I slowly got used to it. Like a slow arsenic poisoning. Shamefully within just a month I was sloshing back water and coke--all at room temperature without even batting an eye.

But now that summer is here and the temperature outside is getting hot, we just couldn't take it anymore. I went out and bought a new fridge just for it's ice-making capabilities. We got it home and plugged the sucker in and waited. After about an hour        a strange thud belched from our new appliance--the melodious sound of Heaven (the American version anyway).

Ice!!!


Ahhhhh. God bless America...and Whirlpool.

Monday, June 20, 2011

What Would the Amish Think?

Okay, I admit it. My kids could never be Amish.

With just one week into summer the kids have run out of stuff to do. Thankfully this is not really a problem for me because I have trained my children not to ever ever utter the words "I'm bored". They know if they do, and I happen to hear them, they'll end up wearing rubber gloves and getting reacquainted with a toilet bowl scrubber. (Stealthy parenting, I know.)
So if in fact they are bored, they'll keep it to themselves like it's a dirty little secret.

Last night the teenagers at the house were looking for something to do--while avoiding at all costs mentioning the B-word.  After a while they disappeared and soon I heard an unusual commotion outside.
Away to the window I flew like a flash, 
tore open the shutters and threw up the sash...
blah, blah, blah...
to what to my wondering eyes should appear? 
But Mitchell and Nick out racing John Deere's!

Seriously, that was the scene, I kid you not. The teenagers were out on our driveway drag racing our two riding lawnmowers.


How bored do you have to be to think of that?

Must have been fun because they raced them again the next day.



This time Connor (who is now at long last heavy enough to weigh the seat down in order to engage the driving system) decided to get in on the contest.

So while other kids are making dirt forts, fighting pretend wars, and running in sprinklers...mine are racing grass cutting contraptions.

I'm wondering what the Amish would think.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

The Brave Boy with the YouTube Crazed Mom

My latest confession is that I've become a serious (though often misguided) fan of YouTube these days. But not really for the reasons most people would think. I don't really watch trending videos, crazy home video stunts, or even those silly animal videos my kids love to watch so much. With the exception of Brian Regan stick cartoon videos, which crack me up, my "youtubing" is serious business.
So what am I watching? The truth is I'm a nut for video tutorials. Seriously, you can learn anything on YouTube. In fact, I'm afraid the schooling that can be had on that crazy website will one day make college obsolete.  Here's a list of very oh so important things I've learned recently:
  • How to remove an image using Photoshop
  • How to remove and replace tile grout
  • How to dance the Thriller
  • How to make zipper flowers
  • How to get smoky eyes
My veneration for these videos all started last year when Connor's baseball coach asked me to help keep the score books for an upcoming game.  I refused to admit that I had no idea how to use a score book so I made a beeline for home and began searching YouTube for:

"How to use a baseball score book"
    A few video tutorials later and I was a baseball stat queen...and royally won over by tutorials!

    It's totally revolutionized my life. And unfortunately just recently it revolutionized Connors too, poor guy.

    These last few weeks of school have us so busy that Connor's hair has gotten way to shabby but I just didn't have time to run him into town and get his hair cut. So what's a youtube loving mother to do? I grabbed my waaaay underused hair clippers and my trusty laptop and fired up a tutorial. Poor Connor got a little freaked out that I was watching hair cutting demos on my laptop and about to make my barbershop debut on his head.

    I think his hair turned out pretty good considering all the cuss words I may have used getting it right.
    not only does the kid's now sport a nice new haircut, he also learned a few new colorful words to boot.

    I'm thinking about posting my own tutorial on youtube now...I think I'll call it:
     "How to freak your kid out" and there will be an uploaded video of me cutting Connor's hair.

    Thursday, June 9, 2011

    A Grizzly Graduates

    One more for the books. Mitchell has officially graduated from high school!

    Matthew and Mitchell on Graduation Day
     The Family
    [three proud Grizzly Graduates wearing Red]

    Top 10 Memories from High School:
    1. Mitchell made the best of a class scheduling snafu by schmoozing his sewing and cooking teachers with his mad homemaking skills after being forced to take these two classes when he ran out of other options. Like they say, "If you can't beat 'em, bake and sew with 'em."
    2. Mitchell setting an archery record in P.E.  Oooh-da-lolly.
    3. A science teacher telling me that if she could combine Mitchell's brain with his cousin Bryce's ability to hand his papers in on time, that she would have the PERFECT student. Quality work actually being turned in on time apparently doesn't happen very often.
    4. Mitchell getting barred from using the school's internet system for the remainder of his High School years because their system had been hacked and they believed he was the culprit. Mitchell denied doing so and was eager to tell them that their system doesn't offer much of a challenge for any would-be hacker. Mitch took it as a compliment that they implicated him first.
    5. Mitchell and his buddy Nick winning the school-wide doubles pickle ball tournament and then proudly displaying the freakiest hot-glued championship trophy you've ever seen. Thank goodness he had to turn it back in for next year's tournament. And thank goodness he won't be there to win that beastly bestowal back again next year.
    6. Mitchell's english teacher, during a parent/teacher conference, giving me an A+ on my blog. She admitted she would read it during Mitchell's class and decided to actually grade me on it. Lucky me got the better grade than my own kid that semester. How sweet is that? I got to tease him about how his own mother was getting a better grade in HIS english class!
    7. One of Mitchell's teachers, during a parent/teacher conference telling me my son liked to catch up on his sleep during her class and that he reads weird books on math and science for fun.
    8. Mitchell wooing the attendance lady by working for her in the office. After that semester he never again had to bring in an excuse note from a parent. She just signed him off on whatever excuse he gave her.
    9. Mitchell being awarded a leopard print Snuggie during a school-wide assembly. He proudly wore it the rest of the day to all his classes. He reported that for the rest of the day there were a lot of high fives and fist bumps from fellow classmates in between classes. Pure Microplush Jealousy.
    10. Mitchell wore his full scout uniform to school for a presentation and when I asked him if that would be embarrassing to wear around the high school kids he answered, "Mom, since when have I cared what my peers really think?"  Good point kid.
    Happy Graduation Son!
    a.k.a. "Mom"

      Monday, June 6, 2011

      A Problem with Primates

      Ahhhh, the end of the school year is here and Chloe is enjoying her last few days of elementary school. Next year she'll be in middle school with Connor, but for now, she's enjoying the fanfare the comes with the glorious long-awaited end-of-the-year grade school wind down: School Parties.

      Today she and her head of three precariously perched ponytails bounded off to school for "Crazy Hair Day" and she's got all sorts of plans for tomorrow's "Backwards Day" but it was last Friday that really got me shaking my head. Friday was "Pajama Day", basically a day the kids all get outta bed and just head strait off to school. But everyone knows that there is one all-important tag along item on Pajama Day: the stuffed animal. Each year the kids show up in PJ's and slippers and clean out their backpacks to make room to bring along their favorite stuffed animal.

      The first year Chloe got to do this she shrewdly asked her teacher what exactly qualifies under the term "stuffed animal" to which the teacher, falling into Chloe's baited trap answered, "whatever stuffed animal you like to carry around with you."

      Bad answer.

      This girl might be one of the smallest kids in the class but she is very capable and extremely willing to  carry around the mother of all stuffed animals. One that, for most of Chloe's life, was bigger than she was. Her preposterous penchant, yes indeed, was that little ol' Chloe loves her giant sliverback Gorilla.

      Yes, alarming I know.

      And especially nefarious since the one and only fear that I have had since childhood is an irrational fear of gorillas. In life's classic list of scary things, it is the Gorilla that has the dubious distinction as being my Achilles heal. The Boogieman, spiders and snakes, dark alleys, jumping from airplanes, you name it, I am not afraid. But show me a Gorilla and I will scream like a girl.

      In a bizzare twist of fate that happened to me around the tender age of two, I have a distinct memory of being assaulted by, of all things, a Gorilla. Years later I would discover it was indeed not a real Gorilla at all but a prankster neighbor who happened to work for a Hollywood Studio in their Costume Department. And through some sort of not-so-funny ruse, this neighbor and my father concocted a plan whereby "costume boy", who'd taken a full-fledged gorilla suit home from work, would swing by our house on his way to a Halloween party and scare the living daylights out of my mother by ringing the bell and then going all-out berserk once she opened the door for what she thought would be just a gaggle of harmless little trick-or-treaters. Unfortunately when that fateful ring happened, it was more trick than treat: I was the one who answered the door.

      Flash forward to the wretched scene where you find my two year old body curled up into the fetal position and screaming bloody murder and you have discovered the origin of my life long irrational fear of Gorillas.

      This is a picture of me just one year later...
      Yes, my parents, knowing my profound displeasure for hairy beasts, thought it'd be a real hoot to take my photo next to the Gorilla statue at the San Diego Zoo. As you can tell by the matching expressions on both my face and the Gorilla's, neither of us thought the idea was all that funny. That was the last day I ever had anything to do with Gorillas or monkeys. To this very day I've never even watched the Wizard of Oz in it's entirety. Once the flying monkeys come out, I get the heebeejeebees and flee the room. I've sworn off ALL hairy beasts-which includes a stern warning to my husband to never let his back get hairy!

      Admittedly, if you're going to have an irrational fear of anything, Gorillas would be a good choice. I rarely run into them-which is to say NEVER. I am very careful at the zoo staying far far away from any anthropoid areas and that seems to be the only place that poses a primate problem.

      That was until Chloe came along.

      This dangable girl, for reasons unexplainable, zeroed in on the whole of the primates and decided that her favorite thing in the whole wide world was monkeys and gorillas. Over the years she has amassed a whole collection of them in stuffed animal form.

      But the one she loves the most is a giant four-foot tall silverback gorilla. She's had it since she was little and spent most of her napping and book reading hours engulfed in it's arms. Tender, yet hairy isn't it?

      And ever since she tricked her very first elementary school teacher into letting her bring it to Pajama Day, she has lugged the hairy beast to PJ Day every single year since. This year was no exception. When I drove to school to pick her up she wasn't all that hard to spot in the mass of school children waiting on the curb. I drove past all the kids with the cute little bears and bunnies and doggies and headed strait for the kid overshadowed by her beady-eyed thug.

      As I got home I was thrilled at the notion that there would be no more stuffed animal-toting PJ parties for Chloe at the Middle School next year. And I grinned an evil smirk knowing the Gorillas Days would soon be numbered. Chloe would soon be distracted by other things and grow too old for hairy beasts and I would soon be rid of the thing.

      Then I discovered Chloe has other plans. Devious ones. She has decided to woo another generation into her monkey madness. I came into the living room yesterday and saw this horrible scene:

      She had swaddled her little niece Kendra into its arms!
       Then she propped a baby bottle 
      into the beast's hairy hand and let King Kong feed her!
       Then, to my horror,
      my own grandchild tenderly fell asleep in its arms!
      Seriously folks, I HATE GORILLAS. Can't a girl just have her little irrational fear without provocation?
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