Saturday, February 28, 2009
Mason's basketball greatness!
We had a big night Friday. Mason scored his very first basket in an organized official ballgame, and then he followed it up with a second two-pointer a few minutes later. His team was on fire. They really acted like a team--moving the ball, passing, rebounding, the works. It was such a good game! Of course with all that mojo they won, but that wasn't the best part. The best part was the big smile he got on his face that fueled the rest of his game. He ran, worked, moved with more heart than I've ever seen. It was beautiful. I'd be lying if I denied tearing up when his first basket went in. (I tear up about the babies with regularity.) But seeing that heart--as Drew Barrymore said in Music and Lyrics--was dinner.
Friday, February 27, 2009
The journey of a 1000 miles begins with one silly step!
You know, you might say Peyton is a bit tardy in learning to walk, what with all his bible class friends doing it first. But he holds the record for Ellis babies! Mason was 15 months, Stephen was 17 months--but Peyton comes in at a speedy 13 months! Even better, he took all these steps on Grandpa Steve's birthday! Hopefully he'll soon walk places instead of being carried--I hope this walking thing isn't just a parlor trick he brings out for parties!
Monday, February 23, 2009
What!?
Orange Blossom Luna Tea Cakes. Sports Night. Pushing Daisies. Whisper Pink Mary Kay Eyeshadow. Spring Copper Glazewear. Veronica Mars. Dress it up petals rhinestone buttons. Starbucks Baked Berry Stellas.
What do these things have in common, besides the fact that you can no longer find them on the open market? Me. They were all my favorites. Favorite TV shows. Favorite make up, favorite food, favorite craft item. It's getting to be a joke of monumental proportions. Monte laughs every single time I say, "wow, I really like that" because he knows it's just a matter of time before the subject of my sentence is eliminated in all of its forms as if it never existed in the first place. Not just canceled or discontinued--expunged from the record, all traces removed like a HAZMAT team crossed with CIA spooks on a super secret covert ops elimination mission. It's bewildering. Seriously.
So, since it happens so often it can't be random, this is now an open letter to whomever or whatever is trying to eradicate everything Kristi Ellis likes. Dear evil nemesis, what gives? For real, dude, dial it down! Sorry I had to get all up in your grill. All my love, Kristi.
Since that's not likely to deter delicate baby sugar plum fairies, much less whatever ultimate evil matrix this is, look for the following things to go belly up or be removed from your lives soon: Tivo, iPhones, Scrapbooking in all it's forms, little league basketball, fruit, blue jeans and Starbucks Venti sized Black Tea Shaken Iced Tea Lemonade with three pumps of sweetener and light ice.
Meanwhile, American Idol and Major League Baseball (which I care absolutely nothing about) are still going strong. I'm just saying.
What do these things have in common, besides the fact that you can no longer find them on the open market? Me. They were all my favorites. Favorite TV shows. Favorite make up, favorite food, favorite craft item. It's getting to be a joke of monumental proportions. Monte laughs every single time I say, "wow, I really like that" because he knows it's just a matter of time before the subject of my sentence is eliminated in all of its forms as if it never existed in the first place. Not just canceled or discontinued--expunged from the record, all traces removed like a HAZMAT team crossed with CIA spooks on a super secret covert ops elimination mission. It's bewildering. Seriously.
So, since it happens so often it can't be random, this is now an open letter to whomever or whatever is trying to eradicate everything Kristi Ellis likes. Dear evil nemesis, what gives? For real, dude, dial it down! Sorry I had to get all up in your grill. All my love, Kristi.
Since that's not likely to deter delicate baby sugar plum fairies, much less whatever ultimate evil matrix this is, look for the following things to go belly up or be removed from your lives soon: Tivo, iPhones, Scrapbooking in all it's forms, little league basketball, fruit, blue jeans and Starbucks Venti sized Black Tea Shaken Iced Tea Lemonade with three pumps of sweetener and light ice.
Meanwhile, American Idol and Major League Baseball (which I care absolutely nothing about) are still going strong. I'm just saying.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
President's Day collides with Black History Month
In the van, on the way to eat, Grandma Judy said "So, has your teacher told you any more about President Rocko Bottom?" [Stephen's pronunciation of Barak Obama]
Stephen replied, "He's not the president anymore."
Grandma was perplexed and said, "Oh really? Well, who is the president now?"
Stephen said, "African Lincoln."
Later, when Grandma asked Stephen to tell Grandpa Gary who the president was, he did come up with the proper name of our 16th president, Abraham Lincoln, and then sometime even later, said George Washington was actually president, so we had three administrations in the space of an hour, two of them run by dead guys. Big day!
Stephen replied, "He's not the president anymore."
Grandma was perplexed and said, "Oh really? Well, who is the president now?"
Stephen said, "African Lincoln."
Later, when Grandma asked Stephen to tell Grandpa Gary who the president was, he did come up with the proper name of our 16th president, Abraham Lincoln, and then sometime even later, said George Washington was actually president, so we had three administrations in the space of an hour, two of them run by dead guys. Big day!
Friday, February 20, 2009
Who are you?
From time to time I do genealogy work, as time and kids permit, and it's usually rewarding, but there also can be some serious frustruations. Take this lady for example. I look a LOT like her, which is convenient because she is my great grandmother, Josephine Goodwin Walker. The bad news? Aside from knowing her father's name was Jacob Goodwin, and her mother was a lady named Sarah who died when Josie was very young, I can't find much more on her ancestry than that. Total road block. It's a pity too, because she and I share a lot of the same facial features, which leads me to wonder if we weren't alike in other ways too. She died in 1951, and her obituary explains that once her mother died, her father left her in the care of the Finley family. We never find him again in any historical records relating to Josephine, or in any of the census records of Saline County, Missouri where Josie grew up. Where did Jacob go? What happened to him? A hundred and fifty years ago it was common to lose a spouse early on, especially a wife (childbirth was extremely hazzardous, and if the birthing didn't get you, the assorted fevers and poxes would make a stab at it.) Most people just married again when their spouses died, mainly to have someone to look after the kids. But not Jacob Goodwin. You could theorize he didn't want to be reminded of Sarah, or wasn't into fatherhood, or didn't like any of the local ladies, or thought little Josie would be better off with somebody else doing the parenting, or that maybe he took this life changing event as a sign he should start completely over somewhere else, but in the end it's all speculation, which comforts me not one bit. Maybe Jacob thought he'd get a job, make some money and come back for his little girl, and maybe he died while doing that, and that's why we never hear of him again, but Josephine's obituary doesn't mention it. It simply says her mother died, she went to live with the Finley's, and she thought highly of the Finley's all her life. Jacob seems to be less dead than just not around. So what happened to him? And more importantly, who were his parents? Who were Sarah's parents? (I don't have a confirmed maiden name--just a scribble in the marriage record of Saline county that may or may not be the same Jacob Goodwin and Sarah, that lists McAnnon, but might instead be McMahan since there were other McMahans around at that time and no McAnnons.) Was Sarah recently immigrated, perhaps from Ireland? Where did I get my face? I will probably never know. Stephen and I have a lot of the same facial features, so maybe he can keep searching for Jacob or Sarah's people once I give up . . . but the truth is, probably, that the search ends with me, and Stephen and I will just be faces in the crowd, never knowing who had this mug in the first place.
Friday, February 13, 2009
Old Time Radio
I'm a huge fan of OTR, and listen to Sirius channel 118 (Radio Classics) every day. Recently, with the merger of Sirius and XM, the programming has moved around a bit and I'm finding more and more shows to love. If you have satellite radio, check out gregbellblog.com for channel updates and the schedule, or just tune in--the shows are moved around so you hear something new in each time slot every day. My faves are Dragnet; Nick Carter Master Detective; the Shadow; the Whistler; Inner Sanctum; Suspense; and Escape. Although the shows are predictable in that they reflect the morality of the time in which they were made (right always prevails, the bad guy never gets away with it) the simplicity and earnestness of characters appeals to me--plus, every so often they throw in a surprise ending I didn't see coming a mile off. I'll admit I'm not as big a fan of the OTR comedy genre, but Fibber McGee and Molly is now, and forever will be, timeless and hilarious. That series is worth picking up at RadioSpirits.com on CD, and listening to when you people with regular radio can't get a signal somewhere. Ah, the good ol' days!
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Fun things to do with fruit
We love to eat at Chevy's, and we enjoy the Lough family. So there we are Sunday, with both delicious Mexican fare AND sparkling dinner conversation provided by Andrew, Tiffany and (about) baby Austin. I like the Loughs because they treat my children as if they were their children, praising and correcting and protecting them in equal amounts . . . it's nice, because I can relax just a little tiny bit from being ever vigilant robo-mom, constantly scanning to prevent spills, stains, separation from the herd, embarrassing bathroom incidents . . . stuff like that.
So imagine my surprise when I catch Andrew teaching Mason how to make false teeth out of his Chevy's orange!
I'm going to have to pay closer attention, or figure out some trick to teach Austin. Maybe something in a "stay-up-all-night" flavor? Nah, can't do that to Tiffany :-)
So imagine my surprise when I catch Andrew teaching Mason how to make false teeth out of his Chevy's orange!
I'm going to have to pay closer attention, or figure out some trick to teach Austin. Maybe something in a "stay-up-all-night" flavor? Nah, can't do that to Tiffany :-)
My heart isn't in Valentine's Day
I haven't had time to make a lot of cards in the last couple of weeks, what with the big "V" looming on the horizon. Being Stephen's room parent takes very little work except around the two public school approved holidays of Halloween and Valentine's Day. I really look forward to Halloween because usually we party at school and then go directly from there to getting lots of loot and having our costumes complimented. But Valentine's is another story. I guess its partly because early on I never had a boyfriend on Valentine's, so the only flowers I got were from my mom--how lame is that--and partly because now that I've been married nearly 18 years, it feels like a lot of social pressure to buy something for a guy who is already cool with just getting me to make dinner for once. Maybe my shoes are too tight, or my heart is two sizes too small, but I just plain don't like Valentine's Day. But it doesn't matter, whatever the reason, my heart or my shoes, there's a party to be planned so I'm doing my best to get my Valentine's game face on, and get red and pink supplies together for some Kindergarten food, craft and game time. Luckily, I have my card making to cheer me up, and even luckier still, Peyton took a couple of really good long naps Thursday and Friday. The card you see before you is the result. I scrap-lifted the general idea from a magazine and added the "Thank You" and the flowers in the background (which are pretty hard to see in the picture, but they're there). It went together pretty fast, and not a single heart or Valentine's Day sentiment on it! The stamp set I used is from Stampin' Up, although I forget the name--it was very popular last year and in one of their special mini-catalogs, which is about all the description I can come up with. I used SU Chocolate Chip ink for the tree; Close To My Heart green inks in Juniper, Key Lime, Olive, Citrus Leaf and Clover Meadow for the leaves; the large scallop circle die from SU for the frame, and an SU jumbo wheel called Everyday Blossoms, in CTMH Vanilla ink, for the background. Now that I'm done making cards, I think I'm ready to face Valentine's Day. See you all Friday, (Kindergarten celebrates a day early!) when my heart will have the opportunity to grow three sizes in one day, and I'll be the smiley mom in the corner decorating cookies and shouting "a happy Valentine's Day to all, and to all a good night!!!"
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Peyton's Birthday
Peyton turned one on January 23rd and mom made him a little cake. It was a red velvet cake with mint green icing, so asthetically it was a bit, uh, interesting. Maroon-red cake and light green icing . . . Monte said it looked like we were killing a stuffed animal. We sent the video to my sister in Phoenix, and she called and said before she knew it was a red velvet cake, she thought something was wrong with the color on her TV. As it turned out, Peyton had eaten so much chicken and fries at his birthday dinner at Bandana's Bar-be-que, dessert wasn't high on his to do list when he got home. He did smile for the camera though, which is more than I can say for his brothers on their respective first birthdays. In fact Peyton is showing many many signs of being nothing like Mason and Stephen. On their first birthdays they each demolished a little cake, had to be hosed down in the bathtub once the cake was pronouced dead, and finally, they were NOT NOT NOT interested in the photoshoot portion of the event. Peyton is his own person, and will probably be bewildered by his family for the rest of his life.
Monday, February 2, 2009
It's still all about the comedy
Dad to 4 year old Stephen, in the Red Lobster Men's Room, while washing hands in the sink: Wow, this bathroom is COLD! They could hang meat in here!
Stephen to Mom, after returning to the table: Mom! That bathroom water was cold! There was bacon in it!
Stephen to Mom, after returning to the table: Mom! That bathroom water was cold! There was bacon in it!
Sunday, February 1, 2009
It's all about the comedy
Night of January 20, 2009
MOM: Stephen, how was Kindergarten today? Did Miss Shrum read you a story in circle time?
STEPHEN: Yeah, she telled us about Rocko Bottom.
MOM: Rocko Bottom? Is that some kind of super hero squirrel or badger or something? Do you mean Rocky and Bullwinkle maybe?
STEPHEN: No. She telled . . . We wrote him letters.
MOM: Letters? Why would you write Rocko Bottom letters?
STEPHEN: Because. We writed him letters because he's the President.
MOM: Ohhhh! You mean Barak Obama?
STEPHEN: Yeah. That's what I said. Rocko Bottom.
MOM: Stephen, how was Kindergarten today? Did Miss Shrum read you a story in circle time?
STEPHEN: Yeah, she telled us about Rocko Bottom.
MOM: Rocko Bottom? Is that some kind of super hero squirrel or badger or something? Do you mean Rocky and Bullwinkle maybe?
STEPHEN: No. She telled . . . We wrote him letters.
MOM: Letters? Why would you write Rocko Bottom letters?
STEPHEN: Because. We writed him letters because he's the President.
MOM: Ohhhh! You mean Barak Obama?
STEPHEN: Yeah. That's what I said. Rocko Bottom.
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