Our weekend, in photos
/Some of us played basketball, and did not go easy on our opponent just because they're ten and have shorter arms:
One of us pitched (at least according to him), "THE BEST GAME OF HIS LIFE!" And as you can see, this person takes baseball very seriously:
The only damper on the weekend? One of us spent it (and the majority of last week) scratching her mad case of poison ivy:
Yeah, so remember the near-electrocution yard work day last week? Apparently, of those 1,934 weeds I pulled, a good portion of them were poison ivy.
And poison ivy? Not so much fun, as it turns out.
Still, though, a pretty good weekend for us.
At least, for those of us not scratching and smelling of Calamine lotion anyway.
The only way I'll carry that NRA card
/What do you get when your boys discover their father's old BB gun at Opa's office?
Answer: You get two very excited boys, begging and pleading to have it. They will be absolutely sure that life, as they know it, cannot go on without the BB gun.
Question--
What do you get when Opa,
Answer: Your own private backyard shooting range, that's what.
I have decided we will only join if Charlton Heston will personally come to the house , stand on the kitchen table and say, "RAMSES, LET MY PEOPLE GO!"
I'm betting it's not likely to happen, what with him, you know, being slightly not alive and all.
But, still. Stranger things have happened, right?
And don't tell me you wouldn't want to see it. You know you love that line, too.
Happy birthday, little blue-eyed boy
/Today at exactly 8:23 this morning, you turned nine. You were very insistent that you were not nine until the clock hit those magic numbers, which signaled your entrance into the world all those years ago. No amount of convincing by your brother could entice you to admit that you were nine, even one minute too soon.
I didn't have the heart to tell you that you were born on west coast time. I let you be nine, two whole hours early.
I know, don't be mad.
Yes, I finally made good on that hasty-made promise of letting you one day own something that's alive. I hope you like your little hermit crab. And I fervently hope that it never gets lost in your room or dies, as other pets have done traumatically in the past.
Chase, you are filled with more creative energy than I have ever seen. Your mind is always working, always thinking. I like to watch you when you are drifting off to that place inside your head, where your dreams are made. You squint your eyes, and I can tell that worlds are being created by your imagination. There is no limit to what you will do, of this I am sure.
You constantly amuse me. We have been asking you for weeks what you want for your birthday, and the two things you have said are a pet and a typewriter. You got both, and it cracks me up to see you at the desk in your room, plunking away on that ancient piece of machinery, courtesy of Oma and e-Bay. You take your writing quite seriously, and it will not surprise me at all when you one day churn out that bestseller.
I love that you like old things. I think it's a rare child that can look past the glaring siren song of cheaply-made plastic crap from China and seek out things with substance. Things that still work, even after probably spending 30 dusty years in someone's basement.
You are my hero, and I love your individuality. I love you for not caring what anyone thinks of you. I love you for dreaming big. I love you for your passion, even when it leads you lecture me for my giant carbon footprint.
I love you, kid. And I owe the good Lord for sending such a tender soul to be in my care. I don't know what I ever did to deserve you. May I one day be worthy of such trust.
Love,
Mama
A love letter
/I have good news for you, my dear. News that will be music to your frugal soul.
Remember that slightly not-cheap paring knife that I lost a few days ago? Well, guess what. I found it! It is lost no more.
I know. I am extremely relieved, too.
Where was it, you say? You'll laugh yourself silly at this, darling, really you will. And you'll never guess where it was. It was in the pan of leftover quiche in the fridge. I must have used it to cut the quiche, and not noticed it there when I put the pan in the fridge that night after dinner.
I know, right? What a chuckle we'll have over this one.
My only regret, dearest one, is that we were not able to find the knife sooner.
Like, say, right about the time you were digging through the trash to look for it. Oh, what an adventure we could have saved you then, had we known.
But, all's well that ends well, or so they always say. And now you may rest well tonight, lovey, knowing the knife is back where she belongs.
Ever Yours,
Your darling wife, Christie
P.S. Please do not use it on me. I really thought it was in the trash. Honest, I did.
The genius of the lone trucker
/About ten years ago, when McKay was a baby, we were living in Minneapolis while the Husband finished up grad school.
We grew to love Minnesota, in spite of the fact that there are only about eight days a year where you can go outside. And in spite of the fact that they willingly elected Jessie "the Body" for their governor (blame the Husband. I'm pretty sure he voted for him).
Slowly, over time, we even began to understand what the natives were saying when they asked us if we "wanted a baig for that" at the grocery store.
But one the funniest experiences of my life came while we were living there. I was running some errands downtown, and had baby McKay, buckled in his car seat, in the back of the car.
I pulled up to a stoplight, and movement out of the corner of my eye caught my attention. Next to me at the light, was a big 18-wheeler truck, driven by a man who looked a little something like this:
Only not quite so handsome.
He was frantically waving at me, so I smiled, nodded my head, and turned toward the light, hoping that the light would soon turn green.
In spite of my attempt to ignore him, he was practically jumping up and down in his seat. I looked over once again, praying that my life was not about to end at the hands of this apparently-crazy trucker.
He was motioning for me to roll down my window, which I did, in spite of the mental security that thin little piece of glass afforded me.
He smiled, revealing several missing teeth, and said: "Hey lady, you always know where you're going, and he always knows where you've been!"
I nodded politely, smiled, and sped off just as the light turned green, hoping to be spared from any more trucker wisdom which made absolutely no sense at all. Shaking my head and laughing, I started thinking about what he had said.
And by the next block, it hit me. He was referring to McKay in the rear-facing car seat, knowing where we've been. And me, facing forward, knowing where we're going.
Probably the most clever thing I've ever heard from a tattooed, toothless trucker in my life.
I only wish I could find him so I could tell him that I got it.
If you see him, be sure to tell him for me, good one, buddy. Good one.