Category Archives: This Book Will Change Your Life

10 Day Challenge & a kick in the ass

I have much to report and a lot of things on my mind.  And sadly, very little time to get it all on paper. Sometime the floating around of BIG ideas makes it harder to sit down and get something down.  A friend (who has incidentally abandoned me in our shared mission to change my “Life”  with “This Book“) recently shared a mini challenge that I decided to go  ahead and do here, in an effort to make myself sit down and get something “on paper.”

Quick synopsis and then on to my first day of the ten day challenge.

As for “This Book” and the Life Changin’ – Day 53’s challenge is to return my junk mail to the sender.  And I kid you not I have not received a SINGLE piece of junk mail since Thursday, Nov 11 (which was Veteran’s Day, hence no mail.) But I will be back on that horse ASAP.

In other news…. Em’s dad came to visit.  She was over the moon.

And… in even BIGGER news… someone else tagged along for the trip and will be staying for an indeterminate length of time.

Much to say about both of these developments… but for now day one of Kristen’s challenge.

Day One: Ten things you want to say to ten different people right now.

1.  Are you fucking kidding me?  ( I pretty much want to say this to this person at least once a day.)

2.  Thank you.  For holding on, to get to here.

3.  Changing your name won’t actually make you any cooler or more talented.

4.  So, did you get it?  Or are you ignoring it to be cool?  Or am I reading too much in to this?

5.   You don’t really have your feelings hurt, right?  Because for fuck’s sake…

6.  Or you could reorganize your schedule to suit that of mine and my CHILD’S.  In case you didn’t get the capitalization that was to put emphasis on the fact that Em is the child in this scenario, not you.

7.  Thank you.  With every piece of me, I thank you.  I don’t know where men like you come from, and I am not counting on ever needing to find another one… so i guess that’s okay.

8.  Is it really okay that I swear this much?  Because sometimes I think it is, and then I think maybe it isn’t, and then you say “fuck” in a meeting and I start thinking, again, that I over-think this kind of thing….

9.  Please.  Please, be here in April. I know it’s not in your control, but it won’t be the same without you.

10.  Let’s do it.   

Day 52: The Meaning of Life

Day 52: Determine the meaning of Life by looking it up in the dictionary.

the condition that distinguishes organisms from inorganic objects and dead organisms, being manifested by growth through metabolism, reproduction, and the power of adaptation to environment through changes originating internally.
And if that doesn’t do it for you, from Monthy Python’s Meaning of Life: The End of the Film
Well, it’s nothing very special. Uh, try and be nice to people, avoid eating fat, read a good book every now and then, get some walking in, and try and live together in peace and harmony with people of all creeds and nations.
I think a combination of those two is a pretty fair assessment.
And for me?  The Meaning of my Life.  It’s pretty simple.  John Lennon said it best.  All you need is Love. I woke up one morning, turned over and found this.  And my heart almost exploded.

Day 51: Sense-less Day

Day 51: Go through your day without your sense of sight.  On a scale of one to ten how vital is your sense of sight?

I have been putting off this challenge for several days because day light saving time has not afforded me the opportunity to do much of anything in the evenings.  I am trying to take advantage of the desire to wake up mega-early to get back in the habit of going to the gym early morning.  And although the gym would be an ideal place to be without the sense of sight I couldn’t really think of a way to pull that one off.

So, I did what I usually do when I absolutely don’t want to blow something off.  I told Emily.  A child of her age will not let you get away with changing the plans. Unless the plans revolve around postponing bedtime.  So, I told Em we’d go for a walk as soon as we got home from work/school on Monday evening.  I thought we’d take turns wearing a blindfold and stroll around the cemetery, seeing if the things that we hear or smell were different when we were without our sense of sight.

Monday evening when we got home it was nearly pitch black dark.  I decided that we would probably look like creeps strolling through the cemetery blind-folded but I didn’t care.  And when I suggested that maybe we wouldn’t go at all she reminded me that I had promised.

And then I was saved.  Not by a bell.  But by shoes!!!  I ordered (read: my mom ordered for me, thanks, Mom!) not one, not two,  but THREE fabulous pairs of potential Wedding Shoes on Saturday evening and they were already here.  Em won’t change gears for just anything, but damn that kid can appreciate a spectacular cherry red satin sling-back.  By the time we’d gotten them all out of the boxes and assessed the potential of each pair, it was far too late to take a stroll through the cemetery.

Feeling pretty great about myself this evening (since I had been successful in Mission: Get Your Ass Back to the Gym this morning) I contemplated, yet again, blowing off our mission to take a walk blind-folded.  I wanted to make sure MQD had time to get some exercise, and I had dinner to prepare, and a stop at the store.  When I suggested to Em that we might need to stop at the grocery store on the way home and postpone our cemetery stroll it was her bright idea to walk through Food Lion with our eyes closed.

So, off we went.  When I first took her hand and closed my eyes, standing next to our car in the parking lot, I realized that this wasn’t really the brightest idea I’d ever had.  Allowing her to maneuver me through the dark parking lot was not actually any different from letting her set off on her own.  In fact it was doubly dangerous.  So, I opened them back up (well, one of them, I just peeked) until we got to the door.  “Mom, while we are here, I need to pee.” And off we went to the back of the store.   While we walked hand in hand through the store I realized that I was very conscious of everything she said.  (Now this is no earth shattering discovery, take away one sense and the rest are bound to be heightened.)  But it did make me very aware of how very little I actually “listen” to her chatter when we are out and about.  Now I consider myself to be a parent that engages with her kid pretty regularly.  But as I relied on her words to guide me though the store I was more actively listening than I usually do.     Thus when she said “Just come right this way, Mama.  We are gonna go down the wine aisle, since you know that one really, really good”  I giggled but didn’t interrupt her.  Or correct her.  “Really well, Em.  Really well,” I thought.

She guided me all the way to the back of the store, to the creepy area where you find the bathrooms.  Observation #1 re: being blind.  Public restrooms pose a whole new danger.   I was completely skeeved out.  I was totally gungo-ho to try to pee without “peeking.”  But as soon as I entered a public restroom I could feel myself freaking out.  I said “Pick a clean one, Em.”  Hopeful.

I could hear her opening and closing doors, assessing each stall.  And when she said “This one has something brown on the floor, but I think it is candy” I caved.  And determined that opening my eyes was the only way I was going to get in and out of here without feeling like I needed to rub hand sanitizer all over both of us.  (FYI, she was right.  It was a Reese’s peanut butter cup.  But I am awfully glad I didn’t discover it later, say, on my shoe. The parental “Is this shit?” sniff test is really only an option when in one’s own home.)

We left the bathroom and she took my hand.  I was proud of how well she maneuvered me through the dairy section.  And we talked through the various shredded cheese options.  I was even able to explain to her which cheese we wanted and felt reasonably certain she had picked the right one (although I did take a peek.)

At the register we switched places.  She closed her eyes the rest of the way to the car.  We stopped on the sidewalk and listened.  We talked about how different it was to just listen than to listen and see.   I was watching her face.  Watching her thinking.  Watching her when she is not “performing” for me is a rare pleasure these days, as she is a ham like her mother. As I watched her I was thinking about what I’d write about for today’s challenge and I felt the tears well up in my eyes.

So Day 51: How vital is my sense of sight on a scale of one to ten?  Ten.  I can’t imagine not being able to see her.  Every day.  She is changing so quickly.  The Emily June I see today will be gone by the end of next week. Replaced by a new Emily June I will somehow love even more than I do today.  Even though that seems unimaginable. I don’t know that I could believe this unless I saw it with my own eyes.  As she held my hand and directed me through the aisles, I could hear in her voice how proud she was of being “in charge.”  How excited she was to participate in a page of “your book, Mom.  The yellow book.”  The temptation to open my eyes didn’t come from my desire to see the end caps in the grocery store.  Or to not trip over an errant can of green beans.  I didn’t want to miss her.   To miss seeing her experiencing something.  Already as a working mother I miss so much.  And being with her, sharing time with her and not seeing her was very uncomfortable.   Add to that the fact that in seeing her I see myself.  And it was a positively excruciating 15 minutes.

Today’s challenge convinced me I really do… need to see it to believe it.

(This post was brought to you by the Sentence Fragment and the Lines Around My Eyes that I didn’t know I had until I looked at the above picture.  Enjoy!)

Mom! Mom! Mom! Mom! Mom! Day 50….

Day 50: Make People Notice YOU Today!

The book offers several suggestions for getting attention: talking shit all day, don’t shave, carry a midget under your arm (?) dress in colorful clothes… none of these really struck my fancy.  I considered a lengthy repetition of “Mom, Mom, Mom, Mom., Mom, Mom” since it seems that is a widely employed way of getting attention in our house.  (I can not tell you how proud it makes me that in her five years on this Earth I have not yet actually said loudly “For Fuck’s Sake, Emily, WHAT?” Although I’ll cop to having asked her on more than one occasion if she was on fire.)

I could certainly use yesterday afternoon’s activity as  challenge material.  Em is “Child of the Week” at school so I went in to her classroom to read.  Her favorite book as of late is “Labyrinth” (a killer book from when my brother was a kid based on the film) but I explained to her that not every parent  thinks that books about goblins stealing children are acceptable preschool fare.  Not every parent thinks David Bowie rules, either.  But that is their mistake.

So, instead of “Labyrinth” we settled on Bob Shea & Lane Smith’s “BIG PLANS.” If you have little people or not it’s worth a read.   It’s about a little boy with BIG PLANS.  And he has a mynah bird pal that he continually asks if he is “in or out.”   I settled in to the rocking chair during Circle Time and  told all the kids in Em’s class that every time I pointed at them they could yell “BIG PLANS!”  And every time I pointed at Em she’d say “I’m in, says the mynah bird.”  It was fun to be in her classroom.  And for about eight seconds I thought teaching pre-school might not make me claw out my eyes.  The kids had fun.  They got to yell.  They hugged me.  I had definitely “made someone notice me.”   Check.

But as I sat down to write this quick post this afternoon and (admittedly) looked towards the keyboard to type I realized I might have done a better job of satisfying the challenge today than yesterday.  I happen to think that pearls make cleavage appropriate for work.  Right?  Am I wrong? What?  I mean… I added a sweater.  A sweater with a flower.  Does it get more demure?

 

 

Day 49: Citizen’s Arrest

Impropriety: The quality or state of being improper, not in accordance with decorum.

Day 49’s challenge was to make a citizen’s arrest.  While it would have been a lot funnier to “arrest” a stranger the opportunity to arrest my mom and step-dad was too great to ignore.  MQD and I had plans to get our “wedding tattoo” on Friday evening and my parents were coming in to town, too.  We planned to meet at Carrburritos and then stop in to Glenn’s to go over our art work, leaving Emily with my parents for a bit.  MQD and I anxiously awaited Paulie finishing up the last-minute tweaks to our artwork while Em took a stroll around Franklin St with my family, stopping at Time After Time to do some shopping.

Our idea to memorialize our eternal wedded bliss on our skin was to combine the Sailor Jerry anchor and the “Stewed Screwed and Tattoed.”

I think we were successful.  I couldn’t be any happier with the way they turned out.  Not only did I get to share this occasion with my betrothed. But…. as I was laying on my stomach, teeth clenched, tattoo gun buzzing away behind me, making idle chit-chat with the other fellow in the shop getting work done I heard my favorite sound.  “Hi, Mom!”  And I looked up to see my sweet five-year-old girl.  In her Cinderella dress.  And four new bracelets.  And a new ring.  And  new pink fuzzy hat.  And my mom.  And my step-dad.  And buzzz….. fuck that hurts.

And I was getting a tattoo.  And my daughter was there.  Surely worth a citizen’s arrest of my mom and my step-dad, David.  Who brings a five-year-old to a tattoo shop?

So, Mom and David, consider yourself arrested.  Thanks for hanging out with Ems while we finished up a few wedding details.

Day 48: You never get a second chance…

To make a first impression.  I’ve had Day 48’s challenge in my purse for a week.  And in this last week I realized that I very rarely speak with anyone that I don’t know, peripherally.  I live in a decent sized community and yet the checkers at the grocery store, I know them.  The lady at the bank,  yep, I know her.  I should have had someone fill it out the other day at Trader Joe’s, I don’t go in there regularly enough to know all the folks that work there.  But I was also hesitant to bug someone that was at work.  And I guess I just don’t cross paths with a lot of strangers.  Accosting someone and saying “Hey, what’s your first impression of me?” when all they know of you is that you’re bugging them and waving a piece of paper in their face seems kind of ridiculous.

Last night, for our anniversary, we played a dice game with our 13 year old neighbor.  Odd way to celebrate, I realize, but his mom was working late and he frequently hangs out at our house instead of staying home alone.  In an odd way it was the perfect way to look in to our future as parents.  Two kids in the house feels right.  Before we set to playing our game I asked Austin to fill out my Day 48 challenge. It brought tears to my eyes.  I don’t know if anyone has ever said a nicer thing about me.

I think she is very unique and creative and spontaneous and has a good personality and treats people with respect.

Day 48 & the funk

Day 48 requires me to get out and mingle.  The “funk” has had Em and I under the weather for going on 72 hours.  So… as soon as I can get out in the world I will be back with a vengeance.  And I will OWN Day 48.

In the meantime, I am horribly busy clearing out my DVR of all pre-recorded kid’s shows and crappy reality TV. What?  It’s good for me.

Day 47: Countin’ sheep, thunder bolts & days…

Day 47: Count Sheep….

I can remember occasionally trying to count sheep when I was a kid.  For a short period of time when I was maybe ten years old I used to worry a lot about what it meant if we were really in a war with Libya.  So I started listening to my pink clock radio as I fell asleep.  But the trouble with listening to the radio while I fell asleep was two-fold.  The “sleep” function on either a radio or a television has the reverse effect on me.  I take it as a dare to try to stay awake until it goes off.  And then I started imagining that inside my radio was an entire universe.  That universe generated sounds and thoughts and “radio waves.”  I had a poster in my room when I was really little that had the alphabet on it.  So, I memorized the alphabet backwards.  That didn’t help me sleep, either.   So, I’d just let my mind wander and I’d imagine what it would be like to be married to Tom Selleck.  (Shut up, it was 1983.) Somewhere amidst all of these “fall asleep” techniques I am sure I counted sheep.  But it didn’t leave much of an impression.  So last night when I decided to give it a shot I felt like it was the very first time.

MQD and I both read before going to sleep last night.  It’s one of my favorite times of the day.  When we are both in bed, reading our own books, barely touching, but aware of the sound of the other’s pages turning, the smile that crosses my face when I hear him chuckle at something he’s read, the wondering if he can see the tear roll my down my face (confession:  I am a recently converted voracious reader of terrible chick lit, this will pass, so help me) all of these things add up to make this one of my very favorite moments.    I suspect this is in no small part due to the fact that it “feels” like something good.  Like the way a perfect marriage should feel.  Like something I’d have imagined doing with Tom Selleck.  (See, how I said that before you could?)

There’s something about those moments that feel just like what you imagined it would be like that is so satisfying.   I have been dwelling a bit on the “what is “it” supposed to feel/look like?  The “it” being our marriage.  I am confident in our ability to communicate.  And I earnestly believe if you’ve got that you’re most of the way there.  I am confident that when I make some smart ass remark at the television and MQD looks at me and says “I love you” he really does.  And that kind of love is the kind that carries you through, the kind that really means you like that person more than you like anyone else, that they are your favorite.  So I am not even really sure why I am so anxious lately. But I am trying not to dig too deep and just let myself feel it.  After all, nothing reminds you that even the most well laid plans can go awry like calling your ex-husband so your daughter can say goodnight, a task I complete five nights out of seven.  So it is no wonder I have a little bit of worry that I am making the right decisions.  I think a certain amount of worry is to be expected.  And yet all in all I feel more sure of this being “right” than anything.   I am not afraid to admit it out loud that I really, really want him, us, our marriage.  I don’t often admit to myself or to anyone that I want anything.  Because if you don’t have goals you don’t fail.

So, I needed last night.  One of those nights where you turn off your light and you think, ahhh…. this is it.  I’ve got this.  With little nagging at the corners of my mind I said “Good night” tucked my Snoopy under my chin (Tom Selleck was a phase, Snoopy was not) and started counting.  I really tried to picture each one, real sheep, not cartoon sheep, jumping over a fence.  I got to about twenty and remembered I’d not set my alarm clock.  Began again.  Somewhere around seventeen my mind started wandering and I realized I could feel my pulse in my lower back and I was actually counting my heart beats.  I rolled over and started again.  Put my hand on MQD’s chest. He was already asleep.  His ability to fall asleep in a moment is a trait I both admire and abhor.  Nothing like tossing and turning while your bed mate soundly slumbers to make you feel like a bratty child, desperate to wake up everyone else in the house, too, dammit.     I let the sheep jump in rhythm with MQD’s breath and I counted.  I don’t recall getting to thirty.

I woke to the sounds of thunder and rain around four this morning.  I could see the lightning through the bedroom curtains and I counted the moments between lightning and thunder-clap as I decided whether I’d try to get back to sleep or not.  I was still awake when MQD got up at five.  And still awake when my little lady hopped in bed around 5:30.  And still awake when I felt her chest begin to rise and fall more slowly as she fell back to sleep.  And still awake when MQD left for work so very early this morning.

But I was rested.  I’d counted sheep.  And calculated the thunderstorm’s distance.  And just now I counted the days.  198.  A hundred and ninety-eight days until we make a wonderful decision.  Until we have a party to celebrate a decision we made long ago…

It’s still raining.  Office door open.  Ella Fitzgerald on the radio.  I love today.

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Day 46: Birthday Day!

Today’s challenge is indicative of the fact that this  book was originally printed in 2003.  It asks you to write down the birth dates of your friends and loved ones, in an effort to not forget them in coming years.

It’s nearly impossible to forget someone’s birthday since Facebook.  And in a lot of ways it really bothers me that remembering someone’ s birthday isn’t really very meaningful anymore.  I will cop to being a frequent facebooker.  It’s probably the equal parts voyeur and exhibitionist in me.  But I do try not to “Happy Birthday” everyone that appears on the upper right hand side of my screen daily.  Particularly if the recipient is someone whose birthday I never knew.  Maybe this isn’t really meaningful, either, but I highly doubt anyone is sitting around wondering why I didn’t tell them Happy Birthday amidst their 300 messages.

My inability to remember birthdays isn’t an indication of a general state of forgetfulness.  I am just bad about birthdays for some reason. Case in point, I just checked Facebook.  Today is the birthday of a guy with whom I attended middle school.  I did not know today was his birthday.  We shall call him Drew, since that his name.  I know that Drew’s phone number was 250-2435 before you needed to dial a prefix in Northern Virginia.  I know that Drew made me cry when I was 12 and that I (cringe) purchased Chicago’s “Look Away” cassette tape single for him as a  Christmas present but thought better than to give it to him.  Evidently, my heartbreak had healed in the time it took to get a ride home from the mall.  All of this to say, I am not a forgetful person.  I just have a mental block against birthdays.

So I have started entering birthdays in to the calendar on my phone. I’m not sure why I feel better about being reminded via one digital source than another.  But I do.  And I have PLANS.  Big Plans!  I am planning on setting up a 2011 file with cards and envelopes.  And addresses.  And maybe even addressing envelopes for 2011 and having myself all set up.  To send real, live, delivered to your postal mailbox birthday greetings.  Because there is forethought and intent in sending a real, live letter.

I wish I could send pink sparkly shoes to everyone of my birthday friends.  Alas, we are not all so lucky.

Day 45: Learn Your Damn Homophones

Day 45: Romance Day, come up with a compliment that has never been made before.

The other day MQD posted a website that made me chuckle.  Learn Your Damn Homophones. It was funny to me on a few planes, but the section referencing compliment vs complement is pertinent here.  Today’s challenge… a compliment that has never been made before…

This isn’t all that difficult.  MQD and I went up to see some of the family this weekend and had our first multi-dimensional multi-family gathering.  Time again it was made clear to me that MQD really is the “complement” that has never been made before.  At the risk of sliding in to a long-winded “reasons I am sickeningly in love with this boy” kind of post I’ll wrap it up quickly.

We were on the way home from DC, Em was passed out in the back  seat and we were giggling our way down I-95.  As our laughter began to wane MQD said “We are really juvenile when we are together… ”  I made a smart-ass remark about how this was true and weren’t we oh so very  melancholy when we were  apart.

I am really juvenile all of the time.  But only when I am with him do I not feel in the least bit apologetic about who I am.  Not for being a pervert with the mind of a 14-year-old boy, not for the past that brought me to my present, not for my tendency to interrupt.  None of it.  It’s who I am.  And he really  does “get me.” And I think he likes me most of the time. There’s no accounting for taste.

So, I spent the morning trying to think of a compliment.  One that had never been made before.  Eventually one fell right from my lips, or from my fingers through my keyboard, as it happened to be…  “Demented bleats made me think of you, my love. “

MQD shook a cheese stick at me the other day.  From groin level. And he made this very disturbing sound, like a billy goat choking… It shouldn’t have made me want to kiss him.  But it did.  So when I saw  a reference to a “maniacal army of lobotomized pigmy goats” on Sleep Talkin’ Man this morning I instantly smiled…

I shot him the link and said “Demented bleats made me think of you, my love. “

It doesn’t get much better than this, kids.

And just to be clear, I’m not the only juvenile one in the bunch.   A picture from one of the funniest road trips I may have ever taken…. xo