Historically April is a busy busy month for me, what with my last-minute attention to taxes and the end of the spring semester. So I do apologize and thank you for coming to visit even if it seems like I've shut the blinds and refuse to answer the door.
Even now I don't have time to draft one of those extensive, well-plotted, socially responsible and politically correct posts for which I've become famous the world over--the ones that have made me the A-List blogger you have come to know and love--so instead you get me throwing stuff out there to see what sticks. To wit:
1) As I was considering the vast array of deodorant choices at my local deodorant provider (thank you, Capitalism, with your glorious choices and affordable prices! I don't care what they say about you--I love you!), I had to smell each one in the Degree (TM) line of products because it's one of the few brands with the impressive power to contain my EXXXXTREEEEEEME stench. Usually I grab the Shower Clean (despite my sniffing everything as if I'm really considering a switch because, let's face it, I'm a hamster in my Habitrail (TM)). For a fleeting moment, however, I almost jumped off my Habitrail (TM) to purchase the scent of "Fresh Oxygen." Wouldn't you assume that it would smell like, well, fresh air, and that this air wouldn't really have a smell if it were truly fresh? Well, you're wrong. Fresh Oxygen, it turns out, does not smell like nothing. So much for truth in advertising.
2) While at my local deodorant provider, which also happens to sell hair products, I made my way two aisles over to purchase HBAs--a term which here stands for "Health and Beauty Aids"--namely some kind of gel or mousse for Jade. You see, Jade recently got her hairs cut and the stylist used product to helped Jade's stick-straight hair flip out at the ends in a sassy way. Jade liked the sass and wanted to find a similar product so that she could style her hairs from home, and off we went in search of it. And there it was, Tigi Bed Head After Party Styling Creme, sitting on the shelf all pink and phallic. (Oh, yes it was.) Geez, that's not even subliminal! My first thought was that ten-year-olds don't need to use $18 hair products, but even it if cost only $5, ten-year-olds don't need creme-emitting-phalluses (phallusi?) greeting them from the medicine cabinet every morning. Who's with me on this?
3) I don't have swine flu, and apparently I'm not at risk since it affects young adults the hardest. Apparently these "young" are people between 20 and 40, so PHEW! Age has it's rewards after all; you "young" people are just too blinded by your youth and good looks and soft skin and big dreams to see otherwise.
This morning I awoke at 3 a.m. to hear Kai faintly whimpering in his room (my maternal sensory buttons are very finely tuned even if I am deep in sleep). He said he was "feeling weird," which I could see meant he had the chills. He attributed it to the fact that moments before he had pictured in his head "a piece of bread with white stuff on it, and the white stuff had green and orange sprinkles." I told him he was probably coming down with something (like SWINE FLU) but he swears it was the image of the bread that caused his symptoms. Even after he woke up later in the morning he swore his "weird feeling" was because he was imagining that bread with the white stuff and sprinkles. Again I tried to dissuade him, this time with the argument that he was describing the bread to me so he was obviously thinking about it, and yet he didn't have the chills. Quod erat demonstrandum, right? Wrong. "That's because I have to be lying in my bed when I think of it." D'oh!
I considered sealing him off in his bedroom and leaving food and water at the door but I don't really like the kids bringing food into their rooms. Instead, I escaped to work (in San Diego, where people have SWINE FLU) while Bell remained home with Kai today. The kid got to recline on the couch under my favorite couch blankie (which I must now sanitize four times before using again) and watch cartoons. Is that the life, or what?
4) Speaking of swine flu, did you ever read that book by Gina Kolata about the Spanish Flu pandemic if 1918? I read it a few years back, when influenza-pandemic talk was just someone's doomsday fantasy, and still it scared the shiite out of me. Now I'm forced to think about it all over again when I should be turning my attention to how to spend my tax refund.
Whenever I hear or read the name "Gina Kolata" I always think of pina coladas. Mmmmm, pina coladas. And getting caught in the rain. And the feel of the ocean. And the taste of champagne.
5) A confession: I have been posting at least one status update to Facebook every day. But I swear to you I have not given up blogging for FB. In fact, it's not really clear to me how people can spend hours on end using Facebook unless they have zillions of Friends and read every item on every Friend's page and take every test and answer every Note in which they are tagged. Maybe it would be a bigger time suck if I had more Friends. I'm not really looking to pad my Inner Circle of Trust with people I have never actually met though. And, because I'm not a joiner ("I work alone."), I haven't joined any FB Groups. However, if I did join a group it would be one of those groups of people who are sick and tired of hearing other people mispronounce their last name, or people who drop my last name from my kids' last name when, in fact, they should know that our kids have a compound last name. This is especially vexing when I know the offender really well. (Dad.)
6) Kai started playing Little League this year, trying it out to see if he likes it. So far, he is most taken with the hitting part of the game because, to quote him, "I LOVE to hit stuff!" Initially he also seemed to enjoy fielding, and he'd go after the ball almost every time, even when it was way out of his jurisdiction. He and the other boys would run from different points on the field to converge on the ball; thereafter tackling or a squabble over the ball might ensue. Meanwhile, the other team would be running the bases, clearly taking advantage of the fact that above all, little boys just love to dogpile each other whenever they get the chance, game be damned. (We also witnessed this phenomenon at basketball games. I can't wait to see Kai play football.) Now that Kai understands that when he plays outfield he he is only responsible for a wee region of the grass, his enthusiasm has waned. In fact, sometimes he sits on or rolls in the clover--and it reminds me of the story of Ferdinand the Bull--when he is in the outfield. He's just biding his time, waiting for his chance to "hit stuff."
Last weekend, Kai was running from second to third when the shortstop tried to tag him out. He did what any level headed person would do when someone chased him--he ran away from the guy. Into the outfield. Psyche! This drew laughter and applause from the crowd, as if Kai had been sent in as comic relief. That boy plays by his own rules.
7) A stumper for anyone familiar with Ice Breakers (TM) mints in the round container: a) Why does the container have two sides, one labeled "To Share" and the other "Not To Share"? b) Why is the "To Share" hole teeny while the "Not to Share" is the size of half the circular container--a semicircle, if you will? This seems backwards. c) Did it used to be otherwise? I and my children swear that the "To Share" hole used to be the larger of the two. d) Is this an error or is it on purpose? e) If an error, do you think the person responsible for that particular run of labels got fired?
8) OMG, we got a third cat! Or at least we could have, judging by the amount of cat fur we found when Bell pulled out the refrigerator to figure out why it wasn't enchilling our food properly. Since the kids are overwhelmed enough with having to clean a litter box for two cats, the makings of an extra cat fur have been stored in the vacuum.
9) And now I must go investigate the refrigerator problem. Until next time, stay chill, People.
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