I’m a harsh judge

Tonight I am drinking a white wine spritzer. Granted, it’s made with a very lovely Sauvignon Blanc from Sonoma that I very much enjoy drinking on its own, but that does not change the fact that I am drinking a white wine spritzer. I used to make jokes about white wine spritzers, about how they were what older women drink to make white zinfandel tolerable and how it was the preferred drink of the dieting women that I never saw eat actual food. And yet, here I am, on a Tuesday night, drinking a white wine spritzer. And that is for one simple reason: I’m too damn old to be drinking normal wine on a Tuesday night.

My birthday was on Saturday, a fact that had me pondering life and death and my rapid descent into middle age. It was a lovely day, full of sunshine and laughter and good tequila and an AMAZING pinata and yes, cupcakes. Howsomever, the week leading up to it I was a little grumptastic and introspective and shit because honestly, I was a little disappointed in myself leading up[ to this birthday. I’m three years away from turning 40 and I thought I would have my shit more together than I do. Read the rest of this entry »

The world came crashing down

I’ve started and stopped this entry roughly 200 times. The first 50 times I had to stop because I kept crying when I started. The next 50 nothing I wrote made sense because my brain was just not working well. The last hundred times, I opened a file and suddenly found myself unable to find the words to say what I want to say.

My mother called me at 6:30 on a Sunday morning. When I answered all I heard was my mother saying “You have to come! She won’t wake up!” I asked all the usual questions (did you call 911? what hospital are they taking her too?) while Kevin threw on clothes because he had awoken to me saying “Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god” while hunched over the bed. Just before I hung up, I heard her say “I don’t think we’re going to a hospital.”

We didn’t talk during the entire 30 minute drive. I clutched my phone, waiting for my mom to call me again, to tell me that Jackie was awake and they were on their way to the hospital so I could meet them there. But she didn’t call. The phone didn’t ring and as we drove into my mom’s neighborhood, I saw an ambulance turning out of an intersection. No lights. No siren. And that was the moment I knew.

Jackie was gone. And our family will never be the same.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Sudden death of someone close to you is a shock to the system, like dipping your soul into a bathtub full of ice. This is something I have learned over and over and over again because every person I’ve lost has gone suddenly, sometimes violently, always too soon. But this time was different.

She’d had yet another surgery, the fourth in 3 years. This time it was her sinuses instead of her pacemaker or her hernia or the giant 9 lb mass that filled her abdomen. She’d had pain issues afterwards but seemed to be doing better.

And then she was gone.

When I got to the house, there was a sheriff standing guard, because they were waiting for the medical examiner to come and pick her up. I have never cried as hard as I cried while my mom and I huddled on the couch clinging to each other. And then we stopped, and started walking around in a fog that didn’t life for the entire month of July.

I made so many phone calls that day, the next day. Calls that started with me being calm and ended with me trying not to sob into the ear of the person I had just called. I could not handle calling my friends, because I knew that talking to them would break me. So instead I sent the worst text messages ever.

“Can you tell Char I won’t be there this week? Jackie died this morning.”

“I won’t be at Bunco, Jackie died.”

“Can you call me when you have a chance. Need to talk, v important.”

I told Laura while she was sitting in the car on her way to the Grand Canyon. I told my uncle while he was at his lake house enjoying the holiday weekend with his grandchildren. I woke up one of my mom’s best friends and said what my mom said: you have to come over.

Jackie’s dead. We lost Jackie. She passed away, she’s gone, she died. I said it over and over and over again but it didn’t seem real until I came home to get some clothes and took a minute to tell Twitter.

And then I cried so hard I almost threw up.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Mom and I were talking the other day and we agreed that it was for the best that Jackie’s death was automatically a medical examiner’s case because of her recent surgery; if it hadn’t been, we wouldn’t have had any idea what to do as far as removing her body from the house (and we would not now know that they charge $20 for body bags). She hadn’t planned her funeral, other than putting down in writing that she wanted to be cremated. So we went to the funeral home and memorial park where so many of our friends had buried family members.

The funeral director looked 12, but she was sweet and efficient and completely respectful of my mother and her relationship with Jackie. We had everything planned before we picked anyone up from the airport. It was an odd way to spend the 4th of July, surrounded by sad people, quiet people, and a million boxes of Kleenex. I remember wondering what their monthly Kleenex bill must be; it has to be astronomical.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

The phrase I kept saying to my mother as I put away files and reminded her to lock up Jackie’s purse and put away things we didn’t want people snooping through was “Death makes people stupid.” Above all, I wanted my mother’s privacy protected. I fielded phone calls from family members asking what happened, how did she die, will your mom be okay? I searched through paperwork trying to reassure myself that she would be okay, that their lawyer had covered everything, that my mom wouldn’t have to sell the house and move to some horrible tiny apartment.

I ordered a case of wine and made Kevin pick it up to bring to my mom’s house. I taught my uncle how to make a good, strong Paloma. I bit my tongue when my family members acted like idiots and treated me like the flighty 12 year old I once was, and I poured myself another glass of wine. I took Jackie’s almost 4 years old granddaughter on “abentures” in the backyard that her grandmother designed and tended to so happily.

Family relationships have already started shifting. Jackie’s son and I are talking more now than we ever used to, but it’s good. Jackie’s sister is being too hovery and bossy for my mom’s liking but luckily, she’s in another state. My mom spends a lot more time on the phone and Skype with far flung friends who keep calling her.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

I feel guilty saying it but things are easier between my mom and I now. She and I worked out our shit years ago, through a lot of arguments and discussions and honest conversations. Jackie and I were getting there when she got sick in 2009, but then things got bad. She was in pain, she didn’t feel well, she worried about my mom, she worried about being out from work, and she missed her son and her grandkids.

And she took a lot of her frustrations out on me.

So it was hard, because Mom and I had to pick and choose how and what we talked about sometimes. There were things she would do for me without letting Jackie know because it was just easier that way. It was what it was, and I had every faith that things would get easier and more comfortable again once Jackie got healthy again, once they figured out how to get her heart beating calmly and her sinuses cleaned up so she wasn’t in constant pain.

But before that could happen, before we could get to that easier, more comfortable spot, Jackie died. Her heart wore out and stopped while she slept, and my mom and I are left behind to have the relationship we always had minus the tension. We text and email and call, I sit with her at meetings with the lawyer, she watches my dog when dogsitting arrangements fall through, she lets me do laundry at her house and I help her do her Costco shopping.

We are, above all else, friends. All those people who told me to take care of my mom don’t realize this, and they don’t realize that we take care of each other. We always have, and if all of this has proven anything, we always will.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Losing a parent really fucking sucks. Knowing that I will someday go through this again and lose my OTHER parent is enough to make me want to crawl under the covers for good. But if there’s one thing I learned and that I know with all of my heart, it is that I am loved, by so many people. I had an Army of Girlfriends who called and brought lasagnas and wine and ice and babies to keep our spirits comforted, fed, entertained. They let me talk when I needed to talk and they let me cry when I needed to cry; they still do, to this day. I had friends who had never even met Jackie making CDs for the funeral, setting up for the reception after the funeral, sending flowers and Starbucks cards. They were my safety net.

They were my safety net, but Kevin was my rock. Someone once told me that the person you marry should be the person you can imagine standing next to your parent’s grave with. He picked up food for people, he made sure I had coffee and Jamaba Juice and Kleenex. He took care of me and my mother without any consideration for other people; we were his only concern, which was what we needed. He’s never once told me what I should or shouldn’t be doing or feeling or saying (except for the day he kept me from biting the head off of a very sweet employee at the funeral home); he’s let me just *be*.

Love seems inadequate to describe what he’s given me. I only hope I am half as good as him when it’s my turn to be his rock.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Everything is settling now. The 40 days we had to wait before the house could be transferred is almost up. Mom’s looking for a CPA and a financial planner to figure out where to go from here, but she doesn’t have to leave the home she shared with Jackie for 32 years. She’s starting to clean things out of the house that Jackie refused to give up, and we’re getting into a new routine of emails and phone calls and text messages and biweekly visits.

The fragile days are getting farther apart, but we can all see the rough spots coming up. Her birthday in September. Thanksgiving. Christmas. Everyone else’s birthdays. The Fourth of July.

I miss her. I miss being able to ask her how to fix things in my house, I miss arguing with her about whether my memories were wrong, I miss her pie crust, I miss her making coffee in that damn percolator.

I guess that part probably won’t ever go away though.

The Very Best Day

(If you want to skip ahead to find out who won the Igigi contest, feel free. But this is really kind of a pretty and sappy entry)

Five years is not very long, really, not in the grand scheme of a lifetime. But at the same time, it’s kind of a really long time because so much can happen in 5 years. It’s long enough for a baby to become a kindergartner. Long enough for a president to be elected and replaced. Long enough for a car to be purchased and paid off.

For us it’s been long enough to be robbed, to be on disability, to switch jobs (voluntarily and not), to have weight loss surgery, to find out kidney stones are horrible, to move, to double the amount of pets in our house, to sit in hospital waiting rooms with our parents, to drive over 60,000 miles together, to cry and laugh and yell and figure out that we fall asleep best if we are touching each other but not actually cuddling.

Five years ago today, we stood in front of our family and friends, our community of people that we loved and that loved us back. Unlike today, that April 8th was sunny and bright and the mountain breeze was just enough to catch my veil as we took our vows. We did not promise anything to each, no mention of honoring or cherishing or til death do us part; instead, we simply stated that we took each other to our hearts and our souls, the whole package as is.

We had our hands bound together with a cord that is knotted to this day. I am superstitious about it and have locked the cord in a frame; I do not want to chance a knot coming loose.

I wore green shoes with my ridiculously princessy dress and a ring from my mother that was my borrowed, my blue, and my old.

He wore a kilt and a knife in his sock and a boutennaire that I made the night before our wedding.

It wasn’t a perfect day with no hitches. The iPod with all of our music on it froze up, the cake was nowhere to be seen half an hour before the wedding, the carriage was late picking Kevin up, and there were, of course, family issues. But I didn’t care. I couldn’t stop smiling and I didn’t care what music we had or what we ate for dessert or what time we started or what our families’ issues were because I was there, he was there and we were getting married.

We rode away in a carriage and ate amazing cake (two things that Kevin had Definite Opinions about us having). After everyone had left, we sat and read our guestbook together while I took roughly 532 bobby pins out of my hair and we ate leftover appetizers from our wedding reception. It was a perfect day.

Since then I have realized that in marriage, every day is a choice. Every day, with every decision we make about our home and our jobs and our families and our pets, I choose him again and luckily, he chooses me. And that is the biggest blessing I could ever have, because we don’t need each other. We WANT each other.

Happy Anniversary, Mr. Pogue. I love you.

(And thanks again to Nate & Jaclyn at The Image Is Found for the AMAZING wedding pictures!! I still get a thrill looking at them.)

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And now that the sappy is done…..

The winner of my Igigi certificate is Measi!!

As you can see from the picture above, she was randomly chosen using Random.org’s number generator. Mel-Check your email soon for details on how to redeem your gift certificate!

Finally warm! Thanks, Grandma!

Everyone thinks I’m a wimp when I say I’m cold. Because I live in San Diego! It’s never cold there! It’s sunny and 75 EVERY DAY.

Except it’s not, that’s just what our chamber of commerce wants you to believe. Also, I do not technically live in San Diego anymore, I live in Poway. And Poway is “The City In The Country”, with coyotes and rodeos and big ass town parades. Seriously though, we’re 30 miles away from San Diego proper and are basically nestled up against the mountains so our weather is way more variable. Summers get all kinds of Africa Hot (I think our highest temp last summer was 112 F), which sucks. But what sucks more are the winters.

Daytimes aren’t too bad, because it usually stays around the low 50′s. Totally manageable! But the winters mean it’s regularly low 40′s to mid 30′s at night, sometimes even colder. Which would not be a problem if A) we had central heating in our vaulted ceiling apartment or B) our building was better insulated and didn’t have drafty windows ALL OVER IT. On top of that, our bedroom is set up in such a way that we basically have to have the head of our bed under a window; handy when trying to catch a breeze in the summer but hell on my poor delicate nose during the winter.

Last winter was not as bad as this winter, because this winter it’s been freezing and I wasn’t able to come up with the right combination of blanket/pajamas/socks to keep me warm enough without getting too warm. I was sleeping like crap because I kept waking up shivering and needing more clothes or sweating and needing to strip off either blankets or socks. Basically, I’ve been seriously jonesing for my Grandma Blanket. My Grandma had a thing for crocheting. After she and my grandfather retired, she spent hours each day sitting and watching her stories (Young and the Restless was her favorite) but since she was never someone who could just sit still not doing anything, she crocheted. Mostly she crocheted blankets, of the classic zig zag stripe variety. One day she decided to make a blanket for me, big enough to cover my twin size bed. It was the very early 80′s so she of course picked a stellar color combination:

Yes, it is burnt orange, chocolate brown, tan and ivory. Never mind that my entire room was decorated in a Strawberry Shortcake motif, that was the color set she liked.

She liked that particular blanket so much that she tried repeatedly to recreate it. I am not sure why that particular pattern was so hard for her to remember but it was. She never did duplicate it exactly, but she made a dozen or so in that color scheme. We found the resulting blankets stashed in a cupboard when she and my grandfather died, and now all of us cousins have a Grandma Blanket.

It’s a hideous color, but it’s the very best blanket I own. It’s heavy and warm without being stifling, and it covers exactly half of the bed so Kevin doesn’t complain about being hot because I have an extra blanket on the bed. I’ve been freezing this winter, but last night Kevin was finally able to find the Grandma Blanket in our carport storage unit. Sophie immediately made a nest in it once I had it on the bed; she knows a good blanket when she sees one.

And I slept better than I had in weeks, because I was finally, blessedly, perfectly warm. Thanks, Grandma

Run. On.

I’m in a rut. Not a rut so much as well, a crevasse. I’m psychologically stymied. The ennui, I has it.

Who gets ennui in the springtime? Seriously, only me.

I think it is because I am an emotional sponge and there is so much fucking drama (DRAMA MOTHERFUCKERS) around me at any given time these days that I am kind of constantly exhausted. It’s not my drama, thank every deity of possible existence out there. But when one friend almost leaves her husband and another definitely IS leaving her husband and the stories that I tell about my job make my former boss tell me it sounds like an episode of The Office, I become prone to being distracted and skittery and tired and apparently, cannot speak unless it is via incredibly long run-on sentences.

In other news, I told Sheila I needed to take a break from going to her class, because it was starting to get to the point where I hated going. I hated driving down there (it tacked an extra 60-90 minutes of driving onto my day). I hated paying for it, because we are a household of broke ass bitches thanks to some stupid low profile tires I had to buy for my stupid car. I hated the fact that I was missing my husband because I never got home before 7:30 on the one night a week we were both home.  So I quit, and who knows if I will go back. I will call her, and I will stay in touch and I will have to come up with some kind of exercise program on my own that is cheap and that I will actually do because I feel like a slug right now. Luckily, I live in a crazy suburban world in the country and there’s all kinds of activity things going on. There is a dog walking group that goes out and hikes on Sunday mornings, which I think I might try to go do. Of course, the last time I took Sophie out for a hike we saw (from about 10 feet away) A GIGANTIC RATTLESNAKE so now we are having to look into rattlesnake awareness training for her. Because we live in the country, and country dogs need to know how to avoid rattlesnakes. (Of course, Kevin’s plan to avoid rattlesnakes involves just not hiking, but hiking is fun and I like it so rattlesnake awareness training it is!)

I did get to take a quick vacation last weekend over the holiday, and I flew out to Kansas City, MO to visit Laura and help her get her baby’s room ready for his imminent arrival (because yes, she is having a boy, which I told her the first time she had an ultrasound and I saw his giant head; his name is Kendrick and he totally roundhouse kicked me).  And then I packed Laura’s very pregnant self into the car and we drove over to the Kansas side of things and visited (the now boobless but still a hot cougar) Jane, who demonstrated her remarkable ability to find anything I wanted in relation to a liquor store. (Don’t knock it, that is a handy, handy trait to have.) It was a lovely weekend and on my last morning there we went and got coffee at an awesome little coffeeshop in downtown Parkville. It was run by a small gay man named Josh who was originally from (you guessed it) San Diego by way of Los Angeles, so we spent our breakfast chattering with him about North Park and East County and the Princess House crystal plates he inherited from his mother and then used in the shop. (And here I thought only my mother had the insane Princess House collection!)

So I’m taking the summer off from school and hoping to use the extra time to do something productive, like actually finish the Couch to 5K program. Of course, I’m also on the planning committee for the CF Foundation Gala so I’m going to be spending a lot of time asking people for money this summer too but you know I have no problem with that.  I’ll probably take at least one more trip good old Kansas City once my little Monekybutt is born, but other than that I think I’ll just plan on sitting next to the pool and yelling at the neighbor kids all summer. It’s cheap entertainment, which really, is always something I can use more of.

What A Difference A Decade Makes

Tonight’s the end of a year, and the end of a decade. The year sucked, so I think I’ll focus on the decade instead.

Here’s how it went….

Had a roommate, got a boyfriend. Lost the boyfriend, got him back, traded the roommate for a live-in boyfriend. Got a kitten, lost the boyfriend, watched the world explode, lost my mind, got a new apartment, got some antidepressants and a new perspective.

Got reinvolved with ex-boyfriend, drank in bars with friends, found a therapist, got rid of the ex once and for all. Lost my job, cried on a friend’s couch, then found a new, better job. Broke my ankle, hung out on the internet, met a random dude who lived in Sacramento, got off the antidepressants, got another cat. Sent a LOT of emails to the random dude, gave him my phone number, met him in person.

Had a lot of sex.

Went to a million weddings. Memorized the freeways between San Diego and Sacramento, flew on a lot of Southwest Airlines planes, admitted the random dude was my boyfriend. Went on vacation with him, met my Internet Doppelganger and walked all over Boston. Moved the boyfriend to San Diego, took him to meet the rest of the family, stunned when he didn’t run away.

Went to Washington DC, met more of my Imaginary Internet Friends, not knowing they were the tribe I had been looking for. Cut my hair, colored my hair, rinse, repeat. Got a new job, made more money. Met my boyfriend’s extended family, amazed him by not running away. Walked the Breast Cancer 3-Day, fucked up my feet, got a MRSA infection. Boyfriend tried not to kill doctor for hurting me.

Welcomed 2005 with the boyfriend and the two cats in the same tiny one bedroom apartment in the sketchy neighborhood. Paid off my car! Went to Wisconsin, got drunk, got cold, got engaged. Pulled off a miracle with Weetabix and threw the very last JournalCon in San Diego. Walked the Breast Cancer 3-Day again, managed not to mess up my feet.

Planned a wedding, planned a honeymoon, tried not to have a nervous breakdown. Contemplated eloping and implications of changing my last name. Decided that no one else’s opinion mattered and did what I wanted. Married the random dude, had an awesome wedding, went to Costa Rica.

Changed my name, watched my husband get laid off, hated my job. Apartment in sketchy neighborhood got robbed, lost all our honeymoon pictures (and iPod and computers and Playstation and sense of security). Fell down, broke my wrist, had surgery, got disabled. Liked my job again, husband got new job at my company, but we still prayed for 2006 to end, quickly.

Went back to Wisconsin, celebrated 1st wedding anniversary, thought about major life changes. Became a Big Sister, got an adorable Little Sister, quit all my other volunteer activities. Picked a surgeon, got approval, got weight loss surgery. Lost a lot of weight, really super fast. Started working out, started freaking out, walked the Breast Cancer 3-Day one last time, and finally walked all 60 damn miles.

Wisconsin brought me back again, and we planned our escape from California. Decided to go back to school, questioned my own sanity as I struggled through accounting, suprised myself by being good at the whole MBA this. Got a tiny, flea bitten, mangy kitten, fell in love, questioned my sanity again. Tiny apartment in sketchy neighborhood got more sketchy.

Got a new job, left the safety of my Giant Company for the do-goodness of Tiny Biotech. Made more money, went to Chicago, dressed up in a slutty costume and made out with Jesus. Fell in love with My Tribe a little bit more with every passing year. Went to a million baby showers, threw a million more.

Made new friends, found our doppelganger couple at Laura’s wedding, went to Vegas, went to Wisconsin,welcomed Niblet to the world. Decided to move to the suburbs. Drove across the country with my best friend and her pug. Swam in a pool in Vegas with some of the best people on the Internet or in the world. Got a dog, fell in love with her, watched husband fall in love with her too. Finished another year of school, realized I was almost done, started thinking maybe this whole MBA thing might work out overall.

Watched 2009 kick all of my friends and some of my family and shook my fist in impotent fury. Found a new therapist, ran into old Therapist at coffee shop, marveled at how infinitely different my life and my self are from when she last saw me. Realized I am a lucky, lucky girl.

Rang out the old decade with my champagne in the air and my heart full to bursting. Rang in the new with hope for something better for all of us.

Happy New Year, to you and yours with love.

A Girl And Her Dog

Two years ago, a clock started ticking.  My biological clock decided to ignore the whole baby thing and focus itself on dogs.  Big dogs, little dogs, puppies and adult.  Fluffy, short hair, yippy, drooly, you name it.  If it was a dog, I wanted it.  If I saw a puppy, I got this craving in my gut that made me consider grabbing it and running far, far away.  Remember that dog food commercial about dog adoption, the one where the dog says “I’m a good dog, I just want to go home”? That one made me cry more than once.

I begged Kevin to let me have a dog on a near daily basis, despite the fact that we were living in a tiny one bedroom apartment with three cats already. (Three cats who I love and adore, but they did nothing to make me want a dog any less.)  He kept being rational and saying no; something about it not being allowed on our lease and the apartment being too crowded, blah blah blah.  I return, I pouted and whined for two years. (The man is kind of a saint.)

But then earlier this year, a friend called me and told me that the complex she was moving into had an apartment open…2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, cathedral ceilings in the living room, and best of all? No pet limits.  We could keep all three cats AND get a dog.

I signed the deposit paperwork a few days later.

We moved in at the end of May and if I could have, I would have picked out a dog within moments of unpacking the last box.  But I had to wait until my summer of travel was over.  So two long, interminable months later I dragged Kevin down to the county animal shelter to look at dogs.  And in the very first cage in the very first kennel we walked into we found her:

They had named her Poquita; she’d been in the shelter for a month, and they had found her roaming the streets.  She had this worried look on her face when she looked up at us; we found out later that the worried look is her default look.  The shelter people said she shouldn’t go to a home with small kids because she had a defensive fear response.  (We have since discovered that she is just fine with small kids.  Grown ups who are strangers  still make her nervous though.) But we took her out into the “get to know you” pen and she wandered around sniffing things and laid in the sun and let us pick her up and gave us a look that said “You’ll work for me.”

So we signed the paperwork and they spayed her and sent her home with us, anthe first thing we did was change her name to Sophie.  And within 72 hours, she had inserted her scrawny little 10 pound self right into our hearts.  Kevin, who had insisted upon saying that any dog we got would be MY DOG (as opposed to the family dog), picked her up one day and said “I’m going to hold you because you’re OUR DOG, not just HER DOG.” And with that, it was done. Miss Sophie, the funniest,cutest little Chihuahua Dachschund ever, was part of the family.  And all of a sudden my life was all about dog toys and crate training and sweaters and training classes and dog park.

And I have never ever been happier.  Sophie and Vivi play with each other all night, every night.  We come home and she leaps around us with such unbridled joy that I can’t help but smile, no matter how bad my day was before I got home. She comes with us to brunch, and people ooh and aww over how cute she is.  At the dogpark, she has a best friend named Noodles, an Italian Greyhound who is the only one that runs as fast as Sophie.  Her pack includes Laura’s two pugs, and she is the boss of them.  The only cat she is afraid of is Riley, which is hilarious because he is the most chicken cat in the world.  And we’ve fattened her up to a respectable 13 pounds.

She’s curled up right next to me right now, which is her default position if I am sitting on the couch. (She’s dreaming of  I think, because her feet are twitching and she lets out a yip every so often.)    Every time we leave, she gives us a look we call The Face.  She loves us more unconditionally than we deserve, and she’s so, so happy.  And it may seem like we did a really good deed by rescuing a sad little shelter dog and making her fat and happy, but really, she is the one doing the good deed because she’s the one who completed our little family.

I’m Not Drinking The Water, That’s For Damn Sure

I had lunch with a dear old friend yesterday, a friend I manage to see maybe once a year despite the fact that we now live about 20 minutes from each other (as opposed to the 70 minutes it used to be).  And in the course of talking to her, I asked if she had gotten on the kid train yet (she’s been working on her Ph.D for years now, which is her own fault for deciding to study Native American autistic children).  I just….had a feeling.  And sure enough, she’s pregnant! And she’s due in July!

Also due in July? My BFF, Laura.

And Jackie’s daughter-in-law.

But! Before the July Trifecta, there’s this:

Due in January: Coworker #1

Due in February: Bunco Friend

Due in March: Coworker #2 & Coworker #3

So as of today, I have seven good friends having babies before the end of the summer of 2010.  The thought of seven baby showers is making me feel very much like my darling (my friend’s daughter & my adopted niecelet who I adore) Niblet in this picture:

Because seriously! I don’t have enough time to knit blankets for all of them and don’t even get me started on how exhausting baby showers are to throw (I’ve thrown FOUR this year, I think I’ve done my duty).  (Okay, so out of the seven, I’m only going to be throwing one baby shower and that’s Laura’s because….well, she’s my Laura. Never mind the fact that she’s going to be LIVING IN MISSOURI by then.)

So this is me, whining over the fact that I will soon be surrounded by adorable babies who I will get to snuggle and spoil and play with and then hand back to their parents when they get fussy.

Okay, maybe this isn’t such a bad thing after all.  But I’m still not drinking the water.

Thankful

For the fact that when I wanted some coffee tonight, it did not matter to me that I would have to walk to Starbucks because Kevin had the car. It wasn’t across the street, it wasn’t miles away, but it was a decently long walk at night and in the cold. And I didn’t think twice about putting on my shoes and heading out.  Three years ago, I would have simply given up on the idea of coffee because the idea of walking that far would have been enough to keep my ass on the couch. I am not thin, I am not a perfect WLS patient.  I still eat candy cane Joe-Joe’s and macaroni & cheese and drink Diet Coke, but I am stronger and more fit and healthier than I was when I was 18, and for that, I will always be thankful.

For the fact that I had a tiny dog with ridiculous ears in a silly sweater to go with me on that walk.  She is a 12 pound bundle of awesomesauce who loves us beyond reason and is able to cheer us up just by leaping into our arms and wagging her tail so hard that we’re afraid her butt might fly off. Sophie is the best thing to have happened to us this year, and sometimes I think we wished her into existence because she so perfectly fits what we wanted in a dog.  Whatever else I might do with my life, I know that I did one very good thing by saving this sweet little dog from the shelter, and for that I am thankful.

For the fact that my family has been blessed with incredible luck when it comes to health problems this year.  We’ve had two major cancer scares this year, and both of them involved major surgery for people we care about.  We discovered just how uncomfortable hospital waiting rooms are, but tumors were removed and found to be benign and people are recovering and oh my god, 2009 you suck.  I am thankful, thankful, thankful that there are surgeons and hospitals and medical discoveries that have saved the people we love.

For the fact that I married a man who makes me laugh pretty much every day, a man who understands my need to have alone time and doesn’t get offended when I kick him out of the house so I can have that alone time. In our current circle of friends, we’re the ones who have been together the longest, and I am absurdly proud of the fact that we like each other just as much as the newlyweds like each other.  It’s kind of fun being the example of a good relationship, and I am ever so thankful for the fact that we found each other.

For the fact that I have gotten to spend the last six months living in the same city as my best friend for the first time in over 10 years.  Getting to reconnect with her and send my dog to her house for playdates and just getting to pop over to each other’s house has been such a gift.  Not many people can say they’ve been friends with someone for 26 years, and even fewer are able to have friendships as easy and nurturing and lasting as ours. I’m so very thankful that we ended up in the same Girl Scout troop way back when we were sassy 8 year olds.

For the fact that Kevin and I are both gainfully employed, at jobs that allow us to have hobbies and personal lives and pursue degrees.  We have great benefits and good bosses and a commute that is annoying at times but tolerable for the most part. It is a blessing that we’ve both survived this economic downturn, with him working for a defense contractor and me working for a tiny biotech firm, and I am thankful every time I pay a bill that I have the ability to do so.

For the fact that life is very, very good for me right now.  I have an apartment I love coming home to, in a neighborhood that is a weird little slice of middle America in San Diego.  I have a circle of friends that entertains me and supports me and makes me happy to be a part of them.  I am healthy, I am loved, and most of all, I am thankful.

(Also, my husband just walked in the room and handed me a bag of Muscat gummies. SO THANKFUL!)

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