would be going to this music festival…

How great does this line up look?
Alas, a three day music festival in Chicago is not a luxury of time or money I can afford… but a girl can dream.
would be going to this music festival…

How great does this line up look?
Alas, a three day music festival in Chicago is not a luxury of time or money I can afford… but a girl can dream.
Posted in Music, Pop Culture
Posted in Five Question Friday
I fear I am turning into my mother… I know everyone says it and perhaps it is inevitable, but it is also a bit scary!
We never ran out of toilet paper growing up. Why? Because my mother had it stockpiled in a cupboard in the basement, my dad counted once and found they had 42 rolls of toilet paper for just the two of them. At the time I thought this was ridiculous because I was just post-college and a few times brought home a roll of toilet paper from work because I ran out at home and wasn’t planning to go to the store before going home (what in my life was so important that I couldn’t stop for toilet paper, I don’t know). But now, I understand. Thanks to Costco and coupons, we might have nearly 100 rolls of toilet paper at our house and I live with three boys. And let’s be honest, boys don’t use a whole lot of toilet paper, so really, that is almost 100 rolls of toilet paper for just myself and guests in our house (want to come over?). But unlike my mom, I will use that up and not continue to buy it when it is on sale and I have a coupon. We’ll ignore the plethora of facial tissues and paper towel I’ve also got tucked away – in my defense, I forgot I had a package of each in the basement the last time Costco had a special. Forgetful and a bargain shopper – yes, I am my mother.
Though I joke, I do think my mom is pretty great. She is selfless (something I could definitely be a little more of) and thoughtful. If you mention you’d like something in passing, don’t be surprised if at Christmas or a birthday, you’ll get that very thing. She’s always cutting articles out of the newspaper or magazines and mailing them to me, along with coupons for things she knows I buy – she pays attention to the details and is always thinking of those she loves. That’s definitely something I’d like to be better at, but something I also think I’ve gotten from her. I just link to things on FB and share things I find on blogs… same sharing, different delivery method. She also came to our house 2-3 days a week for the first year of Liam’s life to babysit him so we didn’t have to put him in full time daycare and she came for a shorter stint after Jack was born but she’s in her 70s and watching two kids is a bit much to do on a regular basis (don’t we all know). I miss having her around, it would be especially nice to have the company in the evenings with Simon working nights. But what a blessing to have at the time.
So I guess it’s all right if I’m turning into my mom – I’d do well to take all her good traits and add some of my own. But I do need to do something about my bulk buying habit.
This post is submitted to Things I Love Thursday at Diaper Diaries.
Posted in Life in general, who is ememby
I know we all have guilty pleasures but what’s the fun in having them if you can’t share your shame with others?
The WB and CW teenage dramas | I have watched them all from Dawson’s Creek and Felicity to Gossip Girl and The Vampire Diaries. When The WB first came on the air, I was within the age demographic for viewership but over time, I’ve gotten older and the former WB/now CW has definitely not (though it could be argued that the actors are closer to my age then the ages of the characters they play). What was normal viewing has morphed into a guilty pleasure and I’m pretty okay with that. Some people read romance novels (nothing wrong with that) and I watch teen dramas with hunky actors. My husband even got me a Vampire Diaries first season blue-ray set for Christmas – he speaks my love language. [Note: Can I just say how much I miss Felicity and Dawson’s Creek?]
Real World/Road Rules/Challenges on MTV | I’m pretty certain I’ve seen every episode of the first 6-10 seasons of these shows thanks to the all-day marathons MTV is so fond of and while I’ve missed a great deal of the newer versions (if you’ve seen one season, you’ve pretty much seen them all), I have seen most of the Challenges/Gauntlets/[insert name of something competitive and *hard*] as my husband is a great lover of any kind of competition (his new favorites are food related like Top Chef and Chopped). These shows really make you question the intelligence of the human race, I feel like I ought to listen to 3 hours of NPR for every 30 minutes I watch of stupid, past-their-prime former quarterbacks/cheerleaders/emo musicians/pseudo intellectuals compete for fame, fortune and hangovers. And yet I watch.
General Hospital | Unlike many of my friends, my mom did not watch soaps growing up (she was too busy cleaning) so I got a late introduction to the genre. My college roomie (love you, Kara) loved General Hospital and we would watch it pretty regularly along with the other girls on our floor (love you girls, too). Anytime I’m home alone in the afternoons, which pretty much NEVER happens, I find myself drawn to the TV at 3 to watch an episode. The good news is, I’m pretty caught up on the story line(s) within that viewing time; this is also the bad news. I’m amazed that while children age years within weeks on soap operas, nothing else actually happens or gets resolved with any speed. But like spending time with a good friend you haven’t seen in ages, watching General Hospital is quite comforting.
Chelsea Lately | I’ve never been one to watch late-night talk shows but then along came Chelsea Handler and her gang of comedians and I cannot quit that show. Simon usually gets home right before or as this show is coming on so it’s the one thing we watch together (the rest of our viewing is done separately and then on weekends we go through the DVRed shows and agree on which ones we can delete). She is hilarious and her interviews are so unlike the rest because she gives people crap for things and doesn’t hold back – she says the things I’m thinking. I don’t know why I’d qualify this as a guilty pleasure, perhaps because the show can be crass sometimes or fairly useless in the grand scheme of things, but really, there isn’t much on TV that isn’t one of those things, at least not much that I watch ;). I also love The Soup, which is also on E! and equally as useless and entertaining.
Honorable mentions: Top Gear – UK version, Law & Order, CSI: Miami and Morning Express with Robin Meade, Yo Gabba, Gabba! (though I am loath to admit it since I have formerly professed my skepticism about the show).
I’d love to hear about your television-related guilty pleasures…
Posted in Guilty Pleasures
Simon works second shift and I work in the mornings until he has to go to work. This means we spend a whole lot of time with our kids on our own (they do go to daycare one day a week so Simon can get things done around the house, a.k.a., sleep) and we need to entertain them. I’m all for letting kids entertain themselves but that doesn’t always work and it also doesn’t help with expending energy or a change of scenery.
If I could reasonably put my kids on a treadmill and let them run, I would so totally do that. They have endless amounts of energy. They are boys. They love to run and scream and run some more. Most nights right before bedtime they are running from the kitchen to the livingroom and back again. [Note to self: It would be handy if our future house had a circular path in it, something built around a central stairway, with a pathway void of furniture and pointy bits.]
But a treadmill seems a bit dangerous considering Jack, and often Liam, still runs into walls; large, stationary walls that have been there all their lives. I’d imagine having to explain treadmill burns would grow a bit tedious very quickly. But the boys still need to run, see: endless amounts of energy. So we leave the house.
Mostly we go to parks. As long as it’s reasonably warm and/or sunny, we try to get outside. Sometimes this means going while it still cold enough to require winter clothing, but as long as there’s no snow or mud, we’ll go. We take what we can get in Michigan.
Often we meet up with friends so the moms can chat while the kids run around. Our favorite park is Frog Hollow – it’s entirely fenced in, except the entrance and the play equipment is strategically placed away from that entrance. The ground is woodchips or padded outdoor material and there are bathrooms – both key for small children. As an added bonus, there’s a Sonic between the highway exit and the park so we plan our trips to coincide with “happy hour” and get away with slushies for the whole family for $3! Win-win!
Sometimes we just stay in our backyard, while it’s not the most fun, it’s preferred to staying inside. Though we avoid the hour between 2 and 3 when the potty-mouthed high schoolers are walking home after school (kids these days). Liam would be bound to pick up bad language, plus he yells “Hello” at anyone who walks by and then George has to lose his mind barking. It’s much better if we stay inside at that time.
This winter Simon spent a lot of time during his mornings with them at the new mall (Rivertown) and the old mall (Center Point) at the play places. [Side note: Rivertown is at least 10 years old and we still call it the “new” mall and now our kids call it that even though they have no idea there was a time before the malls.] I opt to take them to Meijer or Costco for our outings – plus plenty of playdates. Costco is great because we get dinner with a smoothie and samples and split a piece of pizza for us all and get our bulk purchasing done. Whoot!
Another favorite is Meijer Gardens to see the butterflies, run around the children’s garden, float boats around the Great Lakes and visit our favorite ginormous horse.
And then in the summer and fall we’ll get to go to Schwallier’s Country Basket which is our favorite apple orchard for kids. It’s all free except the cow train and paying for feed for the goats (and the mandatory fresh donuts and cider). But there are tons of animals to pet and look at, apple orchards for running through and a great play area for kids with a barn slide and corn box (think sandbox with dried corn).
Gotta do something to pass the time… it works for us!
Posted in Life in general