July 31, 2007
The Hurricane
I remember seeing a TV show once - I can't remember which one it was - but it was set on a Caribbean island with the threat of an oncoming hurricane. Said hurricane was blustery, tragic, and very dangerous. The islanders, in the move that was either a pure myth or an act of courage, tied themselves to trees in order to face the onslaught of the violent storm.
That's kinda' what our house was like as we got ready to launch Operation Duck and Cover.
Operation Duck and Cover is what I called the point in which the ex-wife (aka, the one I call the Swunt) was informed about the Lemonheads. I think every single one of us knew it was going to be unpopular. It was without a doubt that I knew she would be displeased in one way or another-I know she wanted a large family and Angus didn't (and still doesn't). It's not like I'm tremendously bothered she's upset-while I honestly don't want her to be upset because she's an important part of Melissa and Jeff's life (and she's a person to boot), I do have a feeling that seriously-life goes on, whether we want it to or not, and often the "not" means that adjustments have to be made. It's also a little hard to feel too sympathetic to a woman who takes great apparent joy out of soundly trashing my name and Angus' to anyone who will even remotely listen.
Angus discussed at length with the kids about how to handle things. After my father and stepfather, the kids were the first to learn about the pregnancy when we were all on holiday in Mexico. Their reactions were overall very positive, if in need of a little bit of reinforcement and support, which we give readily. We involve them as much as they want to be involved in the new babies' lives. Jeff in particular is very proactive about the babies and fully plans on adopting his upcoming new baby sister (he says because this way he can "stop a little girl from turning out like his sister". Whatever his reason, I find it very touching.)
Despite the pressure from Angus' Mum and his nosy parker brother, he felt the only input he needed with regards to telling his ex was from his kids, as they're the ones who have to live with the ex. The kids and Angus agreed that the best plan of action was to tell the ex while both kids were over here in Scotland. This so that she could have time to recover and repair her emotions, if need be, and so that neither of them were in the eye of the storm. Jeff in particular is an extremely, incredibly, ferociously sensitive young man. You never know what it is that's upset him but things get into him and they go very deep, to the point where he goes off the rails easily.
Angus drafted an email. He asked for my input. I added some, none of it negative. We then had a draft of an email that we felt was as hurricane proof as our tin shed could be-it outlined that lives move on, that he wants nothing but her happiness and would never want to hurt her, that he will be a father again but no matter what Melissa and Jeff are a huge, incredible priority for him and nothing will change that, and that he cares about his ex's feelings and respects her. We readied.
Then, when they were here, we sent it off.
He got a calm, composed email the next day. The ex wanted more detail. She wanted to know who else knew about the babies. She wanted to know when the babies were expected to be here. She wanted to know where the babies come from.
The "where they come from" fucked me off more than anything. I understood immediately that she thought we were adopting two children from abroad. Angus didn't elaborate on that point as he felt it was none of her goddamn business "where" the babies came from. He told her that the babies were coming the end of October. He told her that the children and his immediate family had been told. He again said he hoped that she wasn't hurt.
Then we heard nothing. We started loosening the knots from our ropes binding us to the palm trees. The hurricane, it seemed, was just a blustery day.
Just as the ropes came unbound, Melissa and Jeff went home, and it turned out the hurricane was over on their side of the water the entire time. Because neither Angus, nor his family, nor I paid for it.
Melissa did.
And days later, she's still under attack.
Apparently it started as soon as she got off the airplane. True, it was an evening flight and the kids were tired so the moods couldn't have been brilliant, but Melissa said things were wrong from minute 1. I was in the hospital then but Angus started getting text messages from her, and things escalated wildly out of control.
The long and short of it is this-Melissa faced the brutal storm of her mother's anger alone. Jeff escaped unscathed, but Melissa's insistence that she supports her father, me, and the Lemonheads has made her life there a living hell. The Swunt is adamant that Angus should have rung her at the earliest stage of my pregnancy and informed her of it in order to "limit the trauma on the children" (her words, not mine). And the truth is, the children aren't traumatized in the least-trust me, we check on this aspect constantly. They're more traumatized by the upcoming extension and chaos that will cause their visits here than they are a new brother and sister. His ex is also furious Angus didn't consult with her on the engagement before doing so.
"Shall I call her to see if I should have decaf or regular coffee tomorrow morning?" Angus asked grimly, on finding this out. "Because I clearly cannot make a single decision without calling her to confirm my choices."
The incredible amount of verbal violence over there has been incessant. Melissa's now off-line at a horse camp with her mother and brother and has no mobile coverage. She and Angus had been talking very regularly and texting often, him trying to calm her down and tell her we are here for her. We spoke briefly while I was in the hospital. She told me how hard it was there, how her mother's constant abuse about the situation was never-ending, that her mother is now re-hashing every sin that Angus may have committed ever and is wielding those like verbal numchucks.
I am still working on this stepmother thing. It's not always easy, but it's part of my job now, and a part I won't give up on. The big part of being a stepmom that I battle with is you have to know what to say and what not to say. Somehow, this is done intuitively. Somehow, this is done by rote, so that you do not cut great swaths across a family.
I do not say: Your mother is a fucking mess. You did nothing wrong. This isn't your fault that I'm pregnant. It's no one's fault but my own, as I am regularly reminded of. I broke this. I broke all of this, everywhere. It's just me. She's being a selfish bitch who's blinded by pain and fury and although she has every right to feel pain and fury she has no right to take it out on you. She doesn't deserve to have you two. She paints your father to be an adultering bastard who left her soul to bleed but the truth is she leeched out his happiness a long time ago and when they split she took every friend and family member he had as her own. Tell her to fuck herself. Repeatedly. And I'll send you that lip gloss I found for you.
But that would be continuing the cycle. That would be yet another on the world's longest list of reasons for therapy, that's the women of my past and the women of her past sitting around the kitchen table, wrecking a 15 year-old for her own chance of being free from the cycles that just never end. I want to cave to the siren call of my vicious rage but I know the result would be disastrous. I wouldn't say these things to Melissa, no matter how angry with her mother I am. I wouldn't do it to her just as I look back at who I was once and wish I could be there for her, too. It all has to end somewhere.
"Babe," I told her softly, fiddling with the tubes on my IV and trying to keep my voice low and even. "Your mother's hurting. I know it's not right that it's being taken out on you, it should be taken out on your daddy and me, and it's misplaced anger. I once had parents who were often on the warpath with each other, so do you want some advice? If you can, just listen to her being upset without taking it all in. DonÂ’t let it get to you. Don't feel you need to fight for your daddy or me, because we know how you feel. She needs to get some things out of her and maybe she just needs to know you're there to listen because she loves you and she's hurting. Just let her vent, and even if you don't agree with it, don't let it hurt you. Do you want to try that?"
"I can try that," she said. "Maybe that will help."
I have no idea if it's helped or not. We won't hear from them for another two days. The last words we heard were that things were still bad.
A hurricane I can face. The winds, they don't bother Angus or me. We've been through it all before and will undoubtedly face it again-the babies will be born. We'll get married at some point. Melissa and Jeff will get married to their own partners at some point. The Swunt and I will have to face each other (at which point I will be tranquilized. And I will have starved myself to a size 6, so help me God, before that woman and I are face to face over a white wedding cake.) We can take a lot. But what we can't take is knowing that the kids are facing grief that they don't deserve, I cannot accept a child getting pain for something they didn't do. I get it that the ex is hurt. I know. I do feel bad. But more than that, I feel a white hot rage that she would take it out on her kids like that, and all I want to do is damage control, which is hard to do when you're on bed rest and they're at horse camp facing a category 5.
-H.
PS-Yup, I did finish Harry Potter. Finished the day before the hospital admission, in fact. More to come on that, too.
PPS-As ever, if you have something negative to say about the ex, please try to keep it constructive. While I'd like nothing more than a bitch session at a bar, it won't help Angus, who's the one trying to manage the situation.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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1
This is why I've never had a moment's doubt that you will be a fabulous parent: Because you're already a fabulous step-parent.
that's the women of my past and the women of her past sitting around the kitchen table, wrecking a 15 year-old for her own chance of being free from the cycles that just never end.
I know 60, 70, 80-year-old women who still haven't figured that out up there, Helen. That's some wisdom you've got and I'm totally jealous of it.
As for the ex, I haven't got anything bad to say of her, although it would be great fun to commiserate with you about it over a round of drinks. But honestly, while she isn't handling it well, and though I obviously don't endorse her taking it out on her daughter, it may still be that she's handling it the best she is able. I feel sorry for her, and even sorrier for Melissa, that her best isn't very good, but that's humanity for you. Sometimes a person's best effort still falls way short of being even halfway decent.
I hope she finds some peace--again, more for your, Angus's, and Melissa's sake than anyone else's, but it's peace she definitely needs and peace I hope she finds.
Posted by: ilyka at July 31, 2007 08:50 AM (c5ADe)
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Hi Helen,
Great news you are home from hospital. Must rate as one of the scariest moments you could not wish for.
As for Angus's ex. Very wise words you have written, it must be very hard for you to keep your cool with her after the way she is treating Melissa. At least you have given both the kids all of your support and they know that their mother has to deal with this in a grown up way. It's her loss as all she will do is drive the kids further away from her and be less approachable then she already is.
Keep the blood pressure down and chill as much as you can
Robin
Posted by: robin h at July 31, 2007 09:42 AM (S4M8p)
3
nothing negative to say, only positive words to the effect that you effing rock! and like everyone else here, I have no doubt that you will rock just as much as a mother to your lemonheads as you do to your stepkids!
Posted by: Sarah at July 31, 2007 10:29 AM (69KUi)
4
Nothing negative to say, only that I've been in the middle of this sort of thing, too, and it's HARD--so good luck. I think you're handling it all with a lot of grace (and badassery.)
Posted by: Marian at July 31, 2007 10:59 AM (B+qrE)
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I think that your advice to Melisssa was dead on target, proving once again what a great mom you'll be.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 31, 2007 11:56 AM (X+de8)
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Regardless of how the ex is reacting, Melissa will remember as an adult, the support you and Angus have given her. As she will remember the treatment she received from the ex.
You are doing a great job of keeping your cool in front of the kids, and not bashing the ex in front of them. That alone, is a hard thing, but something they will appreciate more and more as they grow up.
Personally, I'd have a hard time not saying something to the ex myself. Something along the lines of, oh I don't know... get the f**k on with your life. But then, that's probably why I don't deal with ex's.
You're all doing the best you can, and I agree with Ilyka's assestment that a person's best effort isn't always close to halfway decent.
Good luck.
Oh- and don't reveal the HP details just yet, please :-) I'm hoping to read it this week!
Posted by: Angela at July 31, 2007 12:15 PM (DGWM7)
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Not that it is any of my business and not that i know anything but...
...I think you are doing an inccredible job as a step-parent and i am sure the Lemonheads will be the luckiest children around to have you and Angus.
In the meantime, i am sending you good wishes to help you all weather the storm.
abs x
Posted by: abs at July 31, 2007 12:37 PM (+gJH8)
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I would be the "Angus" character here. I divorced with two small children and then remarried and although my ex's new girlfriend-eventual-spouse hated our children and although my ex continually did things I thought were wrong where our children were concerned, I kept those things away from the kids until they were in high school and they figured it all out for themselves. To his credit, my now husband (the step-father) was golden. He hated the situation but bit his tongue and just loved the kids whole-heartedly as his own, only bitching to me in private when they had to go have visitation with their bio-dad.
As grownups, we've now gone through the dreaded "meeting over the wedding cake" three times now (our daughter got married twice). It is never easy, but for their sakes I have tried very hard over the years to be civil because, as you have very clearly pointed out, it isn't the kids who should have to pay.
I'm sorry they're going through this... I think from the things you've said you ARE a great mom - and step-mom and the kids are smart enough to figure that out. Hopefully their mom will get a grip and pull herself together before she implodes. I can feel for her, too, but wonder why it is getting to her so badly. Is she jealous? Hope she finds the peace she needs soon.I'm sure she loves the kids and would really be mortified if she realized what she was doing.
Okay, sorry for the long post. Just had to get that all in. Take care.
Posted by: sue at July 31, 2007 01:12 PM (WbfZD)
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I feel so badly for Melissa and Jeff. I know the ex is hurting, and no one can blame her for that. How many of us have thought we were moving on from a relationship only to learn that our ex was dating someone else or engaged or something else and then completely fallen apart? I know I have had that happen. Only I didn't have kids to consider when that happened to me. Hopefully she can find a way to soothe her pain and realize that she's got to stop this behavior for the kids.
I think what you said to Melissa is great advice and I hope that she can use it to make things better there.
Hugs to you!
Posted by: donna at July 31, 2007 02:25 PM (Kco5r)
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Helen,
I started to reply to this post here, but it simply became too much of a novel to fill up your comment space with, so I turned it into a post on my site.
Please visit if you're so inclined.
I just wanted to let you know that, as always, we support you through all these struggles and tribulations. I'm happy that you're on the mend. If there's anything we across the pond can do to help out, please let us know.
Posted by: Ice Queen at July 31, 2007 02:37 PM (AuzdP)
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My ex threw me out with nothing (although at that point, I was happy to go except for my kids), married the woman he had been seeing, and she immediately got pregnant. My problem with them having more kids was that they couldn't support them, and she never worked. Sure enough, they then raised my kids as well as hers on welfare. They made sure they had plenty of money to take me to court to get child support from me though, and I paid that till they were 18. Also kept them on my insurance till they were 25 although they would never use it, and my son has a heart murmur from untreated sterp throat. Now the child they had together is addicted to meth and is worthless.
To my credit, I never said anythig negative about them having more kids, even though my daughter was the one who took care of the baby.
I do not see anything like this in your future. I see happy babies, happy step kids, and the future is rosy. Trust me, when the kids are old enough, they will separate themselves from the negativity surrounding their mom, and go where it's a happy place. Your house. In fact, you might start rebuilding now, lol, you're gonna need the space. You are doing and saying all the right things. Don't worry, kids are more resilient than we think. Hang in, and glad you're feeling better.
PS, So did he have decaf or caf? LOL!
Posted by: Donna at July 31, 2007 02:44 PM (3ir3Z)
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Gosh, and I thought my wife's pregancies were stressful.
As my grandfather used to say: you poor dear.
Love you lots.
Posted by: RP at July 31, 2007 02:47 PM (op1yW)
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You said exactly the right thing to Melissa, in my unprofessional opinion. You supported and reassured your stepdaughter, and you pointed out a valid reason for the Swunt's incredibly bad behavior without putting the Swunt into a negative light. You gave Melissa the best advice a stepmother could give, all while passing kidney stones and having two Lemonheads doing a Bob Fosse kick-step. Ya done good.
Melissa sounds like a strong young woman. She'll endure her mother's abuse and probably forgive her for it, and she'll be strengthened by knowing that you are there for her and will give her your honest, best advice.
Posted by: lynD at July 31, 2007 03:04 PM (2F9Ak)
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I wish you and I could grab a round and sit this one out and bitch like there is no tomorrow, because boy could we.
However, as I woman told growing up that she ruined her mother's life, deserved nothing from her, and the like-I can sympathize with you (and loads with Melissa). I understand you wanting to just cut loose on the ex, telling Melissa all those things that are simmering inside you-but you are so right in not doing so. It is much harder to walk on the right side of things, but so worth it. Like I feel all the time, the cycle has to stop somewhere, so it may as well be with you. Your advice was excellent-and honestly the best I think you can do in this situation. At least Melissa has someone to turn to (you and Angus) who understands, and instead of feeding the hurricane you are giving her a rope of her own.
As for the ex-well, again, you have been hurt and felt betrayed in the past, so you can understand what the ex is feeling. Yet I suppose that does not help, only makes it worse, as you are trying to tow a line between sympathy and anger. But your heart and mind is in the right place and on the right people-Melissa, Jeff, Angus, and of course the Lemonheads. Just make sure your numero uno priority is yourself-cause if not, the rest of the cards will fall, and then there really will be a hurricane of the worst and strongest kind.
Take care babe-I am thinking of ya all the time.
Posted by: Teresa at July 31, 2007 03:15 PM (gL2x2)
15
Well, this made me cry. I can't help but remember how my ex went ballistic after I left and my 17 1/2 year old son had to deal with the fallout. And I hadn't even left for good yet; I just said I needed space and was going to my brother's house for a few weeks and when he said "no", I left anyway. So since I wasn't there, he took out all his anger with me on our son; ranting and raving and saying terrible things about me.
Ray felt trapped. Ray felt...I can only imagine what Ray felt from what he's told me. And I only found out about it months later; maybe a year? He said he didn't want to upset me so he kept it to himself.
GOD!
I just...I never thought his dad would do that. I would *never* have left Ray there alone with him if I'd known his dad would do that. I just...I didn't think he would. But he did. Stupidly naive of me. And when Ray finally did tell me about it, I could see the anger and hurt on his face. And I seriously wanted to die right then and there because he said "why did you leave me with *him*, Mom? Why? It was so awful. You left, but I couldn't".
I can still see his face to this day. And I felt like the worst mother in the entire world.
Okay, so it's years later now, he's 25, he's happy, he's getting married next month and we are very close. I explained why I left and how I had no idea all that was going on and if I had, I would have done something about it. That I was sorry, so sorry. And he was old enough to understand so...it's in the past now.
And you are right, Melissa and Jeff will get through this too; you all will. But man, this entry of yours today just went through my gut.
What is so HARD about understanding that you cannot take out personal frustrations on your child? NO matter WHAT?! Why is that impossible for some people to understand?
Posted by: The other Amber at July 31, 2007 03:33 PM (zQE5D)
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I think you handled everything beautifully. You gave Melissa what she needed to see her mother's atrocious behavior as something else - the result of hurt and (possibly) immaturity about how to deal with such strong feelings. The ex seems to be a woman used to getting her way, and when she doesn't she appears to behave like a spoiled child (really trying not to sound negative here, just practical). Now, instead of feeling like she is the cause or should take on the weight of her mother's behavior, Melissa can take it for what it is - her mother's feelings exploding out of her. You handled it brilliantly; I hope it truly helped her and that the storm is calmer now where she is.
I hope you and Angus are holding up okay too. It can't be easy dealing with everything you've got going on. Hang in there, I'll be thinking good thoughts for you every day.
Posted by: Lisa at July 31, 2007 03:35 PM (e8V7B)
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I would pay a huge amount of money and possibly my soul to have you as a step-mother. Just be the one person that Melissa can come to and say whatever and still know she is loved beyond a doubt. HUGS to Angus.
Posted by: dee_guerra at July 31, 2007 03:54 PM (nvdWh)
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This entry alone proves that you are going to be a wonderful mommy!!
Posted by: Ms. Pants at July 31, 2007 04:32 PM (+p4Zf)
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See, this is why you rock in the extreme. You said just the right thing to Melissa. I would have blasted out that other bit, after all the years of BS and snide insinuation and general crap from the Swunt, I would have been at my limit. But you were totally cool.
And, you know, people like the Swunt seem to crave the reaction. What you told Melissa just nips that in the bud. Maybe that will help the storm to blow over. I hope so, for ALL your sakes, the Swunt included.
Have I mentioned how smart those babies were to pick you and A for their parents?
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 31, 2007 04:44 PM (/vgMZ)
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Kudos to you guys for treating her so well.
Posted by: Hanna at July 31, 2007 05:02 PM (lUH62)
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Has she absolutely no idea how much damage she is doing to this child?
Posted by: kimmykins13 at July 31, 2007 05:36 PM (IGRQ9)
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LOVES from Canada...all of your other charming readers have said what needs to be said. You rock... and your are fierce....the lemonheads chose a good mama.
Posted by: wn at July 31, 2007 07:22 PM (MlWdo)
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What they all said! Hugs!
Posted by: That Girl at July 31, 2007 07:40 PM (s5Uyz)
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I think what you said to Melissa was perfect. But I fear that she will need years of therapy to undo all the damage her mother has caused, and not only about this episode. Hang in there, Helen, she needs you.
Posted by: kenju at July 31, 2007 07:50 PM (DBvE5)
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I haven't the time to read all the very wonderful responses before me, who no doubt are saying all the things wayyyy better than I am, but as a stepchild, you said the most perfect thing to Melissa at just the right time.
Melissa and Jeff are not stupid, darling, just as we all were not as children - and that apparently we as adults sometimes forget - and they will see who loves them and who cares for them and who is not good for them all by themselves.
You have had a very hard road with Stepmom Status, but I know that if anyone in the whole world could do it carefully, lovingly, graciously, it is you.
Hang in there and batten down the hatches.
Posted by: Margi at July 31, 2007 08:23 PM (66God)
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Many congratulations for taking the high road in this situation and not blowing your stack and making things worse. I've said it before and I'll say it again: the worst mistake a parent (or stepparent) can make is to put down another, estranged parent in front of the kids. Even if said other parent is a worthless asshole, keep the harsh feelings to yourself. Let the kids decide for themselves what to make of the "other" parent. The more you and Angus take the high road and not overreact to the ex's fun and games, the more people will see the situation for what it is and side with you. And hopefully the ex will realize just how self-destructive her behavior is and mellow out some time in the future.
And if things get much, much worse for the kids to the point that their emotional states are being seriously compromised, it may be time for you and Angus to consider seeking custody of them. Of course, I have no idea how such laws work over there in the UK and Sweden, particularly between the two countries, so I don't know if such a thing is feasible. But it may be something to consider.
Posted by: diamond dave at July 31, 2007 08:45 PM (GF+HW)
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I wish I had something very wise to say, but this is an eloquent post, I cannot get over how well you are handling an impossible situation.
Posted by: Judi at August 01, 2007 01:30 AM (1/SXR)
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'Starve yourself to a size 6'?
You're too damned tall to be a healthy size six. But anyway.
Wise words to Melissa. That's the right thing to say and I hope it helped.
Posted by: B. Durbin at August 01, 2007 02:14 AM (tie24)
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Hang in there. I know how hard this step-parent thing can be, and I am so fortunate to have a situation far smoother than yours. Just keep loving the Melissa and Jeff, Angus and the Lemonheads. I think you are doing a marvelous job.
Posted by: sophie at August 01, 2007 02:10 PM (AY+fk)
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Feeling your pain...we're in the midst of another round of correction of the visitation agreement and child support - and it is SO frustrating the things my husband's ex will say to the children. She has no reason to blame me for anything - they were split up but the divorce wasn't final when I met my husband - and yet she seems to have as much anger toward me as Angus' ex seems to have toward you.
I've learned, in the last 3 years, to keep my mouth shut and do my best to stay out of it - but it's so hard. His kids live with us full time and visit her only on Sundays, and the stories they come home with make me livid at times. I've bent over backwards trying to be nice to this woman, and try to have decent dealings with her - and time after time she bashes me - or the latest bit, breaks into my cable account (she's a customer service rep at my cable company). It's just always something.
Hang in there...I hope Jeff and Melissa come home in a couple of days saying everything has settled down.
Posted by: Tracy at August 01, 2007 02:44 PM (zv3bS)
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After my first divorce I found out the man left me for another woman to have children with, and although I was devastated I never once bad mouthed him to another living soul that we knew.
I got therapy and badmouthed him to the thearpist.
Now I'm not even in the same situation, but heres the thing--I never wanted anyone to look at me like I was some bitter bitch (even though I sound like one now on my blog). I didn't want family or firends to think I was losing it..you know?
What irks me about this situation you're in...this woman is capable of sorting out her feelings and getting it back together for her own dignity sake but instead she's making everyone around her miserable. What's worse, she's doing this without regard to the emotional scares she's leaving on her children. She wants to play the victim, which is fine, she's been thru alot I get it. She's looking for any type of emotional response from Angus and now since she's realized she can't provoke a reaction she's manipulating the kids. Until she pulls it together for herself you will be dealing with her bad behavior forever. I'm sorry.
Thank goodness these kids have you.
Posted by: Heidi at August 01, 2007 03:54 PM (3edKR)
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Shes hurt, mad, pissed etc... the sad thing as adults we want to control any situation we are in. Her way to control this event is to lash out at her own daughter because she feels that is an area she knows she in in control of.
I am sorry that the kids are the ones who have to pay for adults in ability to handle things. And then we all wonder how as adults we are so messed up...our forefathers before us have pre-destined us to be disfunctional adults! Its a vicious cycle that I am afraid will go on for generations to come.
The thing is that she really is just hurting herself and making her own daughter understand just how strange and sad her own mother is and you don't have to say anything negative about her to them, she is handling that all on her own.
Hopefully she will open her eyes and see what she is doing is bad for everyone and just move on with her life.
To you and Angus and the babies and the children, enjoy life to the fullest and don't let anyone rain on your parade!
Posted by: Kitty at August 01, 2007 05:15 PM (58g4R)
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My parents divorced after many not-so-happy years together when I was starting college, and my dad remarried fairly soon(against all odds-- I really thought he was the hermit-type who would never give it another go). Anyway, I think you're doing great; saying nothing negative really is the only good policy and it must be incredibly difficult to go on as well as you are. If I were you, I also would avoid asking the kids to ever keep information from their mother; it's very stressful for them and it only feeds the fire of rage and paranoia on the ex's part when she senses something's up and then finally finds out what it is. It must have been tough for M&J to keep quiet about the engagement and the babies for so long, knowing their mom would react like that. I know you had your very good reasons to handle it this way, though, and obviously I don't know the ex. I deeply hope the ex will find a way to deal with her emotions eventually.
So sorry to hear about the kidneys, too; it must be terrifying as well as painful. I am glad you're home safe.
Posted by: Andrea at August 02, 2007 02:37 PM (25ebt)
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July 30, 2007
Exhausted
I'd been struggling. Really struggling, like uphill salmon in the stream struggling. I'm prone to panic and depression lately as I try to figure out what's what. I'm over the moon that I'm going to be a mother but the overwhelmingness that is twins and the impact of twins has been taking its toll-financial worries, emotional worries, worries from a pure space perspective...it's all exhausting. Plus we had Operation Duck and Cover last week (more on that soon, but suffice to say that no matter how bad I thought it would be, the response far exceeded my negative expectations.) No matter where I turned it was darkness about the babies. Everywhere.
Even with me.
I had a minor meltdown Wednesday afternoon after the midwife appointment, when I couldn't answer basic questions. I have no idea how much to feed a baby. I don't know how to burp a baby. I don't know how to settle a baby and I don't know how to handle months of no sleep and if one more fucking person cracks a joke about how having twins means never sleeping agan I swear to God I'm going to hurt them in a very profound and permanent way. I was so overwhelmed I was drowning. The midwife pronounced the babies and I healthy and in good shape. Angus and I had a heated discussion, mostly because I'm in that "nesting" stage and not a damn thing has been done about their nursery, nor is there any sign of doing so, and it was such a priority in my head it was a neon flashing sign screaming "You don't know what you're doing, you dumb bitch!"
I was so tired of feeling so negative about absolutely everything.
A lot has been happening.
So on our return from Scotland on Wednesday (after the midwfie), we decided to take the kids to the movies with Angus' brother and his 5 year-old daughter. When we got to the theatre, I had to go to the bathroom, but unusually for me, when I got there nothing came out. At all. The entire movie passed (The Simpsons Movie, which I recommend) and my bladder felt so full I was going to burst. I rushed to the bathrooms after the film but once again...nothing.
I knew I had a problem then.
I told Angus, who conferred with me as we drove to his brother's house, where we were all due for a curry. We decided to bow out of the curry as Angus and the kids piled into the car and they dropped me off at our hospital, and Angus would feed the kids, settle them into bed, then come back for me.
Only he never got to come back for me. I was admitted on the spot, as by the time I'd gotten to the hospital I was passing blood, blood clots, and in so much pain I couldn't hold still. They checked my cervix and told me that the door, she was shut, and that the Lemonheads weren't currently on their way. But I was admitted because it was a real risk-the doctors were certain I had some kind of infection brewing, and in pregnancy infections can cause pre-term labor. They were so serious about it that I was promptly started on hardcore steroid injections designed to develop the Lemonheads' lungs as fast as possible, because there was a chance they would be coming.
On Wednesday I was 26 weeks pregnant exactly.
The babies are healthy and active, but they're not large. They're long and lean, but don't weight enough to have great odds. Their birth would have been a bad thing.
By 3 am I was settled in the maternity ward, in the antenatal wing. I was on heavy antibiotics. They gave me only paracetamol (Tylenol) to take. I spent most of that night on the toilet screaming in pain, passing blood clots with worrying frequency.
The next morning they took me for a renal scan. The doctors were convinced I had something wrong with my plumbing (wonder how they guessed.) My kidneys are squashed high up in my ribcage now, courtesy of my handbag uterus toting two little tykes. A scan revealed my right kidney was badly affected by hydronephrosis, a condition the doctors feel will clear up as soon as the babies are born and my organs re-settle where they belong. The hydronephrosis has resulted in a severe kidney infection.
Over the next few days, the kidney infection spread to cystitis, because misery loves company and because if it can go wrong, it will.
On Friday it all got much worse.
The ward was very, very busy. Women were going into labor everywhere. I stayed on the IV antibiotics and trudged painfully to the toilet often, hoping and praying I'd get to pee. The antibiotics weren't working fast-the strain of infection I have needed the one antibiotic I'm allergic to, so the alternate antibiotic was taking its sweet time. On the way back from the toilet I had a massive Braxton Hicks contraction.
But the contraction didn't go away.
I was soon doubled over in pain. I asked a nice midwife for some paracetamol and she said she'd bring me some. Before she could, two more women went into labor, and when the woman next to me started off for her C-section, a midwife passing by took one look at my face and then rushed to my side. By this time I was rolling around the bed in agony, sharp knife-like pains shooting up my back and my stomach one hard massive fist of uterus. I was surrounded by midwives as they swamped me with kit. My blood pressure was 145/100, a number that's extraordinarily high for someone like me who has very low blood pressure. The babies had stopped moving or I couldn't feel them through my steel trap uterus, I wasn't sure, but there was nothing happening in there.
I didn't know it at the time, but they rang down and cleared a bed in the delivery room for me. They were sure I was going into labor. I'm glad they didn't tell me that. I knew that the concern was I was going into labor, which again would have been a disaster, but I didn't know they were that sure I was headed there.
Then they got the monitor out to listen to the heartbeats.
They couldn't find them.
They kept trying. They barked orders for ultrasound kit. They passed looks with each other.
And I felt a kind of agony inside that I've never felt before, not ever. I'm a pessimist to the highest degree. I expect the worst to happen and I generally brace myself for it. But nothing in my whole tiny, insignificant little world, prepared me for the moment when the heartbeats of my children couldn't be heard. There is nothing in my little handbook of life that tells me how to handle that single moment when I learn that my children are gone. And there aren't enough synonyms to tell you how I felt in that moment, a moment which still seems suspended in time, and which will in the darkest of nights come back to me, unbidden, unwanted.
An ultrasound was found, and the babies were picked up. The one on the left - our daughter, the very active baby - had her heartbeat right away. She wasn't moving and was showing a high heartbeat level, but as I was in distress she was reacting to it. It took a minute to find our son's heartbeat on the scan, but soon enough they did.
And even though I was still thrashing on the bed in pain, I didn't care anymore. They were alive. That's all I cared about. It was as complicated and simple as that-they were alive. Nothing else mattered.
It transpired that the ureter between my right kidney and the bladder was now so compacted that stones were forming. The massive pain and symptoms I had weren't the babies coming early but of kidney stones coming. I felt incredibly stupid for the whole drama being caused over some kidney stones.
I've never had kidney stones before and I'd heard they were painful, but seriously? You know what I'd say about kidney stones? I've got one word. Motherfucker. Because that's the only thing that your brain can squeak out when those bad boys appear.
They broke out the party pack of grown-up painkillers, and for the next two days the babies and I slept through a haze of narcotics.
There are many things I will never forget-the kind smile and comforting hand of a midwife as she inserted a catheter on Saturday to help ease me. The feeling of alternating between fever and chill of infection. The resultant kicks the Lemonheads would reward me with when they heard other newborns on the ward. But one thing I'll remember is late Saturday, after Angus had left upon the closing of visiting hours. I hadn't felt the babies in a while, the drugs were making us all too drowsy, and I worried about them because if you don't feel them for a while you imagine the worst, so I got out my iPod.
There's a song I heard by chance when this IVF round started. I heard it and I listened to it constantly, as it's a sweet, calming, pure song that goes in one ear and right out the top of your toe, massaging every nerve in comfort on its way out. I listened to this song through the shots, the surgeries, the positives, the scans, the scares. This song has been with the Lemonheads since before their existence. I got the headphones and placed one beside one baby, one beside the other.
I hit play.
I heard the song myself as I watched the slide move, indicating the song was playing.
I waited.
And waited.
Then I felt it - a flutter from the left. A kick from the right. Mama, we're sleepy.
I smiled as the song ended, then plugged the iPod into my own ears and fell back asleep listening to the song.
My priorities have changed. The nursery no longer matters to me. The babies can have a crib in the study for all I care, maybe it's not painted, maybe nothing matches, maybe nothing looks perfect. It's not important. My "high-risk" pregnancy truly has gone high risk now, as although we're still working to clear my infections the hydronephrosis has me facing huge chances the infections will happen again. With infection comes the risk of pre-term labor. We really are at the point of counting down days, trying to get to a place of greater safety. From here on the babies will get scanned every two weeks as will my kidneys. I'm uncomfortable and in pain, actually. I'm exhausted and my body is in shit shape from fighting infection. I get tired walking from one room to another, and I breathe like a bulldog from the exertion of it all. I'll get better, I'm sure. As the infections finally go away I'll feel better and I will hopefully stop sounding like a pug dog.
And what's important to me is Angus' kids. And the Lemonheads. And above all, Angus himself (who busted me out of there yesterday and is taking care of me at home now). And everything else can wait and take a back seat while I bury my face in the smell of it all and inhale as deeply as I can. My feeling of being overwhelmed has blown over in a storm that consisted of electric beds, pink striped uniforms and needles. Instead I have a steady throb of greatest affection and of hope.
Many huge, huge thanks to Ilyka for being a fantastic guest poster and a great friend. I can never repay you babe. How about a round of applause for her?
Thanks for being great out there. Thanks for the well-wishes. Thanks for the support.
And thanks to the midwives out there, with their kind eyes and gentle hands. I appreciate you.
-H.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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Post contains 2026 words, total size 11 kb.
1
I am glad you are home and on the mend!
Posted by: justme at July 30, 2007 09:31 AM (DK4ZC)
2
So sorry the pregnancy is getting even more complicated. I am glad you are back home and the infection is gone. Take extra good care of yourself.
Posted by: marie-baguettte at July 30, 2007 10:08 AM (BNqmF)
3
So glad you're home..nothing makes you feel better than being home. Take really good care of yourself and the lemonheads and I'm sure everything will turn out well.
Posted by: Suzie at July 30, 2007 10:56 AM (YqqaU)
4
Ah-ha, I got it wrong. You had the pregnancy-induced hydronephrosis and not the secondary-to-infection hydronephrosis. How nice of me to mess that up for your readers!
Well, here is fervently hoping El Hydro doesn't come back in any form whatsoever.
I felt incredibly stupid for the whole drama being caused over some kidney stones.
Yeah, I was going to yell at you for this?* But you got it right: MOTHERFUCKER. "Kidney stones" are the favorite thing of hardcore junkies to fake after "migraine headache," and because why? Because kidney stones and migraine headaches are the two most painful things that (1) just about guarantee you narcotics and (2) are difficult to diagnose via imaging (a CT head will not show a migraine in action, and neither a KUB nor a CT-IVP are guaranteed to show stones, even if they are there).
Kidney stones are excruciatingly painful, is what I'm saying, and don't ever feel bad complaining about them. It's only natural to do so.
*Not really.
Posted by: ilyka at July 30, 2007 11:04 AM (c5ADe)
5
Welcome back, babe.
Kidney stones... *shudders.*
Posted by: redsaid at July 30, 2007 11:29 AM (ycOyc)
6
"I have no idea how much to feed a baby. I don't know how to burp a baby. I don't know how to settle a baby and I don't know how to handle months of no sleep"
No one does. It's part of the constant terror of being a parent. You'll do fine.
Kidney stones...yikes! I have no words. I think that "motherfucker! was probably appropriate.
But you didn't answer the question that I really wanted the answer to: Did you finish
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows"?
Posted by: ~Easy at July 30, 2007 11:58 AM (X+de8)
7
Oh my dear! I've been away all weekend and worrying for you and the lemon heads. I'm glad their hanging in, and hopefully things will improve.
As bad as the Duck and Cover may have been, at least it's done.
Take care and get some rest :-)
Posted by: Angela at July 30, 2007 11:58 AM (DGWM7)
8
Helen, I'm so glad you're home and on the mend. I wondered all weekend how you were.
Try not to beat yourself worrying about all the how's of raising babies. I think it's something all parents-to-be go through and it's damn scary. You'll figure out how to feed the babes and get them to sleep. You'll make the finances and logistics of space work, too.
Posted by: selzach at July 30, 2007 12:32 PM (e7L5K)
9
Please hold to that hope and great affection. I'm pulling for you, Helen. You are right that it doesn't matter if the nursery isn't done. The babies will not care one bit where they sleep.
Posted by: kenju at July 30, 2007 12:39 PM (DBvE5)
10
Thanks for hosting Ilyka...good job.
I'm sorry for all your suffering Helen and hope you recover quickly, and (I hope you don't mind) I'm praying for you. : )
For what it's worth, my sister had a dresser drawer for a bassinette and slept in my parents' room. I'm sure the Lemonheads will have much nicer accommodations even if you don't do anything else from now until birth. : )
HOW to burp isn't a big deal...you can learn that in 2 minutes. THAT you burp them IS a big deal. We bottle fed Angel1, and I'd frequently feed her the entire bottle forgetting that I was supposed to burp her midway through. I can't imagine why she threw up on me so much. : ) We live and learn, and our kids grow up healthy in spite of our learning curve.
Posted by: Solomon at July 30, 2007 12:46 PM (x+GoF)
11
I didn’t know how to feed the kid either – but the kid knows and they’ll tell you. Never burped a baby either, but you’ll figure it out unless you want to spend those precious possible sleep moments cleaning up all the spit-up. I didn’t know how to settle a baby either. Turns out, ours liked to be swaddled tightly and an upturned pinky finger (yours) in the mouth. Btw – we learned all of the above in the hospital before we even came home. Trust me, you’ll figure it out when you need to know it.
As for the no sleep – that’s why they tell you to write down all the feedings and diapers for the first two weeks. After two weeks, you’re still not sleeping, but you’ve adapted. She’s almost two now and I don’t guess I’ll ever sleep soundly again. Maybe once she’s married…
Posted by: Clancy at July 30, 2007 01:24 PM (X+xFB)
12
Take care of yourself and those lovely Lemonheads... the rest will take care of itself.
Ilyka- you did good.
Posted by: sue at July 30, 2007 01:47 PM (WbfZD)
13
What you do is tick stuff in their mouths. If they eat or drink it, they were hungry. After a few minutes, put them up on your shoulder, and pat them just above their butts. Alot of the time they will do it on their own as soon as you put them up there. You are bottle feeding so you will know how much they ate. Change when wet or messy. Bathe when stinky. On their back to sleep. Talk to them. Love them.
It's not rocket science, if it was, alot of us wouldn't be here.
Biggest tip? Don't worry, you'll do fine, if you tense up, they will know.....
You'll be great, but of all things for you to get now, damn.
Looking forward to duck and cover story too.
Posted by: Donna at July 30, 2007 02:19 PM (3ir3Z)
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Duh, STICK not tick, ack!
Posted by: Donna at July 30, 2007 02:20 PM (3ir3Z)
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I haven't posted on my blog in about a year so I didn't leave the link. I was wondering what the song was you were listening to.
Posted by: Melissa at July 30, 2007 03:22 PM (B3YpC)
16
Glad you are safe and home; what an ordeal for all of you!
I am also VERY glad that this experience, as awful as it was, has at least brought you greater understanding of what's really important. As you listed; Angus, the kids, the babies. How to burp and "settle", whatever...that comes with having them. Everyone must go through it; all the pre-knowledge in the world isn't going to be the same as just doing it.
And it's really not that hard, if we can just get our silly brains out of the way with its constant haranguing about the "right" way to do this or that.
Relieved you are okay, Helen.
Posted by: The other Amber at July 30, 2007 03:23 PM (zQE5D)
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First off, thanks so much to Ilyka, whose posts I enjoyed while you were away. ::: throws single roses and applauds ::: Well done.
Next, I'm so very glad you're home where you can really rest and recuperate. I can't imagine dealing with kidney stones and the worry of premature labor - the mental anguish alone must have been completely debilitating.
I'm glad Operation Duck and Cover is over, and sorry it wasn't less messy. She doesn't sound like a very stable or confident person on her own, so I guess messy might be par for the course. I'm proud of all of you for getting it out of the way. She may never love your babies, but she will have to learn to accept their existence, and Angus' kids seem to be able to be strong due to their being confident in your love for them. This is a good thing.
I will admit to wondering if you finished the HP book as well, but if you did it must have been before you returned from Scotland into complete chaos. I read it last week and thought about you and wondered if you were reading it too. I would imagine you didn't read much in the hospital. One question - what was the song in the iPod? I don't remember reading about there being a special song - maybe you want to keep that detail to yourself? I suppose you *are* allowed to do that now and then. LOL You're so generous with sharing other bits with everyone.
Long comment, sorry. But I missed you and was worried about you. I'm glad you're back, now rest and take care of yourself and those babies. Try not to worry about the mechanics of taking care of babies after their birth - it really does all fall into place while you're in a haze, and you come out of the fog just *knowing* what to do somehow. It will all be okay in the long run, you'll see. (I was going to mention sleeping in a dresser drawer but Solomon beat me to it.)
Posted by: Lisa at July 30, 2007 03:30 PM (e8V7B)
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Oh my poor Helen-what hell you have been through!
My sister has a small framed quote my mom gave her when she had her son. I think it sums it all up:
"Making the decision to have a child--it's momentous. It is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body."
She gave my this one when I had my daughter:
“No language can express the power and beauty and heroism of a mother's love.“
You are going to be a great mom. It all falls into place once they are in your arms. Trust. I had no fucking idea what I was doing, and I am a totally bitchin' mom.
And Ilyka? You rocked the house-thanks.
Posted by: Teresa at July 30, 2007 04:39 PM (ytLPx)
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Let me edit myself:
You already are a great mom.
Posted by: Teresa at July 30, 2007 04:41 PM (ytLPx)
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I'll pass on assvice, if that is the right term for this. Mothering is nothing more than a learned skill. Your love and devotion to them is visceral and fierce, but taking care of them is something you learn and get in the habit of. Take the class on the basics if there is one for stuff like burping techniques and bathing and diapering if you feel like you don't know how to do that stuff. And they'll show you in the hospital after you deliver,I am sure.
Bridget is nine months old and I still don't know how much to feed her, if that makes you feel any better! I just call the pediatrician a lot.
I'm hoping that you feel better soon and that the Lemonhead gets off your ureter soon so you can pee pain-free. Thinking of you!
Posted by: donna at July 30, 2007 05:22 PM (Kco5r)
21
Well, if anything prepared you for labor, I'm guessing the kidney stones did. I've never had one but have heard they're terribly painful. Good to hear you're all doing (moderately) well.
In all the noise and haste, did Angus end up telling the ex-wife about the Lemonheads?
Posted by: Tracy at July 30, 2007 05:38 PM (zVCYR)
22
What Teresa said. You are already a great Mom. So what if you aren't yet sure of the nuts and bolts? I suspect they'll teach you what you need to know. And if not, their Daddy will help.
Super Fabulous Wonderful Happy that you're home and getting well. All my love.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 30, 2007 05:46 PM (/vgMZ)
23
I'm so sorry about the kidney stones; I unfortunately remember the agony too well. That memory is likely to remain after I've forgotten how to tie my shoes.
I'm extra glad that the Lemonheads are okay. I especially liked this comment:
They were alive. That's all I cared about. It was as complicated and simple as that-they were alive. Nothing else mattered.
As I've mentioned before, you're already a mother. Putting the health and safety of your kids before everything else merely reaffirms this. And I think that your children will be profoundly lucky to have you as their mother.
Take care. And stay away from more kidney stones.
Posted by: physics geek at July 30, 2007 07:02 PM (MT22W)
24
A friend of mine had hydronephrosis late in her pregnancy as well. She was hospitalized for a few days. In the end she had a smooth delivery and no recurrence of the infection. I really wish you the best and that you stay very healthy as you await your little ones' arrival.
Posted by: Gabriella at July 30, 2007 07:23 PM (5/LCh)
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Many thanks to Ilyka, who did commendably well despite my throwing temper tantrums over your goddam fucking shitass blog antispam program that tried to nuke me. (damn, there I go again. Sorry.) I'm sorry to hear of the pain you're in, as well as the pain of suffering those that don't support you or your life (duck and cover, huh?) and I sincerely hope things will improve for you and your family, and that the twins will be born healthy. I look forward to the future when you can blog about the joys of motherhood and the love of your babies.
And if you haven't already, check out the post where Ilyka told us to say nice things about you. I had a few things, and many others did too. Something to cheer you up.
Posted by: diamond dave at July 30, 2007 08:44 PM (V9zMt)
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Diamond Dave - Ilyka sent me the link from Love Helen Friday.
You lot made me cry.
Good tears.
I don't deserve any of you or the nice things that were said, but I'm awfully damn glad you're here with me.
PS-sorry about the fucked up anti-spam. I am migrating the blog at some point in a drama-free future, at which point I encourage any words you can think of throwing at it.
Posted by: Helen at July 30, 2007 09:20 PM (C6Kbb)
27
Dude. You're going to be a fantastic mama. No one knows what the hell we're doing when they first hand us our kids, it's an on the fly lesson, but you figure it out as you go. You love them, that's the most important thing.
Well that and if you put boy lemonhead in a sweater vest, I'm disowning you.
Posted by: statia at July 30, 2007 10:10 PM (lHsKN)
28
So when I finally checked in to my flickr page, after a long computer-hiatus, and saw the picture from your hospital bed, I have to admit my heart leaped out of my chest a bit till I realized you were alright (or at least better). I'm so glad you're home and you and the little ones are safe.
Posted by: maolcolm at July 30, 2007 10:37 PM (45Ecv)
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As always, you remain in my prayers.
Posted by: oddybobo at July 30, 2007 10:49 PM (mZfwW)
30
Oh my, I am sorry you have had such a rough go of things.
The babies will not come with any instructions attached, so you'll have your keen mind and big heart to rely and all will be fine!
Take very good care!
Posted by: Steff at July 30, 2007 11:18 PM (SrnvE)
31
Welcome to the mama club. It's for real and you're gonna be a stellar life-time member...
Posted by: Marie at July 31, 2007 03:24 AM (OmG0X)
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They are going to be fine! I send you my baby-luck as the mom of a 27 weeker - who is now about to get his license and is 5'11"/132 lbs up from his 1 lb 12 oz 14" birth.
My mom, surprisingly, gave me the best advice about my tumultuous pregnancy and early deliveries. She said "When he turns 2 and is driving you nuts - or for that matter whenever his stubborness makes you scream - remember that this bullheadedness is what brought him through."
This advice has saved him many a time.
You are doing great.
Come real close to the screen and Ill tell you the Parent's Secret - we are all making it up as we go along. No two kids eat alike, digest alike, think alike, etc.
Dont let anyone make you feel like you dont know what you're doing.
Posted by: That Girl at July 31, 2007 04:59 AM (s5Uyz)
33
Holy Christ girl, you keep scaring the carp out of me! Just for a moment there, in the middle of that post...*shudder*...ok I'm coming back from the ledge now. I'm so happy to hear that you and your Lemonheads are home now.
Posted by: Donna at July 31, 2007 06:22 AM (lQSbL)
34
I am thrilled that you're on the mend and that the Lemonheads are okay. I had a kidney stone earlier this year and it was the most god-awful pain I've ever experienced. Thank goodness for pain medication.
Posted by: kitty at July 31, 2007 05:23 PM (Zl4mu)
35
I had terrible Braxton hicks both pregnancies.
My Midwife told me to drink and drink water and lay on my left side...
she was right it helped.
The emotional side of pregnancy can be rough on some. It is called Hormones. Keep it in check....
I too was a frightened new Mother...as never baby sitting , never being around babies. Guess what they will let you know when they are hungry, and when they are wet! They will have you trained in no time.
One can go on 3 hours of sleep at a shot for a long time....
Good luck
Posted by: armywifetoddlermom at August 03, 2007 06:44 PM (TabtH)
36
Oh my goodness... Please know that you and the lemonheads are in my thoughts...
Posted by: Richmond at August 04, 2007 11:15 PM (gZB7C)
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July 27, 2007
In Hospital
That, I'm afraid, is where Helen is right now (as some of you may already know). She's okay, if by "okay" you mean "laid up with
hydronephrosis secondary to a kidney infection." The doctors are weighing whether to do surgery to drain the fluid, but first, that infection has got to go.
The twins are fine as of this writing, but obviously this is an unwelcome development.
Helen, get well. We're all pulling for you and the Lemonheads.
UPDATE 29 July 2007: Just had an email from her with two whole words in it, but they were the right words: "I'm home." I'll let Helen take it from here, guys, and thanks so much for not throwing rotten tomatoes at me. You've all been heaps of fun.
Posted by: Ilyka at
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1
Oh, no!
Wishing her a very speedy recovery!
Posted by: redsaid at July 27, 2007 10:00 AM (ycOyc)
2
Ay ay ay! Hope you feel better soon, H.
Posted by: Marian at July 27, 2007 10:51 AM (B+qrE)
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Oh my, that's scary. I hope you're well soon, Helen!
(Ilyka, you're doing great with the updates, btw.
Posted by: Opal at July 27, 2007 11:04 AM (YSz9t)
4
hope you are feeling better soon, helen.
Posted by: jade at July 27, 2007 11:09 AM (f9G4W)
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My thoughts are with all of them.
Get better soon H!
Posted by: justme at July 27, 2007 11:10 AM (DK4ZC)
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Sending you all my best wishes. Hope you are well soon.
Posted by: Gwyneth at July 27, 2007 11:51 AM (ujvNt)
Posted by: ~Easy at July 27, 2007 11:53 AM (X+de8)
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sending happy thoughts your way
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 27, 2007 12:32 PM (+MvHD)
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I hope you'll soon be back to good health, Helen.
Posted by: kenju at July 27, 2007 12:32 PM (DBvE5)
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Yikes. Best wishes, Helen. Get well quickly and hang on to the Lemonheads tight tight tight.
Posted by: Sarah at July 27, 2007 12:36 PM (P+c18)
11
Oh no! Get better soon Helen!
Posted by: geeky at July 27, 2007 01:10 PM (ziVl9)
12
Get well soon Helen! {{Hugs}}
Posted by: pam at July 27, 2007 01:12 PM (l6NIn)
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Get well soon, Helen. As for the Lemonheads, hold tight, little ones.
*hugs*
Posted by: Amanda at July 27, 2007 01:20 PM (ay+rD)
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Hang in there Helen, and you too Lemonheads. Sending you nothing put good thoughts across the pond...
Thanks for the update Ilyka-it is much appreciated.
Posted by: Teresa at July 27, 2007 01:49 PM (+wM+g)
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Get Well Soon Helen - We miss you!
Posted by: kimmykins13 at July 27, 2007 01:54 PM (HUKlZ)
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Get well soon, Helen. I'm sending good thoughts for you, Angus and the Lemonheads.
Posted by: sselzach at July 27, 2007 02:38 PM (A2sAN)
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Oh my! I am sending all the happy, healthy, healing thoughts I can your way.
Thanks for updating us, Ilyka - very thoughtful.
Posted by: Lisa at July 27, 2007 03:10 PM (e8V7B)
18
Well CRAP! That's just not fair!
I am seriously pissed off that this is happening to you!
I hope you get past this pronto, Helen. You deserve all good things. Get better and come home soon. You are greatly missed.
Posted by: The other Amber at July 27, 2007 03:58 PM (zQE5D)
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Oh, jeez. Lots of love, my friend. I hope you get better soon and that your babies are fine.
Posted by: RP at July 27, 2007 06:28 PM (op1yW)
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*sending my love and prayers*
Posted by: Margi at July 27, 2007 06:45 PM (3ExiX)
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Yikes - that's certainly not a good way to wind up a vacation. Just wanted to add hopes that you'll be feeling better and the kiddos are fine.
Posted by: Tracy at July 27, 2007 07:32 PM (zv3bS)
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sending love to you and the babies, helen!! oxoxox
Posted by: leah at July 27, 2007 09:06 PM (MLOqc)
Posted by: Mike at July 27, 2007 10:41 PM (dwnKW)
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Hope you are home soon and all is well.
Posted by: nickel1942 at July 27, 2007 11:12 PM (57XtT)
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::checking back, hoping for news and still thinking good healing thoughts ::
Thinking of you all!
Posted by: Lisa at July 28, 2007 03:59 AM (e8V7B)
Posted by: Annika at July 28, 2007 03:02 PM (xBV5k)
Posted by: Jennifer at July 28, 2007 09:49 PM (RlFqM)
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Helen. Hope you are ok and the Lemonheads. Hospitals are not fun.
Positives thoughts to you and the LH's and Angus and Gorby...
Posted by: sara jane at July 29, 2007 02:20 PM (UKxjN)
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Thinking of and praying for you. Get well!
Posted by: Julie at July 29, 2007 04:42 PM (xYQcF)
Posted by: That Girl at July 29, 2007 10:33 PM (QzfsY)
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It was fun while it lasted Ilyka...
And Helen, SO GLAD you are home!!
Posted by: Teresa at July 30, 2007 01:32 AM (75ING)
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Hooray! Thanks so much for the update, Ilyka. Happy to hear you're home now, Helen!
Posted by: Lisa at July 30, 2007 05:13 AM (e8V7B)
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YAAAAAY! Ilyka, you just made my day!
So glad you're home and presumably doing much better. Kisses and (very gentle) hugs for you and A and the Lemonheads.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 30, 2007 08:34 AM (qPLLC)
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July 26, 2007
Two Stories
I don't feel as though I've contributed much during my time here (it would have been nice, for example, had I remembered when I agreed to guest-blog for Helen that I was going to be out of town without internet access for a couple of days during the same time she was absent), but luckily this is the internet and so I found a couple of pieces by others that you might like to read.
They are stories, haunting and somewhat melancholy stories, but beautifully crafted ones, and I don't think either will leave you too bummed out.
The Pond, by Chris Clarke at Creek Running North:
Gregory lived in the tall grass now, but Leah could not find him. She peered between the clumps of big bluestem, called him out into the rocky clearing at the pondÂ’s edge, but he did not answer her. Her right arm buzzed bright with pain, pink and fiery, concentric arcs where red metal had branded her the day before.
She looked for him among the cattails, their fat seed heads burst open and bleeding down. He wasnÂ’t there. There were only the cattail shoots and sedges between them, their stems bespattered with drying duckweed blown up onto them in last nightÂ’s storm.
Emerging Bones, by Theriomorph:
I was dizzy all the time and kept having this problem with all the oxygen in the world disappearing very suddenly and the concomitant sensation of a vacuum around me that imploded my chest and then I couldnÂ’t breathe and everything would go dim and fuzzy except the jagged violence of my own heartbeat which would grow deafening, aggressive, a crashing of horror and rage that dragged my vision down some long tunnel into tiny pinpricks of red, throbbing in irregular beat.
They call these panic attacks, of the Post Traumatic Stress variety.
This happened when I woke up from the dreams of pushing his dirt-encrusted tongue back into his mouth, or giant animals made out of metal crushing him at forestÂ’s edge, or searching for his killer on high hills and because I wasnÂ’t succeeding Shalom was fading from my sight and from the world.
Pop over, see if you like them. Both authors write rings around me, and yet it's impossible for me to hate them, because I am not really a writer; I am a blogger, and a reader, and oh, how I love to read a good story or two.
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Apocalypse Aftermath
I'm not trying to depress anyone, but I think I might actually buy this book,
The World without Us, now that I've read
the hype in Scientific American and viewed
the timeline of what happens to New York City once you vaporize all the people out of it.
I am a fun person to be around! You should invite me to all your parties!
I can't help it. I find this stuff fascinating. Oh, but quick note before anyone gets on me about it: Yes, I'm aware that Scientific American is considered a lightweight science publication; start my boyfriend's physicist brother on the subject sometime if you have all day and nothing better to do. Then, for bonus points, mock him behind his back because oh sure, that lame Scientific American, so lightweight--yet he's written articles for FOX News, of all places, and since when is THAT outfit a respected scientific authority?
Anyway, this will not be a rigorous scientific analysis. Why do I even have to say that? Because it's the internet.
No, I'm really just fascinated by the whole "and then there were none" idea. No more us. I don't know why I'm fascinated by it; shouldn't it wig me out or make me a little depressed? After all, I'm not a nihilist, nor am I a believer in the Rapture. Humanity's destruction is not something I look forward to. I didn't mark it on my calendar with half a page of Strawberry Shortcake stickers and little hearts drawn in red felt-tip, you know?
I don't want humanity to go boom, but on some level I guess I accept that it's going to. We're going to. Nothing lasts forever, although speculation is that fragments of St. Paul's Cathedral could endure for 15,000 years after we check out. The Brooklyn Bridge only gets 300 years of post-humanity survival; the subway system, a whopping two days. Did you know they're continually pumping water out of the subways? It's true--they pump out about 13 million gallons a day. Cut the power to the pumps and WHOOSH, it floods quick.
I always thought of New York City's subway system as an astounding achievement (and it is, I'm not taking anything away from it), but it's also a very fragile thing, like so many other human achievements. And just as we often do with most human achievements, we focus more on how impressive the whole thing is than on how fragile, how temporary, how dependent on our upkeep it really is.
And never even mind New York. What's London going to look like a century after everyone's gone? Rio de Janeiro? Hong Kong? Ooh, I'll bet Hong Kong becomes a real mess. It all becomes a real mess for a long time after, while the earth struggles to clean up after us and rebuild herself. And then, just as the hideous giant cockroaches are forming a symbiotic relationship with irradiated barnacles, the sun expands and blows everything up for permanent.
This stuff used to depress me when I was little. I would get sad. "But I'll miss us," one-half my brain would think. "But you won't be here to miss anything," the other, more reasonable half would counter. "But someone should miss us." "Who? And why?"
That's a good question. Why should anything else on earth miss us? (Besides pets. Let's pretend, for the purposes of not having me start bawling right here at the keyboard, that pets get Rapturized or whatever at exactly the same time we do.)
Yet I think it would be nice if we were missed, or at least noticed, after our departure. Maybe it's irrational of me, but I find it cheering to read that bronze sculptures could last millions of years, maybe ten million. I want to say, "Artists! Commence working in bronze immediately! The giant cockroaches must have reminders of us. Sculpt us wielding mighty cans of Raid, sculpt us with one foot raised and poised to stomp, sculpt us with broom and dustpan, triumphantly dumping into the trash bin dozens of maimed and murdered cockroaches."
I don't mind so much that we go. It's the part where the giant cockroaches take over that bothers me. I just don't like those ugly little bastards to win anything, not even a used-up planet full of plutonium 239.
Posted by: Ilyka at
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1
There was an episode of CSI or one of those kind of shows last night that I stumbled on to at the very end. Apparently it was all about roaches and their ability to endure. What I saw was creepy.
I'm with you on the giant statues of us with Raid cans and a raised foot. : ) Unfortunately, I think they'll have the last laugh.
Posted by: Solomon at July 26, 2007 12:33 PM (al5Ou)
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One of my all time favorite (if campy) movies was "Logans' Run" and it facinated me about how things could be in the future when we all are forced underground by our destructive tendencies. I think we all have a bit of facination about the "what if"...
Posted by: sue at July 26, 2007 03:10 PM (WbfZD)
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Nothing is permanant, even the Pyrimad. Speaking of the Pyrimad, every civilization is worry about what happen after they die. We should be building more monuments to ourself. Dig a big circular lake and fill it with Mercury, the effect is spectacular. Oop, been done somewhere in China a few milleniums ago.
I agree that our achievements are fragile, and they are more impressive because of it. Our civilization is probably the first to think more about the here and now then the after life. We don't built gigantic monuments dispicting our glories to ensure that future generation don't forget, and that may be our downfall.
The world is getting too dangerous to be left divided into warring states. It is time for one strong military leader to rise up and unified the world and ensure humanity continue dominate over the giant cockroaches.
Posted by: Anh at July 26, 2007 04:08 PM (OPL/7)
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I have a subscription to SA and I have not read that yet. I'll remedy that tomorrow.
Posted by: kenju at July 27, 2007 03:02 AM (DBvE5)
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I read that article, its kind of facinating to think the earth could heal itself so quickly. Im with you, I dont want anything crazy bad happening to us, but like you said, nothing lasts forever. Im hoping it wont be the cockroaches tho...
Posted by: Bevin at July 28, 2007 07:41 PM (9GqdI)
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July 24, 2007
Where Are You From?
This was an easy question for me to answer as a child the first time we moved. It stayed manageable the second time. By the third time, however, this started happening:
"Where are you from?"
"New Jersey."
"You don't sound like you're from New Jersey."
"Well, that's where I'm from originally. I moved here from San Diego."
It went no better if instead of "New Jersey" I just said "San Diego," if you were about to suggest that.
"Oh, my aunt lives there! Do you know [something I would only know if I'd lived there all my life]?"
"Uh, no. We only lived there the last year and a half or so."
"Oh. Well, where'd you live before that?"
You can see how things got tedious in a hurry, right?
more...
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1
Other than a 9 year stint in Dallas & Denton, Texas I have lived my whole life in St. Louis. I love it here, and I wouldn't want to live anywhere else again.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 25, 2007 12:04 PM (X+de8)
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Where I've lived:
New Jersey (birth - 7)
Colorado (7-11)
California (11-12)
New York (12-1
Virginia (1 semester of college)
New Jersey (again, 1
Florida (18-30 and counting)
Where I'm from: everywhere and nowhere
Where my accent suggests I'm from: Canada, eh? With a hint of Joisey mixed in for good measure, because I choose to say certain catch phrases and pronounce certain words in the Jersey way, since that's where I'm technically from.
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 25, 2007 12:26 PM (+MvHD)
3
I've lived several places also,
Ohio (birth -2)
Kentucky (2-6)
Georgia (6-14)
North Carolina (14-now...27)
But when people ask me where I'm from I say Ohio. I only lived there for two years and frankly I don't plan on ever going back, but it's where a lot of my family is and frankly it's fun to annoy the locals who think Yankees* are the devil.
*I know Ohio isn't really what you would normally think of as a Yankee state, but basically translate Yankee into "anyone north of North Carolina and OH MY GOD CLOSE THE BORDERS THEY'RE INVADING"...
I do love NC. Asside from (and including) the occasional crazies.
Posted by: Erin at July 25, 2007 12:44 PM (HQy7k)
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I'm a Washington State girl myself...but I'm so glad I live in Florida....otherwise I never would have met my wonderful Puerto Rican husband. So, Florida we stay. I'm not to keen on the island, and he can't move away from the water. Our children will always know they are Floridians mixed with a pinch of winter skiing with their Northern cousins and a little bit of fall surfing with their primos de Caribe.
Posted by: nukeum00 at July 25, 2007 01:34 PM (JKeGB)
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I was born in Virginia Beach, VA but raised on the Outer Banks of North Carolina - So I was born and raised at the Beach. I went to college in Pennsylvania right outside of Pittsburgh. Moved to DC right out of college, got engaged to a guy in DC who was from Ohio - we later moved just outside of Canton. When that relationship ended I moved back to NC for several years. I was then offered a position at the Boulders Resort and Golden Door Spa in Arizona - so I moved to Scottsdale. I had never been out west before and it was such an experience! The heat in Phoenix was unbelievable and I passed out in July that year in a Fry's grocery store. I actually moved there in May and had a series of nosebleeds the first few weeks from all of that dry desert air. Yes, it took my body a while to adjust. I lived there for a year and 1/2 and loved every minute of it, made a lot of friends and got to go all over the west coast and Mexico....then it was time to come home. I missed my family. I currently live in Virginia Beach, VA.
Posted by: kimmykins13 at July 25, 2007 01:48 PM (HUKlZ)
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I grew up in a region of South Africa called the bushveld. On a farm. Outside a town so tiny it didn't even have a high school OR a video store!
Loathed it. In my heart I always knew that I was a city girl.
When I was 13, our family moved to the South Africa's administrative capital city Pretoria. However, my mom didn't want me to be a latchkey kid, so I went back to the bushveld and to the same boarding school my sisters attended 60 kilometres from the tiny town we grew up. I only spent a year and a semester there before I convinced my mom that I was far better suited to attend the performing arts high school conveniently located in Pretoria.
So that's where I went. Attended college there as well, then moved to glittering city of gold (Johannesburg) 60 kilometres away from Pretoria for my first job.
Moved back to Pretoria for about 10 months before going to Washington DC all by myself at the age of 22.
Spent four years in DC, then - major mistake - followed a boyfriend to Baltimore. Stayed five years.
Now my body is reluctantly back in South Africa (in Stellenbosch, in the heart of the South African wine country, just an hour's drive from Cape Town, which is our equivalent of San Fransisco).
However, my heart is still very much in DC. That place will forever remain my siren city. My best memories are buried in the nooks and crannies of that stately city.
Posted by: redsaid at July 25, 2007 01:51 PM (ycOyc)
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By the way, just to clarify something in my super lengthy previous comment: living in Baltimore wasn't as big a mistake as the person I lived there with! Baltimore is actually pretty cool, but my heart was always in DC. Still is. The love of my life is there. (Don't think he knows that he is the love of my life.) And it was obviously not the guy I moved to Baltimore for!
Hindsight's SUCH a bitch.
Posted by: redsaid at July 25, 2007 02:07 PM (ycOyc)
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Solomon's from all around too, sort of...
SC (birth-3)
ND (3-7)
LA (7-
SC (8-26)
NC (26-41 and counting)
I say I'm from SC, because that's where the bulk of my development and memories occurred. But I don't have a Southern accent, so I usually have to explain we moved around when my speech was being developed, and I just never latched on to the good ol' Southern accent...intentionally.
I think a Southern accent on a girl sounds pretty but on a guy sounds goofy. I don't think guys w/ Southern accents are odd or unintelligent, I just don't like it. Kind of like vegetables: I like string beans but not lima beans. Why not? I just don't.
Anyway, that's where I'm from.
Posted by: Solomon at July 25, 2007 02:09 PM (x+GoF)
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So many places...
Born in Kansas City, MO then moved to....
Portland, OR
St. Louis, MO
Thousand Oaks, CA
Arlington, VA
Charleston, SC
Detroit, MI
Houston, TX
Dallas, TX
Boston, MA
Dallas, TX
San Jose, CA
Dallas, TX
New York, NY
Enfield, CT
Dallas, TX
Dallas is definitely what feels like home to me. There are things about it I don't like and things about other places I do like, but for whatever reason this is just what fits.
Posted by: donna at July 25, 2007 02:26 PM (Kco5r)
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i'm in socal right now, but i will always, always be a missouri girl. always.
Posted by: becky at July 25, 2007 02:30 PM (jv5jW)
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I've just started writing NL/US. I lived in NH, USA until I was 13. Then my mom met a Dutch guy on the internet and we moved to the Netherlands. I've been here ever since - that'll be 10 years in a few weeks. On the one hand, am I really American, since I grew up with such European views? But then, with that navy blue passport, I'll never actually be European. So I write NL/US and just hope people don't ask for the life story...
I miss the mountains. Somebody once told me that they're in my blood - and I guess they are. Sometimes I'd do just about anything to get a few meters above sea level.
Posted by: Hannah at July 25, 2007 02:30 PM (5w+E2)
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I hate the "Where are you from?" question too. Up until a few years ago, I lived in Richmond VA with my parents. But before that we moved from the suburbs of Philadelphia PA when I was 13. If I answer Richmond, they say "Oh, your accent sounds like you're from up north" so I have to explain the Philly origin. If I say Philly, they ask me about things a 13 year old wouldn't know about, like popular Philly bars. And if I try to explain the whole Philly to Richmond thing? Their eyes glaze over before I've finished my sentence. *sigh*
Posted by: geeky at July 25, 2007 02:39 PM (ziVl9)
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I am pathetic compared to most of you. I was born in Jenison, Michigan. I grew up there. I lived in a little house across the street from my elementary school. I went to college a few towns away and lived at home while I did most of it. Then I shared an apartment in Jenison with my boyfriend. Then we got married and bought said little house from my mom and dad. And that is where I still live-now with my two kids that attend the elementary school across the street.
So yeah, through and through, I am from Jenison, Michigan.
Posted by: Teresa at July 25, 2007 02:48 PM (1dFtZ)
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I've lived in this city since I was five, so I guess I'm from here. I was born in a little mining town a couple of thousand kilometres from here but I haven't been these since I was two.
I don't entirely want to be here anymore though. It's my husband and his work (and the great economy) that keep us here, but given a choice, I'd take off to Germany for at least a few years. And living on the coast has always appealed to me -- I just don't think I'll ever be able to talk my husband into it.
Posted by: Tinker at July 25, 2007 03:58 PM (HGoEM)
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I have lived in Minnesota my entire life. I have lived in Sweden over different summers and Barcelona for a couple months one spring, and San Francisco for a summer. I am a Minnesotan through and through and I love this great state.
Posted by: amelia at July 25, 2007 04:02 PM (L2+hh)
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I never know what to answer the old "where are you from?" question anymore. I guess I'm "from" Connecticut, but it hardly feels like home anymore. I still miss CT and the Blue Ridge of NC - both have similar climates and vegetation. And I really miss the seasons.
I was born and raised in CT.
Lived in MA for a year of college, then moved with my mom to western NC and finished school.
Lived in MA for another 6 months, then lived in GA for a couple years.
I finally moved to FL for a job and have been here nearly 10 years.
Posted by: selzach at July 25, 2007 04:15 PM (2yHUA)
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I've lived in California, Washington state, Oregon, Texas, Mississippi, and Oklahoma, but I'm an Oregonian through and through. I love being close to mountains, ocean, desert country if I wish, and even rain forest to a degree. I could hardly stay sane living in the middle of the country without a mountain or ocean within reach.
Posted by: Lisa at July 25, 2007 04:26 PM (e8V7B)
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I was born near Bogota Colombia, but moved to the states, more specifically NH when I was 5. Have been there since. I'm not sure it's where I want to stay permenantly, but my job is pretty rooted in NH/MA/NY so for now this is where I stay. I contemplate living in Arizona, Cali and Montana... we'll see where I end up. But NH is where I say I'm from.
Posted by: Angela at July 25, 2007 05:03 PM (DGWM7)
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I have lived in Chicago, or a Chicago suburb all of my life.
Posted by: Theresa at July 25, 2007 05:51 PM (x1Vbp)
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You all just leave the best comments!
First of all, people who've stayed more or less in one spot all your lives?--I am jealous of you. That's what I wanted as a kid, to just stay in one place and really be FROM somewhere. That is so cool.
Erin:
But when people ask me where I'm from I say Ohio. I only lived there for two years and frankly I don't plan on ever going back, but it's where a lot of my family is and frankly it's fun to annoy the locals who think Yankees* are the devil.
I confess I went back to answering "New Jersey" sometimes when I lived in Dallas for just that reason. I still have enough family back east in New York that I can sponge up some semblance of an East Coast accent when I want to, so that was like bonus annoying points.
Kimmykins:
I was then offered a position at the Boulders Resort and Golden Door Spa in Arizona - so I moved to Scottsdale.
Oh, oh, OH, envy! I am a consumerist whore, I admit it, and I love the resorts there.
That dry air is definitely an adjustment. My boyfriend isn't used to it at all and always has to take a sinus tablet when we're there.
Redsaid:
However, my heart is still very much in DC. That place will forever remain my siren city. My best memories are buried in the nooks and crannies of that stately city.
This was really beautiful and bittersweet. And don't worry: I know what you mean about regretting who you followed but not necessarily where you wound up when you followed him. I've done that, too.
Donna, I knew you'd end up saying Dallas just because it kept showing up on the list. It doesn't say anything to move to a particular place but when you keep returning to it, that's everything.
Helen touched on some of the things I miss about Dallas (I Fratelli's, for one!) but anymore, living where I do, the speeding. I miss the speeding. New Mexicans do five miles UNDER the speed limit. I am used to people doing 20 mph over it--when they're feeling cautious.
Hannah:
I miss the mountains. Somebody once told me that they're in my blood - and I guess they are. Sometimes I'd do just about anything to get a few meters above sea level.
I love mountains and sometimes feel like I have to have them around myself. They're comforting to me, like having elemental earth guardians watching over everything.
Lisa:
love being close to mountains, ocean, desert country if I wish, and even rain forest to a degree. I could hardly stay sane living in the middle of the country without a mountain or ocean within reach.
Leaving proximity to the ocean behind was something I missed sorely moving from California. Everyone I've talked to from Oregon loves it to death and wouldn't really want to live anywhere else. I'll have to check it out some year. I've been to Seattle but that's as much of the Pacific Northwest as I've seen.
Angela:
I was born near Bogota Colombia, but moved to the states, more specifically NH when I was 5.
You and redsaid are tied for most radical moves, I think. All the way up to New Hampshire from Colombia! And both are also places I've always been told are beautiful.
You guys have been awesome. I am loving these stories so much!
Posted by: ilyka at July 25, 2007 07:46 PM (zPRu7)
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I'd love to share my various venues here, but the censoring program on this blogger has gone totally medieval on my ass. I've been commenting here for almost two years and NEVER had a problem before. Now I can hardly type shit.
Helen, when you get back, HEEELLLLPPPP!
Posted by: diamond dave at July 25, 2007 08:56 PM (13w54)
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I was born in Cardiff, Wales, raised in Johannesburg, South Africa, spent the last 7 years of my life in London, England and now I live in Sydney, Australia. I always say I am from South Africa but then have the inevitable "oh but you don't sound like a South African!" to which I have to explain that I spent the first 6 years of my life in the UK then went to SA and have been living in London for 7 years so my accent is very confusing. I guess the longer I live in Aus for the easier it will be to just skip over the London bit and say I am originally from South Africa!
Posted by: Sarah at July 25, 2007 10:56 PM (AHcm3)
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I'm an Illinois kid with a split personality due to living all over the St. Louis Metro until I was 28. Let's see:
Metro East: Centreville, Alorton, Washington Park, Cahokia and East St. Louis
St. Louis City/County: Mehlville, Beverly Hills, South City and Lafayette Square
I did leave the area for a failed move to Edinburg, TX when I was 10, for boarding school in Aurora, IL and college in Galesburg, IL. I finally left the area for good when I moved to Kansas City, MO for work and then to England for love.
It was much easier to say where you were from in the US than it is here in England. If I say I'm from East St. Louis or Cahokia (where my mom lives), you can hear crickets chirp. If I say I'm from St. Louis, you might see a flicker of recognition but it's rare. So most of the time I just say I'm from the Midwest and leave it at that because I don't feel like reaching for a map to show that there's life between the trifecta of California, New York and Florida.
Posted by: tanis at July 25, 2007 10:59 PM (AN/2b)
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Helen, when you get back, HEEELLLLPPPP!
Diamond Dave! You calm down this minute!
Let me go have a look at this mess. Oh hey, can you do me a favor when Helen returns, DD? Can you help me convert her to Wordpress? Movable Type suuuuucks.
Posted by: ilyka at July 25, 2007 11:42 PM (zPRu7)
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Damnit, I'm so right about Movable Type sucking: I forgot there is no "spam queue" from which to rescue your comment, Diamond Dave. No, the %#^& MT Blacklist just NUKES it before you can even submit it. And you know, and I know, and everyone knows, it probably nuked it because some idiot on mu.nu entered "the" or possibly "and" into the communal MT Blacklist.
I feel a hollering coming on.
If you have trouble again, DD, feel free to email me your remarks and I'll just force-post 'em, if you are comfortable doing that. I'm very sorry. And I swear, it wasn't anything I did!
Posted by: ilyka at July 25, 2007 11:47 PM (zPRu7)
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I don't like hearing the comments I get when I say "El Paso by way of South Carolina and Oklahoma mixed in."
So, I've come up with a solution.
When someone asks me where I'm from, I say:
"The apex of my mother's thighs."
A CONVERSATION STOPPER RIGHT THERE.
Posted by: Margi at July 26, 2007 01:00 AM (OuCik)
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Grew up in Sacramento. Lived in Washington, Oregon, and Colorado before my husband got a transfer... to Sacramento. Hmm. Not a bad place to be but I miss my friends. If I won the lottery I think I'd get a home in Denver.
Oh, who am I kidding? I'd get a second one in Ashland. Because the Oregon Shakespeare Festival just plain rocks.
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 26, 2007 01:36 AM (tie24)
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Sorry for the tantrum, Ilyka. I was getting ready to throw things there for a minute.
Okay, let's try this one more time.
Born in West Virginia, lived there till I was about six.
Moved to Atlanta (suburbs), lived there till I was fourteen.
Moved to So. California (Torrance), graduated high school. Went to college up north in Santa Cruz for about a year, then returned home to SoCal for a few more years. Moved out of parent's house up to SF Bay Area (Hayward), got job and lived there for couple of years.
Moved back to Atlanta (cheaper housing), rented place and moved in with girlfriend, got married, bought house, lived there ever since.
Probably will move in another year or so, probably Texas to be closer to family.
Where do I call home? Hell, I don't know, maybe Neptune. Sometimes I miss CA, being I've lived there longest and have lots of friends there, but never go back to live. I'm actually kind of partial to WVa (you get all four seasons COMPLETE, and the fall colors are absolutely fantastic), but there ain't no jobs there, unless I want to work in a coal mine.
My wife, on the other hand, was a military brat. Like the commercial says, she's been everywhere, man.
Posted by: diamond dave at July 26, 2007 02:35 AM (Y7S2g)
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I've lived in the Chicago Suburbs most of my life. The years in my 20's I spent living in the City of Chicago near the Cub's ballpark.
Now, I'm getting ready to move across country to the west side of Phoenix to be closer to my sister. I'm scared and excited all at once. I'll be happy to be away from the winter months, and I will also be happy to live close to my sister.
After 37 years in one area, it's time for a change.
Posted by: Heidi at July 26, 2007 05:41 AM (De/xT)
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I was born and raised on a farm in Denmark. At age 8 we moved to southern Spain for a few months, then back to Denmark for two years, and then back to Spain again, this time for seven years. At age 17 I went back to Denmark alone to attend boarding school. Some years later I spent six months in wonderful London. I have lived in eight different towns here in Denmark, and sometimes envy those of my friends who have lived in the same place all there life. On the other hand I wouldn't have missed living in Spain or London for anything either. My dear wife is from Brazil, but of Italian origin, so we are probably not done with moving around yet, either.
Posted by: Mike at July 26, 2007 08:21 AM (CGOCH)
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Fresno, CA: birth-1.5
Coalinga, CA: 1.5-7
Bay Area CA: 7-12
...and that's the easy part. My parents divorced when I was 12, so between 12-15, I split my time between Horrible Horrible Columbus, GA (Mom/school) and the Bay Area (Dad/breaks.)
At 15 I switched the arrangement to go to school in the Bay Area and graduated from HS with my friends--I can't say that I made any real ones in GA. Sad.
Then at 18-19, I spent a year in Luxembourg (Mom moved there for work.)
Moved to Atlanta for uni when I was 19--and that's where I live today. I intend to get the hell out as soon as I graduate--I have Southern roots all the way back to 1623, but I'll never be a Georgia peach.
Mom was transferred to Albania, so here I sit--it's summer break, so I'm here with her.
Top two places closest to my heart are the Bay Area and Luxembourg, and when people ask, I say that "I'm originally from Fresno, but I consider the Bay Area to be my home." It took me a long time to get to that--and if I'm telling a story, I'll eventually have to give a timeline of where I was living, 'cause it gets complicated.
Posted by: Marian at July 26, 2007 11:49 AM (B+qrE)
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Iowa, Iowa, and Iowa. I moved about 10 times throughout the state until I met Hubs (28 yrs ago)... this is the longest I've lived anywhere my whole life. Well, actually, we built a new house 2 miles from the old one and moved 3 years ago, but that hardly counts...
Posted by: sue at July 26, 2007 03:07 PM (WbfZD)
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I was an Air Force and an Army wife. I'm from nowhere, although I claim Texas, which is where I live now. Actually, I was born in Texas, traveled all sorts of places, and ended up back in Texas. I like Texas, especially since my children and grandchildren are here!
Posted by: PrimoDonna at July 26, 2007 04:35 PM (qQGjh)
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July 20, 2007
Greetings from Your Very Apologetic Guestblogger
WAIT! Don't click off. At least let me say that I understand why you want to. I do!
I've been starting my Monday-through-Friday mornings with Helen's posts for four years now. Everyday Stranger is one of the few blogs I read where I honestly don't care what its author chooses to write about. I read Everyday Stranger because I like Helen, plain and simple. I like her writing style, I love her intimacy--you know what I'm talking about, don't you? There really is no substitute for Helen.
Hmm. Now I'm starting to depress myself.
I don't comment very much here, except sometimes to gush (over Helen) and sometimes to holler (at people I feel are being mean to Helen). I am good at the hollering. I had an email from a friend a few weeks ago that summed me up perfectly, though my friend was talking about herself: She said, "I come from a yelling family." That's me. I come from a yelling family.
Even the most obstinate descendants of yelling families, however, can burn out, and currently I am burnt out on the yelling. Besides, it's rude to holler at the regulars when one is a guest on another person's weblog. So be of good cheer! I have no plans to holler at anyone unless you insult Helen; and then, look out.
Oh, to hell with me! Let's just declare this a Love Helen Friday, can we? You can leave a comment telling me what YOU enjoy about Everyday Stranger (I know I copped out up there by more or less saying "everything," but I trust you will all do better than that), and that will be really nice for Helen to read when she gets back, right? I mean, I didn't tell her I was going to do anything like this. I just thought it up right now because my melatonin's kicking in (I keep odd hours) and my brain is checking out.
Plus, it'll really burn her enemies. (Oh, why must I always focus on the negativity like this? Do you think it's because I come from a yelling family?)
But I like the idea! I am making it official. It is now Love Helen Friday. Especially for you lurkers! Come out and show the love. Favorite posts you remember, her envy-inducing ability to give good hair, the zany Elf obsession--it's all fair game. I would normally add something here about how you should try not to say anything really gauche like, "Well, for one thing, I sure do love lookin' at her boobies," but I've read enough of the comments here to know that I really only have to worry about one or two of you doing that, and those one or two will probably be meaning it affectionately rather than all creepy-stalker-like; or so I hope.
Love Helen Friday is in effect. GO!
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1
I love Helen because she's smart, witty, tragically honest in her writing, not-perfect (although damn close) and cool.
It's hard to describe exactly what you like about another blogger....without sounding cheesy or stalkerish....but honestly...I just dig the way she writes. I guess that's the long and short of it.
Posted by: wn at July 20, 2007 12:31 PM (Y8+V9)
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I love her brutally honest ways of telling people when she isn't up for suggestions. I also love how out going she is. I vacation vicariously through her!
Posted by: Jessica at July 20, 2007 12:34 PM (ii/lW)
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I vacation vicariously through her!
Oh, me too. Absolutely. I wish I could just pop up to Scotland, but I'm settling for popping over to Scottsdale Sunday night.
These are obviously not the same thing at all. Oh, well.
but honestly...I just dig the way she writes
Nah, you don't sound a bit creepy. (And I like your blog title. Lotsa words, that's the internet all right.)
Posted by: ilyka at July 20, 2007 12:42 PM (zPRu7)
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Helen's eloquent, real, and open (and a darn good photographer too). She loves the Muppets. What's to not love here?
Oh, and she's in high-tech and takes no prisoners. My hero!
(Apparently the comment for deems the fact I have a livejournal for a blog "questionable." I do too, comment form, I do too.)
Posted by: Opal at July 20, 2007 12:48 PM (Us7dd)
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I love:
Helen's narrative style. She has this great, distinctive, right-there-with-you voice. And damn if she doesn't have good stories to tell in that voice!
Helen's big heart and her unabashed love for Angus. It's endearing and smile-inducing.
That she's a Helen of Many Trades--I admire so much her dedication to Jeff and Melissa, and the Lemonheads. I admire her mad tiling skills.
What an awesome idea, Ilyka.
Posted by: Marian at July 20, 2007 12:58 PM (B+qrE)
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I love how freely she shares so many seemingly private details of her life: the uneasiness with the brother in law, operation duck and cover, the joy and awe in the relationship with her father brings.
I love the pictures of Gorby and Seymour.
I love how her memories of my home state make me reflect upon the positive things from time to time.
Posted by: sarah at July 20, 2007 01:30 PM (QxKa0)
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ROFL! Applause for the guest blogger!
I love the way Heleen always manages to face down the world, no matter what the situation. Nothing ever really gets the best of her, she always wins in the end. I love reading about her daily life (yes, even the fence) ... maybe because it's another way of seeing that the world really isn't always bad. After all, Helen always prevails, right? Right!
Posted by: Hannah at July 20, 2007 01:44 PM (5w+E2)
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So far I like you too!
I have been with Helen since the dark days in Sweden. I feel fortunate to have been able to read about her life, and been able to watch from afar as she makes her way uphill to hapiness. She is a cool chick and I think we would get along great, and she says her peace which I love!
Posted by: Cheryl at July 20, 2007 02:03 PM (ofEMA)
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I love Helen because... its ok to be broken. And despite all I was told while growing up, sex is good and healthy. Amen!
Posted by: miguel at July 20, 2007 02:14 PM (nkeFb)
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I love how Helen is so deliciously human. She's a balls-out, live-life-to-the-fullest kind of woman (yes, I said balls-out). I appreciate her candor, revel in her triumphs, and can't wait to see what she has to say every day.
Posted by: Amanda at July 20, 2007 02:25 PM (B5c+c)
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She is intelligent, intimate, raw, and funny-just to name a few. She writes beautifully and lives honestly.
The truth-I just
get her. And I love her like a friend I have had forever.
Posted by: Teresa at July 20, 2007 03:12 PM (xGcDO)
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I love Helen for many of the same reasons listed here already. She's so candid. I feel like she and I are old friends even though we've never met in real life because she shares so much. She's an amazing writer and despite what she thinks about herself, is a truly strong woman whom I admire greatly.
Now when can I make out with her?
Posted by: donna at July 20, 2007 03:41 PM (Kco5r)
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I love the pop culture references, since we are about the same age and I "get" all of them. I love the adventure aspect of Helen's life because I've always wanted to travel and see things and Helen actually does it. And finally, Helen is like J.K. Rowling, you can't wait for each new episode.
Posted by: Julie at July 20, 2007 04:22 PM (6JI3A)
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Hmmm... What to say? Helen is just one of those chicks I'd love to drink pints with whilst talking celebrity gossip, bad television, and boys. Preferably at a slumber party, where we do each other's hair and then invite all the boys over to pay to watch she, Ms. Pants and myself have a pillow fight. Because that'd be like the great rack trifecta, and I'm sure we could make a mint.
Posted by: amy t. at July 20, 2007 05:47 PM (3dOTd)
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She's smart as a whip. That's why I like to read here everyday. She's funny when she wants to be, cynical often, sarcastic sometimes, but always very intelligent and it shines through!
Posted by: kenju at July 20, 2007 06:34 PM (DBvE5)
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Helen has a wit and sarcastic style that I think is hilarious, and she's extremely imaginative (remember her running into Santa at Starbucks?). I've heard it said a true friend is one who knows everything about you and likes you anyway. : ) Helen and I differ on many major ideals, yet I really enjoy her honest, candid posts.
As birds of a feather generally flock together, I don't have any close friends that are as candid and open as Helen is. I like that Helen allows folks like me (and some of y'all) to visit/comment here daily even though we don't always agree.
Posted by: Solomon at July 20, 2007 07:49 PM (al5Ou)
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I love Helen, not only for being so open about who she is, not only for getting a pint at the pub quicker than I can, not only for being such a lovely person... I love her for her taste in gifts and earrings
she is generosity unbounded and I LOVE HELEN!
Posted by: stinkerbell at July 20, 2007 08:02 PM (j8mVO)
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hmm...I love Helen for the same reasons that everyone already said! I'm reading the posts, and I'm like "that's what I wanted to say" sheesh.
Helen, you are a superb writer & I have to have my fix every morning before I can start work. You and my coffee - great combination!! I don't comment often, except when called out to do so. But I'm here everyday (no pun intended) for my favorite stranger.
love,
C
Posted by: Christina at July 20, 2007 08:41 PM (b4jrh)
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Let's see.
Beautiful, smart, funny, poignant and incredibly talented with both word and camera.
What's not to love.
Posted by: Stephen Macklin at July 20, 2007 08:43 PM (UquFN)
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Helen has been broken. We see the shattered glass all around her. But we also see that she has taken the glass and made a beautiful, fragile, yet tangible piece of art.
Her life story gives us hope that we too can face the tragedy that is our own life and come out on the other side and still be open, tough yet vulnerable, and we can still be loveable.
I adore reading here because I feel her pain and cry, hear her laughter and laugh along. I see my pain through her eyes and she has taught me that I am ok. It will be ok. She will be ok.
Posted by: Karen at July 21, 2007 12:41 AM (S3y9+)
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Hmmm where to start
* her intimate and humerous writing style
* her ability to make me think w/o being boring or condescending
* she loves animals
* She's Helen .... nuff said
Posted by: Lorri at July 21, 2007 01:13 AM (Lfkis)
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So many of you have already said the things I love the most about Helen but why not say them again?
She's hilarious and raw in her honesty.
She can make me laugh and cry in the same post.
She lets us all know it's okay to be be broken and we can keep going anyway.
She truly loves her animals and marvels at their love for her.
She has been "chicken braked"!
She lets us see that Angus is perfect and not so perfect all at the same time.
She is my "Everyday Stranger".
Posted by: Deb at July 21, 2007 02:11 AM (0lvli)
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Hey - veteran lurker here!
I love this site because it feels like I know her (which of course I don't) and she makes me giggle when I am surrepitously reading during class...
Posted by: usagi at July 21, 2007 03:10 AM (eEi99)
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I mostly lurk here, too, but I read it all. Love the photos, of course, but I love the stories and the writing, too. She has the coolest guest bloggers, too.
Posted by: Rob at July 21, 2007 04:03 AM (pIwTk)
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Rarely do I read a post from Helen and not feel "something". She shares in a way that is moving and evocative. She makes me believe that should we meet in real life that we could definately be friends.
Posted by: Terry at July 21, 2007 04:29 AM (7MeZM)
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Lurker here. I have never ever commented to Helen, but I have read her religiously through a hard winter in Sweden, through a move to her heaven, and through a lot of healing. I used to relate to her exactly, but she has grown more than I have. I cannot go a day without her, I am her follower.
She is beautiful and extraordinary and a normal person, all at once.
She will never know how much I care for her.
Posted by: Carrie at July 21, 2007 06:08 AM (fDl/T)
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I love this blog, the length, details and thoughts she puts into her blog. I randomly googled something one day, and came across this blog am I ever glad that I did! Now who are you? You never introduced yourself...
Posted by: Missgirlbliss at July 21, 2007 08:15 AM (YLUfG)
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Been an avid reader for a couple of years since being directed here by another fan (fareastcynic@blogspot.com). I have read almost all her old blogs as well.
Her growth as a person and a writer is so out there and obvious. I admire how she has worked so hard reparing her "broken" psyche. And I know as my ex was a certified card carrying BPD. Who tried but just could not accomplish what Helen has accomplished. Kudos and good on Helen and those who love her.
And Guestblogger I look forward to the day you resume your own Blog.
Posted by: Foggy at July 21, 2007 02:46 PM (WlHuv)
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I was intrigued by the link on my friend's blog titled "Everyday Stranger" thus I clicked on it and have been and still am an avid reader ever since. Helen's writing is so candid, honest and vivid that I could totally imagine the events she described unfolding in front of my eyes. Being an alien in a foreign country, I can totally relate to the hassle of the administration and it's nice to feel that I'm not alone out there. Always a good read, always enjoyable. You rock girl!
Posted by: miao at July 21, 2007 04:04 PM (CpO64)
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I can't pass a box of Lemonheads without giving her a thought.
Been reading Helen for years.
Posted by: Marie at July 21, 2007 04:05 PM (v+Iku)
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Dang. I'm spoiled because Helen usually posts right about the time I get up in the morning, so I read her first thing. I'm not used to being so far back in the comments.
Anyway, every day is "I Love Helen Day" as far as I'm concerned.
Wow. I managed to get through without mentioning her boobies!
Posted by: ~Easy at July 21, 2007 04:22 PM (X+de8)
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I am also one of the frequent flyers to Helen's site. I was skimming through another blog, when I happened to see the link for Everyday Stranger. I clicked it, and the first post I read was a conversation she was having with herself. It became apparent to me that she was giving herself a pep talk regarding her distress at work. I was transfixed immediately. Of course, I had to go back to the beginning, to her life in Sweden, cause starting a story in the middle is completely taboo. When I read the passages referring to her emotional crisis and subsequent breakdown, I cried my heart out for her. And for myself. Oh, yeah, I've been there more times than I want to remember. Never actually allowing the abyss to completely consume me, but spending desperate hours staring into it with longing and fear.
Helen opened my self-absorbed eyes to the fact that there are so many of us humans who are absolutely emotionally and psychologically broken that we must often contemplate the notion that there is no shining beacon of salvation. From ourselves and those whom we allow to hurt us continually and without restraint.
I'm sure that without my unswerving faith in divine intervention that I would not be physically present on this planet any longer. And my abhorrence of the consequences my early demise would bring to my beloved Mother. It would literally destroy her and I simply could not do that to a person I dearly loved.
Anyway, Helen's desire to share with the world her trials and tribulations, her struggles with self-esteem (you are so beautiful, you crazy gal) and her hard earned insight that constantly amazes and moves me, has kept me here for many years and I will continue to do so until she decides she no longer needs her blog. And I sure as HELL will be reading the first time she posts the miraculous account of the birth of the lemonheads.
I truly love you, Helen, and everything you are and everything you will become.
Kimberley
Posted by: KImberley at July 22, 2007 04:07 AM (YtHtJ)
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Helen has been my inspiration and mentor for several years now. Through her, I have gained insight and strength...the ability to tackle the world (and myself)...to grow. Her perspective has, in many ways, shaped my world because I realized that I wasn't in this fight alone. When I was in the process of finding myself, I would read things on this blog and say, "THAT'S how I want to conduct myself..." and I would follow her example. Now that I have my own confidence and identity, now that I know who and what I am, I don't rely on Helen's wisdom to help shape my life as much as I rely on her for a kindred spirit who views life much as I do and appreciates travel, love, laughter, animals, and children.
In a nutshell, Helen was a my mentor. Now she is my friend. And for that, I will always love her.
Posted by: Mia at July 22, 2007 06:34 PM (+2lQc)
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It's Sunday. I hope I can still love Helen. Cause she feels like one of my friends who writes every day.
Posted by: That Girl at July 22, 2007 11:37 PM (Mc2V9)
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She's the first person who ever made me feel like I wasn't less capable or less of a person if I was afraid sometimes.
That's a BIG DEAL for me. In fact, it's changed my life!
Posted by: flikka at July 23, 2007 12:09 AM (puvdD)
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I love Helen- she is the ONE blogger that I must read everyday. Her writing is thoughtful and thought provoking, and her photo stream is an inspiration.
Posted by: jen-again at July 23, 2007 02:58 AM (fpBSq)
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I first stumbled upon Helen's site when I googled "expatriation." I had been contemplating leaving the US and was curious to hear of others' tales about the experience. I soon realized that there was so much more to learn from Helen, and I have been a dedicated reader since. I love her writing style and candid, thoughtful recollections of life. Thanks for sharing your insight, beauty and strength.
Posted by: Gwyneth at July 23, 2007 12:12 PM (mSUnd)
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Can I do it on Monday?
I love Helen because she comes across as so real. She says things that most of us want to but can't find the perfect words for. I've gone through some of the same experiences she has, but she tells the tale in much better words than I ever can find. She's come out of the pit of despair and the sunshine is bright on her face - no one deserves it more. yeah, I love her. Is it obvious?
Posted by: sue at July 23, 2007 02:15 PM (WbfZD)
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It's Monday, and zI still love Helen. I found her blog early in my surfing and have been in love with it ever since. I still remember reading a post about stepdaughters just as I was adapting to my two. It was so profound and touching--I made my husband read it so he would understand me better. How can you not love someone who is able to zero in on the exact heart of a matter and share so willingly of herself? I'm glad she hangs out in blogdom and I will continue to read her first to see what happens next.
Posted by: sophie at July 23, 2007 05:17 PM (AY+fk)
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I started reading Helen's blog about two years ago, when I saw her commenting at the once-great Snoozebutton Dreams. I enjoy her writing style and biting wit, which she seems to be able to apply to virtually any situation she may be discussing, whether it be hilarious, serious, mundane, or even tragic. I can also empathize somewhat with her emotional troubles, as I've been known to cover similar ground in my lifetime (even though from a male perspective). Her writing style makes me actually care about her as a person, even if it's only through cyberspace. I also admire her candidness and honesty in her blogging, even when it comes through sharply at times. I envy her writing ability, wishing I could express myself as clearly as she is able to. I also think that she should give herself more credit for her abilities. Rock on, Helen!
PS: her boobies? As far as I'm concerned, that's hers and Angus' business, not mine. (And soon, the Lemonheads).
Posted by: diamond dave at July 23, 2007 09:20 PM (iH5JX)
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I can't remember when I first found Helen's site. Years ago now. But I was immediately hooked. In these times, honesty is like a rare, priceless ornament made of glass lace...so fragile and treasured. Somehow, Helen manages to embrace this honesty tightly, without damaging it's beauty or integrity.
All that and she is funny, witty and devastating all at the same time.
Honored that she shares her journey with all of us!
Posted by: Serena at July 24, 2007 12:55 PM (jU/ey)
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Continuing with Love Helen Friday right into Tuesday. I started reading Everyday Stranger three ... almost four? years ago not long before the parting of the ways with Company X. I was reading the day "Mr. Y" left his first comment on this blog. I remember Christmas writings about Santa in Starbucks and a big fluffy dog bringing three ghosts to visit. I was here when boy and girl moved in together in a town she referred to as Whitney Houston. I have remained steadfast even as she travels all over the world and occasionally makes us wait for pictures.
I have really enjoyed watching Angus and Helen become a family together and knowing that Jeff and Melissa have come to treasure Helen too. I am really looking forward to the Lemonheads' arrival in the outside world and all the wonders that their birth will bring.
Every morning I get up, pour a cup of coffee and turn on the laptop; the first link I click is Everyday Stranger, without fail.Over these few years I've been reading, I've cried, laughed out loud, been afraid and nervous for her and inspired by her, and through it all I feel I've gotten to know someone better who has made my life richer just by being a part of it. Thanks, Helen, for letting me into your life a little bit; for sharing stories of your travels, your healing, your pregnancy, and yourself, with all of us.
Posted by: Lisa at July 24, 2007 03:58 PM (e8V7B)
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I love Helen because she's always, no matter what, just Helen. I love her because even though it might have pained her immensely, she still kept reading my old blog when I was nattering on about MY pregnancy. Hey, I was Sideshow Mom there for a while, wasn't I? Heh.
And I'm totally pissed with myself that I am typing this on a Tuesday instead of the Love Helen Friday, like I was supposed to.
Eh. I'm a rebel, Dotty.
Posted by: Margi at July 24, 2007 04:06 PM (BZTd9)
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Wow, so much Helen love! It's wonderful to see
I've been reading Helen monday-friday for probably four and half years (well almost every, being I'm writing this on a Tuesday, it's the summer schedule). I found her when I was first reading blogs, I think from Plain Layne, so that's how long ago that was! She even commented once on my bright pink blog of 2nd year debauchery--which no longer exists after my entire extended family found it--which was thrilling for me, my friends were my only other commenters ever. I never blogged again, but I kept reading Helen.
Her writing immediately spoke to me, she captured feelings I had had so very well. So I suppose I first started reading because I identified with her, but I have kept reading because I have become so fond of her in her own right. I love how every entry is like a story (can't wait for your book
) I love the way she shares herself, letting us in to her thoughts and feelings. I admire the brave way she kept writing when she was discovered by her family. I love the way she loves Angus, Melissa, Jeff, and the Lemonheads.
Thank you, Helen, for sharing yourself with us for all these years. I know you blog for you, but I'm so glad you also blog for us.
Posted by: Laura at July 24, 2007 05:52 PM (FFBkP)
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I love Helen's ability to be transparent to we the readers about her thoughts and her life. Her writing intelligent and funny and insightful, and she looks fabulous pregnant, but I particularly admire the freedom she practices in sharing her life with us.
Posted by: suze at July 24, 2007 08:07 PM (0doyF)
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Everyone has said it so much better than I can, but I still wanted to say that I too always click onto the link to Helen's page first! I love seeing a big chunk of new post up for me to sit back and enjoy!
Its been four years or so since I first stumbled upon Everyday Stranger and I have been an avid reader ever since. I have laughed, cried and become emotionally involved in Helen's unique style. I felt a strange kinship reading about her London commuting experiences as I too was riding the trains to Waterloo and walking across that very same bridge, enjoying the same view. I could have ordered my gingerbread latte from the same barista as Helen, or even passed her in the street without knowing it.
Now I live on the otherside of the world and Helen's posts about the weather, lifestyle and living in the UK make me alternatively homesick and happy not to be there in the big wet!
Finding out that Helen and Angus had been successful in their IVF treatment was as exciting for me as a close friend telling me she was pregnant and I have devoured her posts about pregnancy even though she is adamant this won't turn into a mommyblog!
I have been working on a little project for the lemonheads and hope Helen won't mind if I step out of the computer at some stage to send it to her!
Thanks Helen, as you can see you have had such an impact on so many of our lives! We love you!
Posted by: Sarah at July 25, 2007 12:24 AM (AHcm3)
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Everyone has already said it much better than I ever could. I've been lurking for a few months now, and I love how honest and how eloquent she is. She is amazingly brave and talented - I'm a big fan!
Posted by: Sarah at July 25, 2007 12:42 AM (PAfsg)
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The question shouldn't be: Do you love Helen?
The question should be: How can you not love Helen?
Smart, Funny and doesn't mince words...what's not to love?
Posted by: Heidi at July 25, 2007 01:32 AM (3vvfs)
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I love it when you rant, I love it when you're funny. I love your honesty, your love for animals. And your love for Angus too, of course! *grins* When it's all tied together (as it often is) I love that the most. Heh.
(And GAHHHHH! YOUR SPAM FILTER: I hates it! lol, it wouldn't let me post the rest and I couldn't figure out why so I had to delete the rest.
)
Posted by: The other Amber at July 25, 2007 02:39 PM (zQE5D)
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July 19, 2007
I've Left the Key in Your Mailbox, and There's Extra Fish Food in the Cupboard
And now, without further adieu (what does that mean, really? Without further goodbye would be the literal translation, but isn't that pretty rude? That's like
No I will NOT say excuse me before I leave the table, thank you very much!) we're off. To Scotland. Again.
Because we like it there.
Actually, Gorby's off to his exclusive bed and breakfast, Angus and I have a one night stopover in the Lake District before picking up his kids Friday morning at the Glasgow Airport (which should be interesting as you're not allowed to drive up to the airport still) then we head back up to the Hebrides and the Isle of Mull, because we loved it so much.
Melissa and I are both hoping to get a copy of the Harry Potter book while we're up there. We're both glad we're out of GSM, TV and internet range because neither of us want a Muppet to come along and spoil it for us (in high school we had to read A Separate Peace. I'll never forget opening the front page of my school-issued book and seeing the words "Finny DIES!" written in black marker on it from some joker who felt the need to let me know the ending. Thanks, needledick. Am sure you're working as a gas station attendant somewhere now, and you've earned that, mate. From that moment on I've hated spoilers.)
We've agreed to not tell each other a single thing about it. Although I read faster than she does, I get car sick if I read in the car and she doesn't, so she'll likely finish it before I will. We've also agreed that we will signal to one another that we are done with the book by using stock James Bond 007 phrases, which then we will know means we can discuss the book.
Complicated, but fun.
So a few days in Mull. Then a day in the Scottish Lowlands. Then a day visiting Angus' dad and his stepmom, who always completely exhaust me. Then back home in time to visit the midwife and set off the situation known as Operation Duck and Cover, in which Angus informs his ex about the babies.
Good times, my friends, good times.
As a special treat, a guest poster will be here while I'm swatting mosquitos swanning around the Highlands. Ilyka Damen, who some of you may have read, stopped blogging a month ago and I've missed her horribly since then. Seriously. Like, as in "miss Target" kind of miss so that should tell you what kind of longing has been occurring. The girl comes up with posts that amaze me and make me tremble with envy at her wit. She's graciously agreed to pick up the old blogging pen and come in, so she'll be posting here. She's not just a great writer but she's also a good friend - I love her and I hope you love her, too.
See you on Friday next week.
-H.
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1
No Harry Potter posting till we are all done with the book or at least a heads up spoiler warning mmkay?
Also, it is without further ado, which means without any further fuss, or trouble, not further adieu, lol! That one gets me, as well as towing the line instead of toeing the line which is the correct one. To not put a toe over the line. I don't know where we lost these kinds of things.
Good luck with the ex, it's probably good you will be out of the country, duck and cover is right!
Posted by: Donna at July 19, 2007 08:00 AM (oSG48)
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See, I sat there mulling "adieu" versus "ado" (you know, as one does) trying to decide which one it was (like I always have to deliberate "separate" and how to spell that one. Always have to think about that one.) Then I googled them both and they both came up, so I decided it must be "adieu" because, you know, it's the one that made the least sense.
I hate Google.
And I promise-I will not pull an "A Separate Peace" on this site. PROMISE.
And now-I'm off to the Highlands.
Posted by: Helen at July 19, 2007 08:11 AM (XjRZt)
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I've got the whole weekend blocked for Harry Potter... now just to decide a good reading location... have fun in Scotland!
Posted by: Hannah at July 19, 2007 08:14 AM (5w+E2)
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I'll never forget opening the front page of my school-issued book and seeing the words "Finny DIES!" written in black marker on it
OMG STAB!
I loved that book and I cried my heart out when that happened, although it also made me do a 180 on my feelings for the narrator (from "dude, I've so been there" to "dude, you accidentally killed your best friend out of jealousy, diiiiick move there, buddy").
I would worry about the above being a spoiler but "Finny DIES!" is--look, it's already well and truly spoiled once you've read that.
Thank you for the kind intro. NOT WORTHY. If the stats are bad while you're away I'm blaming Harry Potter.
Posted by: ilyka at July 19, 2007 08:47 AM (zPRu7)
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Thank you for being kind enough to secure a guest-poster while you're gone so we don't have TOO many withdrawals.
I had a huge crush on Finny. What a guy!
Have a great trip!
Posted by: Julie at July 19, 2007 11:30 AM (f6TKp)
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You know, I didn't notice that you used 'adieu' instead of 'ado'. I thought it was just a brit thing, like misspelling "labor" ;-)
Harry arrives at our home on Saturday morning. I'm hoping that the owl isn't late. All of our family should have the book read by Sunday night and we'll all be able to safely watch TV and get online again. People who give spoilers are assholes.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 19, 2007 12:10 PM (X+de8)
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Have a great time - but we'll miss you. I get my Potter book on Sat. and I can't wait!
Posted by: kenju at July 19, 2007 12:24 PM (DBvE5)
Posted by: Teresa at July 19, 2007 01:51 PM (a/qXz)
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I was going to read "A Separate Peace" this weekend...I guess there's no need now.
Just kidding. : )
Just yesterday I was looking for tips on traveling to Scotland; maybe you can give some when you get back. "Must sees", "good times to visit", "hidden places to see", and maybe even "places not to waste one's time on". I'd love to hear any and all suggestions.
Posted by: Solomon at July 19, 2007 03:14 PM (al5Ou)
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July 18, 2007
The Missing Piece
Dog? Check.
House? Check.
Two Cars? Check.
2.5 Kids? Overshot that one, but Check.
Now what's missing...hm....what could it be...
If you said "Husband", well, ok maybe you have a point there.
If you said "white picket fence" though, you've caught what I was throwing at you.
(I know you might have come here for something angsty or something about the Lemonheads. Trust me, I have both. You might be angst or Lemonheaded out though, so I got your back on that one.)
Our house has been firmly enclosed by a massive hedge all the way around it, front and back. This has taken years of careful pruning and loving, loads of professional gardening assistance, and dedication to its survivial by the previous owners.
It only took Angus and I one year to kill off part of it.
We like to think of ourselves as not so much horticulturally incompetent, more like licensed to take our green thumbs and shove them up our asses.
The hedge in front of the house rotted and died. The massive drought last year didn't help. It caught some weird bush disease (and it's just not going to get old, that line. "Bush disease". Heh.) and then withered and died. We thought we killed if off but the neighbors tell us the previous owners accidentally set fire to it before they left, so the blame's not all ours.
Like any project we do, it takes a while to get around to it. Once we do get around to it, it is done to Angus specifications, which usually means it's done right, if not quite at Helen Speed. To be fair, Angus has been severely restricted by the hideous rain we're constantly having, so the slow progress is more down to the rain than any deliberation on our parts.
But one day, Angus decided he and Jeff were going to rid the world of the diseased hedges all along the front boundary of our property.
So they dug them up.
All of them. Stumps and all. And I wood-chipped them all and pretended I was in Fargo.
This of course slightly unnerved our neighbors, who wondered what the maniacs were doing digging up hedges that had been there for donkey's years and then feeding them to a wood chipper. In the rain. With an open view of all the neighbors. We assured them that in time-honored American tradition we were putting up a giant fuck-off metal gate, complete with CCTV cameras, intercoms, and wild dogs aimed at ushering intruders away (we're still working on that one with Gorby. Any day now he'll be a wild dog. Annnnnny day now.)
They realized we were messing with them, but they were glad to see the unhealthy hedges gone.
You awake still?
Angus started making a fence. From scratch. One that didn't use any screws, in fact, but is held together by old-fashioned mortice and tenon joints that are so strong you could have an entire rugby team swinging on them and they wouldn't break off. Seriously.
He did each section by hand.
And it kept going.
In the meantime, I seriously took down the pond foliage, reducing it to a massive pile of woodchips, which I used to fill the empty pond with. But I didn't just attack the pond. I removed the hedges from the entire front of the house so that more light comes in to the study now, we're not so boxed in.
Never let it be said that a woman packing twins can't dig up some hedges.
Nearly done here with the Great Fence Experiment of 2007.
But the fence kept growing and growing, as Angus then made pickets for it (which he used brads to hold them into place with. No old-fashioned joints there, but he did get the big compressor out, so that day everyone had an orgasm.)
And then in a bold move, once the fence was painted cream (and the tops of them routed off in a neat pattern, which he's reinforced with a dark green color), he decided the trees by the side of the house were offending him terribly. So on Saturday he chopped them down (despite my protestations to just "take a bit off the top") and I dutifully woodchipped them all. The woodchipper and I are great mates now. We speak the same lingo.
And now we have a front garden we love.
And there's the wild dog in the picture there, chasing his tennis ball. You know. As wild dogs do.
It's nearly done-we have to take some hedges that were too big to chip to the tip and we are planting red climber roses along the wooden fence (so that attractive soil-looking front view will disappear). But we love it, and most of all we love how you can see every corner of the house.
We are so cheesy it hurts.
-H.
PS-Angus just came by and said "Oh God. A blog post about the fence. People must be so bored." If so, I apologize. But seriously - that fence? It's hot.
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What's his hourly rate? I could totally use a fence like that up here in Leamington.
You guys may be cheesy, but it's lovely.
Posted by: tanis at July 18, 2007 06:49 AM (6cH2N)
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The fence looks amazing. I always thought about the bad vibes I get these days about the 2.5 kids and the white picket fence... but seeing this... wow, maybe not so bad after all.
And Angus is amazing. Is there anything he can't do?
Posted by: Hannah at July 18, 2007 08:25 AM (5w+E2)
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Married to a home improvement Natzi as I am, I know just how long and what detailed work was used for that fence, WOW is alz I can say. And you, shouldnt you be lying somewhere with your feet up?
Posted by: Cheryl at July 18, 2007 08:30 AM (ofEMA)
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I love it! You two do good work.
"Is that your friend, there, in the wood chippah?" (From Fargo, LOL)
Posted by: Julie at July 18, 2007 08:42 AM (Fz8EZ)
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Damn! Angus does good work. Having recently replaced my fences I know what a chore that is.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 18, 2007 12:22 PM (X+de8)
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That's a good lookin' fence! Anyone who does home improvements would NOT be bored with that fence.
On a different note, my daughter and I are planning to go to Scotland next Summer for her 13th birthday (kind of a "You're entering womanhood" kind of thing). Does anyone have any ideas about places to go, places to avoid, best time to go/avoid, getting passports, plane tickets, and reservations?
I hope you don't mind me asking this here Helen. If you'd rather, they can e-mail me. I look forward to any advice y'all are willing to give. Thanks.
Posted by: Solomon at July 18, 2007 12:34 PM (x+GoF)
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I blog about my yard work regularly.
Good job! It looks great!
Angus, you can come build a fence for me anytime you're in Orlando (like when the Wizarding World of Harry Potter opens in 2009).
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 18, 2007 12:34 PM (+MvHD)
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Not boring at all. Love the fence!
Posted by: Jen(aside) at July 18, 2007 12:38 PM (u973k)
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ohmygod the fence! love it! we spent last weekend propping up our new (old) fence with stakes. Its a beautiful old paling fence and the alternative is that crappy plastic stuff designed to look like wood. so the man got the mallet out and staked it upright. go the men and the fences!
Posted by: Sarah at July 18, 2007 12:44 PM (/i+3p)
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That fence is to-die-for. Seriously. Who wouldn't want a masterpiece like that surrounding their home?
Posted by: gatorgirl at July 18, 2007 01:14 PM (T+cX8)
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nothing cheesy about that fence! the garden looks great. Isn't house pride a wonderful thing?
Posted by: lambchop at July 18, 2007 01:15 PM (X/837)
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I love that fence! Bravo to you and Angus.
Posted by: donna at July 18, 2007 02:02 PM (Kco5r)
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That is a damn fine fence.
Posted by: Teresa at July 18, 2007 02:08 PM (7enW3)
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I love your fence
Posted by: geeky at July 18, 2007 02:25 PM (ziVl9)
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I am now ashamed for all the complaining I've done about what is apparently a pitiful amount of landscaping work. I wasn't even packing twins.....
You two are masters!
Posted by: cursingmama at July 18, 2007 02:26 PM (PoQfr)
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Angus is a man after my own heart. Mr. kenju couldn't even run a compressor, let alone build a fence or dig up shrubs!
A chipper would be hella in my hands. I'd chip everything in sight!
Posted by: kenju at July 18, 2007 02:47 PM (DBvE5)
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You have the perfect spot to hang a giant Christmas wreath over your front door.
Looks great, although I liked the hedge by the front window. I can see your point though. Will you plant something shorter there?
Posted by: paula at July 18, 2007 02:57 PM (FlZPw)
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I love it! And the yard is very very nice now!
Which reminds me that I should post about our own house adventures this afternoon...
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 18, 2007 04:09 PM (/vgMZ)
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Hey you, that's a mighty fine fence you got there!
Have been trying to email you (from other account) but your ISP keeps bouncing it back to me. HALP!
Posted by: ilyka at July 18, 2007 08:14 PM (zPRu7)
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Awesome fence.
And heck, I have such a love for HGTV that fence-building is an interesting blog post! Now all you have to do is get some climbing roses...
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 19, 2007 01:26 AM (tie24)
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The fence is absolutely awesome. And in case nobody has said it, Pickett Fences == Tom Skerritt and Fyvush Finkel. And really, what more do you need.
:-D
Posted by: tommy at July 19, 2007 05:31 AM (6CCYI)
Posted by: sue at July 23, 2007 01:55 PM (WbfZD)
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July 17, 2007
To Big D, With Love From Helen
Scoldy
wrote something the other day that got me reminiscing (do you know Scoldy? Shouldn't you know Scoldy?)
Scoldy is someone who's spent a lot of time in Dallas, much like I have. I have nothing against Dallas, really-people who read here come from there, I came from there, and a cool chick that lets me freak out on her plate still lives there. But lately I find when people ask me where I'm from, out of the handbasket full of locations I've lived in I come up with a simple, unexpected answer.
"I come from Seattle," I say.
And I flinch like a cheating whore.
Dallas...Dallas is so long ago it seems like another lifetime. In terms of the way I think of my life, it is a different lifetime. It's a whole other person who lived there, it's not really me. Not really.
The thoughts of Dallas came up in my mind when I read Scoldy's post and thought about Dallas’ dialing codes. Stupid, I know, but we work in telecom and have to think about these kinds of things. I remember living in one area code and having to dial another just to talk to my then-boyfriend, Kim. Then they introduced another area code and the whole thing was blown to hell. I’m not sure if I’m proud or not, but I successfully had all three area codes as my phone number for a period of time. Apparently, my grandpa in Kansas showed my stepmother his address book, and the entries for me took up the entire “C” section and most of the “D” section of his book (my maiden name starts with a “C”). I moved so much he would just cross out my old address and write in the new place.
I lived in Arlington (north and south), Dallas (Lower Greenville and Oak Cliff), and Richardson. I moved a lot within those areas. I moved so much that I knew the roads of Dallas like the back of my hand, I could find my way out of any traffic jam anywhere because I knew all the side roads and shortcuts.
Most of the shortcuts have been lost to the foggy archives of my shoddy memory.
But thereÂ’s a lot that I remember.
Dallas was an easy place to live for the most part. It was as part of me as the lines and etchings on the bottom of my feet. The heat springs to mind first, Christ that incredible heat. I remember being nearly dizzy from it. YouÂ’d park your car as close to a sliver of shade as you could find, and youÂ’d run from air conditioned spot to air conditioned spot. The heat sapped you of your energy during the day and at night youÂ’d sit outside, batting at the insects, wondering at what point your skin would just let go of it all.
The bluebonnets were what made Dallas. For a period of time as brief as a sneeze the sides of the Interstate would be covered in a carpet of violent purple. They bluebonnets wouldnÂ’t last long but everyone and their dog would be taking pictures in them despite warnings that trampling the collections of state flower would get you ticketed.
I remember the traffic. The worst traffic IÂ’ve ever seen in my life was actually in Atlanta (with the worst driving actually in Italy) but Dallas liked to give Atlanta traffic jams a run for the money. I-20, I-30, the 635 and the worst offender, 75 Central ExpresswayÂ…god the traffic. Roads were always being dug up and improved in the worst sense of the word. It got so IÂ’d go into work by 7, the sun already hard and hot on the sizzling blacktop, just to avoid the crush of traffic. I was a different driver then. All that aggression and offensive driving has melted off me in a haze of commuting via train, driving lessons, and good old-fashioned aging. I was reckless then, in my youth. Life was for living and driving was for anger. ItÂ’s all passed me by now.
In Dallas I had Deep Ellum, the hopping throbbing alternate scene to West End and Lower Greenville. I remember dancing at the Blind Lemon and standing on a rooftop bar seeing a crumpled Mercedes under a Parisian bridge on the TV. It was Diana’s death and all of us – buzzing on our Zimas and Dos Equiis, the Shiners and our Bacardi Breezers – didn’t believe it was real. West End was for the tourists and business travelers, whom I’d sometimes take there for a “slice of Dallas”. Lower Greenville was where I called home for a while, then it was a place I couldn’t bear. One of my tattoos is from Lower Greenville, the one that hurt the most.
I often wonder what wouldÂ’ve happened had I bought the house there that I was looking at. Then I figure: Probably nothing different than what has happened. IÂ’m where IÂ’m supposed to be.
The sights of Dallas were all familiar – Mansion on Turtle Creek. The Book Depository and the grassy knoll, both of which I visited mere days before I moved away. The hurtling slides of what was Wet ‘N Wild (Jesus, what a horrible name) before Six Flags bought the water park. The old Rangers stadium and then the new one, which always looked aggressive to me. That weird glass skyscraper that turned gold in the sun, a yellow-y pink outside of the sun. The keyhole building in downtown Dallas. The Cowboys stadium with its partial roof. Reunion Tower, where I once dined.
I remember the food in Dallas, too. In college three of my closest female friends would meet every Friday at the El ChicoÂ’s in Arlington to drink margaritas the size of melons and gorge on fajitas. The food wasnÂ’t spectacular but itÂ’s what we did. I have lost contact with most of the women, despite them trying to anchor me in their gravity, but as usual I spun out of control and eased myself out of their lives.
Jason’s Deli was for Saturday lunch – the mufalattas, the baked potatoes the size of a rabbit, loaded with cheese – and you weren’t hungry the rest of the day. Sunday mornings I would go out to Einstein Brothers and bring back a bagel made just the way I liked it, which varied from week to week. I’d pay $1.50 in quarters into the nearby machine to buy the Dallas Morning News, which I’d read the many sections of in bed with my bagel and my orange juice, excluding the business and finance ones, and I’d meticulously check the news about the Stars.
Ah, the Stars. I used to watch the games. I used to watch the players practice at Las Colinas. I used to know every single stat to every single one of them. Now I donÂ’t even know most of the players. Your priorities change, even if you still carry a torch for the little team that could. I will always love the Stars.
I went to college at UTA. I finished high school in Arlington. Never having fitted in, I took a load of classes during the day and wound up graduating a semester early. It suited me.
I was never a Texan.
I couldnÂ’t have been-it just didnÂ’t compute with me. I remember how fond Kim was of me but IÂ’ll never understand why. The me that permeates my memories of back then was a raw, naked individual prone to rage and displays of pique. I was a hollow shell of uncontrollable emotions. I was nothing inside. I had no status and no concept of status in a town whose every definition is based on what youÂ’re wearing, what youÂ’re driving, and where you live.
At the end of my time in Dallas I was finally finding peace. I had a fun little girl car that suited me perfectly and that I loved (a VW Cabrio, which I still miss horribly and wish IÂ’d kept). I had a little house in a dodgy little suburb (Oak Cliff), but everything in that house was mine. I had a bouncy dog and a room full of hockey kit and an old-fashioned gas heater in the bathroom that was all mine. I had my routines and I followed them religiously.
Sometimes I feel a pang of sadness that the Lemonheads will never know Dallas, the place where Mommy came from will be a puzzle and a wisp of smoke to them, nothing more than a name and a grainy 1980’s TV show. It’s impossible to tell them that I paid my bills to TU Electric, Southwestern Bell, and Texaco. It won’t matter to them that I was at the Stars playoff game in ‘98, the one they narrowly won, the one which pushed for Game 7, and it was so awesome that the entire stadium screamed and cried and we broke the lights above us from hitting them so hard and when we left the entire crowd was singing and dancing and laughing. It means nothing to them that we would go Kroger-ing for the Thanksgiving food, that iFratelli’s had one of the best pizzas, and that The Parks was the mall to go to for serious shopping, even if it meant braving the I-20.
But maybe thatÂ’s ok.
I mentioned something to Angus this weekend that I wish the twins would have as they grow up (but wonÂ’t have, for various reasons.)
He smiled at me. “Some things have to be a trade-off.”
HeÂ’s right.
We can start over again with the Mariners and the Seahawks. How the utilities are paid is pointless, just as it was pointless to me when I was a kid. Victoria is just some chick who’ll have a Secret, Jason’s Deli is just a name, and the heat – that amazing heat – is something they’ll find on holidays we will go on to Malaysia, Thailand, or the Caribbean. They won’t have fields of bluebonnets but they will have bluebells, and the bells can give the bonnets a run for their money.
Dallas and I got what we needed from each other. WeÂ’re cool. WeÂ’re even. It was never home and never will be. Should everything all go to hell I will never go back to Dallas again, even though as I write this I canÂ’t really tell where I would go. Speeding through the rail lines of Southwest Trains I know that this, this is home. This is where it all comes together. Living in Dallas was easy and living in England is often hard but I have never felt so calmly home in my life as I do here in our little corner of England.
But thanks, Big D.
I look back on Dallas as it starts to fade in my memory. Already parts of it are going, being replaced by things my RAM has space for (I canÂ’t remember the name of that other Mexican restaurant I loved. What was the name of that vet I used to use? And what was the shortcut off of Brown, the one that took me to Lower Greenville? Does anyone even remember TaylorÂ’s, the bookstore I used to work for, or has it passed from memory, too?)
Dallas to me will always be a memory of bright white hot sun bouncing off the road and dashboard in front of me. The sun visor is pulled down and the shadow bounces along the upper bridge of my nose. The pavement is shimmering in waves of heat and itÂ’s all covered with the dazzling sunlight, and I donÂ’t know where IÂ’m driving to but I donÂ’t need to know, itÂ’s just part of the journey.
-H.
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1
Wow. That brought back memories. More than you can imagine. I lived in Carrolton for a time, then Denton. I worked at the People's restaurant in Addison for a time, then later at the Magic Time Machine. I remember all of the things you mentioned, but the Stars moved down from Minnesota after I left to go back to St Louis.
Even then, as a longtime hockey fan I wouldn't have been a Stars fan. They were a divisional rival of the Blues, and I spent too much time spent disliking them as the North Stars.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 17, 2007 12:36 PM (X+de8)
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i feel homesick for the home town I left behind: Meredith, NH. But yet... it'll be 10 years next month and it's fading, just like your memories are. I was not quite 13 when I left, though. It makes me sad, realizing that I can't quite remember how the sunlight looked, glinting off the lake, all the names of the librarians - thoughI do still remember my library card number (3102) and the sound the Mount Washington boat made as it came to the docks. But I guess it's part of life, moving on, seeing new things, putting roots down in different places.
Right, now I feel like a plant that's been replanted many times. Wonder what color my pot is this time?
Posted by: Hannah at July 17, 2007 12:56 PM (5w+E2)
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I'm still a little raw about the time Dallas stole the MN Northstars and renamed them simply The Stars.
Maybe not just a little raw - - you'd think all that time and a new hockey team would heal that kind of wound.
Posted by: cursingmama at July 17, 2007 01:37 PM (PoQfr)
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I think you said it perfectly... we all end up where we are supposed to be. If someone would have told me years ago that I, a town kid, would end up married to a farmer and living in the country? I wouldn't have believed a word.
You will give the lemonheads everything they need. Wherever.
Posted by: sue at July 17, 2007 01:47 PM (WbfZD)
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A beautiful post, Helen. I hope you are printing this for the babies to read when they are older. Trust me - they WILL want to know.
Posted by: kenju at July 17, 2007 02:19 PM (DBvE5)
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Still mad about the hockey - like cursingmama. Even went so far as to wear an old North Stars tshirt to a Dallas Stars game while living there.
Dallas holds a lot of fun and painful memories for me. Every once in a while I tease the idea of visiting ... but wonder if it would feel the same or not. The husband catches me looking around North Dallas, Carrollton, Plano, Richardson .. etc remembering all of those places.
I had to leave to escape the big hair and big hard boobs. Emma was born in Richardson but we left for Minnesota when she was just 3 months old. Still, when people ask, she says she's from Texas.
Man, you brought up a lot of memories!
Posted by: Michele at July 17, 2007 02:45 PM (H4SV7)
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How typical of me that that after your beautiful post, all I have to say is "mmmmmm..... iFratelli...."? I ate there at least once a week up until I quit my job in Irving to have Bridget. Best pizza ever.
But I know what you mean. We've lived a lot of places that we've liked but for me, Dallas is home. Not so much for my husband. I can't say that we'll never move but this will be home no matter where our house is. But I wasn't born in Dallas, and have many memories of growing up in a lot of other cities. For some reason, this place just fits me. Until we retire to Hilton Head, that is...
Posted by: donna at July 17, 2007 05:15 PM (Kco5r)
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The only reason I'm positive Taylor's really existed is because I still have the bookmarks from the books I bought there.
Loved this post.
Posted by: kitty at July 17, 2007 08:04 PM (Zl4mu)
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I have been to the Dallas/Ft. Worth area twice for vacation in my life at the age of 10 and 14. My aunts used to live there and all I remember that is was hotter than hell and muggy (Mind you I always went in mid summer). My aunt lived in some small town off a long dirt gravel road about 2 hours from Dallas. I do remember thinking to my 14 year old self that there are sure a lot of freaking freeways here. It seems every mile you go there would be an exit with 3-4 over passes zig zaging over each other and wonder how the hell my mom step dad naviagated their way there all the way from Canada! My memories include the PBR rodeo in Mesquite, the BBQ beef brisket sandwiches (I would kill for one now) and the Ft. Worth Stockyards... (Not Dallas but close enough) I begged my mom to take me to Six Flags but we never did get to go...I have fond memories of Texas and would love to go back. I have been to Arlington my other aunt lived there for a short time and I had a very nice pool. One of these days I hope I can go back for a visit. I decided to delurk. I love the blog. If you donÂ’t mind me asking how did you become so fond of hockey? I thought only us Canadians were gun ho for our hockey.
Posted by: Missgirlbliss at July 18, 2007 04:51 AM (JQN4I)
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My entire family lives in Grand Prairie/Arlington/Mansfield - but when I go back now, it's never "home." I've forgotten the names of highways, and my landmarks that I used to drive with are rapidly changing. The big field that we used to go hot air ballooning in across from the Parks is now built up with generic box stores.
I do miss some things deeply. Gloria's (only the one on Lemmon), El Fenix, and this other little Mexican restaurant on Restaurant Row that has long since gone out of business but had amazing queso. Learning to drive on I30. Driving to Dallas for dinner when I was at UNT, eating at the El Chicos that was closest to the stadium every single Saturday (the one across the street from the Black Eyed Pea).
I loved when we'd get a few snowflakes and the entire metroplex would shut down. And god... yes... the bluebonnets. But I remember other things too that make me so glad I don't live there anymore.
Sorry for blathering on so long. This just really moved me.
Posted by: April at July 18, 2007 03:39 PM (sxFIl)
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July 16, 2007
Reverend Tag Team
We had a Christening to go to yesterday, one for Sam and Jane (Angus' brother and his Fillipina wife) and their new son (Angus' nephew). Jane is very Catholic and their other child, 5 year-old Jilly, was baptized and goes to church and is looking at First Communion coming in a few years' time. I remember my First Communion myself - I got to carry the sandalwood oil. The rest is just a blur of Jesus references and white organza.
We had to be there for 1215 which meant leaving by 1115. In typical Angus style, at 1115 he still hadn't showered and was outside painting the fence and chatting with the neighbor. When he finally came in I was climbing the ceiling, dressed up in my black silk dress that showed a prominent baby bulge, and he tried to chat to me while cleaning the paintbrush.
"You're really winding me up. Go. Shower. Now." I said through clenched teeth. If you men are unfamiliar with the clenched teeth routine, lemme just say this: It means if you don't cooperate with me, you're looking at a return to the bachelor day tradition of eating your meals by the kitchen sink until we forgive you. Message received, Angus made his way to the shower. We left with just enough time to get there.
As he was driving, I thought about it.
"So like, say Jesus gets into a smiting mode while we are at the Christening," I start. We play what-if games a lot, usually instigated by over-active imagination me. "I'd totally be safe while the rest of you are going to hell."
"How's that?" he asks.
"Because we're in a Catholic Church and I'm pregnant. If that's not a get out of jail free card from Jesus then I don't know what is."
"Oh right. You mean you're pregnant in a Catholic church with our little bastard children that are going to hell? That kind of pregnant?" he asks.
He might have a point - I'm not exactly pure as the driven snow or anything. The divorces alone would be enough to get me a "Go to Excommunication. go directly to Excommunication. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.". I consider this, then come up with an ok counter-argument. "Well they're not born yet so they can't be judged yet. Even Adam would admit they'd be spared."
Ah, Adam. The one I've started to call The Reverend in my head. "Reverend" as I think of him as the new Moral Majority now that the old leader of the Moral Majority has gone to hell himself. I was ready to face the Reverend until Angus told me he was off on some sponsored walk for charity, so I'd have to save my fight for another day.
And damn I'd been looking forward to one, too.
We get to the church, where I find out one of the other guests is pregnant, too. I tug on Angus' shirt. "Her too. She'd be smite free like I would. The rest of you, well, I think you're screwed, but that's just me."
We go into the church and sit down. The entire rest of the family is there along with a half-dozen Fillipina women, all of whom come rushing over to touch my stomach. I can't really explain why but I didn't mind them all touching me despite my current "Get your fucking hands off me" crusade. Maybe it's because I know it's cultural for them, the women there all have several kids of their own and take turns passing babies around at the many barbecues Sam and Jane have.
The priest comes out and we couldn't believe it...he was wearing Jesus sandals. The priest was wearing Jesus sandals. Angus' mother was aghast (I can't see a church of England minister pulling off the same stunt) but I liked the guy, especially when he went up to Angus' Mum and told her that her segment of the reading should be accompanied by a tap dance, it was up to her to improvise it. A priest with a sense of humor, then-not something I'd ever come across before in my Catholic days. The Lemonheads - who had been quiet all morning - liked him, too, because as soon as he started talking they started moving.
The service was short, luckily - as I'm getting larger that whole "Please be seated/please stand up" bit is getting harder and harder. The service was overwhelmingly Catholic and every other word was "Jesus", which I guess is the case in a baptism (I haven't been to many of them but am assuming there's a general pattern.) Angus had to do a reading too, of Psalm 23 ("The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want"). I'd dared him to go up there and start it and then after "I shall not want" to look up at the congregation and say "Ah, screw it-ya'll know this one, let's skip to the next bit."
He declined.
I then dared him to read it like that rap song - "Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death" - the one from that movie with Michelle Pfeiffer, who played the teacher with too much eyeliner on. He wasn't familiar with either the movie or the rap song, and he declined that one, too. But he did look very serious and officious during his part.
(Not seen in the picture: The Jesus sandals.)
I also started to work the over-active imagination on that "Do you renounce Satan and all his works?" part. I started wondering what kind of works Satan would do. Maybe he was more into acryclics than performance art, and who are we to judge his interpretations?
The service over we head over to Sam and Jane's for a barbecue. Their barbecues are famous for incredible quantites of food that come out at weird times. Last year they had spring rolls, noodles, and every variety of dead animal that can possibly be thrown onto a barbecue grill (Sam has three grills, all of which he keeps going at the same time). Then came 6 desserts. And then, because they'd timed things wrong, out came a massive mound of Bombay Potato, which is just what you want after 13 pork chops, 2 helpings of cake and untold quantities of alcohol. But their get-togethers are a load of fun and they are great hosts, so we were looking forward to it.
Usually the group splits into three - Sam's friends from university all huddle together. Angus' family huddles together. The Fillipinas are in the living room on the karaoke machine together (they always try to get others to join, but my singing voice is not great so out of consideration for the other guests, I always decline.) At this barbecue the Fillipinas skipped the karaoke, but they were my favorite women there because they kept beaming, rubbing my stomach and telling me how small I was for 6 months with twins.
We all change out of our nice dresses and suits and then get down to the business of barbecue. The newly baptized baby gets passed around a lot and he's a cute cheeky little thing and always welcome. He graces Angus' lap for a long time and it tugs at my heart. Gorby is trotting around the garden - there are children around and he loves kids. Even more, he loves kids who eat because they always drop things, which he happily vacuums up.
Angus' mum starts in early.
"Helen, has Angus told the ex about the babies yet?" she asks directly.
I freeze.
Oh God.
"No, Angus and the kids are managing it. She'll be told while they're here next week," I say politely.
"Oh dear, I do think that's awful. She'll be on her own then," Angus' Mum tuts.
"Yes she will. The children felt that would help her have some time to think things through, lest she try to take things out on them. She's done that before, you know." I say. I don't like being in this position at all.
"Yes, but she'll have no one to comfort her, it's such a shame," murmurs Angus' Mum.
Sweet Mary Fuck. While I'm sorry that she'll feel bad - actually I honestly am, I don't like her to feel bad because feeling bad sucks, and also because she'll just dump it on Angus' family and kids - I could really, really do without being made to feel bad about the Lemonheads again.
I sigh heavily. I wonder why Angus' Mum feels I am someone to share the ex's burdens with. I remember once Jeff was flying over to see us on the unaccompanied minor service. Angus was unreachable and the flight was delayed so instead of phoning me, Angus' ex phoned his mum. Mum called me. She explained that the poor ex, she couldn't just hang around the airport with her then 9 year-old son, she had a birthday party to go to! It was so sad for her to be late for a birthday party! The poor woman!
I was aghast. As far as I'm concerned, if a flight is late you fucking wait with your kid. You can be late for a birthday party in order to be with your kid. Hell, you crawl across frozen tundra for your kid if the situation dictates it. I'm sure the phone receiver iced up in her hand as his mum realized that I was the last person in the world to have sympathy for the ex on this one - Angus and I have waited loads of times with the kids for flights running late, it's what you do. His mum got off the phone then.
I look up at Angus, who's watching his mum and I. I raise an eyebrow. He makes a slashing motion to his mum, the international signal for "enough". She sees the motion and purses her lips together, but changes the subject.
She gets right on my nerves twice more.
Once was when she was playing Jenga and I accidentally jogged the table. "Do you mind?" she asked frostily. I apologized - it was an accident, honest - but I could've done without her tone. I suppose by then I'd really fucked her off, though. She'd had one other go at us before then.
"Wasn't the Christening lovely?" she'd asked.
Sure. Jesus sandals, bathing a kid's head, and a whole lot of prayin'. It was ok as Christenings go. "Yes, it was all right," I replied.
"Now you can use both Jilly's Christening outfit and the new baby's outfit for your Christening," she says. Oh this path again. I know this path.
"We're not having a Christening," Angus states firmly.
If anything, today further convinced us. The very, very religious ceremony was just honestly not our kind of thing. Why would we have our family and friends join round for something that is not important to us? It's important to them, and I understand that, but in my mind Angus and I arranging a baptism is like a hypocrisy, to me it mocks the seriousness and gravity with which those in our family place in the ceremony. I think it's rude for Angus and I - two non-religions people - to go impose ourselves on a tradition we don't believe in.
"But shouldn't you be thinking about the well-being of the children?" she asks.
Believe me. It's all we think about.
"We do. And we believe it should be their choice. If they want to be baptised when they're older they can be. We will support them fully at any juncture. But we don't believe this should be imposed on them, the choice should be theirs." I state calmly.
"It's important that the children have a name," she counters. Ah yes. That whole "the child actually gets named at the baptism, not on the birth certificate" shtick. As far as we are concerned, the name that goes on the birth certificate is the name. To us a baptism is just a religious hedging of the bets.
There is more commotion over this one. Angus finally draws a line under it. I feel really worn out, and the babies aren't even born yet. I can't wait to see what parenting lectures I'm going to get.
I realize that the Reverend may be away but there's a sub for him anytime he needs it.
It's clear to me. I'm the heathen who's corrupting his son and his two upcoming babies while not being sympathetic enough to the needs of his ex. I drive us home, Angus having enjoyed one-third of a bottle of good Polish vodka with his brother and a Polish guest and Gorby, passed clean out in the back of the car, snoring, with a full stomach and dreams of children running around. It had been a long day.
Still, I have my get out of jail free card. It's signed by Jesus. That's got to be worth something.
-H.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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1
First, just want to say that Jake makes me wait every single damn time we have anywhere to be. And it drives me nuts. I spend more of my time waiting on that man.... and people think it's women who take forever.
Second, just reading about the pressure being put on you makes my blood boil, probably because we got a bit of similar pressure from what we considered unlikely sources. First, my mother pointedly asked me to take my christening gown. I told her she could keep it because we wouldn't be needing it and she gave me a look that said she was most disappointed. Not what I would have expected from my mother. And then Jake's grandfather gave us a gorgeous white blanket that he pointedly mentioned twice as I was gushing over how beautiful it was that it was, in fact, a CHRISTENING blanket. Did you get that? A CHRISTENING blanket. Funny coming from a man who divorced his wife of twenty-some years and mother to his six children. But you know. Whatever.
Anyway, the point is, bravo to you and Angus for showing the united front and not letting family pressure dictate how you raise those babies. I know a lot of people do just cave for the sake of peace and quiet, but someone has to draw the line in the sand. Hopefully once the Lemonheads arrive, everyone will be so overwhelmed by their cuteness that no one worries about that stuff. Here's hoping!
Posted by: donna at July 16, 2007 01:49 PM (Kco5r)
2
Clearly your theology regarding the "get out of hell free" card is more conventional than traditional. : )
I know you don't sit around waiting for Solomon to agree with you, but on this one I'm with you 100%. Maybe it's the 3 hours of sleep talking (Angel3 kept us up), but I don't see a need to have a baby baptized/dedicated if one doesn't believe it to be valid?
Posted by: Solomon at July 16, 2007 01:52 PM (x+GoF)
3
Clearly your theology regarding the "get out of hell free" card is more conventional than traditional.
I know you don't sit around waiting for Solomon to agree with you, but on this one I'm with you 100%. Maybe it's the 3 hours of sleep talking (Angel3 kept us up), but I don't see a need to have a baby baptized/dedicated if one doesn't believe it to be valid?
Posted by: Solomon at July 16, 2007 01:53 PM (x+GoF)
4
Sorry for the duplicate comment. I didn't think it posted at first. My bad.
Posted by: Solomon at July 16, 2007 01:54 PM (x+GoF)
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Have you ever read the books "Growing Up Catholic"? I'm still modestly practicing (what with kids in Catholic school and all) and get such a kick out of them that I let my son read them too.
They certainly won't sway you back into the fold - but will give you a chuckle.
Posted by: cursingmama at July 16, 2007 02:04 PM (PoQfr)
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my grandmother swore I'd never have a healthy day in my life since my parent's didn't have me baptized. Strangely, I'm alive and well.
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 16, 2007 02:11 PM (+MvHD)
7
As long as you're doing what you think is right by them - and I'm pretty sure your idea of right is on the right track - they're you're all well and good. I just wonder if it won't be harder dealing with the lectures than actually raising the Lemonheads. Then again, might that not just be the hardest part of parenting in general, doing it your way and not bowing to possibly incorrect pressure?
Posted by: Hannah at July 16, 2007 03:01 PM (5w+E2)
8
Your comment program wouldn't post my long, ranty comment because it objected to the word "b-i-z" in my comment.
Problem is, I didn't use the word "b-i-z". Nor anything close to.
So I deleted the whole thing and instead I'll just sum up a trifle more succinctly:
Religions are man-made mythologies which exist so people can feel less afraid of dying and also so each group can feel superior to everyone else
*and*
If Angus' ex is really going to lose her shit from this news then she needs to grow the fuck up. Nobody died for god's sake.
/Ms. Compassion 2007 here (lol)
Posted by: The other Amber at July 16, 2007 03:52 PM (zQE5D)
9
1.) "Dangerous Minds"
2.) "Gangsta's Paradise" by Coolio
3.) Amy and I call then JCs. I say "Jesus Cleats." Amy says "Jerusalem Cruisers."
4.) Kinda sick that I can still run through the entire baptism ceremony in my head word for word, eh? Including the baby screaming when they pour the icy water on the widdle head.
Love to you!
Posted by: Ms. Pants at July 16, 2007 04:02 PM (+p4Zf)
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Religion is such a sticky topic. I do not envy your relationship with Angus's mum one bit. I think you both handle yourselves wonderfully. And I agree with you 100%.
One reason I am not religious is I can't stand hypocrisy, which where I live and the religion practiced around here it is all too common. I really am sorry that you were made to feel bad yet again about the Lemonheads-but babies are wonderful things, and once they are in Angus's mum arms her tune may change. Stranger things have happened.
Posted by: Teresa at July 16, 2007 04:04 PM (6RAsc)
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i feel you totally on this post. my not-quite-mother-in-law is the same way. i can't wait to see how it all plays out once the babies (yours, mine, etc) are here... will they learn to shut up, or will it get worse?
Posted by: b. at July 16, 2007 04:27 PM (wtBf+)
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You know, next time Angus' mum or brother start in on the whole baptism thing, tell them you ARE having one, and it will be a pagan ceremony dedicating the babies to harmony with nature. And of course they're invited to attend. Naked.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 16, 2007 04:38 PM (qPLLC)
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Yup... this confirms it once again... you are a fantastic person and are going to be a terric mom.
Posted by: sue at July 16, 2007 05:04 PM (WbfZD)
14
Loving the Fillipina women who are karaoke lovin' belly rubbers. There are certain people who just want to invade your space and touch your belly ... and then there are those who give off a warm loving vibe and you get a bit of it each time they rub your belly.
Hating the pressure that you're under over the ex's feelings. Yeah, she's going to be hurt and pissed off, but that's part of life. You guys have gone above and beyond when respecting her feelings, but you can't continue to walk on eggshells and avoid the elephant in the room. Either way she'll be pissed off - if you told her right away she's had 9 months to stew. She'll be mad now because it's half over and she didn't know. She would've been really mad had she found out after the fact. I think you guys are handling this as well as you possibly could! Very very smart having the kids with you when telling her. She'll still rip into you after they're home, but hopefully she'll be over the initial red hot anger by then.
When my dad and his wife got pregnant we had to tell my mom. My mom, who was already so depressed and lived in her bedroom when she wasn't working, shrugged her shoulders and said "well, that figures." It did help her to move on though. She stopped living in a fantasy world where my dad would magically come back to her - although he doesn't help things by teasing with the idea nearly 20 years later. My brother and I were 13 and 15 at the time.
I can only hope that this helps the ex move on a bit herself. Not only will it make her happier, it will also make Melissa and Jeff happier.
I've probably said all the wrong things. I jsut want it to work out for everyone, you know? You're stressed out enough as it is without the help of your future mother in law and the ex.
Posted by: Michele at July 16, 2007 05:19 PM (H4SV7)
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That was a really long post!
Posted by: sara jane at July 16, 2007 05:51 PM (t5Xsa)
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Good job dealing with the difficult questions in a diplomatic way that doesn't compromise your beliefs. Religion is something that is felt so strongly that middle ground is often impossible. I think you handled it marvelously!
Posted by: sophie at July 16, 2007 08:03 PM (1HOa8)
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There shouldn't be one more second spent feeling bad about your babies!! I know it isn't easy when you have The Weight of the World on your shoulders and relatives who are, let's say, opinionated, but dollface, these are your babies and for once, you get to decide what and how and when and if. Amen.
Posted by: Donna at July 16, 2007 10:57 PM (lQSbL)
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I'm not catholic so I'm really bummed!
Here I am almost 40 and I don't have a REAL name. I thought the name on my birth certificate was a enough. Now I just feel like a no-namer.
Oh well, I've survivied this long without a real name, I guess I'll just have to keep making do.
Posted by: grace at July 17, 2007 01:41 AM (yJz+h)
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July 14, 2007
Results
When Angus and I first started IVF here in the UK it was under something called the egg share program. Egg share is maybe hard to understand, but the gist of it is this-in the EU (unlike the U.S.) it's illegal to buy eggs from a woman, so if you're a woman who, for whatever reason, can't use your own eggs, you have a long damn wait on the national registry to get access to donor eggs. When you get the call that you've been matched with someone based on physical characteristics, you go through an IVF cycle yourself and take half the donor's eggs and then you hope and pray.
Angus and I had two reasons for doing this - the first is honestly the fact that if I donated half of the eggs I created during an IVF cycle, my IVF cycle would be free. It sounds horrible and materialistic, but it's true. IVF isn't cheap. The woman who I'd be donating eggs to would basically pay the cost of my cycle and her cycle. The division of the eggs would be even, except in the case of an odd number of eggs I'd get the spare. They would not divide them based on quality, just an even split.
The other reason we donated is because, based on my past experience, I produce a serious bumper crop of eggs when on hormone stimulation. Sharing half my eggs seemed so logical, I could help another woman, try to have a baby ourselves, and manage to pay only the bureaucratic costs. I confess to the vanity of being so happy that I could help another woman. I admit that knowing I was going to be able to assist someone was something that kept me focussed.
On our first IVF cycle together here I produced 19 eggs. That's considered a large amount by our clinic, which is extremely conservative and careful about managing egg numbers. My 19 eggs were split - the other woman got 9 eggs, I got 10 eggs.
I never knew a single detail about the other woman. I had to answer a long questionnaire about myself which would be filed with the government, the hospital, and a copy for the other woman, which she would get on the occasion that she achieved what's sentimentally known as a "viable pregnancy". Summing yourself up on a few pages of questionnaire is a pretty fucking scary thing when you're faced with it, and to this day I cant remember everything I said on it. I was terrified. When any children she had turned 18, they would be allowed by law to seek out their "birth mother". As far as I was concerned, I was not the birth mother. I would be happy to meet any offspring I helped create, but I had no doubt I was not their mother. The person who sang them to sleep and cleaned skinned knees and went on holiday with them was their mother.
On that first cycle, after splitting my eggs and then working on getting ours to fertilize, I mentally signed off my thoughts of the other woman. I had thought of her constantly prior to that - there was another woman in the UK doing some of the same drug treatments I was doing to get ready. There was another woman who probably thought about me a lot. There was another woman depending on me.
On that first cycle, neither of us got pregnant.
On the resulting frozen embryo transer, I was the only one who got pregnant, which I later miscarried.
The other woman had received 9 of my eggs and never achieved a positive pregnancy, and I can't tell you how bad I felt about that. She must've felt great - 9 eggs is a nice amount to work with in a country that tries for only 8-12 eggs per woman per cycle. She must've got her hopes up. She must've believed. 9 eggs later and it was all over.
In January we started on our next (and last, as in the UK you can only do two donor cycles of eggs) donor cycle. This time my body didn't respond as well to the drugs. It was an extremely stressful cycle even though I took great care of my body in preparation. In the end I only got 8 eggs, most of them not very good quality.
I felt terrible.
Another woman had her hopes pinned on the donor again, and all I came up with were 8 eggs of crappy quality. She got 4 and I got 4. 4...what an underwhelming number to pay nearly £6000 for. Of my 4, only 2 fertilized. We put both back in as the doctor explained they weren't great quality, it was incredibly unlikely they'd both take.
Fast forward and I'm now pregnant with the Lemonheads. Against huge odds those two average quality embryos made it. Unbelievable.
We decided to not find out about the other woman's success yet. I took it too hard last time, it really ate at me that I let someone down. My guilt from my previous failed cycle was enormous, it absolutely tore at me.
But something started to swing in me this week. Maybe it's knowing that we hit 24 weeks, that the midwife visit this week showed both myself and the twins in perfect health, maybe it's knowing that we're hitting survivability should the babies decide to come early. I don't know what it was, but I realized on Friday that I was ready to find out about the other woman, that it was ok to know now.
We called the clinic.
We got the word back.
The other woman never got pregnant using my eggs.
And once again I feel absolutely terrible for crashing someone's dreams. The logical part of my head tells me that I shouldn't feel bad, my eggs gave someone a chance and that's all that matters. But the illogical side of me knows how it feels to curl up in a fetal position and sob over a failed cycle.
I've been thinking about it a lot since then. Somewhere is a woman I send my heartfelt love and apologies to. Somewhere is someone that I want to hug and tell her how I did take care of myself, how I did wish for more for her.
I'm not a very touchy-feely person with regards to my stomach, I find I really only rub my growing bump when the Lemonheads are getting too active, as there's something about rubbing their kicks that makes them calm down. But this morning I sat on the couch and just rubbed the outside surface of my stomach in response to their little movements. I felt the small mound of a head on one side of me, and I smoothed my hand against it until they moved away. In whatever way I could I told them I loved them and that I'm glad they made it.
And for a little while the Lemonheads and I will mourn the dreams of another woman and hope she gets her chance soon to know what it's like to have someone inside you that you've never met but already love.
-H.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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Oh, that made me tear up. I would tell you there is no point in your feeling bad, but you know that, and hell, feelings are feelings. I would feel a little sad for her myself if it were me.
I hope she gets lucky down the road. And of course I have continued high hopes for these Lemonheads.
Posted by: scoldy at July 14, 2007 10:14 AM (zPRu7)
2
Bless your heart, Helen. Giving someone hope is a glorious thing to do and reaffirms my faith in humanity.
It wasn't her time yet. It may never be her destiny to have children. That doesn't take away from your gift.
{Hugs}
Posted by: pam at July 14, 2007 11:14 AM (l6NIn)
3
This is going to be harsh possibly, but I don't mean it to be. Your infertility is due to you getting your tubes tied. Really, the only reason you can't get pregnant is because of that. Other women have many many reasons they can't get pregnant. They could have egg quality and uterine issues. If they used good quality eggs (which you have as you've been pregnant multiple times), then their chances are upped but aren't still stellar as they mught be dealing with other non-egg related issues.
Please don't take it so hard. I know you feel as if you let them down somehow by your eggs not taking. I am sure they are happy that they even had the chance - a chance they didn't have without you.
I know I haven't commented much - dealing with some of that pregnancy jealousy or something. I am still watching and reading religiously - I just don't know what to say sometimes while I am still in limbo.
PS -I love love love that pea coat.
Posted by: Michele at July 14, 2007 04:02 PM (H4SV7)
4
I have to agree with the rest. You did your best by giving her a share of possible baby potential. What her body did with it (like yours) is out of anyones control.
IVF just like trying to get pregnant is a gamble, but it was very unselfish of you to share half of your eight. She was pretty lucky to have a chance because of you. The Lemonheads are lucky to have such a giving mommy!
Posted by: Heidi at July 14, 2007 04:55 PM (tXzvX)
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YOU did not let them down. Your eggs did not either. You gave both women a chance they may not have had otherwise. That's all you can do. God or whatever Greater Being you may believe in does the rest (in my opinion). Im sure they would each thank you for the chance you granted them, even if it wasnt as successfull as you/they wouldve hoped.
The fact that you care so deeply for their heart break is a testament to the quality of person you are Helen.
ps I sent you an email.
Posted by: Terry at July 15, 2007 12:33 AM (YxiC2)
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Thanks for such an interesting and poignant post.
It's not very often that we get a chance to see what it's like to be an egg donor- more often we hear from the recipients.
Very moving.....thanks for sharing, once again.
All the best-
Megan
Posted by: Megan at July 15, 2007 04:36 AM (YxiC2)
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That made my eyes water a little. It is wonderful of you to mourn for her losses (or never-happens), but there had to be a reason she didn't get pregnant, and your eggs are not that reason. Please don't come down hard on yourself. Her time will come.
Posted by: kenju at July 15, 2007 11:19 PM (DBvE5)
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It's not your fault. You tried, you took care of yourself, and you helped someone have a chance some others will never have. Don't beat yourself up over the timing not being quite right for someone else - you did all you could do, which is much more than some would even allow themselves to offer.
Posted by: Lisa at July 15, 2007 11:58 PM (e8V7B)
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What a lovely sentiment. I'm so glad it was you... maybe it just wasn't her time and she'll have a better go of it next time. You paid the price many, many times over... it's your time to be happy.
Posted by: sue at July 16, 2007 04:56 PM (WbfZD)
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July 13, 2007
A Typical Evening In Our House
Angus got a new toy.
See, since weÂ’re building an extension (or the architect and builders are, anyway), weÂ’re planning on doing a lot of the finishing work ourselves. For this, we will need tools. And I actually support him buying tools, because not only will they get used (and they do get used), but heÂ’s like a kid in a candy shop when heÂ’s around his man toys. I may fail to get excited about a table saw but if it floats his boat then whatever.
I went into the study the other day to find Angus slavishly poring over the new Toolstation catalog, with Post-It tabs at the ready to mark things he wanted. He pointed out something which looked not unlike a propane tank to my untrained eye. He was practically leaping out of his chair about it.
“What is that, baby?” I ask calmly.
“It’ll solve all our problems! It’s just what we need! It’s a compressor and it does absolutely everything!” he exclaimed.
“Indeed? So it’ll do the dishes?” I ask, arching my eyebrow. I feel that’s the benchmark of “I am dubious”, the arching of the eyebrow.
“Yes! It will!”
“I mean wash them, not blow the fuck out of them,” I reply.
“It’s just what we need! I’m going to have to get it!” he giggles.
“OK babe,” I shrug, smiling. “Do you need a tissue to clean up your mess from the catalog, or will you just wipe it on your boxers?”
“Ha bloody ha.”
The compressor showed up two days later. I was in London and Angus sent me a stern text that I was not to play with his new toys. When I entered the kitchen it looked like a tool and die factory had exploded all over the kitchen table. There was no way in hell I was going to play with his toys. I didn't even know what most of it was.
When he came home it was like a party atmosphere with the compressor.
“Look! I can hook a nail gun to it!” Damn. That was actually my idea for a Christmas present for him, now that’s out. Nothing says “romance” like something that can shoot a 4 inch spike out the nozzle at high speeds, after all. “It can dust! It can blow up balloons! It can spray paint! It does everything!”
Indeed. While he played with his toys I caved in to the Lemonheads demand for MSG. IÂ’ve never been a huge fan of Chinese food, but something about sweet and sour prawns was screaming my name. I got some take-away Chinese for us for dinner, and although IÂ’m good about not eating bad foods this meal was about as bad as it gets-springrolls, crispy seafood rolls, and sweet and sour prawns. It could only have gotten worse if IÂ’d actually taken our plates and battered them and fried them, too.
When I got there with our Chinese, something was up. The dog was glued to the underside of the table, whimpering. Angus looked chagrined. “You know how Gorby loves power tools?” he asked. I do – Gorby LOVES power tools. From a cordless drill to a table saw, he loves the noise and mess they make. We have to lock him inside the house sometimes he gets so over-excited about tools. “Yeah, well, he doesn’t like the compressor so much,” Angus says sheepishly.
This is a surprise. We both bet that Gorby would go absolutely mental over the new tool, and in a good way. We ate our dinner and then Angus turned on the compressor. Sure enough, Gorby disappeared into the living room in a haze of grey and white fur. Angus shut the kitchen door to work the tool (he actually had to – it was raining outside so he couldn’t go out and there was concern a part on it wasn’t working, which would necessitate immediate return to factory.) Gorby and I were in the living room with the doors shut, the dog hiding well behind the couch, whining. At the sudden sound of a valve backfiring, Gorby tried to jump up on the couch and bury under me.
This was wearing on me. It was a pattern – compressor humming, dog whistling, valve going off, dog dashing behind the couch despite comforting from me.
Finally, there was a blast of outtake air that was so loud that Gorby wouldÂ’ve tried to go up the chimney had the fire guard not been there.
“ENOUGH WITH THE TOY!” I shout.
Angus emerges from his compressor space and apologizes to Gorby. “I’m sorry, boy, it’s all done now.”
We chill out and watch version 1 of The Alastair Campbell Diaries while allowing the fried food to wrap itself around our arteries. I realize my right breast is itching terribly as I lounge on the couch. Fuck, I think. I have PUPPP. I delicately peel back my T-shirt (by "delicately" I of course mean "rip up my T-shirt with the grace of a frat boy at Ft. Lauderdale") and see, instead of said hateful rash, I have a bug bite.
I look up at Angus. "I have a bug bite on my boob."
He looks at me and shrugs.
I frown. "I need sympathy." I don't really need sympathy, it's just something we do.
"Oh! OK. Um...sorry about the bug bite."
I nod, satisfied.
We finish our TV program, love on Gorby once more to make sure he's feeling secure (he is, he has a very short memory) and then head up to bed. Once there, I find three more bug bites. I turn to Angus, who is reading his magazine in bed.
"I have four bug bites," I state.
"Oh," he replies, disinterested, folding up his magazine and switching off the light.
"Sympathy, please."
"I already gave you sympathy!"
"That was for ONE bug bite. I now have FOUR."
He sighs deeply and spoons me.
"My thoughts are with you at this difficult time."
This. This is why I'm with him. Because he buys compressors and knows just what to say.
-H.
PS-Zane could not make the meeting, so he sent a sub. Luckily said sub is someone I have worked with before and whom (according to Angus) is “sweet on me”. I’ll take a sweet on me over a showdown anytime, but I know it’s just a matter of time before Zane and I stare down over a table. Sorry, meant to blog yesterday but was exhausted after a long day of soul-sucking meetings.
PPS-Surprisingly I saw a large chunk that I had written a long post about on someone else’s blog, word for word. And I know it was mine because I’d done some edits to it that showed up on the other site. When I quote others or use something from an email, I credit them (even if I just use their initials or a shout out to them in case they want to maintain anonymity). I have seen people copy whole posts of mine and paste them, but they do usually tell people where the found the info, which I’m absolutely fine with-on the few occasions it looked like someone nicked whole posts of mine, I got pretty fucked off. Quote me? Link me? Borrow whole passages? No problem as long as you mention where you found it, because otherwise it pisses me off when people steal and makes me feel cheap and dirty and used, and not in the good “Friday night boot-knocking” kind of way, more like the "I wrote your term paper and you stiffed me on the payment" kind of way.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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1
Who's the lousy plagiarist? Name and shame 'em!
Alos hope your bugbites are ok. I haven't got a clue what a compressor is either, nor what you could do with it.
Posted by: Elisa at July 13, 2007 10:29 AM (6/XCd)
2
our air compressor makes a fantastic noise when it's first turned on (filling with air). It's hubby's compressor but it's MY nail gun.
I understand there are several sizes of nails and they take different guns, so you can still get Angus a nail gun for Christmas, just a different size.
Let me tell you how useful the compressor is for filling tires (bike, car, whatever).
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 13, 2007 12:18 PM (+MvHD)
3
Yes. Assholes like that need to be brought out in the open.
Tell Angus I'm very jealous of his compressor. I'd love to have one for myself, but since my neighbor has one he lets me use my wife doesn't see why I need one :-(
Posted by: ~Easy at July 13, 2007 12:18 PM (X+de8)
4
Well, you have my sympathy for your FOUR bug bites! I had four on one foot not too long ago, and that shit itched for a week.
Posted by: geeky at July 13, 2007 12:24 PM (ziVl9)
5
Our two dogs hate the compressor and actually peed themselves when we were putting down our new flooring.
DIY totally turns me on. Sgt knows he's going to get some serious loving after I've been shopping at Home Depot.
I can't help myself.
Posted by: Anita at July 13, 2007 12:54 PM (boPjE)
6
My dogs barks like mad and then he pees all over the floor when I turn on anything loud - like a blender. Yeah who plagiarized your post?! That is bull!
Posted by: Heather at July 13, 2007 01:21 PM (s0rhn)
7
Dare I say we have THREE air compressors? A huge one in the shop, a mobile one in the "work truck" (that goes to the field and can do on-the-spot repairs) and a small slightly-bigger-than-a-football one for when Hubs doesn't want to haul the work truck around just to air up a tire. Ah, yes, the testosterone does fly around here a bit.
I sympathize with the bug bites. That's the worst part of summer for me, until the hard freeze hits I get bit like crazy. I'm one of those people who swell up something horrid if I get bit by something as tiny as a "no-see-um" and would hate to think what kind of hell I would go through if I ever got stung by something significant.
Stealing your words? Filthy buggers! That is just SOOOOO uncool. You have such great words... but they are uniquely Helen words and should be rightfully credited as Helen words. Or, better yet, should just be left right where they started.
Posted by: sue at July 13, 2007 01:29 PM (WbfZD)
8
We play the tool lottery at my house all the time. I want something big done - and I convince my DH to do it by waving new tools under his nose. Unfortunately at the rate we're accumulating tools his next project may have to be a tool shed and I'm not getting anything out of it.
- Gotta call out the copy cat - or have some fun with it if it's been direct linked
Posted by: cursingmama at July 13, 2007 01:31 PM (PoQfr)
9
Lucy doesn't like the air compressor either - so, Gorby isn't alone. James has started leaving it in the basement and running a long long hose up the stairs - if possible. Tools tend to be his choice of gifts when it comes to birthdays and Christmas. Pocket hole jig? Sure! Just show me the specific website where I can buy it!
I feel for you on the bug bites. Could always dab a bit of calamine lotion on them and make pink spots a new fashion statement?
Yeah, the cold has taken away all ability to write things that are remotely funny.
People, use copy and paste for good things - not bad.
Posted by: Michele at July 13, 2007 02:19 PM (H4SV7)
10
Air compressors are a fine toy but from one girl to another, ya gotta draw a line in the sand if Angus ever wants to bring a backhoe home. Just don't let him do it.
Posted by: Marie at July 13, 2007 02:22 PM (v+Iku)
11
I see you've finally met the evil sploggers. Unfortunately there is very little you can do except explain to them about plagiarism and leave a little comment with the link to the original post, so their readers can see what an asshole they're dealing with.
Our princess loves power tools, too. And she doesn't mind compressors. In fact she thinks it is her MISSION to bark them to death. The only thing she runs from is the dreaded evil vacuum monster....
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 13, 2007 04:03 PM (qPLLC)
12
::: stomps and whines,
a la Veruca Salt, "I want a compressor NO-ooooooow!" Seriously - that's one of the toys on my list. LOL
As for Gorby, being afraid will keep him away from the business end of the nail gun, right? I can really imagine him hightailing it out of the room occupied by the big scary monster compressor noises. Pathetic and cute at the same time.
You have my deepest sympathies for your bug bites, which I hope are on the way to healing. And I *love* battered and fried Chinese food dishes! Comfort food for sure.
(Go starch!
) Love the sympathy game.
Posted by: Lisa at July 13, 2007 08:13 PM (e8V7B)
13
I still don't understand what air compressors do; I just know guys LOVE them! hahaha
And I ran across an ENTIRE blog entry of mine the other day on a weird-assed blog that at least linked to me at the bottom of the post, although it didn't give me credit for writing it. I still don't even understand what the blog was for or why my entry was on there but there I was.
Not only that, but some of the words had been changed in nonsensical ways too; like the word "apple" randomly inserted where I'd written the word "people", you know? Odd substitutions like that.
My theory is, it's an alien blog. Aliens have been watching this behavior for some time and they want to know why people enjoy blogging so much. So they created their own blog, but being aliens, lacked anything to say, so they grabbed my entry at random and posted it.
Then waited for the "high" they are sure humans must be getting.
What? Why are you staring?
it could happen!
;-P
Posted by: The other Amber at July 13, 2007 10:13 PM (zQE5D)
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July 11, 2007
Crash, as Filmed by Robert Altman
Yesterday was directed like a Robert Altman film. One continuous shot as the trippy dippy lead character (me) went about her daily grind. Maybe you can picture it-panning from the warehouse where the scene dressings are stored, as I walk along a path dodging golf carts. Script boys run between sets and in the background is someone dressed like Big Bird.
Instead, my daily grind yesterday was set in London, and quite a few things happened yesterday in the typical non-descript way that my life seems to happen.
I took the train in to London, hopped an overcrowded tube, and headed to my therapist. The tube was heaving with morning rush hour traffic, which is always a scenario I don't like because I just don't like crowds. I sigh heavily and sway from hand to hand as I stand in the aisle. I wonder if I pick my feet up if I'll remain standing, so packed is the train.
Then? The Robert Altman camera pans to a middle-aged man who is reading his paper as he sits on a seat nearby. He looks at me. He takes in my protruding gut. He kindly offers me his seat. I wearily accept with enormous gratitude. It's a first for me, a man giving me his seat. It's also a first for me, a woman accepting the seat. As I keep growing, hopefully it won't be the last.
My therapist meeting was good. The walk down the tree-lined residential avenue is always calming. The weather wasn't brilliant, but the intrepid me was not getting rained on and that's all that matters. More unusually my session had a unique point to it - we have spent so long trying to get me to connect to my feelings that now we're trying to get me to disidentify with them in order to strip the negative out. He had me do an exercise which I was cynical about at first but in the end, it worked.
Score one for the home team.
I like my therapist but lately I've had a hard time. Not because I am dealing with difficult emotional stuff, but because by the time I reach his place my coffee has kicked in. Big time. And for the past few weeks, I've found as soon as I enter his loft space (the house he lives in accommodates all kind of hippy granola types - massseuses, acupuncturists, therapists) I have to go the toilet. Like, big go. As in what Angus calls a "spidoosh". I'm not trying to overshare or anything here, but I absolutely cannot do big business in my therapists' toilet. That's just wrong. What if he heard? I'd need more therapy. GOD.
So every week I suffer because every week I forget about the trauma and order a coffee on the way to meet him.
I have only myself to blame.
Robert Altman films my twitchiness with aplomb.
I made my way to a work building, where I had a meeting. Then another meeting. Then another building for another meeting. I get an email from Angus which is the draft email he's going to send to his ex to break the news about the babies, and could he have my comments? We do this often-send sensitive personal emails to each other to review, to see if one of us can see a potentially bad wording of something in order to make things more delicately handled. I have a few comments, which I send back.
We're getting ready to tell her next week.
Let the nightmare begin.
On my way to another tube station to go to another meeting (keep up here, Robert Altman is still working the one take angle here) I see a sale at Space NK. I do massive busines as I buy a load of Christmas presents for people. I know it's only July
, but my Christmas season is going to be pretty busy and - I can imagine - not very mobile.
I feel really homesick for Melissa then. I send her a text message. She replies. Then we talk on the phone for a long while. Our talk is about her horse camp, how she's doing, what she misses, and about Harry Potter. I had to duck off the call to go to a meeting, but I was on a high from talking to her all afternoon.
The camera pans over to me in another meeting room. We sit there and discuss technical architecture, using so many acronyms it sounds like we're speaking code. We work. We develop. Then, we plan ahead for a larger technical meeting we're having on Thursday.
One of the guys in the room, a vendor who works for us whom I know extremely well, mentions they have a new systems designer. Said systems designer is very good. Said systems designer works for Company X, the Swedish company I lost my job from years ago.
"Really?" I ask, chewing my Granny Smith apple. My feet are propped up on a chair. The guys don't mind, they offer gentle teasing about my state but do things like hand me the rubbish bin to throw my goods away in so I don't have to get up. "Anyone I know?"
"It's a guy named...." my colleague starts, flipping through his notebook to get the name. "Ah! Here it is. His name is Zane."
I stop chewing. The apple feels like a heavy mush in my stomach and a hot wash has just lurched over me. "Zane?" I ask, swallowing heavily. "What's his last name?"
"Zane...Michaelson. That's it. Zane Michaelson."
And since I'm such an excellent poker player and can totally keep my emotions to myself, this is followed with: "Oh, so I see you know him, Helen?"
I nod and smile.
I do indeed know him.
He's my ex-husband's best friend.
"I used to work with him," I explain. Which I did. We never got on, really, we kind of tolerated each other for my ex's benefit. It seems like high school it was so long ago, but there you have it. In certain lines of business, it all comes back again.
Robert Altman busily films the scene, which he titles in his head "Crash", unaware that the title has already been taken.
I get to meet up with Zane tomorrow then. I haven't seen him in 4 years, not since I got let go from Company X, not since my ex and I divorced and I took up with Angus. And now I'll be across the table from him, the customer, the pariah, the cuckolder...and the pregnant one. I don't know how much my ex - who is still living and working in China - knows. I did send him an email telling him of Mumin's death and he sent a reply that was actually nice and polite. We don't talk because we don't need to, but that doesn't mean I'd want him to get hurt. If he would. Maybe I'm being presumptuous there, too, maybe he's so over me I'm not even a memory. I can't imagine he doesn't know I'm with Angus, as telecoms is more gossip-y than Sweet Valley High.
Angus had to meet and work with people who knew both him and his ex. He never had any really uncomfortable conversations about it, as the people he worked with were pretty conservative and very English about the handling (tiptoe, be delicate, don't mention the war!). Zane, on the other hand, is about as subtle as acid reflux. It will be uncomfortable. I'm looking forward to it like I'm looking forward to childbirth. Scratch that - I'm more looking forward to childbirth than I am meeting Zane.
Angus hugs me later that evening. "It had to happen," he tells me sympathetically.
Robert Altman circles us, standing in the kitchen with his camera.
"I know," I reply. "It did." And it did have to happen. Telecom is incestuous. It was inevitable that I run into this situation, I had to bust my Facing People From the Divorce cherry at some point. In some ways, I can even imagine I may even be in the same space as my ex again (although while he's in China, this is pretty unlikely seeing as he was never a fan of the UK and I'm unlikely to find myself in Guangzhou anytime soon).
Everything is always so complicated.
Even Robert Altman agrees and he should know, he's been following me all fucking day.
-H.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
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1
...are you sure your ex isn't married and preggers, too?...
You'll be your wonderful self and Zane will be amazed and in awe at your beauty and will have nothing but great things to report to the ex... who knows? Maybe they aren't even friends anymore! Stranger things have happened.
Posted by: sue at July 11, 2007 01:26 PM (WbfZD)
2
I can just see you (ok, metaphorically) sailing past this guy tomorrow, knowing that he has nothing on you and can't bother you in the least. You'll do great.
Posted by: Hannah at July 11, 2007 02:28 PM (5w+E2)
3
Ok, so this is completely not responding to anything you said, other than I spit Blueberry Iced Tea all over my keyboard when you referenced "Sweet Valley High". I think I have up to book #104 stashed away in a box somewhere. Good Night Irene!
I'm agreeing with Sue and Hannah. Put on your very best poker face and even if you are a bundle of nerves on the inside, focus on the actual purpose of the meeting and you'll kick ass.
Posted by: Tif at July 11, 2007 02:42 PM (jCFyL)
4
Helen, I have been following your words for nearly as long as you have been writing, and this southerner is delurking to give you the advice her mother gave her... "kill them with kindness". At first I thought she was just telling me to lean over backwards, but having had to deal with an ex who broke up with me to date his student (whom he later married), I soon realized that by "being kind" when we were in the same place (and hell, we were in the same damn department for the next year until I could get out), I was keeping him guessing all the time. I was "serene" and he was...not. I ended up feeling much better for myself than if I had it out with him, because I secretly felt like I had the upper hand the whole time; he could be nasty (and so could the bitch gf) and I could just smile and let them think I was plotting revenge without lifting anything but the corners of my mouth.
I don't know. Maybe it's a southern thing.
Posted by: Mandy at July 11, 2007 04:09 PM (G4qQJ)
5
Well, lovey--in sympathy/empathy? My ex of 16 years (with whom I had a great love for many years and then a horriffic breakup which involved stalking on his part and a public hearing--oh, and he's a shrink, with a practice right down the street) lives around the corner from me and my husband with his new "barbie-doll" wife. He does not allow her to speak to me, but curiosity overcame her at a neighborhood Christmas party once. It was terribly awkward. And weird.
So, you see, it's not just telecom that's incestuous; it's the world. Anyway, once you see Zane the first time, at least you won't have to dread it anymore.
This is me sending you virtual armor and warm wishes for a poker face.
Posted by: Deborah at July 11, 2007 04:13 PM (GOFVL)
6
The others are absolutely right. Once you're done seeing him, you won't be dreading it. And being nice never goes wrong in the professional arena.
Good luck, babe. Hope it went well.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 11, 2007 05:38 PM (/vgMZ)
Posted by: That Girl at July 13, 2007 02:07 AM (Mc2V9)
8
Still here, even if I haven't commented in a bit...
I think you're doing beautifully! Proud of you...
Posted by: serena at July 13, 2007 03:40 AM (4J7so)
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July 10, 2007
Rules of Pregnancy
A cool mum-to-be I know sent me the following email, which I think was appropriate enough to include here:
Rules of Pregnancy
1. The appropriate response to a couple telling you they are having a baby is "Congratulations" with enthusiasm. Any other response makes you a jerk.
2. Through the wonders of science, we now know that babies are made ONLY by the mother and father- not grandparents or other family. Unless the baby is in your uterus or you are the man that helped put it there, you may not ever use the phrase "my baby"
3. On the same note, unless you made the baby as defined in #2, the pregnancy, birth and the raising of the child are not about you. You do not have input. No one wants to hear your opinion unless they ask for it.
4. The body of a pregnant woman should be treated the same as any other body. You would not randomly touch someones stomach if they were not pregnant, nor would you inquire into the condition of their uterus, cervix or how they plan to use their breasts. Pregnancy does not remove all traces of privacy from a woman.
5. Likewise, no woman wants to hear comments on her weight- ever. A pregnant woman does not find it flattering that you think she is about to pop, must be having twins, looks swollen or has gained weight in her face. Telling her she looks too small only makes her worry that she is somehow starving her baby. making such comments invite her to critique your physical appearance and you may not act offended. The only acceptable comment on appearance is "You look fabulous!"
6. Most of us have picked up on the fact that summer is hot. We are hot every summer when we are not pregnant. We donÂ’t need you to point out that we will be miserably hot before the baby comes.
7. There is a reason that tickets to Labor & Delivery are not yet sold on Ticketmaster. Childbirth is actually not a public event. It may sound crazy, but some women really do not relish the idea of their mother, mother-in-law or a host of other family members seeing their bare butt or genitals. Also, some people simply feel like the birth of their child is a private and emotional moment to be shared only by the parents.
8. Like everything else in life, unless you receive an invitation, you are not invited. This includes doctor appointments, ultrasounds, labor, delivery, the hospital and the parents home. you do not decide if you will be there for the birth or if you will move in with the new parents to "help out". if your assistance is desired, rest assured that you will be asked for it.
9. If you are asked to help after the birth, this means you should clean up the house, help with cooking meals, and generally stay out of the way. Holding the baby more than the parents, interfering with breastfeeding and sleeping schedules and making a woman who is still leaking fluid from various locations lift a finger in housework is not helping.
10. The only people entitled to time with the baby are the parents. Whether they choose to have you at the hospital for the birth or ask you to wait 3 weeks to visit, appreciate that you are being given the privilege of seeing their child. Complaining or showing disappointment only encourages the parents to include you less.
OK, let's talk about numbers 4 and 5, shall we?
About the weight - I've had a few people comment on my size now. I'm at that stage where I am very obviously pregnant now. I'm not in that ambiguous "does she need to lay off the chocolate Pop-Tarts or not?" stage, no one will confuse me with someone who went to a Harlem Globetrotters game and swallowed the game ball. I'm pregnant. It shows. There are all kinds of opinions about how much weight a woman should gain or not. I'm 6 months in and have gained 20 pounds. When I read that the average twin pregnancy should include 50 pounds of weight gain, I nearly wept. No, scratch that. I did weep. When I met my movie buddy Lloyd, he laughed at me and said I was enormous and should clearly only gain 5 pounds, no one needs to gain 50 pounds.
I refrained from smacking Lloyd as hard as I could and telling him that until he carried something the size of a bowling ball around his two intestines, he should keep his fucking mouth shut.
I did not share my popcorn with him, however.
I get loads of comments. I'm actually not that big I don't think, other women having twins - and some of women with just 1 baby - look bigger than I do, maybe because I'm a taller chick with a ribcage that Pavarotti would admire, so I can pack away a lot of baby in here. People insist on commenting on my size, and it really pisses me off. I'm pregnant, capisce? Don't go around telling me how big I am, I don't go up to you and tell you to ensure you don't have a monobrow, do I? Angus made the fatal error of calling me to the phone the other day with the term of endearment "Fat Girl". He was joking, of course. But clue drama of Faye Dunaway style and you'll understand my reaction to being called that term (he apologized and promised to not call me that again, which is good because I'd hate to ratchet my diva dial all the way up on high already.)
If you see a pregnant chick, just tell her she looks good. Even if she looks like shit. Lie, people. Just lie.
About number 4 - I can't reiterate it enough: Don't rub a pregnant woman's stomach without asking her first. Just don't do it. We are not Buddha. We are not a genie, we cannot grant you 3 wishes. We are not Care Bears who will make your very bestest wish come true. We are carrying babies and feeling a bit self-conscious about it in general, thanks. I get it that people want to "be one with the energy" or to be a part of it, but it's patronizing in the extreme. So far, I have had my stomach rubbed by seven people. Seven. In a very uncomfortable moment, I had to meet with an external company and one of my bosses came in to the meeting and joined. He introduced himself and me. Then he - I still can't believe this myself - told the table that I'm a top project manager who always delivers what he tells me to, even going above and beyond the call of duty, and to emphasize his point he patted my stomach.
I sat there with a frozen expression on my face. You'd think I was being pleasant. Inside, I'd turned into a verbal Rambo.
I'm sure some women don't mind it, there are women that no doubt feel ok or even connected about people touching them. I don't like people touching my stomach when I'm not knocked up (I need a sec to suck it in, after all), why would I be ok about emphasizing the point that I can no longer see my beaver? If women love you to touch their pregnant stomachs, I'm sure they'll tell you. They may even be the ones with the shirt saying "Bun in the Oven", with that big arrow pointing towards their crotch.
Some of the stomach touchers - like Jeff, who not only touches my stomach but thinks that my navel is a loudspeaker through which he should talk in order to be broadcast into the Lemonheads comfy 1970's-style den - are on the ok list for touching me. Angus would have full clearance to touch my stomach, only he's more likely to rub his hand across the stovetop seconds after sizzling up some fajitas. Another person who's ok for touching me is this guy:
My Dad, who phoned on Thursday and told me that the airline he works for asked him to pilot in a flight to London for an overnight stay, and could he come see us?
Of course he could. We were ecstatic, including Granddog Gorby, who thinks my dad is the best thing since sliced dog biscuits. So my dad came, had dinner and stayed overnight with us, and yes he touched my stomach, but he's one of the few with a hall pass.
But he did comment on how big I'm getting, which necessitated an ass-kicking.
-H.
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You are effing hilarious and I love the way you write about these topics! I will never forget the day my female (childless) boss, poked me in the 7 month pregnant belly with her pointy finger to illustrate something she was talking to me about, in the toilet, at the office, after she had gone to the toilet, and before she had washed her hands! Nice......
Posted by: Sarah at July 10, 2007 06:19 AM (/i+3p)
2
Hi Helen! I hope you don't mind, but I have a friend who just opened an online baby/mum shop. Thought you might be interested: www.pickleandboo.co.uk.
Posted by: Juls at July 10, 2007 06:27 AM (Q03JQ)
3
My sister had big problems with #9 when my mother went to help her after each child was born. Every phone call I recieved from my sister started with "Do you know what your mother did to me today" and preceded with "I'm ready to send her back on the next flight".
Turns out having your mother around is more of a pain in the ass then actual child birth....
Who knew.
Posted by: Heidi at July 10, 2007 06:42 AM (7KDfj)
4
As always Helen, you look beautiful
abs xxxx
Posted by: abs at July 10, 2007 08:13 AM (pejJ8)
5
Knowing nothing about pregnant women, I have now engraved the above rules in my memory for all time.
Posted by: Hannah at July 10, 2007 08:56 AM (lUH62)
6
Helen, you look fantastic! =)
(And I'm not just saying that to be nice.)
Posted by: Amanda at July 10, 2007 12:20 PM (ay+rD)
7
What? You mean the tickets I bought are FAKE?? I'm suing Ticketmaster!!
Seriously, I've found that in general, it's the people without children who do the stupid things.
I would add one more thing to the list:
-If you visit, keep it SHORT during the first few months unless you're helping out by making a meal, or cleaning house. Mom and baby(ies) are tired. Their rest is more important than your entertainment.
As the father, I found that one of my primary functions was too shoo away well meaning but obnoxious visitors so that my wife and baby could sleep.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 10, 2007 12:26 PM (X+de8)
8
I have a short list of people who are allowed to touch me as well. At times I know when people who are not on that list are about to rub my belly and have grabbed their hand before it reaches me making for an awkward moment for them. Up until a couple of weeks ago I would let comments about my size slide. That was until one day when it was hot, really really hot and I was cranky, really really cranky a jack-ass in the local coffee shop said I looked like I was about to pop.
My comment back to him ... "Do I look like a zit to you?"
Stunned silence. Then he asked if I wanted decaf or regular.
You look fantabulous H. I'll let you rub my belly if I can rub yours
Posted by: Anita at July 10, 2007 01:01 PM (pTsT0)
9
Yes, yes, a million times yes. I never got past the "does she need to lay off the chocolate pop tarts" phase (delivering at 25w3d - not recommended, incidentally) and was actually having a bit of fun messing with some folks in my department by not saying anything and letting them wonder, so I was not tormented by random strangers touching my stomach, but I'm pretty sure I would have hauled off and slugged anyone who did.
And you DO look fabulous. I found you via one of your progress pictures that was on interestingness on Flickr. I think pregnant women, all pregnant women, are BEAUTIFUL.
Posted by: Sarah at July 10, 2007 01:03 PM (MJivL)
10
Just to defend the childless a bit, I hate being touched by strangers and I would never in a million years attempt to touch a stranger's pregnant belly. In fact, I don't want to touch anyone's belly, and if you make me I will inwardly cringe.
Posted by: geeky at July 10, 2007 01:04 PM (ziVl9)
11
Ha-ha to number five. It always cracks me up that woman get sensitive about their looks & weight when pregnant. The reality is guys (who don’t like guys) don’t think pregnant women look “fabulous”. Pregnant women look hot and you my dear are looking very fricking hot.
Cheers to your Angus, heÂ’s one lucky bastard.
Posted by: Mr. Dobbs at July 10, 2007 01:29 PM (WzwJX)
12
I found this shirt for you at Cafe Press...
It says, "Hands off the bump"
http://www.cafepress.com/buy/maternity+shirts+pregnancy/-/pv_design_details/pg_1/id_11172100/opt_/fpt_/c_360/
Posted by: impossiblejane at July 10, 2007 01:50 PM (eihy3)
13
Funny stuff Helen. The Super-Model gained 40lbs or more in all 3 of her pregnancies, and she never had twins. You really do look good, and you know my policy on lying...
The Super-Model and I are wrestling with points 7 & 8. Her parents showed up two weeks before the baby was born and went everywhere with her. EVERYWHERE!! I really like my in-laws, but Mrs. Solomon needed some alone time. They're still with us 18 days after showing up. They do help though...that's good.
The Solomons have a brand new baby boy!!! He was born Friday, July 6th, and was 8lbs 7oz and 21 inches. Just wanted to share the good news.
Posted by: Solomon at July 10, 2007 02:52 PM (al5Ou)
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I'll pile on. You DO look great, and very healthy.
Looks like Gorby and your Dad had a good time. I'm glad he could drop in!
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 10, 2007 03:39 PM (qPLLC)
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I love that picture; that is such a GREAT picture! The yard and your Dad and Gorby and you looking so happy.
And you really do look great! Not just blowing sunshine up your ass here.
I gained 60 pounds with my first and a whopping 70 pounds with second. Each time I lost it all and fit back in my "skinny" jeans within months. So don't worry.
Posted by: The other Amber at July 10, 2007 03:43 PM (zQE5D)
16
You do look great. I propose an 11th rule - no uninvited sharing of negative delivery-room experiences (yours or someone elses) with the pregnant lady.
Good stories - ok. For example, I had a colleague who (really, not making this up) slept through her first child's labor and was woken up by the nurse in time to push.
Posted by: suze at July 10, 2007 04:08 PM (0doyF)
17
What a great picture... and, yes, you look FABULOUS! Honest.
Glad your Dad got to stop by. What a great surprise.
Posted by: sue at July 10, 2007 04:18 PM (WbfZD)
18
Erm, sorry, I seem to have inadvertently broken number 5 while trying to be complimentary. I was jealous over having gained 50 lbs while carrying one, not trying to imply you hadn't gained enough. I promise it won't happen again.
You really do look amazing - fit, healthy, and glowing.
Hooray for a visit from your Dad! I'm glad he was able to come stay overnight with you. I laughed out loud at the description of Jeff talking through your belly button into the Lemonheads' den. Cute visual. I love the shirt someone posted a link to as well.
Posted by: Lisa at July 10, 2007 05:23 PM (e8V7B)
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Lisa-I promise you didn't upset me. This was "real world" stuff, honest!
Although I DO like Suze's number 11, no nightmare delivery stories (seriously, never a good idea to tell to a woman who's going to be facing that.)
And Solomon-congratulations. Honest!
Posted by: Helen at July 10, 2007 06:07 PM (OR0rC)
20
You would not randomly touch someones stomach if they were not pregnant...
You don't know me very well, do you?
Seriously though, I only touched the stomachs of family members and close friends. Even then, I asked first.
As for #5, I love how pregnant women look. My wife used to complain, "I'm fat." "Honey, you're not fat: you're pregnant. And you look magnificent."
So Helen, will you smack me if I give you a mental belly rub from across the pond? You look absolutely adorable as a mom to be.
Posted by: physics geek at July 10, 2007 07:46 PM (MT22W)
21
The proper comment is "you're glowing!" 'cause you are.
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 11, 2007 02:49 AM (tie24)
22
A willow, You are a willow, swaying in the wind.
ha- that is a quote from Night Shift, only the bestest movie ever from Michael Keaton.
except that that line was said by Henry Winkler to his girlfriend... funny....I guess you had to be there..
Posted by: j.m at July 11, 2007 05:18 AM (TsXw6)
23
Thanks Helen. I saw him smile for the first time today...what a glorious sight. I look forward to you seeing that for the first time in a few months.
I also look forward to baby posts and am pretty sure your other friends do too.
Posted by: Solomon at July 11, 2007 01:20 PM (x+GoF)
24
I only had 2 instances of people touching my stomach uninvited while pregnant -- both were coworkers. One touched it in a motherly way that didn't bother me. The other POKED it. Hard.
Posted by: Dotty at July 11, 2007 06:48 PM (KJE2B)
25
I was lucky enough to avoid most of the offenses when carrying my son. I got a couple that made me want to shove my foot up someone's nostril...but nothing too serious. My sister in-law however, was finishing up her last week at work, in her 39th and then some week of pregnancy and a woman said to her,
"You MUST be having a girl...you know because girls steal your beauty."
That woman is lucky she got away with her life.
Posted by: Kathy at July 11, 2007 08:51 PM (3gHjo)
26
AMEN to those rules! Especially #7
Posted by: Sara at July 12, 2007 08:23 PM (QKW+c)
27
We asked people to wait three weeks before visiting, it came as a shock to the recipients I think. Nevertheless, they respected our wishes.
You look lovely in this photograph, so relaxed and happy. I'm glad your Dad could stay with you and enjoy each other's company.
K from Australia
Posted by: Kikimiss at July 13, 2007 08:55 PM (Yv8ja)
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July 09, 2007
Fear
We think the nationality issue has been sorted now - thanks to those who offered links and advice, we read them religiously, and although we're still looking for official comment from Border and Immigration Control, we're much calmer about the issue that the babies will be American and British at birth. We're also pleased we don't have to get married at Basingstoke! The marriage issue has been put to rest, much to the displeasure of both of our families, but both of us really feel that the stress levels are high enough as it is, adding a wedding into the mix right now isn't going to help. We will get married. Just not yet.
I know I've been writing a lot lately about stress, issues, and conflicted feelings. Lately things have been coming in waves of primary colors, raw and wild stresses and fears that are as vivid as my hormone-induced pregnancy dreams. I don't mean for this spot to become a beehive of vulnerability, it's just I'm in an area that I have never been in before, an area I thought maybe I would never be in.
For years now, I've had few real fears. I guess when you meet with the action end of a bottle you stop being afraid of a lot of things, they just don't scare you anymore. Death doesn't scare me. Heights don't scare me. Snakes and creepy crawlies - while not my favorite things in the world - don't paralyze me with fear. I can say that I have a lot of things that concern me, but for so long I had nothing I was truly, completely, and utterly afraid of. Nothing stabbed me in the heart with cold hard terror. There was nothing that was a fate worse than death, because death itself wasn't a benchmark of alarm, and because death was, in some ways, a better answer to the life of unmitigated destruction I was forcing myself to live.
Until now.
Work with my nice couch man has been ongoing and will keep going until the babies are born, then I imagine some kind of scale down will have to happen. He's gotten me out of hopping out of myself. I am no longer feeling absolutely nothing at events that I should feel something at. I do not try to be anyone else, and I don't tell people lies so that they won't get to know me. I am the nearest thing to Me that I have ever been.
And he's helping me deal with the next round.
I always seem to have rounds. Only this one is a round which makes my mouth run dry. It makes me short of breath with panic. It makes me feel like going prostrate with agony and defeat, and that's something for me. I'm the little engine that could. I can take the defeat, the shit, the challenges. But suddenly, I am overwhelmed by something bigger than I am.
We're working as fast as we can.
I look back at the life I've lived as though I'm a war veteran standing on the edge of a very large cliff. From the view of the cliff, I can see it all. My childhood, where I was locked inside of eyes that didn't fit, where the embarassment and inadequacies first set in. My teens, where I ruthlessly seized the path of not belonging, and made it my mission to further making myself as distant as possible. My early adult years, where it was obvious to all and sundry just how detached I was, just how much was invisible from the surface. My late 20's, where I started to implode. The many, many hours I spent on a couch, trying to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.
I look down over my cliff and the sea smells of dysfunction, as screaming taunts, addictions, nightmares, emotional and physical violence, and that whine of the TV at 5 am as it plays only humming white noise churn below me. I am none of those people now, but they are all in me, and I am trying to reconcile them and move on. I survived it all, but even more than that, I survived myself. I did a far better job of enforcing the nightmares than anyone I ever loved could ever have done.
And now I feel kicking. It's gentle but insistent. It comes in the mornings, it comes in the late evenings, it comes when I am still. There is no noise in my head but there's noise in the ever-growing curve of my abdomen.
I have dreams that I am a warrior, battle-weary and scarred, trying to get three children out of a war-torn country. I am told, in typical Freudian bullshit fashion, that two of the children in my dream are the Lemonheads. The other child I am trying to save is me. I don't know what to make of this, but then I often don't know what to make of anything.
The battle to get over how broken I was is largely over. We have some smaller pieces to work on, but I am in my here and now. I am proud of the work I've done. I am proud that I survived myself. I wouldn't wish being broken on anyone, but if you make it through and can look back, then you are the strongest person I know.
I do not fear death. I do not fear love. But I do have a fear now, and it is scarier than anything I have ever felt. It punches me in the gut and takes my breath away. If I don't protect the babies as I should have been protected, I will have failed them. I will have failed myself. If I don't take heed and take a different path, then I will ruin them. If I don't save them from what I know is out there, then I will be no better than the monsters I tried to run from. It's not just all up to me, it's not all just tilting at windmills. I will conquer it, because there is no alternative.
My fear was unexpected.
My fear is honest, and terrifying.
My fear is simple.
My biggest fear in the world is that my babies will turn out like me.
-H.
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1
Congratulations. You are now a parent.
This is the fear that every parent lives with. Every decesion is now run through a new filter that overwhelms all other concerns. When you start to think about all of the things that can happen you'll go insane. Take deep breaths, and just do your best. It will be good enough.
Don't sell yourself short. You have many good qualities that your babies will aquire. I feel confident that your kids will not turn out exactly like you fear.
Posted by: ~Easy at July 09, 2007 12:05 PM (X+de8)
2
They're going to be somewhat like you. It's just inevitable. But, don't fear. You're a good person. Two little Helens running around delights me to no end.
Posted by: statia at July 09, 2007 12:16 PM (lHsKN)
3
I was just about to say the same thing. You are already a mom, in fact you have been for a while even before you got a postitive beta, and you have already been doing an excellent job caring for those Lemonheads. You will do better for them because you know you should and you know you can. That's not to say you won't make mistakes - every parent does - but you know how you want them to feel and you will work your hind end off to make sure they feel that way. You are already doing an amazing job.
Posted by: donna at July 09, 2007 12:20 PM (Kco5r)
4
My biggest fear is that my son is going to turn out just like my husband!
Posted by: paula at July 09, 2007 12:32 PM (FlZPw)
5
Your fear proves the couch time is/was well spent. Reality is fearful, fantasy can be pleasant. How the DNA replicants evolve is not totally up to the nuture of the DNA donors; nature plays a large role also. That said I predict the replicants will be well loved and feel very safe and secure in your home. With those advantages they will do very well in life.
Posted by: Foggy at July 09, 2007 12:43 PM (Dk5Ts)
6
You're forgetting the inner strength that it took you to finally get to where you are. Part of who you are is based on the paths you've taken, and while there is no doubt that the lemonheads will inherit characterisitics of both you and Angus, they will choose their own paths that will make them their own people. You're responsibility is to protect them from the unseens while they are young,guide them as they grow up, and be their roots when they are adults.
I cultivate a wish that if I go down the parenting route, that I will see my family togeher & relaxing regularly. My family, as it is now, only gets together on birthdays and holidays, as per general expectations. I dread those events, and I dream of a different relationship with my kids.
That being said, I do understand your fear. I would hope my kids where better than me, more fogiving and easier to laugh.
Posted by: Angela at July 09, 2007 12:48 PM (DGWM7)
7
Ahh, the rounds. I so hear you on that. Sometimes I wonder if the rounds ever stop or if they continually perpetuate one another. Would I have round 45856 if round 2283 didn't reveal blabbity-blah? Couldn't I have just done without realising blabbity-blah and saved myself several more rounds? Is it really imperative that I deal with the blabbity-blah when I've gone 32 years not even really being aware of it?
(Wish I could answer all that for both of us!)
However--here's what I think: your kiddos will be like you in many ways. I don't think this is anything to really fear, as you can't change it. That whole DNA thing? Yeah, there it is.
BUT. There's also the "product of our environment" kind of thing. Hel, your childhood was less than loving and nurturing. Much of how you are now is because you kinda had to raise yourself and in doing so, had to form a hard candy shell to keep you from melting in people's hands. (Though I hear you
do melt in mouths... what?! I'm just sayin!)
The Lemonheads aren't going to have the same kind of childhood that you had. You've waited so very long for their arrival and have wanted them from the get-go. I know you're going to be a loving, nurturing, caring mother. (Just look at Jeff and Melissa! They love you! And you're supposed to be the "Evil" Stepmother!)
Because you are going to love these kids to bits and back again, they won't have to form such a hard candy shell from the get-go. You'll be there to love them and support them all the way. Inevitably, they'll probably have your strength and drive. It's possible they might get a touch of the Dooms, as they're hereditary, but at least they'll have a great role model for dealing with them. You're taking the necessary steps to sort out your Dooms & Glooms so if they should wind up with a touch of it, they'll know immediately how to seek the help that will get them out of the Pit of Despair.
I understand your fears. (I echo them myself.) But from an outsider's view, you're worried about them becoming what you were like when you didn't have the tools to deal with life, not the wonderful, loving, caring, amazing woman you are now. Don't forget to update your own character and achievements when you're constructing Worst-Case-Scenarios. ;-p xxx
Posted by: Ms. Pants at July 09, 2007 02:30 PM (+p4Zf)
8
I am by no account a professional so I don't feel able to offer real advice. I am, however, a woman who has recently gone through her own roller coaster year. My family doctor recently told me that the fact that I am able to confront and rationalize my fears means that I'm over the hump. That Im able to move on. It does make sense to me, even if I am still wary. But just realize that almost every new mom has her own degree of fear that's holed up inside her. From what I've read so far of your journey, it sounds like you are a remarkable strong woman. The fact that you care enough to want to protect the Lemonheads from whatever lays ahead, just shows that you are indeed already a Mommy.
Good Luck Helen.
Posted by: Terry at July 09, 2007 03:01 PM (2nDll)
9
They will have the best of you. And with your and Angus' love and attention, they will be well-adjusted children who know they are loved, wanted and cared for forever.
Posted by: kenju at July 09, 2007 03:03 PM (DBvE5)
10
I agree. You've just passed Mommy 101. It never ends, sweetie... if it isn't one thing it is something else. The lemonheads will have your wealth of experience to guide them and although you will never stop fearing one thing or another for them you must remember that in many respects children come "pre-programmed" and all we can do is guide them. I can't think of a better guide than you.
Posted by: sue at July 09, 2007 03:07 PM (WbfZD)
11
"My biggest fear in the world is that my babies will turn out like me"
And that is a bad thing? The person they will know is the person you are NOW, not the mess you say you used to be......have a little faith in yourself, your stepkids haven't run screaming from you have they? Look outside, there are no villagers with pitchforks and torches out there. You are not the monster you seem to think you are.
Posted by: Donna at July 09, 2007 03:10 PM (XVAEN)
12
You already said here that you are the strongest person you know:
"The battle to get over how broken I was is largely over. ... I wouldn't wish being broken on anyone, but if you make it through and can look back, then you are the strongest person I know."
so why wouldn't you want the babies to be like that?
BTW, looking at your pic today from your website I thought you'd snapped a picture of the Loch Ness monster while you were in Scotland!
Posted by: Jennifer at July 09, 2007 03:32 PM (8aSU6)
13
My biggest fear in the world is that my babies will turn out like me.
Is that supposed to be a negative? You've gone through some rough times, experienced some terrible things, and yet somehow you've ended up stronger and happier than you were before those things. Isn't that what's supposed to happen?
As to this point:
If I don't protect the babies as I should have been protected, I will have failed them.
Join the crowd. I believe that every parent, myself included, worries that very thing. I believe that as long as you think that, you'll be fine. It's when you think that you've got it all figured out that the real problems arise.
Crikey, I speak like I know something. The reality is that I'm just making it up as I go along. It's okay, though: my children teach me what I need to know. I'm confident that your's will offer similar instruction.
Posted by: physics geek at July 09, 2007 04:32 PM (MT22W)
14
Like some of the others are saying; welcome to parenthood! I understand your fears; hell, I still beat myself up sometimes because I wasn't a perfect parent, but nobody is! And look how awesome my kids turned out, lol.
And you know, it wasn't easy. My father was an alcoholic, my childhood was the pits in many ways and my ex's childhood was horrific, although how much so I didn't find out until many years later. I tried to commit suicide when I was 17, you know. I wasn't exactly Miss Healthy Id back then, lol.
But we were determined to raise our kids without all that baggage, we weren't going to make the mistakes our parents had with us and guess what? We did a great job! And we were so young, too. I was only 22 when I had Lucy. But despite not getting any therapy for my own issues until after the kids were grown, still, the ex and I persevered. And we were successful!
So, if I can do it, you can do it too. You are older, wiser and you've done such great work on yourself! You'll be awesome.
Besides, a lot of it is up to them anyway. Despite how much weight we put upon parenting and yes, of course good parenting is very important, but ultimately the Lemonheads are going to be their own persons. You can guide them and do your best but in the end we are all ourselves and not our parents. So what they become in the end is only partially you and Angus but mostly them. Scary as that sounds, but it's true.
The important thing is that you yearn to be a good parent. That's what counts, that attitude. After that, it all just rolls out naturally, you'll see.
Posted by: The other Amber at July 09, 2007 05:13 PM (zQE5D)
15
I'm going to disagree with you, my friend. Being "just like you" is a pretty good thing. I know you have your demons and your issues. We all do. It's just that you have the resources and the resiliency to fight back. And that's a quality I suspect you'd appreciate both babies inheriting from Mom. That being said, I really don't think you're really afraid that your lemonheads will end up "just like you". I suspect that your real fear is that they will have to face unbelievably difficult, painful times as you did, and that will scar them, too. That's a healthy fear, and keeping it in the back of your mind will help you protect them.
Your Lemonheads were pretty smart picking you.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 09, 2007 05:40 PM (/vgMZ)
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I second caltechgirl. Every word, especially, "Your Lemonheads were pretty smart picking you."
Posted by: Mia at July 09, 2007 07:04 PM (+2lQc)
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I think the twins will turn out with your good characteristics - your resilience, your wit, your brains, etc. The difference here is they don't have to carry the same baggage you have carried for all these years. I have no doubt that you and Angus will love them to death and make sure they have all they need, and the two of you will strive not to repeat the same mistakes of your parents that contributed to your emotional troubles. You are committed to stability for your family, and few things will help them more than that. I believe that your problems have made you wise enough to teach your children how to avoid the same pitfalls you went through. Imagine this - the twins having the things that are good about Helen (yes you DO have good qualities, don't deny yourself that), but without the baggage. Unconditional love of your children will go a long way towards them turning out happy and well adjusted to life.
Posted by: diamond dave at July 10, 2007 01:26 AM (ReolN)
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July 06, 2007
The Logistics of Loving a Foreigner
Throughout all the baby talks, decisions, arguments, stresses, and choices, one thing has been 100% crystal clear to Angus and I - the babies, when they are born, will immediately be registered as American citizens by myself and British citizens by him. This is a point of non-negotiation for both of us. Our children will be dual citizens from Day One (ok, well, really more like Day Five, as we need to get home from the hospital first).
It's not that we worry there'll be an international incident regarding them or anything, but we are both keen to have our children be a mixed part of both of our lives. It's not ok for me to not register them as Americans, because that's where I'm from, that's what I am. It's not ok to not register them as British citizens, because that's who Angus is, that's where we live (and there's the side issue of the babies needing visas, etc.)
I did check with the American Embassy about the rules on this. For children born outside of wedlock to a U.S. citizen mother and non-U.S. citizen father, they absolutely can be American citizens as long as I have lived in the U.S. for 5 years after the age of 14 (it seems a strange rule, but I comply. I have official college transcripts to prove it.) So I need to turn up with the babies at the Embassy with my passport and birth certificate, as well as proof I lived in the States for 5 years after age 14 (if they even ask for it, I have a feeling once I open my trap it'll be clear I am, indeed, a Yankee Doodle Dandy), and voila-the babies get American passports and are Americans.
I checked on this.
I was worried about it.
My fears were assuaged.
Turns out I should maybe have checked on the British side of things, too.
Silly me - I honestly thought American citizenship rules would be more difficult than British ones. Seriously. Not because I'm having a go at America, but immigration in the States is so complex, I thought American citizens born abroad thrown into the mix would make it harder.
It turns out, as Angus and I aren't married, the babies cannot be British citizens from birth. Believe it or not, it's only because the British citizen in this instance is, according to Border and Immigration Control, "not relevant". Citizenship apparently passes matrilineally in this country, the fact that the father is British does not matter a jot. We can apply for British citizenship on the babies' behalf after they become Americans, but it's not a guarantee that they will get it, which I feel is really, really fucked up.
All this could be solved if we had gotten married.
I'm here on a work visa, not a fiancée visa, which means (we think) I'd have to apply to the Home Office for permission to get married because I'm not in the UK with indefinite leave to remain (I would have gotten that by March next year, only they changed the fucking rules last year and so I have to go through the hassle and stress of trying to renew my work visa for one more year before I can get indefinite leave to remain. This, because immigrants are BAD. Even immigrants like myself, who pays 40% of my salary in taxes and owns a home. We're all bad.) If I apply for a fiancée visa, I have to leave the country while it's being considered, and not only is that going to be difficult with regards to work ("Hey! Hope you don't mind, but I have to fuck off for a while as I'm being considered for a fiancee visa! See you soon!") but it'd mean our little family of four would be apart for a while.
God, the drama.
Add on to the fact that while Angus and I do want to get married and will get married, neither of us want to do it now, as it means we've loads of paperwork to do, a month of preparations, and then - how neat! - I can get married while 7 months pregnant and the size of a small island nation! I'm so happy! This is totally what I had in mind, struggling to get the paperwork in and avoiding getting married in a designated "U.K. Immigration Restricted Office", which in our case means Basingstoke, which is a town that's rather like the asshole of the U.K. We could go to the States, but something about flying at 7+ months pregnant kind of makes me wary of that idea.
All this, and I'd be seriously pregnant.
Shotgun wedding. Just what I'd always envisaged for myself.
You can take the girl out of the Deep South, but you can't take the Deep South out of the girl.
(I am not judging shotgun weddings. If you got married because there was some knocked-upness going on, then I promise you I am not having a go. I'm just talking about how I saw my future.)
So last night there we were, severely depressed. Neither of us want to HAVE to get married. And while I'm completely happy with an elopement on a beach somewhere, Angus is dead certain - a wedding for us will be an event with friends and family. I woke up at 4 am and tossed and turned for hours, my mind a riot - how would we get a cake? How would we get a first dance - there are two babies in the way? How would we get invitations in time? We didn't budget this in, what impact will this have on the nursery fund we're saving? For the love of God, how enormous am I going to be at my own wedding? I saw it now, me showing the photo album to the babies in the future: Here's Mommy and Daddy. Yes I know, we're looking pained. And Daddy looks hungover. And - what's that? Oh no, sweetheart, that's not a flower girl. Those are Mommy's pregnant cankles.
Wedding stuff seriously stresses me out. Not only is it very complicated by the fact that I may have to get permission from this country to get married (which is so fucking patronizing, but it's yet another fact I need to check on), but I just don't want to get married while pregnant. And we don't want the stress right now. And this isn't how we wanted it to be, either of us. But ensuring the babies are citizens of both countries is hugely important to us.
God. Once Adam finds out about this it'll be hell. Adam is already in line for an ear-bending next weekend, not only from myself but from Angus, Angus' other brother, and his brother's wife (the Filipina). We are all sick and tired of his crappy comments adding to the feeding frenzy that us foreign brides may spirit off the English babies. He's going to be told in no uncertain terms that he needs to think before he speaks, that the implications of his words are huge. I keep thinking he's assuming I'm going to go all Not Without My Daughter on them, except in our case it'll be Not Without My Daughter and Son. And this is the U.K, not Iran. And I'm no Sally Field. So, really, nothing like Not Without My Daughter, but you get my meaning.
So this morning we started phoning offices as soon as they opened. Angus got on to Border and Immigration Control, and I was ready to start ringing the Home Office. Border and Immigration Control say that the law has actually changed as of July last year, all their websites are out of date, and the babies born out of wedlock to British fathers can be British from the beginning, too. Angus has asked for it in writing.
It might be ok.
Until we get something in writing, we keep nervously feeling the metal edge of a 12-guage in our backs.
-H.
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Helen,
The law did change last year - I don't have the link to hand at the moment to send you, but you don't have to worry about registering the Lemonheads as British.
As for the fun of getting married while being on a work permit, there are a few hoops but nothing life threatening. You'll have to apply for a Certificate of Approval from the Home Office (yes it's silly but it has to be done). After that's approved, you and Angus only have to go and give notice at a designated register office, you don't have to get married there. (I got married at my local designated register office because the marriage room at Coventry was beautiful.) The people at Basingstoke can forward your notice to any place you wish to get married.
I know all this paperwork makes your head want to explode (I get to slog through the stupid Life in the UK test and ILR paperwork in the next couple of months) but it's doable. I can't help you out with much in this world, but I'm pretty good with this immigration stuff.
Posted by: tanis at July 06, 2007 09:54 AM (6cH2N)
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I hope it works out for you! Weddings are stress hell, and if you add pregnancy on top of that - UGH. That's like an aneurysm waiting to go off. Keeping my fingers crossed for you
Posted by: Heather at July 06, 2007 12:37 PM (s0rhn)
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Looks like the unwed matrilineal citizenship law still stands? (note 4):
http://www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk/applying/nationality/advice/bn1
From my understanding you _don't_ need to leave the UK to apply for a fiance visa for the marriage approval if your current leave to remain (other than student) is for more than 6 months. If you are on a work permit then this should qualify (see guidance note #2):
http://www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk/6353/11406/coaguidanceapr07.pdf
(Call the Home Office to confirm tho as immigration is very confusing - lol)
How long have you guys been living together? If it is over 2 years then there is always the unmarried partner visa. Not sure if that would give the Lemonheads citizenship at birth but I would check though because it is a similar visa status to the marriage visa (in terms of 2 years and then can apply for indefinite leave). If you have been living together for over 4 years I believe you would qualify for indefinite leave immediately when you apply. If you do qualify for the indefinite leave then you wouldn't need to get approval for the marriage. Email me if you want any further details from when I went through it.
Posted by: Lee at July 06, 2007 01:27 PM (lN4Rc)
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Wow. Just reading this makes my head ache. I seriously hope all of this works out with you. And I totally understand you not wanting to be pregnant at your wedding. I can think of 10,000 other things I would've rather done at 7+ months pregnant then standing in front of family and friends and feeling like a beached whale.
Good luck-and I have a feeling this will all work out A-OK!
Posted by: Teresa at July 06, 2007 01:41 PM (0OxvL)
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Ahhh.. someone else who has to have the huge wedding because of their soon-to-be husband. It's so nice to see I'm not the only woman who doesn't really like weddings. Well. Hopefully, I'll like my own. But I'm quite okay with not spending 10-30 thousand dollars on one night.
Posted by: Jen(aside) at July 06, 2007 01:48 PM (u973k)
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Geez, I had no idea it would all be so complicated! I guess I just assumed if the babies were born there, they would be British citizens. Obviously I don't get out of the country much.
And yeah, everyone tells you about all the fun wedding stuff - dresses, cakes, flowers, etc. - but no one ever mentions all of the fucking paperwork, especially when it comes to changing your name.
Posted by: geeky at July 06, 2007 02:19 PM (RX+qr)
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Hey Helen, Tanis is right about the Cert of Approval from the Home Office...I was trying to think of the name of it. But if your children will be British from birth anyway then that would be great.
Try not to stress over it too much
(I say that as I stress over my ILR process which isn't until next year!)
Posted by: Juls at July 06, 2007 03:21 PM (EuG5z)
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As the parent of 2 dual-national UK/US kids, let me tell you that carrying extra passports and remembering which to use where is a hassle (the US is *very particular* that you use the US one to enter & exit; the UK is almost as bad). But it's a good hassle: I am always happy to think that my kids have the right work and live in two huge markets, the US and the EU...not mention that they have plenty of places to run to if things go pear-shaped where they happen to be.
You can never have too many passports.
Posted by: A Reader at July 06, 2007 04:07 PM (62SBq)
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Oh bloody hell. I'm sorry this is so stressful and complicated. Can the Office of Official Whatsits fax you what you need?
Posted by: Donna at July 06, 2007 04:16 PM (lQSbL)
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Bloody Hell is right. If this is what you have to go through, it's a damn good thing you decided to wait to get married. I'm getting a stress migraine just reading about it.
Just think, if you DO have to run off and get married now, you can still have a wedding later, and then you'll have TWO special days for Angus to give you presents, since he gives such nice presents, anyway.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 06, 2007 05:29 PM (hQNjm)
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Gah... I hope that the person you got on the phone today is right, because that would make life so much easier. You do NOT need MORE stress!
Posted by: Sarah at July 06, 2007 05:54 PM (cLdR4)
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Aw puddin! I wish I'd known you were stressing over this. I could have actually helped out! A friend of mine did an internship at the US Embassy in London a while back and has kept up on all the passport and immigration laws with both countries since. (Because he's got this certain blond friend who was/is desperate to get dual citizenship and who constantly pestered him about it.)
It will be okay. They'll be dual, no problem. xxx
Posted by: Ms. Pants at July 06, 2007 06:02 PM (BqBbJ)
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It actually doesn't surprise me that the US law is easier— the US has a fairly weird law about citizenship by the standards of the world. But I think all will be well, particularly once you get it in writing.
As for Adam, I suggest that every time he brings up the subject, start faintly singing "Foot-In-Mouth disease, Foot-In-Mouth disease..." until he figures out that he's being an asshole. If that doesn't work, apply a cricket bat.
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 06, 2007 06:05 PM (tie24)
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So sorry that this is adding stress to you. If you absolutely have to marry (which I'm hoping you do not), maybe do a civil ceremony and save the family and friends for a later date. Sounds like you will be able to avoid it. Take care of you and the Lemonheads.
Posted by: sophie at July 06, 2007 07:16 PM (1HOa8)
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Phew, I read through your entry and then right at the end, slight hope! I sympathise. My aussie bloke and I had our wedding planned for Jan '04 until his work decided not to renew his visa so we rushed off to Richmond Registry office (the one with the famous green door that celebrities get photographed in front of!) and got married one Tuesday, we didn't tell anyone except two friends we coerced into being witnesses. Very annoying that you actually need to know the witnesses, we romantically talked about grabbing two randoms from the street but were told thats not allowed! Our real (fake) wedding three months later was lovely and we have subsequently told a few friends the truth, but its kind of irrelevant to us, it was our paperwork wedding. When it came to my baby, we decided to stay in the UK so she could have her British citizenship, but this is where I am confused, I always thought it was maternal, so if the Dad was British it didn't matter, it was whatever passport/visa the baby's mum was on that influenced it. Some of my South African friends in the UK on ancestral visas have to apply for visas for the British born babies. I am lucky, I have a British passport from Birth so my baby has a British passport, an Aussie one through her Dad (easy - like the American, turn up and you get it) and I finally managed to register her birth in South Africa just last week so she has that as another option!'
God, if she was a boy and played rugby it would be very hard to pick a country!
Posted by: Sarah at July 07, 2007 01:26 PM (/i+3p)
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July 05, 2007
Some Say Love, It Is a Flower. I Say It's Five Ounces of Vegetable Oil.
Last night the boy really pulled out all the stops.
I got home and was greeted by the dog, who generally finds it's his main purpose in life to:
1) Hate the postman
2) Bark at thunder
3) Greet anyone entering the house (us, friends, burglars) with a wag of the tail before retiring back to his bed in the kitchen
I met Angus in his study and shared with him my American purchase of the day - a chocolate chip cookie from a place at Waterloo. Said place make killer cookies. They're so buttery the paper bag gets see-through with butter grease stains, but I figured the Lemonheads, they needed some exposure to empty calories American fare.
Angus, grinning, told me what was in stock for me that night.
He'd bought me soy burgers (he had real dead animal burgers in the freezer, he makes his own recipe in huge batches. He goes so far as to use chopped steak and blue cheese, none of this ground chuck business for his burgers.) He'd bought white hamburger buns, something which is generally against his principles. He serves his burgers on sliced baguettes, not on something he referrs to as "packaged sawdust". He had corn on the cob, mushrooms, and potatoes, all for the grill. He had apple pie and vanilla ice cream for dessert.
But his coup de resistance? The point where he earned more boyfriend points than it's possible to spend in a lifetime? The moment when I knew how much he loved me?
He bought me a package of processed cheese slices for my burger. Like the Kraft ones, the ones that are an unnaturally bright orange, the ones individually wrapped in plastic that's impossible to get off the corners of the cheese slices correctly. We have a fridge full of French cheeses, we have a huge lump of English cheddar...and my boy went and bought me cheese slices because he says that's how American 4th of July cheeseburgers are supposed to be.
Nothing says "I love you" like processed cheese product. Nothing.
We sat under the canopy of a tree while he barbecued our dinner. Despite the chill and the rain, he insisted we grill. "This is what you do on the 4th of July," he explained. "You grill. So we are." It was very cozy and companionshippy, and I was so grateful. We ate our mushrooms. We had our corn on the cob (I'm a weird one when it comes to corn on the cob. I love the stuff, but I won't eat it off the cob. I have to cut it off the cob. I don't like scraping my teeth against something that feels like an unsoaked sponge. I have issues, I know.) He made me my soy burger with a huge smear of bright yellow mustard. "They didn't have any French's mustard at the shop," Angus explained apologetically as he spread Coleman's on the upper bun. He put a huge dab of salsa on my burger. And I got not one but two of my fake cheese slices.
The food was excellent, including my packaged cheese product. I have 14 slices left and I'll be damned if I'm not going to eat every single one of them (look alive, Lemonheads. This is Mommy's home turf, right here.) I don't want processed cheese food every day, but dammit he bought it for me for our American 4th of July and I'm going to eat it.
That's love, people.
After dinner Angus warmed up the apple pie (which was really tarte tartin but beggars can't be choosers and it tasted great). He dolloped two enormous scoops of vanilla ice cream on top and handed me the plate with a fluorish.
"Voila!" he grinned. "Apple pie a la....a la...apple pie a la dipshit!" he cried.
"I think you mean apple pie a la mode," I fill in for him.
"That's the one, I couldn't remember the name of it."
We went to bed early tucked in a cozy embrace. I fell asleep right away - my purchase of a Widgey saving my hips and back from agony - and we slept through the night, waking only to throw Maggie out of the room when she started to be a pain (Maggie has extra privileges these days. She's not coping well.)
This morning we both woke up feeling a little...on. Slight nudgings from the other party, dragging fingers up and down soft backs, it was all happening before he had to leave for a meeting. As we really got going, Angus pulled the sheet back and there, in all its glory, was my very pregnant body. Wrapped around the Widgey. Because nothing says hot stuff like a pregnant chick spooning an enormous nursing pillow.
Angus looked at the pillow.
It's covered in blue gingham. It's not exactly a turn on. I imagine that in men's minds it's similar to trying to give Dorothy one while Auntie Em was in the other room.
"Er..." I said. I hastily shoved it off the bed.
Smiling, Angus crawled up to me. Suddenly, he looked stricken with pain. "Leg cramp," he gasped through badly clenched teeth. He shook his leg wildly up and down, trying to get the cramp out. While he did that, I had to adjust myself as the sudden loss of my Dorothy-like dildo meant my hips and my nearly 6 months pregnant stomach weren't aligned, and it was painful.
I wondered if this is how sex will be when we're in our 80's.
We got there in the end (and it was good!). The beginning drama didn't affect us and instead I think a little reality proves that if you can get through all that and still desire each other, then maybe there's a spark there that'll last you for years to come.
Besides, he bought me processed cheese slices.
In some countries that must mean we're married.
-H.
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Angus is quite correct. Even if it rains, one must grill on the 4th of July.
Can you get Campbell's Tomato Soup there? If so, there's nothing quite like grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup on a rainy day. Especially if you have the proper cheese!
Posted by: ~Easy at July 05, 2007 11:56 AM (X+de8)
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we also grilled in the rain. And the neighbors set off an enormous amount of explosives in the rain. I was glad for the rain when I saw just how pyro-maniacal (now officially a word) they were.
I'm glad you enjoyed your fourth.
Posted by: wRitErsbLock at July 05, 2007 01:00 PM (+MvHD)
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Good story, good story.
Posted by: sara jane at July 05, 2007 01:08 PM (t5Xsa)
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Bwahaha.
Aaron and I so rarely get to have that steamy sex that you read about or watch on TV. Half the time, he's got one foot against the door, while we are trying to giggle as quietly as possible, getting it on, while my 3 year old walks up and down the stairs, "Mommy? Where'd you go, Mommy?" I swear. The kid has 1,000 toys, but he can't bear to miss me for a half an hour.
Posted by: Jen(aside) at July 05, 2007 01:36 PM (u973k)
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There are some things that just can't be made properly without processed cheese food! That was really sweet of Angus to buy you some
Posted by: geeky at July 05, 2007 02:36 PM (RX+qr)
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It's official: he's a keeper. =D
Posted by: Amanda at July 05, 2007 03:51 PM (ay+rD)
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What a lovely day. Angus sure is a keeper.
I will let you live vicariously through me on the Fourth. We awoke and my dear husband asked me if I wanted to start my day with a 'bang'. I rolled my eyes but it didn't stop things.
We went to the annual parade, and it was a great one-starting with the usual low fly-by of an A-10.
There was the roar of motorcyles kicking things off, then of course the vets. It always amazes me each year how there are fewer and fewer. In fact this year there was only two WWII vets, and about 10 Vietnam Vets, a couple Desert Storm, and a handful from the current war (some of them only on leave)-all followed by a large group of current soilders families. Very somber, but then the band comes, and the various organizations and groups, classic cars, and my personal fave, the local bagpipe group. The kids all had huge bags of candies (we are talking trick o' treat size bags!), and we worked our way through the crush of traffic over to the 'penny carnival' ( that is anything but a penny) and 3-on-3 b-ball games. The smell of all things sweet hung in the air, and we had some elephant ears, and then off to the BBQ. The kids swam in the pool, the adults joined in soon due to the heat and humidity, and then we got our eat on. Burgers (yes! with processed cheese!), brats, and hotdogs-watermelon, fresh fruit, cold salads, chips-n-dip, lemonade for the kids, beer and Mike's for the grown-ups. Follow it up with red, white and blue cupcakes, lemon squares, angel food cake, and brownies.
Soon after, it is time to air-pop the popcorn, and grab the blankets and head to the end of the street for the fireworks. We sit literally right under where they fire them up, save for where the fireman have it blocked off. The neighborhood kids all do sparklers or play soccer, and adults throw horseshoes or frisbees. Then the show starts at dark. 30 minutes of kick-ass, loud explosions, followed by a gold grand finale that is unlike any that I have ever seen. It is hard to take it all in. Then back to the house to set of our own show, with our mostly (illegal!) fireworks-most of which go off as should, but a few burns in the grass, and only a couple times we had to run out of the way of a stray bottle rocket. After blowing up a few popcans, and I'm sure pissing off a good amount of the neighbors, we all head home-a little sunburn, a lot exhausted-but all very happy.
I don't live a charmed life most days of the year, but the Fourth is all good. And a holiday that is my favorite-dare I say even better then Christmas!
Posted by: Teresa at July 05, 2007 04:06 PM (+FSYk)
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Turing Steak into chopped Hamburger meat...That a crime.
Posted by: Drew at July 05, 2007 04:08 PM (DngOs)
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YAY! There's just nothing processed American cheese for a 4th of July burger!
And the margaritas were delish, too.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 05, 2007 04:36 PM (qPLLC)
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OK, I'm not PMSing (this week) but Angus' actions did bring some mist to my eyes. What a sweetheart he can be!
Posted by: Julie at July 05, 2007 06:58 PM (euiFL)
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 05, 2007 07:21 PM (tie24)
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I said he was a keeper a long time ago - and this confirms it!
Posted by: kenju at July 05, 2007 07:39 PM (DBvE5)
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Oh btw! Going back to your Motherhood post on the 2nd, I don't know if you ever watched the show "Frasier", or if it airs over there on reruns or not but I just saw a repeat from 2004 that made me crack up while thinking of you two the whole time. It's titled "Match Game" and it's about Niles and a pregnant Daphne feeling all this pressure to fit in with the other couples who are from their Lamaze class. Who are, of course, doing everything "natural", including everything she eats, etc., you know...and intimidating the hell out of poor Niles and Daph who suddenly feel like they need to be just like this other couple.
I laughed so hard, I about peed myself. It was SUCH a cliche and so very very funny as Niles and Daphne start to question themselves and the upcoming birth of their child because of this odious couple they end up copying for a while, lol!
Anyway, I hope you can get a copy or rent it or something. Very very funny stuff and I think you guys would appreciate it.
Posted by: The other Amber at July 05, 2007 07:51 PM (zQE5D)
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That's big man, because while I loves me some processed cheese food, I totally put snobby cheese on my burgers.
And I only sometimes put them on sawdust rolls.
We totally made lobsta. It was pissing outside, so there was no way we were grilling in the rain.
I might melt, as I am very fragile like that.
Posted by: statia at July 06, 2007 12:54 AM (lHsKN)
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July 04, 2007
My Fellow Americans
Although I left America 8 years ago, there are some days where I get a bit warped around the edges, where I am not quite the color I should be - I fade a bit, and get a little more introspective (as if that's possible). I think about my home country a lot on some days, and on those days I get a bit opaque. My edges are faint.
Today is one of those days that I often feel just a little bit pale on.
It's not as hard on me as Thanksgiving is, that Thursday is generally very hard on me, but it's a day that I feel just a bit...off.
Today most of the people I lived amongst have the day off. It's a day where you wake up and stretch, maybe have a morning round of loving. You open the curtains to the sunshine, think about everything you need to do today, and turn the TV on. The stores are all closed. Your neighbors are all home.
Your day may be filled with the smell of coals turning red in metal-tubbed grills. Hot dogs, hamburgers, ribs...the smell of mustard and ketchup fills the air, along with barbecue sauce, corn on the cob, and pie. Watermelon is chilling in a cooler. Bottles of beer are sweating on the tabletop, their labels bubbled with moisture. Maybe a pitcher or two of some lucious drink involving blenders, ice, and sheer mess are lounging about.
Your day may have the sound of rawhide meeting a bat as a line drive causes the fans to stand up and cheer at the stadium. If you're in the neighborhood, you hear the guy next door laughing, and the sound of sprinklers - and children running through them - is the hum and throb of the daily background noise. Tonight, somewhat sticky, somewhat humid, you'll maybe sit down and watch the fireworks explode overhead. You'll "Oooh!" and "Aaaah!" as appropriate, because that's what you do when the bangs occur overhead.
And these are things that I miss.
Stupid, really.
I may not necessarily miss much, but I do miss Nabisco products. I miss TV in the evening. I miss a grocery store full of so many things I will never need or use, but at least they're there, hanging out and waiting. Cookies? Check. Double stuff cookies? Check. Double stuff cookies dipped in frosting? Check. I wouldn't touch the things, I think they sound revolting. But it comforts me to know they're there. I miss Target and Boston Market and Jason's Deli. I miss Pop Tarts not being a strange thing to eat for breakfast. I miss being able to open my mouth and not having to think about which vernacular I use.
But these things are slight things I miss. They pass. I look at what I have in my life here and it is decision I made, and don't regret.
But on the 4th of July, like Thanksgiving, I miss home.
Maybe I'm romanticising things, about how your days will be, about how it all pans out. Maybe barbecues and sprinklers and baseball games are a thing of the past, much like Trick-or-Treating and Easter bunny baskets. Maybe I've just not moved on.
My day today is heading into London for a meeting. I'll be listening to Southwest Trains announcements and my iPod. Lunch will come from a sandwich shop, although my lovely Angus has promised me a BBQ for dinner, even if the rain starts pissing down (which it will. It's neverending. We had a party planned for Saturday but we've canned it as the weather is supposed to be foul this weekend.)
Don't get me wrong, I'm very glad to be here, and am very glad to have the company of Maggie, Gorby, and my lovely boy, who has changed the desktop picture on our home PC to one of an American flag for the day. He's generally very sensitive and caring on the days I feel homesick and I am so grateful. Now if I can just get him to quit playing his new favorite radio station he's convinced that Americans listen to - it's KWBY, which he found on the web. It's a radio station for gaw cowboys. Yes, you read that right. He and Gorby like to dance to the music while I cringe and hope he'll turn the racket off.
But even though I'm very glad to be here, it doesn't mean I don't miss something that was a part of me for 25 years.
Happy 4th of July, then. Have a beer and light a sparkler for me. Have fun today.
-H.
PS-strange, I hadn't realized it-in the past few weeks I had my 1,000th blog post and my 16,000th comment. Angus pointed this out to me this morning as we're in the process of moving my blog from everydaystranger.mu.nu to a new server (so if you come in to the site via that URL be advised it'll be turned off in the next few weeks). I promise to give out the new URL once it's moved (although I'll still accessible via http://everydaystranger.net and http://everydaystranger.eu), but I'm not quitting and I'll still be Helen of Everyday Stranger (Helen of Troy was already taken).
I'll be sans KWBY, though, that's for sure.
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Ok, going through something similar - though I didn't even realize it was the 4th until I wrote the day on my notepad at work. I'm feeling even more homesick now... I miss the corn on the cob and watermeleon.
Posted by: Hannah at July 04, 2007 08:55 AM (5w+E2)
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Actually I'll be at work today making double time and a half. No holiday for shelter workers.
Posted by: impossiblejane at July 04, 2007 10:27 AM (eihy3)
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I'm not American but I sympathise on being homesick when away from the familiar on holidays. However being South African, but born in the UK and now living in Australia, well my holidays are all confused anyway! Now I just miss those things that remind me of home, like YOU magazines, biltong and the smell of coal smoke on a cold morning.
I hope you get your BBQ tonight!
Posted by: Sarah at July 04, 2007 10:28 AM (/i+3p)
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It's not stupid at all. Why wouldn't you miss the very essence of the USA? I'll pop a beer for you today, Helen, and think of you and other Americans living abroad while I slice the watermelon.
Posted by: kenju at July 04, 2007 11:35 AM (DBvE5)
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I came to this site today expecting a post about July 4th. After all, you wouldn't be Helen if you didn't acknowledge the day. Though we're not doing anything special today (hubby is working), I'll definitely think of you when I watch the fireworks from my deck.
Posted by: minawolf at July 04, 2007 01:53 PM (Ysm6Z)
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I know exactly what you mean. I lived in the Philippines for two years and all my American holidays were lost to me for that time.
Posted by: Ernie E (from Flickr) at July 04, 2007 02:05 PM (ZfrqE)
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Hope you have a good day and yummy BBQ later. But I do have to say you live closer to the deep fried Mars bars than we do! 'Murricans haven't gone that far yet- except does the deep fried Twinkie count?
Posted by: kb at July 04, 2007 02:20 PM (FpAR+)
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We're getting ready for our 4th of july bash. The wife is in the kitchen making potato salad and deviled eggs. The beer is on ice, and the chicken is marinating for the grill later to along with the hot dogs & hamburgers.
I'll drink a toast to you, and anyone else who's far from home on this day.
Cheers!
~Easy
Posted by: ~Easy at July 04, 2007 02:25 PM (X+de8)
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Happy 4th Helen! I will be doing all those things, and thinking of you! I am still childlike and enjoy my holidays to the fullest! Take care
Posted by: Cheryl at July 04, 2007 02:35 PM (ofEMA)
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Happy Fourth to you, Helen! If it's any comfort, here in Dallas, it's probably going to rain today too. We'll be in somewhat the same boat. Literally in a boat if this flingin' flangin' rain doesn't stop soon....
Posted by: donna at July 04, 2007 02:55 PM (Kco5r)
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Today is day number 15 of rain in Austin, so it's an "off" 4th of July here too. Many of the surrounding cities have postponed or cancelled the fireworks displays tonight. And the holiday in the middle of the week makes it odd this year too. I'm dreaming off picnics and food on the grill as I sit inside and have pancakes for breakfast.
So sweet of Angus to change the picture on the computer and prepare BBQ for dinner. I hope you enjoy your 4th on the other side of the pond.
Posted by: sarah at July 04, 2007 02:59 PM (tHcG/)
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It's chilly and overcast here today in NJ. The evening showers may even cancel the fireworks!
I had some watermelon for breakfast - Just for YOU! Tonight it will be steak and corn and cabbage and apple slaw. Feel free to come on over.
Posted by: Terry at July 04, 2007 04:16 PM (A5s0y)
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Sunny and perfect here in Southern California, although the fireworks are likely to be few, due to the fire danger.... We're off to the beach for the evening.
Posted by: caltechgirl at July 04, 2007 05:17 PM (qPLLC)
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Happy 4th!
Brisket in the smoker and homemade potato salad chilling. Fireworks at dark.
Although I will think of you as I prepare homemade mac and cheese for my youngest boy who might secretly be related to you due to the amount he can consume in single sitting!
I thought something was going on with the site, it is now blocked from my work network and the error I get from the proxy is hideous! :-)
Posted by: steff at July 04, 2007 06:17 PM (ECxJF)
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We don't have any big plans this 4th. It falls in the middle of the work week, and while I have the rest of this week off, the Mr. does not. No bbqs or get togethers for us tonight. But I will think of you as we watch the fireworks, even if they're on TV
Posted by: geeky at July 04, 2007 06:26 PM (RX+qr)
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mmm, Jason's Deli.. muffaletta!
Posted by: Julie at July 04, 2007 06:28 PM (2Oqjr)
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It's not silly to be homesick on special days, good grief, give yourself a break, girl! I still can't get into today, being from Canada, but I'll take the day off on a Wednesday just the same.
Posted by: Donna at July 04, 2007 07:07 PM (lQSbL)
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Hardly surprising that you miss "home" on those days that have the best childhood memories.
Since I live in an apartment complex, Halloween tends to affect me in a similar way— I get all of one trick-or-treater and feel let down.
So
here's the best fireworks show I can do for you; click and have some fun!
Posted by: B. Durbin at July 04, 2007 07:25 PM (tie24)
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Happy 4th, babe!
I'll drink a beer for you at the baseball game. Two if it's pouring rain, which is beginning to look likely.
PS--I'd forgotten about Jason's Deli! A grad school hangout for me.
Posted by: BeachGirl at July 04, 2007 08:11 PM (RgeoX)
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I'm abroad for this 'un, too--the third Fourth I've had overseas. I spent it with friends and family, eating the closest approximation we could come up with to Georgia barbecue, drinking Margaritas (frozen), and playing dominoes.
I'm on month two of a summer in Albania, and I'll be back in the states before long. Not a long stretch, but not my first. It's funny, indeed, what we miss about home. Food comes up a lot, and to quote a colleague--"it's like sex: when you're not getting any, it's all you can talk about."
Posted by: Marian at July 04, 2007 09:55 PM (7ZiKm)
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Hmmmm...i can relate the homesickness part..but the 4th of july holiday is not what she use ta be. From my perspective it is getting goddamn annoying. The noise! the never ending fucking noise! this is going to sound bad, but most everything here is getting goddamn annoying. So I will celebrate by tossing some more carne asada on the grill slap it on a tortilla, fish the godamn beans out of the bottom of the weber kettle (you cant barbeque beans) and take a deep pull of my Dos Equis...
ahhhh burrrp!
happy 4th.
Posted by: j.m at July 05, 2007 05:16 AM (TsXw6)
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You miss America and America (at least this little corner of the digital part of it) misses you too. I already finished my beers for the day, but I'm dedicating one (belatedly) to you. Happy 4th, Helen.
Posted by: Mike the Marine at July 05, 2007 08:10 AM (V9bGU)
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July 03, 2007
Scotland the Brave
Slight diversion while I try to get my head round the baby suggestions yesterday-a lot of them were very good, many of the products I can't get here but am looking at alternates, and although I can't find Boppys here, I bought myself a poseur Boppy wanna-be today, mostly because my hips are screaming in agony during the night as the weight of my stomach throws everything out of whack.
So, like...how about a Scotland recap?
'Cause I'm sure you're sick of clicking here and finding how stressed out I am. My stress might be osmotic, so soon you'll be stressed, as instead of moving over water my stress moves over pixels. It could happen.
Getting to Scotland from here is reasonably simple and incredibly cheap if you plan it in advance. Both Angus and I are huge, huge fans of the sleeper train from ScotRail, and if you check their page they have a little tiny link to something called Bargain Berths. If you play around with the dates, you can book an overnight sleeper train on the Bargain Berth for £19. Ordinarily, it costs you a few hundred pounds. Totally worth it to go through their exasperating website. The sleeper train is dead easy-get on the train in central London late at night, get off the train first thing in the morning in central Edinburgh/Glasgow/Aberdeen/Inverness wherever the hell you're going in Scotland. I took us to Fort William, as it's close to Oban, where the power station (and point of Angus' birthday present was.) From there, we would take various ferries about the Hebrides and the Isle of Skye.
You also sleep like a baby on the sleeper train. You rock gently with the movements of the train, I absolutely love it. Besides, there's something about waking up to the views of the Highlands on the train.
And even more spectacular was this, which we saw this from our seats on the train while downing our breakfast:
When we got off the train at Fort William, we picked up the hire car and drove to Oban, then out and about Loch Awe to Cruachan Power Station. We had a tour of the station by the most Scottish Scotsman I've ever met. I do ok with the Scotch accent, but I struggled with this guy, even wondering for a while why the tour guide kept talking about Lahore. What does a large city in Pakistan have to do with this power station? I wondered, as they bussed us into the mountain. I then cottoned to that "Lahore" was close to his pronounciation of "Loch Awe".
My Gaelic sucks.
We stayed overnight in a completely unremarkable B&B, remarkable only for The Most Uncomfortable Bed in The History of Medieval Beds. We had springs coming out of the bed, seriously. It was the one and only time either of us could think of a crappy hotel we'd ever stayed in Scotland in, and it will be the last.
We took the ferry then to the Isle of Mull, one of the Inner Hebrides.
On the way we passed one of my summer homes.
I wish, anyway.
The ferry was crowded and I was feeling a bit....naughty. I'm one of those pregnant women with a slightly insatiable horniness going on, so I decided to splurge on something that women do and men usually love.
I slid off my knickers in the ladies room and then quietly handed them to Angus when I rejoined him on the upper deck of the crowded ferry.
No lads, riddle me this-what's the correct thing you should reply when your randy lady slides her knickers into your coat pocket? Is it:
A) God you are the hottest thing on two legs.
B) You look after your own knickers, I don't want them.
C) Oh look - there's a Larus canus! Hang on!
There's a correct answer here, and it would be A. Not B. Which is what I got. But the boy did redeem himself by being very on and paying lots of attention to me in the car.
We drove around Mull, including the main village of Tobermory, which is a very cute, charming village known apparently because there's some kids show character here named Tobermory.
We spent the day on Mull, which was an amazing and beautiful place. We toured the Mull Highland Museum, which was very angry about the Clearances (as they should be, it was a dark time). But they kept saying the Highlanders would be back to claim the land someday, to which I thought: What Highlanders? The Clearances took place centuries ago, and continued for generations. Who is there to find to come back? There is evidence of the Clearances everywhere.
It was hotter than hell and we slept with the window open, which we later learned was a mistake.
The next morning it was warm but spookily misty.
And Mull was just as beautiful as you imagine Scotland will be.
All parts, even the sheep's ass.
We left Mull via ferry.
We drove along Glenfinnan forest. We got stopped by traffic wardens, who were diverting traffic around a film crew filming in Glenfinnan forest. We didn't know it at the time, but apparently it was production on the next Harry Potter film.
So close, and yet so far.
We took a ferry to the Isle of Skye, where we drove to the north of the island and stayed in an old baronial home. The innkeeper there told us that next weekend the hotel was booked with a number of "Hollywood types". Our second run in with the movies, we were intrigued and asked more.
"Oh I can't tell you who's staying here," the proprietress said demurely. But she did tell us the name of the film.
We drove to Portree, where over lunch I got out my Blackberry and googled the film.
"OH MY GOD!" I shrieked. I can be so American. "Do you know who is in that film?" I asked Angus.
He looked blank.
He really only know Jack Nicholson, every other Hollywood name seems to pass him by.
"It's McDreamy! McDREAMY! He's on this island! He's going to be in that hotel!"
Angus continued to look non-plussed.
"I liked him from Can't Buy Me Love! Who can say that? I had true fan love, and even tolerated his crap film!"
Most of Portree was roped off for more filming, which is of his new film Made of Honor.
We never saw McDreamy.
That's ok.
I'll still have Can't Buy Me Love.
We spent the day in Skye, then headed back to the mainland.
On our last day we saw that famous viaduct, which I have fond memories of.
It was a wonderful trip. I am so glad we went, it was relaxing, warm, wonderful, and we felt like a couple, which we both needed.
Someday, maybe I'll get to live in Scotland.
I think that'd be a little slice of heaven.
-H.
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1
Glad you enjoyed; sounds like a good trip. Scotland--particularly Skye--is one of my favorite places.
Posted by: Marian at July 03, 2007 04:21 PM (7ZiKm)
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How beautiful!
And I want that sheep for my very own. I will love it and pet it and then shear it. I could make some crazy great baby blankets out of that...
Posted by: Teresa at July 03, 2007 04:22 PM (HEmVx)
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I have such great memories of Skye. Next time you go, I highly recommend the dinner at the Rosemont Hotel. It wasn't particularly expensive and it was probably the best meal I ate there. I spent so much money in that town.
Good lord. I can't believe I'll be seeing all those green hills in less than five days!
Posted by: amy t. at July 03, 2007 04:28 PM (3dOTd)
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You are looking beautiful, as always. And so is Scotland. I'll indulge in a little bit of jealousy, and then get over it.
Posted by: Jen(aside) at July 03, 2007 04:51 PM (u973k)
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Great pictures, and you look absolutely wonderful!!
Well, how about a reverse osmosis of happines? Hey if stress can travel via microwaves and pixels, then happiness must travel faster.... it's lighter you know :-)
Posted by: Angela at July 03, 2007 05:59 PM (DGWM7)
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Didn't Mcdreamy play opposite of Reese Witherspoon in "Sweet Home Alabama"?
I love that movie. One of my favorite scenes... the proposal in Tiffany's. I know. Shallow, but still a girl can dream can't she?
Posted by: Angela at July 03, 2007 06:03 PM (DGWM7)
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I love your summer home...LOL. The photos and scenery are spectacular and the scenery beyond the sheep is magnificent!
Posted by: kenju at July 03, 2007 07:21 PM (DBvE5)
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Absolutely amazing photos. Thanks for sharing them!
The picture of you is beautiful, by the way - the way the light falls, your expression - very nice.
Posted by: Hannah at July 03, 2007 07:48 PM (lUH62)
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Angela-he was in that film. And I loved the film, even though I don't like Reese Witherspoon (it's her chin man, I can't get past it) and I think she chose the wrong man in the flick.
This is why I'm not a scriptwriter.
Posted by: Helen at July 03, 2007 09:08 PM (uG7tJ)
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Bah, EVERYONE likes Can't Buy Me Love! If you liked Patrick Dempsey in Loverboy, THEN I'll buy that you're a fan.
Posted by: Lindsay at July 03, 2007 09:25 PM (mHNC3)
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I can't get past Reese's chin either Helen. It bothers me further that my nickname is Reese-now I always picture her chin when my dad calls me that.
Posted by: Teresa at July 03, 2007 10:04 PM (QbSYX)
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The kid's show with the coloured houses is Balamory. You'll be singing the tune before you know it (we grew out of it some years ago, I don't even know if it's still showing)
Lovely place but the midges are out to kill in the summer (which is why we go early or late in the year)
Posted by: Caroline M at July 04, 2007 07:09 AM (x3QDi)
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looks like you had a lovely time. That's a gorgeous pic of you.
Another 'Can't Buy Me Love' filmfan here... sigh....
Posted by: Elisa at July 04, 2007 09:37 AM (AlPvn)
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McDreamy is dreamy no matter what crap movie he's in. He was also in an episode of Will and Grace. *sigh* Aham...anyway, lovely, lovely you and Scotland.
Posted by: Donna at July 04, 2007 07:00 PM (lQSbL)
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Patrick Dempsey will never top Loverboy.
Posted by: paula at July 05, 2007 12:00 PM (FlZPw)
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