Thursday, January 5, 2012

It's Like A Staycation Where You Leave.


Maxin' and relaxin'. Circa 1988.

Last night, I  babysat for our neighbor’s sleeping toddler. Nora does NOT know about my evening’s whereabouts and, since their Emily is her BFFAEEMTMWYNT (Best friend forever and ever ever, Mom, take me with you next time), she will NEVER know. The Coopers and the Schoenys do a childcare swap every now and again. And it’s amazing. Because, for real? I have going-out needs. So do the Coopers. But I imagine that they have the same kinda We Should Prolly Pay These Bills needs, too. It’s a truly great arrangement, except for the one teensy annoying detail of We Can Never Go Out With The Coopers. Who are our only friends in the neighborhood, unless you count the drunken dude on my stoop.

Which I do not.

Back to my evening of babysitting. Susannah stayed home with Peej and Nora since she fell asleep right after dinner. Plus, I didn’t want to deprive P.J. of that all-too-critical 3 month-old and Dad bonding time between the hours of 7 and 11pm.

So I was alone. On a couch, with tons of projects that I didn’t even HAVE to do if I didn’t feel like it, and the knowledge that my arms were free to flail about (at any time!) because I was not laden down with any person, toddler, or baby of my very own…

…And since their kiddo is quite possibly the easiest child ever EVER ever, well, I kinda felt like I hit the luxury jackpot.

I finished my thank you notes. (God, I’m boring MYSELF right now.)

Got a little writing done.

Rendezvoused with Professor Layton and my old pal the DS.

Spent a little more time flailing my arms.

Hydrated. (See? Who SAYS I people can’t follow through on New Year’s Resolutions?)

Leaned back on my arms- which one CANNOT do whilst holding a child of any size.

And then wondered if Suzy was eating okay. And if Nora was feeling better from the previous day’s awful cold. Speculated on whether or not P.J. was watching something on Netflix- and if it was something we were gonna see together. These kind of thoughts can quickly derail the spa-like effect of laying still by oneself.

I overcame and was victorious. It was an incredibly relaxing evening.

Unless you’re P.J., reading this at this very moment. Then, I am exhausted from the trials and tribulations of childcare.

But if you’re Tim and Angie- can you go out again tonight?

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Zuzu's Three-Monthiversary!

We love you, Buttercup. Especially when you're wearing bear ears...


...Or leaping through time and space...


...Or just doing your best Winston Churchill.


Monday, January 2, 2012

I Love Me A Good Even-Numbered Year.

The Baby New Year is a girl?!
Happy New Year!

Aaand, the posting of today's blog is about three-ish hours late today. Nice start to 2012, yes?

The delay was well worth it (at least for me), because our darling friend Natalie came over to smooch Zuzu and play magnetic dolls with Nora. (She also chatted with us, but I'm fairly certain we're no longer the main draws.)

So. Yes. A new year.

2011 was a pretty good time, overall. It started off on a rather sad note, but steadily increased in its sheer awesomesaucitude.

We did a fair bit of traveling. Fixed up the house some more. Wrote more than during all four years of college combined. And met Susannah, one of the nicest people I'll ever have the pleasure of knowing.

But there's still something exciting about beginning a new year- it's like a clean slate, even though there's very little that changes from December 31st to January 1st. But hey, there's very little that changes each time I rearrange a room (except for the furniture), and that always has a bizarrely inspired effect on me.

We all need our rituals.

Our festivities this year were slightly more subdued than, say, ten years prior. (Thank God.) But the crowd was just as terrific; one really fun guy, two smallish chicks prone to dancing, and me. (Also prone to dancing.) Depending on who you were, sushi was consumed. Or a grilled cheese with pesto. Bacon-wrapped appetizers that didn't even need to be removed from the baking sheet. (Yay, formality and politesse!) A potentially unwise amount of baked brie was consumed well into the morning hours. The growns split a bottle of champagne. The Sound Of Music was started. (That flick is loooong.) There was music, dancing, and multiple episodes of Clean House on Netflix.

It was kinda my favorite celebration ever.

And you know how they say to do on New Year's Day what you'd like to do all year long? Apparently 2012 will include naps, movies, Skype calls with family, nonstop food, Wii Fit, and a brief interlude with Professor Layton on the DS. (I specifically put that one on the docket for the express purpose of getting to do it all year.)

This year will bring some pretty neat-o things. But I've gotta say, I'm already a ridiculously happy camper at this, the start to my new clean slate of a year.

I think back to my resolutions ten, fifteen years ago, and I'm stupidly pleased at the fulfillment of close to all of them. I have the two jobs I've wanted for my entire life. I'm married to P.J., whom at this very moment is picking up an order of beef broccoli, veggie rice, and an egg roll for me (the latter of which was not a resolution whilst in college- but which would've been, had I really been a planner), and he's really indulgent in the whole "not earning a ton of money" thing while pursuing my two dream jobs.

So in light of the fact that, wish-wise, I'm doing pretty nicely, I'm only adding two new things to my resolutions:

-Patience. For Nora, for Suzy, for P.J., for all interactions with family and customer service and transit.

-And hydration. 'Cause seriously.

Happiest of 2012, everyone.

Now please excuse me while I go patiently drink a glass of water.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Olley Olley.

Yep, made it on the flight.
It seems I have used all of my good travel karma- not to mention other travelers' good will.

Yesterday's travels capped off an otherwise stellar week with simply abysmal airport conditions. (I realize it's rather bougie to complain about expensive travel- and jaunts that get us home safely, at that- but permit me the post-holiday catharsis of a good ol' transit whine.)

I was already feeling rather mopey about leaving the homestead. Not only was it wonderful to see my family and spend Christmas with everyone, but it was so darned NICE to not be the one in charge. I didn't do a single load of laundry (yet I had neatly folded piles by my room each night), didn't cook one meal (yet ate full to bursting every hour on the hour), and maybe washed one cup (but used eleventy hundred). I napped. I showered. People held Suzy and entertained Nora. There were movies, Mario Kart tournaments, fires in the fireplace, anthologies read, and more than one platter of cookies demolished by me personally.

You understand my hesitation to leave.

But leave we did. To Albany International Airport, to be exact. Usually heading through their security is a skip through a [short] field of daisies. But not yesterday. After a positively Clampett-like dragging of all worldly possessions through the baggage check-in line (seriously, it was like we had one pair of shared hands between us, and they were newly acquired. Thank God Susannah was tied to me, or she might have been left in the car. We had no idea what our deal was, nor why we were completely unable to manage our disproportionate number of bags), we finally made it to the security check point.

Which wrapped eighteen times til Tuesday back over the drop-off overpass. For they were using one scanner- for the entire airport. One. Three lines, one scanner. (Even Chicago's Midway, at its absolute worst, uses at least four.) So we waited in that line until WELL past when our plane boarded. We even (inadvisably) got into two separate lines (me with Zuzu, Peej with NJ), to see if we could "race" and have at least half of our family board the darned plane.

Unfortunately, Nora became aware of this plan once the two parties were neatly separated by about a hundred exhausted and be-luggaged travelers. And she thought that this meant I wasn't coming home with her. And no amount of reasoning could convince her otherwise. And so she had a fit. (Causing the elderly grandmotherly type in front of P.J. to turn and shoot them dirty looks for the rest of this venture.)

Suzy, for her part, was sleeping nicely in her sling this whole time. This might be directly due to the fact that, while sliding out of the sling/hanging on for dear life, she may or may not have been losing oxygen. Either way, by that point I was fairly convinced that I was carrying at least two unrelated persons' baggage.

We were then cut off by a twentysomething girl who informed everyone that her plane was boarding. (Yeah, she was on our flight.) I informed her that half the line was on that flight (for we had all been talking). She smiled vapidly and continued to cut her way to the front. I almost threw Susannah's shoe at her. No one's that pretty.

We went through the scanner with little incident- except for the moment when I had to be reminded that I had a baby strapped to me. And she needed to be removed. Whoops. (I don't even know if I was wearing pants at this point, I was so brain dead. Just kept removing things. Except the child.)

Made it through security at roughly the same time as Peej and Nora. Double whoops. Absolutely booked it down to our gate. Forget numbered boarding- we had missed boarding altogether. And the gate was empty. We barely made it on the flight, but thankfully the gate attendant let us through.

"Wow," he said incredulously. "This is an all-baby flight! You're like the sixth one!"

Amazingly, there were three seats left together on the entire flight. And they were in the coveted last row before the bathroom. (I wouldn't have cared if we were on the wing by now, I was just desperate to sit down. And to see if Suzy had fallen out on the sprint.)

Aside from a ridiculously turbulent takeoff ("This is it," I announced to a crazed P.J., at least three times), the flight was pretty okay. If you don't count the fact that Susannah filled her diaper the moment we sat down and, due to the lack of changing table in the bathroom, didn't get so fresh and so clean clean for another two hours. Which I don't.

Last ones off the plane (which, I'm pretty sure, is good luck) and last ones to the baggage area- except for the gal with the orange lips and fedora who almost kicked Nora as she tripped over her and expressed her disdain for all things humanity. (Peej berated her and [edited] suggested that she go think about how to be a nicer person. He received passerby applause.)

Made it to the shuttle in time to awkwardly struggle with two bags, four carry-ons, and two overtired girls. The driver barely waited for me to clear the partition before he shut the doors. (Note to shuttle bus drivers: If you see a woman with a baby (sorta) tied to her, struggling to heft luggage onto a bus, fling a diaper bag into a seat, and prevent a toddler from falling back into the road- and all you do is avert your eyes, you know you're kind of a wad.)

But we made it to our car. Fed/cleaned/buckled at least two children inside. Got home just in time for bedtime (two hours late). While Peej made a grocery run, I mopped the floors and completely unpacked. (For I am clinically insane.) Begged the newly home P.J. to help me change all the sheets. (For I was desperate for a non-catified bed.)

And slept like the dead.

Until Susannah decided to wake up, two hours later.

And then again, every hour on the hour.

(It's good to be home.)