International Talk Like a Pirate Day

Written by Riley on September 19, 2008 in: Dogs | Tags: , ,

full pirateAaargh!!!! It’s time for another round of International Talk Like a Pirate Day!

dog pirateShiver me timbers, not again

DSCN9599I can’t believe you making me do this, fool.

full pirateYes, it is time, again, ya foolhardy excuses for man’s best friend! I knew I should have gone for a parrot, arrrrrghhhh!!!!

dog pirateA parrot would be just as confused as me, because YOU DO NOT TALK LIKE A PIRATE. All you do is say “Argh.”

full pirateAvast! That’s where ye be wrong, lassie. I say ‘buccaneer’ and ‘walk the plank’ and I sing! I sing of the sea and pirates of yore! Aaaaarghhh!”

DSCN9599Sing one pirate song for me.

dog pirateAnd it can’t be from any of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies.

(silence)

dog pirateSmartly, now!

full pirateUh…

Baby beluga in the deep blue sea

DSCN9599That ain’t no pirate song, damn!

full pirateI am a pirate, aye, and I know what music we sing. A song of whales and the sea, of beauty, arrrgh!!!!

dog pirateBaby Beluga is a kid’s song.

full pirateYou shut up now, lassie! You’re ruining the pirate sexy!

dog pirateWhatever. I’m out of here. Aye aye, weirdo.

full pirateAye aye, indeed, you thoughtless wench. Why don’t you go crawl into a bung hole and choke on a hornpipe—

DSCN9598Yo, if you do any more piratespeak, we gonna have a problem. And by ‘we’ I mean ‘you’.

full pirateAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHH!!!!!

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

We interrupt this blog to bring you some happy music from a fellow pirate.

elvis pirate
How great thou arghhhhhh, how great thou arghhhhhhh

Happy International Talk Like a Pirate Day.

Join the Qlubb

Written by Riley on September 18, 2008 in: Product reviews | Tags: , , , , ,

Are you a homeroom mom? A book club leader? Do you run a scrapbooking club? Or are you the ringleader of the monthly girls night out for wine and tasteful debauchery?

Welcome to Qlubb, a website that makes it all the easier to tell everyone the whens and wheres to the place be seen.

Qlubb offers these amenities:

1. Private Group Pages, so you can have you own address, eg: thekickingestbookclubintheworld.qlubb.com
2. Public web page, so you can encourage wannabe members to visit the site to learn about your group, but they’ll only be able to access what you want them to see
3. Group Calendar, to inform everyone of your supercool social events
4. Shared to-do list, note the keyword, “shared” - everyone can go in and make changes, ie there’s not just one person writing all the task and to-bring lists et al.
5. Self-managed roster, members are automatically added as soon as they log in and can create their own profile to let people know whatever they want – but please, no annoying MySpace names
6. Automatic reminders, sent out based on the calendar of events, in the manner of Outlook. This is an option that is decided per member on what works best for them (so if you don’t want to receive those pesky email reminders, you don’t have to)
7. Online RSVP, like evite, but better ;0
8. Photo sharing, no good club comes without camera fun these days – you can upload pix and comment on them at will - “beautiful!” “love it!” “uh, where did that dog come from?” “no, really, why didn’t anyone tell me I looked like that?”
9. Group email, an internal qlubb.com email that only you and your fellow members can send and receive, meaning you won’t be receiving those alerts that you won the British lottery.

10. What, numbers 1-9 aren’t enough? Check it out and decide for yourself. The only question I have is “shall we go clubbin’?” or “shall we go qlubbin’?”

Qlubb

The Parent as Artist

Written by Riley on September 17, 2008 in: Family, Musings | Tags: , , ,

“Can she color within the lines yet?”

That is the question I face as I sit in the doctor’s office for Little No Limit’s four year old check up. The doctor has peppered her with questions, many of which Little No Limit could not (or chose not to) answer. This is not uncommon, as Little No Limit is considered speech delayed (and possibly selectively mute), as I have been told by various speech pathologists, therapists, and doctors over the years.

“She doesn’t color in the lines,” I said, “but she does love to color. It’s her favorite thing to do.”

Awkward silence.

“Well, that’s okay,” the doctor said. “She still has time.”

That’s how it goes at the doctor’s office. I point out Little No Limit’s achievements only to be reminded how she could do better. It’s like reading about an overbearing stage mom or watching the yuppies on Best in Show talk to their Weimaraner. Only not funny.

This is not to say it was a bad appointment. It was quite cordial. But what is it about coloring within the lines? Doctors aren’t the only ones who talk about it. School teachers notice, obviously, but even parents and other children notice. “He’s coloring within the lines now!” one mom will proudly say, or “We’re almost there!” It seems to be such a milestone to color within the lines, but why? Art is supposed to be about expression, and since when is expression reined in by lines?

Much like with artistic expression, I believe there is an aesthetic to child-rearing, which would make parents artists and children, like Charlotte said, their magnum opus. In the world of art, they say that real artists do not cater to an audience, nay, they do not even consider their audience when they create.

Chuck Klosterman wrote this in his metal music book, Fargo Rock City:

“A widely held opinion in the aesthetic community insists an artist is more credible if he doesn’t consider his audience during his creative process; the philosophy suggests that a true artist has to make his art for personal reasons, regardless of whether or not people like it (or even want it). That’s plainly stupid, and Bon Jovi knew it. Art is not intrinsic to the universe; art is a human construction. If you killed off all the world’s people, you would kill off all the art. The only thing important about art is how it affects people. It only needs to affect one person to be interesting, but it has to affect many people to be important.”

I know, I know – Bon Jovi? I can’t believe he went there either. I reference this quote not as an excuse to make fun of Bon Jovi (which I am more than happy to do for no reason whatsoever) but because it focuses on the importance of what other people believe.

An artist puts love, patience, effort, and unpaid time into the creation of a work that in the end can stand on its own. People who take parenting seriously put love, patience, effort, and unpaid time into the development of a human being who in the end can stand on their own. If you were to apply Chuck’s thoughts on pursuit of the aesthetic in art to parenting, which side do you think you’d fall on, the side that cares about what everyone thinks or doesn’t?

I may sound like I’m getting carried away — hello, it’s just a simple yes or no, can she color within the lines — but contemplating lists of what children should be able to do by such and such an age is obsessive, demanding, and overwhelming. Why should parenting and every aspect of childhood development be subjected to rigorous standards while the rest of the world’s artists get away with art for art’s sake?

Sure, there are still rules for art. In the writing world, they say avoid adverbs. But plenty of writers use them, and use them good well. Parents are not granted the same leniency as artists when it comes to rule-breaking. If you choose to not follow the AAP-recommended vaccine schedule, some people might call you a parasite. If you adhere to the AAP-recommended vaccine schedule, other groups might suggest you’re exposing your little joys to serious risks. If you choose to claim Bon Jovi is the greatest musician ever, I might call you a weirdo.

If we look to ol’ Chuck’s description that our art depends on what others think, then as parents, we’re up a certain creek without a paddle. And since we don’t want to be there, we must consider the alternative – answer to no one. This presents a new problem, one that also exists among artists and parents alike: who has the confidence to stand alone?

And now is the time I wish I was twenty again. Because when I was twenty, I knew everything. Now, I know nothing (except in select conversations involving the terms “Bon Jovi” and “original sound”). When I was twenty, I was the consummate babysitter. I’d handled kids from all walks of life, the kind who thought it their purpose in life to make mine hell, the kind who were spoiled brats, the kind who was seriously autistic and would squeeze me so hard when he hugged me that I eventually implemented a No More Hugs rule. Seriously, all kinds.

I also worked with kids. I taught Sunday School for years and I used to be Pocahontas for a children’s entertainment company. I drove from house to house, where little girls squealed, “It’s really her!” It helped that I didn’t have to wear a wig, like those lesser Pocahontas-for-Hires. My hair wasn’t quite that long, but it was long enough, and jet black, and I was the right skin color. Never mind the fact that I’m not the least bit Native American. That fact was of little concern to the girls at the parties. They braided my hair and sat in my lap while I read stories and we made beaded bracelets and necklaces and sang songs.

Because I was always surrounded by children, I became a self-designated expert on them. And in my assessments of problem children, I nearly always attributed the cause to poor parenting. Nature-nurture was a silly controversy, in my not-so-humble 20-year-old opinion. It was always nurture. These parents. They needed to be more firm/less firm. They needed to be home more often/less often. The consequences needed to be more severe/less severe for breaking the rules. And what the hell were they feeding their kids!

When I had my own children, all that patting-myself-on-the-back knowledge went into the trash, along with my bikini and my personal time. What remained was the critical voice. With every decision I make about my children, I can still hear the questions in the back of mind: “Are you sure that’s the right decision?” “How is what you are doing this instant going to affect them down the road?” Like many parents of my generation, I took some peeks at those developmental lists and books that told me how to treat my kids and how to gauge my children’s development. And they left me unsettled.

Well, no more. I am drawing the line, or rather, coloring over it. From this point on, I go it alone. I trust my instincts, I gain back my twenty year old confidence, and I say to Little No Limit: you go give coloring a bad name.

(P.S. There’s never a Jon Bon Jovi coloring book when you need one. But there is this video.)

(P.P.S. This post contributed to Scribbit’s Monthly Write Away.)

The Responsibility Project by Liberty Mutual

Written by Riley on September 16, 2008 in: Family, Movies, Product reviews | Tags: , , , ,

Responsibility these days sometimes feels more like an anomaly. I mean, we do live in a country that is so lawsuit happy there’s an organization dedicated to stopping frivolous lawsuits, like The Pantswearer. There’s always some other person, organization, or deity to blame for one’s lot in life. Certainly not oneself. Like most parents, teaching my children responsibility is something I want to do, and a great website to contribute to this goal is The Responsibility Project by Liberty Mutual, which I learned about from Mom Central.

The Responsibility Project is a resource website created by Liberty Mutual to help parents talk to their children about personal responsibility. The short films come with discussion questions and there are also links to other great sites, like Kids Health.

These short films are actually good. Not like sitting around laughing at something ridiculous like “cheese in the face” on YouTube, but actual films that take me to another place, even if for only ten minutes. For example, New Boy is a compelling eleven minute film, based on a Roddy Doyle story.

Father’s Day and Mandy & Lester are also worth viewing. Really, all of them are pretty good, so you won’t have much trouble finding something good to watch.

You may or may not want to read the comments. If anything, the comments serve to remind me that there are MANY ways to interpret a film.

The site also runs a blog with links to interesting articles. For instance, a small town recently allowed their teachers to carry concealed weapons to school. I’ll give you one guess as to which state this small town might be in (Hint: Don’t Mess With ____ ).

All in all, interesting site with thought-provoking articles and cool films. Enjoy! Spread the word on taking responsibility (except in the case of flatulence, when it is perfectly acceptable to point the blame elsewhere).

Question for You

Written by Riley on September 15, 2008 in: Family | Tags: ,

Me: Honey, I have a question for you.

Husband: Okay.

Me: I just poured out some grits and there were bugs in it.

Husband: Bugs?!

Me: Yeah, you know, those little bugs that get into grits and rice and stuff. I can’t remember what they’re called, but we used to get them in Florida. I think they’re called Webelos? Actually, no. That’s not it. But something that sounds like it.

Husband: Webelos?

Me: Nevermind. The point is I found some in the grits.

Husband: Okay?

Me: So my question is this–

Husband: I hope it’s not ‘do we still eat it?’ (laughs) Because that answer is no.

Me: Oh. (acts nonchalant)

Husband: Seriously. What’s your question?

Me: Uh, nothing.
(returns to kitchen)

(Five minutes later, run back to the office.)

Me: I got it! Weevils! That’s what they’re called!

Husband: (blank stare) Are we still talking about the bugs?

Get Back to the Table Month

With the start of the new school year, I’ve already started receiving the food paperwork. There’s the request to only pack healthy lunches, the list of books about vegetable eating, and the positive results of sitting down to a family dinner – your kids will be smarter, say no to drugs, have more confidence, and win the lottery (I made one of those up – can you guess which?).

I grew up in a house where the family dinner took place every single evening. There were seven people – my mother, father, grandmother, and me and my siblings. We sat down and held hands and said grace before meals, and when dinner was done, we said grace after meals and then prayed a decade of the rosary, except on Sundays, when we said the whole rosary. Ah, Catholicism.

Family dinners are much harder to pull off these days, now that I’m the one running the family, partly because Husband’s work schedule is erratic and partly because I am a lazy bum. It’s not like we never sit down together, I just don’t emphasize it as part of the daily routine. For a while, it wasn’t a big deal to me, but now that the kids are getting older, I feel a need to give them something to remember, a time the whole family can count on being together. Plus, I want them to be smarter, say no to drugs, and have more confidence.

Libby’s Vegetables and Sara Evans have launched Get Back to the Table Month, to help slackers like me get the family dinner up and running. The website includes coupons for Libby’s canned veggies (my kids like the sweet peas), recipes, and shopping and kitchen tips. You can also submit your own tips to win a chance for dinner with Sara Evans backstage at one of her shows – talk about a family dinner that your kids will never forget.

So, time to get cracking in your kitchen. Make a casserole. Bake a meatloaf. Throw everything in a crock pot and let it do the work. And when in doubt, heed the advice of this parking spot:

DSCN1103
Taken at the parking lot at The Camp in Costa Mesa

Arlo Guthrie’s Boy’s Night Out

I recently saw Arlo Guthrie’s Boy’s Night Out show, put on by the city of Irvine as part of their Great Park Night Flight Concert Series.

Irvine’s Great Park is the land that used to be Marine Corps Air Station El Toro. It is going to be developed into, among other things, a 1,347-acre park called the Great Park. The Great Park is a ways to being done, but the Night Flight Concert Series are among the activities they’re already offering. On one side of the stage, visitors can go for a hot air balloon ride (hence the term “flight” in the event name), that takes you high enough to see the span of the Great Park. On the other side of the stage is an old hangar, converted into a café on concert nights.

Costa Mesa’s Avanti Café provides the food, which is all natural and vegetarian, making it, truly, an easy date for me and Husband. I sat at a table drinking Sam Adams (all the beer cost $4, and you could choose from a few choices, among them bottled Sam Adams or Pabst Blue Ribbon in a can. Seriously, who would choose PBR over Sam?), eating a portabello sandwich, thinking to myself, I wonder what a former serviceman would think to see this cafe set up in the hangar. I suspect the feeling might be similar to the scene from Grosse Point Blanke when John Cusack goes to his old home and a convenience store has been built in its stead.

I’ve never seen Arlo Guthrie perform before. He is a song and storyteller like no other. His son, Abe, and grandson, Krishna, played accompaniment to his tales and ballads. He sang the usual bits, Alice’s Restaurant, The Motorcycle Song, and City of New Orleans. He also sang St. James Infirmary in tribute to New Orleans (this was on the brink of Gustav). He told stories about meeting Steve Goodman, about performing at Woodstock, about running into Secret Service agents at the airport. All in all, a funny, talented man worth seeing. He ended his show with a cover of Leadbelly’s “Alabama Bound,” which someone caught at another show and posted on YouTube.

It’s a catchy tune, but the meaning is sad. The song involves (shockingly) unrequited love and alcohol, with lyrics like Oh, don’t you leave me here / But if you must go anyhow / Just leave a dime for beer and Well if you don’t want me, Polly Ann / Well I don’t want you.

I think everyone has experienced unrequited love at one point or another, and the only answer I’ve ever known for that kind of pain is this too shall pass. I envied the people in the hot air balloon when Arlo sang this song, because they had the whole of Irvine’s Great Park to behold, to see the infinite possibilities of what was once a landing pad for fighter pilots going in and out of the Pacific during WWII and now is a place for music and laughter.

Noodleboro’s Learn to Listen Pizza Palace Game

Written by Riley on September 12, 2008 in: Dogs, Family, Product reviews | Tags: , , ,

Noodleboro is a line of games from Hasbro that help children learn about manners and how to listen and share. Little No Limit and The Boy have been enjoying the Learning to Listen Pizza Palace Game:

DSCN9581

The premise of the game is to follow instructions on making a pizza, and then pack it into a delivery box. It also comes with a CD and storybook. Sometimes we don’t even play the game, but just listen to music or read the story. Other times, the kids make their own pizzas and deliver them to one another, so chalk up a few points for imaginary play. The pieces are sturdy and there are enough of them that if you lose a couple, you can still play the game. Unlike my useless jigsaw puzzles.

When I showed the game to Meredith Carrillo, a licensed MFT who focuses on working with new moms, she described the game as “A wonderful way to bond with your child through play. This game offers children the opportunity to practice important skills such as taking turns and following directions in a fun imaginative way.”

All in all, it’s a big hit with everyone in the house, except the dogs, who have expressed serious distraught over these “not-real” pizzas.

DSCN9584
It doesn’t just taste like cardboard. It IS cardboard. Quit taunting me.

Feeling lucky? Here’s a link to enter a sweepstakes to win a free game. Good luck!

DSCN9586
If I enter, can I request a real pizza instead?

I Know a Song That Gets on Everybody’s Nerves

Written by Riley on September 11, 2008 in: Musings | Tags:

I was at the grocery store and while checking out, “Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman” by Bryan Adams played on the overheard speaker. I walked out to my car, humming the tune inside my head and a few seconds later, another woman walked out, singing under her breath, “You know, you really loooooooooooooooove a woman…” and then a few seconds after her, two other women walked out, singing with each other, “You’ve got to give her some faith, hold her tight, and little TENderness! Gotta TREAT her right!” and I realized, wow, we are all afflicted with the same disease of not being able to break Bryan Adams from our psyche.

Any other songs treat you like that? Where you can’t get it out of your head? For good or bad? Here are 13 of mine. I guarantee you, I will rock out and sing along to each of these songs. For good or bad.

1.       Queen. I give a band name to number one, because it seemed silly to waste four slots on them: We Will Rock You, Bohemian Rhapsody, Another One Bites the Dust, the Highlander theme. Please note the omission of the song Fat Bottomed Girls which, if it wasn’t by Queen, I would really hate.

2.       Unbelievable by EMF. The things, you say, your purple prose just gives you away - you know you want to sing along. I’m embarrassed to admit this one because I didn’t even like this song when it came out. But the sound of it these days brings with it nostalgia. And I love nostalgia.

3.       Uptown Girl. I used to dance to this all the time when I was a kid.

4.       Car Wash (clap – clap – clap – clap clap clap clap) As soon as the clapping starts, I go into another zone. The groovin’ zone.

5.       Sweet Emotion. I used to call the classic rock radio station in New Orleans all the time and request this song. Husband and I played it as our bride and groom entrance song when we entered our wedding reception.

6.       Everyday People by Sly and the Family Stone. I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-am everyday people (bum, bum). I was kind of mad when Toyota started using this song in its commercials, but I could never change the station when it came on.

7.       You Really Got Me by either The Kinks or Van Halen. As soon as I hear that opening riff, I involuntarily scrunch up my nose, do air guitar, and start yelling.

8.       Born to be Wild by Steppenwolf. Lawyer Girl and I used to sing this aloud in the car for no reason whatsoever. One of us would just start and we’d continue on.

9.       Santa Claus is Coming to Town, as sung by The Boss. Seriously, this song does not get enough rock-out or hilarity credit. It’s best to be drunk when rocking out to this song. Because otherwise, you will have no excuse.

10.   I’ve already admitted to loving Blaze of Glory by Bon Jovi.

11.   Brass Monkey. There are actually a lot of Beastie Boys songs that make the cut. I went with this choice because it’s on every 80s Night playlist at dance clubs across the nation. I’ll pretty much go with everything on the Hello Nasty and Paul’s Boutique albums. The kids even like dancing to them.

12.   I Just Called to Say I Love You by Stevie Wonder. One day, due to a traffic detour, Lawyer Girl and I found ourselves driving through the neighborhoods off of Claiborne near I-10 and this song came on the radio, and we just sang along and shook our heads from side to side. We got a lot of weird looks that afternoon. Weird what memories stick.

13.   These Boots Are Made for Walking by Nancy Sinatra. And that’s just what they’ll do. One of these days these boots are gonna walk all over you (who’s air strumming the bass line now?)

So. What’s your song?

 

A Wedding Toast

Written by Riley on September 10, 2008 in: Family | Tags:

In preparation for the wedding toast I gave to Bride and Groom last Saturday, I considered other sources of wedding toasts. Movies.

Four Weddings and a Funeral:  When Bernard told me he was getting engaged to Lydia, I congratulated him because all his other girlfriends were such complete dogs. Although may I say how delighted we are to have so many of them here today. I’m particularly delighted to see Camilla, who many of you will remember as the first person Bernard asked to marry him. If I remember rightly, she told him to sod off. And lucky for Lydia that she did.

The Wedding Singer:  Little news flash, Pop. Ha. Harold ain’t so perfect. Remember that time in Puerto Rico when we picked up those two, uh… well, I guess they were prostitutes, but I don’t remember paying.

Wedding Crashers:  I never thought my sister would find someone who cared about what other people thought as much as she did - until I met Craig.

Okay, you know what, I think I’ll go it alone after all. Here’s what I said (this is not word for word, because I didn’t write it down; also, you should know prior to this speech that Groom is a dentist):

Bride and I were next door neighbors in high school. Between the two of us, we only had one pair of rollerblades, so we would take turns using them. We liked to pretend we were Kristi Yamaguchi. She may have been an ice skater, but since it never snows in Florida, rollerblading was the closest were we getting. And in all those times that we zoomed down the hill and crash landed in the grass—because neither of us ever quite learned how to use the brakes—never in all those times did I think to say to Bride, you know, I think you should marry the guy who sits behind me in pre-cal.

I’m not sure how many of you know that while Bride and Groom never met when they went to the same high school, I took a lot of classes with Groom. And I remember one Christmas season, when I came into class, I mentioned to Groom that I had watched Rudolf on TV the night before, and he said, “Is that the one with the elf who wants to be a dentist? I love that guy!” And I thought, wow, he really does want to be a dentist. Seriously—don’t even get him started on Steve Martin.

So fast forward to our ten year reunion. I told Bride she had to come with me to the pre-reunion cocktail mixer at the Twisted Martini, even though she graduated a year ahead of me. I needed her as back up because I didn’t know who was going.

So I show up at the bar, and who do I see having a drink, but Groom. I asked him what he’s been up to and he said, “I’m a dentist now.” And I thought, “Duh, of course you are.” But as soon as he told me he was a dentist, I remembered that Rudolf story and all the others times in high school he’d said he wanted to be a dentist, and I thought to myself, that is so great that he had that much vision even in high school, and the determination to follow through on it. I really admire that. (pause for clapping from Groom’s side of room)

And I thought to myself, this is a great guy. He’s just the kind of guy I should introduce to my friends. And conveniently, Bride walked up at that moment.

So I said, “Bride, Groom. Groom, Bride. Excuse me a minute, I see someone I want to say hi to.” And I walked away.

Now, I had no idea that walking away was the right thing to do – I had honestly just spotted someone I wanted to say hi to – but it turned out to be the right decision.

And here we are now.

So if you could all raise your glasses with me to the coolest girl in the world and the luckiest guy (outrage from the groom’s side). All right, and the coolest guy and the luckiest girl, come on, you guys—

Cheers!

 

 

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