27 March 2009

What She Said

I keep reading posts from other bloggers that take the words right out of my mouth. 

My fellow widow Supa Dupa Fresh posted a couple of weeks ago on when she got rid of what of her late husband's belongings. I have to say, at this point, almost two years out, I retain little of John's stuff. I have some items of clothing (his wedding suit, a favorite leather jacket, his cashmere top coat) that I save thinking that Riley might wear them someday. Or not. I don't want to pressure him, but I keep them just in case. I have John's comic book collection—he was a semi-serious collector with some pieces that are rather valuable. A friend was kind enough to catalog all the books for me, and I figure someday Maddie or Riley might want to add to the collection or just learn about collecting things as a hobby. I have some of John's books. Of course, I have his wedding ring and a few other personal effects. Most other stuff, though, is long gone. 

The one rather strange thing I keep holding on to is his toothbrush. John and I actually shared a toothbrush, a fact I'm sure many people will find totally disgusting and even more will find to simply be TMI. We had a Sonicare and we both just used the same head on it, out of sheer laziness and the fact that neither of us found that disgusting. We also each had a non-electric toothbrush for times when two minutes of Sonic cleaning seemed like too much of an investment. It's that manual toothbrush of his that I've kept for close to two years now. It's just a standard-issue, post-dental cleaning toothbrush, magenta and white. I don't use it as it was already seriously worn when John died. At the condo, I kept John's toothbrush, my toothbrush, and the kids' toothbrushes in a toothbrush holder designed for a family of four. I would often think about throwing John's out, then decide against it. Then I moved it to CV's. At her house, though, while the cup is still in use, it made more sense to put the three kids' brushes plus mine in the cup since it's the four of us sharing the bathroom. And still I did not throw John's toothbrush away. I just moved it to the medicine cabinet. I'm not sure what my attachment to it is, but it's not harming anything by sitting in the medicine cabinet, so I just leave it there. Maybe next time we move, I'll be ready to let it go.

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The process of stumbling upon a new blog is usually untraceable for me. I click through from here, there, and everywhere and am usually unable to figure out how I got from A to B to C. It's through one of those mysterious voyages through cyberspace that I ended up at Dr. Smak's blog.

She lost a son, not a husband. A four-year-old son, to brain cancer. Recently. Just a month ago. Her writing is unbelievably honest and true, and she takes emotions I wasn't even aware I  had and expresses them with crystal clarity.

Of the many, many things that spoke to me on her blog (which I read beginning to end, without pause, when I should have been working yesterday), there were two that stood out. First, this, on grieving her son's loss, taken from the post A Gathering Storm:
I also found that as a parent, I had a huge sense of relief. I no longer was the parent of a child with cancer. I no longer had to walk the minefield of that life, scanning the horizon for infections, cancer, learning disabilities, emotional scarring. Next time a kid in my house pukes, that's all it will be: puke. Not cancer.
Sub wife for parent, and I feel the same. I've written about my sense of relief at John's death before. It's a feeling mostly unacknowledged in public in regards to the death of someone who has suffered a long illness. Dr. Smak makes me feel less alone, less of an ogre, for having the feeling and talking about it, and I thank her for that.

Her post also talks of a sense of relief at her son's relapse, a relapse that meant his diagnosis was terminal. She writes, "My anxiety level regarding if, when, how he would relapse had been so great, so constant, so unrelenting that to not have to worry about the relapse anymore was liberating. I could just focus on him, on what was next to come, without wondering. [. . .] I no longer had to worry [i]f I would make a bad decision, or one that I would regret."

In my experience, knowing anything is better than not knowing. There are a couple of (comparatively minor) fronts on which I've been in limbo in my life over the past few weeks, and the stress it creates is overwhelming. I become irritable and cranky. I can't sleep. It's awful.

A terminal diagnosis is awful, too. John's diagnosis was terminal from the get-go, but it was a diagnosis. After the waiting around with the testing and the "maybe it's this, no, maybe it's that"-ing, a diagnosis, even an awful, incomprehensible one, brought it's own strange relief. It represented knowledge, a starting point from which to build a plan and to get ready—as if anyone really can—for what was to come.

I don't think John's parents ever accepted his diagnosis as terminal and I think that's one of the reasons they struggled so much with his treatment. They constantly wanted second, third, fourth opinions and talked of flying here and there to see this person and that person. They wanted John to take herbs, eat special food, maybe even get coffee enemas. John did much of that, although not the jet-setting or the enemas. 

Having some kind of acceptance around the finality of the hand John had been dealt, he and I had a somewhat different approach. We wanted to balance an aggressive treatment with a normal life. We trusted John's oncologist and we had done our own research; none of the superstars at other hospitals would have been able to offer anything other than what John got at our local (world-class) medical facility, and by staying where we were, treatment came at the cost of $5.00 copays per visit. Beyond the traditional chemo/radiation routes? John was open to all kinds of "alternative" therapies, but not if they interfered with his daily life and routine. I think many of the alternative treatments he did helped him. But I also think accepting the diagnosis gave me, and John, too, a bizarre sense of peace with not feeling like we had to do everything. We knew there was ultimately nothing we could do to prevent his death. We never had to worry that we hadn't tried hard enough, that we hadn't seen the right doctor, that we hadn't found the right treatment. That freedom from responsibility brought relief, too, and is one of the things that allowed us to go forward with life on our terms.

I don't think we fought any less hard or gave up, although perhaps it sounds that way. It's difficult to express, the feelings of relief and peace and acceptance that surround a terminal diagnosis. There's some strange gift of being given time to say goodbye, time to start the grieving process, time to put the proverbial affairs in order. It's a gift I hope to never receive again, a gift I cannot and would not give. But that is how I chose to take that knowledge and finality, as a wretched, stingy, cheap and tawdry gift, at face value.

I've rambled on too long to cover the other point that hit home for me in Dr. Smak's blog, the idea of living through an ordeal like this as a push towards activism. Next time.

24 March 2009

Realizations

No. 1: The Real Work Has Only Just Begun

This is not a political post, but it starts with a story that involves politics. And then it moves on to some whining. Don't say I didn't warn you.

I was an Barack Obama supporter from the get-go. I was quite nervous that he would not succeed in getting the Democratic nomination, not because he didn't deserve it but because Hilary Clinton had such strong support, such great experience, and such name recognition. I remember the day Obama got the nomination and the happiness and relief I felt that he was on his way to becoming our President.

That euphoric feeling lasted about two weeks. Then, one day, it occurred to me that he might not win the general election. That thought had honestly never crossed my mind until that point, daft as that sounds. I had been so focused on whether or not he could secure the party nomination that I had completely forgotten that that was the tip of the iceberg. 

I feel much the same way about my condo right now. I had to do so much work to get it ready to list—emotional and physical—that it never occurred to me that once it was on the market, it might not sell. I know, I know. Laugh all you want, as you'd think, given the current economic situation in the U.S. and the state of the housing market, it might have crossed my mind that I would not be able to sell. But it really didn't. It's starting to now.

My condo has been on the market nearly a month. This past weekend was the third weekend of open houses, all of which have been well attended. Buyer's agents have been brining people through. Yesterday, a woman who had spent quite a bit of time at this past weekend's open house went back with her agent, then sent my agent a long list of questions about my place. Maybe this will turn into an offer? It's the closest I've gotten.

Perhaps a month isn't very long. Or perhaps it's long enough and I need to drop my price. And therein lies a big dilemma. My condo is listed at $45,000 (yes, that's FORTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS) less than I paid for it three and a half years ago. That doesn't even account for the $15,000 (yes, that's FIFTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS) worth of improvements I made during the time I lived there. So I'm already standing to lose a big chunk of change. On one hand, heck, I'm already going to lose a ton of money? Why not drop the price, get it off my hands, and lose MORE! On the other hand, that's a lot of money!

It's of course not the concern of the buyer how much money I stand to lose. The buyer is concerned only with getting the best possible price. I understand that. I'm just feeling frustrated and impatient is all. And a little stymied and unsure. I have yet to determine my breaking point on the price. No matter what I decide that point is, what will I do if I can't sell at that price? Move back in? Ugh.

I need to think about how long I can take the limbo. It's a status that's never been comfortable for me, and this is no exception. My gut sense is that it's not quite time to lower the price and that I need to take this as a lesson in patience. There's been a lot of interest in the place, and the price is not a secret when people decide to come by. My sense is that if the price were really way too high, no one would even be coming by to look. Of course, I'm not a realtor. That's just my sense. So I will wait a bit for now, keep mulling it over, and hopefully an answer, or an offer, will come to me.

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No. 2: I Need to Exercise

Totally unrelated to housing, two nights go, I was inspired to put my Jillian Michaels 30-Day Shred DVD into the player and give it a go.

Jillian Michaels is trying to kill me.

It's a good kind of killing, though, or at least that's what I'm told myself as I flailed around again last night, pretending to jump rope, doing endless jumping jacks, and heaving hand weights. I've been out of the exercise loop for a while now, and it does feel good to be doing something—anything!—rather than kidding myself that living on the second floor and doing a lot of lifting of 35-pound toddlers makes my life qualify as a workout. Now if I could just revamp my eating habits, too, because I've been eating a lot of the following lately:

Random List of Awesome Food I Have Recently Eaten
Cadbury Mini-Eggs (the brilliant CV heats them up in the microwave, yum)
nachos
Jell-O instant pudding (chocolate and butterscotch and that neon-green pistachio)
cottage cheese
JIF peanut butter (I'm usually a natural, organic, no-sugar peanut butter kind of gal, but I had some JIF the other day and I thought I'd died and gone to heaven)
Diet Coke
Friendly's chocolate soft-serve with peanut butter sauce
Chee-toes (the baked ones, practically health food)
Girl Scout Thin Mint ice cream

I'm totally in comfort-eating mode. I've also eaten some fruit and salad and such, but much of my diet has been rather, shall we say lacking in freshness as of late. Perhaps the shredding will inspire me to get back to my more usual ways.

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No. 3: It's not Spring Yet

OK, yes, according to the calendar it's spring. But just because it's late March and the sun is shining does not mean that it's warm outside. I keep pretending that it does, though, and not wearing my scarf and putting on short-sleeved shirts and sending the kids to daycare in sweatshirts and no coats and then regretting it.

This morning is was 28°F. It's not spring yet! Evidently my brain can't process that information.

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No. 4: I Feel Dull

I've been quiet on the blog front not only because of being busy at work, but also because of feeling dull. I feel drawn inward lately, weighed down by work stress and condo stress and a sense of plodding along without really getting anywhere. I don't feel unhappy, and I've done many fun things lately, but I just feel slow and thus rather uninteresting and uninspired. I've felt this way before and it will pass. I hope soon.

18 March 2009

Love and Music

I'm about to lose my mind at work, so overwhelmed with the tedium of math proofreading am I. There is a dim, dim light at the end of the tunnel, but it's hard to keep sight on it. In an effort to keep my eyes on the prize, I opened up iTunes for some inspiration today. I have a really isolated office, so I can play music at pretty much any volume I want without worry of disturbing anyone or being ridiculed for my (somewhat lowbrow) taste.

I decided to browse my coworkers' shared libraries since I have loaded virtually no music into my work computer. I came across a live version of Ben Harper covering Peter Gabriel's classic "In Your Eyes."

My heart stopped as I listened to the song. I think I played it 20 times in a row, and I'm listening to it again now. The song took me right back to college, a period in my life I loved as it happened and for which I have a deep nostalgia. Mostly what it made me remember is how intense everything was back then. I thought more deeply, I liked and disliked with more passion, and, most of all, I loved more fiercely. That song, this song that I'm playing now, stirred up the overwhelming desire that I carried for college crushes, the euphoria of love requited, and the longing to be with someone who feels the same way about me. 

As my forays with Mr. Coffee and other dating dabblings would indicate, I would love to be involved with someone and eventually get married again. I loved being married. I loved John, of course, more than I ever expected to love anyone. But, honestly, I've become so used to the day-to-day that is my unpartnered life that I had forgotten what the intensity of a romantic love for a spouse feels like. Yes, I feel a deep love for my children, but a different kind. Tears flood my eyes as Ben Harper implores me to "feel that complete," expresses desire to "touch the light and heat," as he "reaches out from the inside." Peter Gabriel, pure genius.

To feel that is exhausting, overwhelming, joyous. I want to feel it again. I will, I think, I hope.

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On a somewhat related note, my That Person sent me an instant message via Facebook the other day. It was totally out of the blue. We have not exchanged so much as a generic holiday letter in years. We had a lovely chat. He and his family are moving close to where I live soon, and we'll probably see each other in the next few months. 

Our "conversation" reminded me of how funny and smart he is, and stirred up some of the same emotions as Mr. Harper's rendition of Mr. Gabriel's song. I'm in this space right now, between the music and the people from the past and Riley's questions, where I feel as acutely aware of what I don't have as I am grateful for what I do.


13 March 2009

From the Backseat

Riley: Mama, Baby has two mamas.
Me: Yes, honey, Baby has two mamas.
Riley: You my mama?
Me: Yes, I'm your mama and Maddie's mama.
Riley: A [a kid at daycare] has a mama and a daddy.
Me: Yes, he does.
Riley: I want a mama and a daddy. You can bring me a daddy?
Me: Honey, you do have a daddy. He's just not here. I'm so sorry, and I wish I could bring him to you.
Riley [thinking]: Where he is?
Me [panicking]: He can't be with us. [very unsatisfactory answer] Where do you think he is?
Riley: I don't know.
Me: Me either, honey, but I know he loves you and Maddie and me very much.

The time has come to figure out how to handle this one. 

11 March 2009

RushRushRush

I've been really busy at work, constantly behind, but not quite buried enough under piles of paper to justify bringing in a temp to help out. The situation stresses me out. No one expects me to do more than I can, but I still hate to miss deadlines. I've my nose to the grindstone, taking breaks only to eat lunch (I'm slurping soup between sentences while I write this entry) or send a quick e-mail here and there. Oh, and go to the bathroom, where I sometimes find  yesterday's underwear in my pants leg.*

I'm not usually in any rush to get to work in the morning, but last week and this week have been exceptions. When I start every work day off feeling behind, it's hard not to hear every tick of the clock as we get ready in the morning. The weekend time change means that the kids are (blessedly) sleeping until after 7:00 a.m., but their later waking means that I lazily get up later, too, and suddenly we have all the same things to do in the morning but much less time to get them accomplished.

It all came to a head this morning. I never actually lost my temper, but I was harried, short, and less than warm. Reasonable requests from the kids were met with a whiplash "No!" followed by a curt, "Fine" when I couldn't deal with the whining that came after the no. I spilled milk twice as I raced around to get daycare lunches ready. By the time we got out to the car, my back was so tight it felt like it was made of 2 x 4s. Or just one giant concrete slab.

We had a nice drive to school, with the kids singing along to Baby Beluga and saying all manner of cute things that I have since forgotten. It gave me some time to think about what I learned from my Morning of Hectic Craziness:

1. I need to get up at least fifteen minutes before the kids.
2. Rushing never helps anything.
3. If I say yes, I need to mean it and follow through nicely. If I say no, I need to mean it and deal with the consequences (also nicely).

Simple enough, right? Why, then, do I feel like these are lessons I've been learning over and over and over? Sometimes I am really quite slow.

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Lots of people have been to look at my condo. None of them have made offers yet. Grrr.

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In addition to being super-busy at work, I'm also dealing with some (potentially very exciting) unbloggable situations. I hope to be able to blog about them soon. They are not bad—quite the opposite—but they do take up time. 

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I haven't had time to fully process in the in-law visit, but overall is was quite good. For Maddie and Riley, the highlight was spending both mornings of the weekend swimming in the pool at the hotel where everyone stayed. I had told the kids they could go swimming, and they seemed excited about it, but they have never loved water and it was not at all clear to me that they even knew what a pool was. When we went over Saturday morning, my expectations were pretty low.

They adored the water. They had a blast floating around in some little inflatable boats I had from last summer, and they liked jumping from the side of the pool into my arms. Riley, a true lover of physical comedy, would laugh as though he'd never stop when his Uncle Al would go underwater and blow bubbles.

Here they are at the pool; in the image of Maddie, you can see Riley in the background getting some help from his Hatchi to get his trunks on. Such bathing beauties!

*When I pulled on my jeans to get dressed today, I got them all the way pulled up and was about to button them when I felt underwear from the day before yesterday stuck in the thigh. Yow. 'Tis my week for underwear mishaps.

09 March 2009

Erk Moment

Years ago, my best friend, Erk, told me a hilarious story. Here's how I remember it. (Erk, you can correct me if I get it wrong.) Erk was in a meeting at work. Something about the leg of her pants, down by the ankle, felt wrong, so she reached down under the table to adjust her cuff. What does she discover, lingering in the leg of her pants, the pants she had also worn the day before? YESTERDAY'S UNDERWEAR! So there she is, sitting in a meeting, surrounded by her coworkers at an industrial packaging company that could have been used as a model for the sitcom The Office, holding her dirty underwear in her hand.

Interestingly, I don't remember what Erk did at that point. Hopefully she'll let us know. And maybe she'll also share with us the story of Mr. Bear.

Anyway.

I just took a midmorning bathroom break during which I made two discoveries. One: the jeans I am wearing have three big stains on the left thigh that look like French's Yellow Mustard. This is odd, and it's rather unsettling that it took me until nearly 11:00 to notice. Two: as I was pulling my pants back on, something about the right thigh felt a little . . . tight. Yup, you guessed it. Yesterday's underwear was lodged in there.

Sigh. At least I wasn't in a meeting.

06 March 2009

Visitors

My in-laws—all of them—get here today for a weekend visit.

When John was alive, he and I rarely argued. Oh, sure, we'd snip at each other at the end of a bad day, and I know I had personal habits that annoyed him just as he had his that annoyed me. But down-and-dirty, knock-'em-out fights? Pretty much never. It took until my kids were toddlers for me to find my yelling voice (as has been well documented here), and John was not one to raise his voice, either. Certainly we were far too civilized to hit or throw. So even on the rare occasions that we truly argued, it was a restrained affair, more along the silent treatment and sulking lines than anything.

Nothing could cause us to give each other the cold shoulder like the impending arrival of John's parents. The week before their arrival, I would inevitably be in a state of constant bitchiness. My relationship with my parents-in-law has always been so volatile, so charged, that the idea of their arrival would send me into a tailspin of latent stress. It was a pattern known as Low Expectations Yields High Results: I would decide ahead of time that their visit would be awful, pure torture, offensive and untenable, then be surprised each and every time that it was never, ever as bad as I thought it would be. The fact that the visits were ultimately relatively enjoyable is the good news. The bad news is that, despite numerous lessons from history, I could not stop expecting the worst and behaving like a brat because of the angst created by that expectation. 

And now? The cycle continues. I'd pushed the in-laws' visit to the back of my mind for a while. I've had so many other things on my plate between work and the move and all that it was easy to forget the visit was happening. But it's been on my mind this week, although I thought I was feeling pretty calm. But this morning, all of the worries that I had not even recognized were there turned me into a venom-spewing Medusa in the car on the way to daycare.

Ugh.

I felt horrible after I dropped the kids off. It was Riley who bore the brunt of my irritation, ostensibly because he wasn't listening to me, which is true. But my reaction was way off the mark and was just a way for me to release this in-law related frustration. I recognized it as that in the moment, but still wasn't able to rein myself in. All I can do now is try to do better next time.

We do have a nice weekend planned. Tonight we'll all meet up for dinner. Tomorrow, I'm taking the kids to the hotel where everyone is staying to swim in the indoor heated pool in the morning, then in the afternoon, it should be nice enough to go to the park. Saturday night, after the kids are in bed, I'll sneak out for some down time with my sister-in-law. Sunday, those who want to will go to church and those who would rather relax in a Harvard Square coffee shop can do that. It makes my in-laws so happy to the see the kids, and vice versa. We'll have fun, if I can just let myself believe it to be so.

04 March 2009

Finding Things

About two weeks ago, during one of the many totally unintellectual TV shows I watch, the Bedazzler was mentioned. I know vaguely what a Bedazzler is, and I have a shadowy recollection of seeing them advertised on TV lo so many years ago when they first came out. I had not, however, thought of the Bedazzler in decades. 

Since that mention a couple of weeks ago, though, I think I have heard or read the word at least once a day. It reminds me of the Law of New Vocabulary: learn a new word and suddenly you'll hear and read it everywhere. Bedazzler wasn't exactly new to me, but suddenly it has been unearthed, and it's everwhere. I find myself with an urge to start Dazzling. Riley and Maddie would love it. So far, I have refrained.

The Bedazzler is not the only rediscovered word and object I have encountered of late. In the process of packing up my house, I stumbled across all manner of little forgotten items, triggers of memories, tiny treasures of the past. I found the most recent one yesterday morning. When I reached deep into my coat pocket to extract my glove, it came out with a ribbon attached.

John and I were not big gift-givers, but on the rare occasions that John did give me something material, he always put together a lovely package. John was very sentimental and romantic, but much more one for a card or poem or song than for an object. This particular ribbon, which was wrapped around an object that I have long since forgotten, is itself the very kind of romantic kitch that John loved most: white satin with lettered in some kind of handwriting font with words like cherish, forever, togetherness, love.

I tied that piece of ribbon around the headboard of our bed after I unwrapped the gift, and there it stayed, for years. It has survived a few cleaning people (who seemed to know that if someone ties a ribbon on a bed, it must be done for a reason), a cat, my in-laws (who once decided to clean my bedroom [let's not even talk about how inappropriate that was just in idea] and threw the ribbon in the trash, causing me to totally freak out and get the whole household to dig through our garbage and recycling until we found it), and two toddlers. 

Why this ribbon is so meaningful to me is a mystery. It's just one of those things that is so very John, one of those things that has stuck around to remind of of the good of the past, and one of those things that I've invested with sentimental meaning that could never, ever be replaced. I don't have many objects like this, and the ones I have almost scare me because I'm not sure what I'd do if anything ever happened to them. For me, this is the danger of finding most "stuff" totally superfluous: the stuff that is meaningful is really, really meaningful.

When I was packing up the Old House, I neglected to pack the ribbon. It wasn't until I was back at the condo picking up some last-minute things (an errand I continue to run nearly daily) that I noticed it. This must have during the week that I was scheduled to meet with the stager, because I remember feeling relieved that I noticed the ribbon before she had a chance to declare that Such Randomness would make my house Unsellable and get rid of it. I removed the ribbon and shoved it into my coat pocket, where it lay, forgotten, until yesterday morning.

It's laying on my lap right now. I've left it in my coat pocket since my bed is still at the Old House and the bed I'm using at CV's has no headboard. I've nearly lost it a few times; it often clings to my fleece gloves as I pull them from my coat, and already this morning, as I was leaving daycare, Riley held it out to me and said, "Mama! What this?" But I keep stuffing it back in my pocket and enjoying the memories it brings back when it flutters out when I reach in for my keys or a Kleenex or the googley eye that fell off Maddie's art project last week that she now needs back IMMEDIATELY.

I'm tempting fate. If I don't find somewhere to put the ribbon, I'm going to lose it. Part of me wants to lose it. This move out of the Old House is a fresh start. There's a part of me that wants to shed the few Meaningful Objects I cling to and break away from that past. Perhaps I should run over my special coffee mug and tie the ribbon to the Japanese maple we planted at the Old House, perhaps for a bird to find and take away to its nest. But perhaps that would be foolish. I have so few of these objects. It's possible that their place of honor in my life has a reason and serves a purpose. Maybe I'll tie the ribbon on Riley's crib. A montage of pictures of John with the kids hangs over Maddie's crib, but Riley's has no Meaningful Object of its own. That's what I'll do. Tonight. If the ribbon is still in my pocket when I get home.

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Work = SO BUSY.
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Me in the evening = SO LAZY.
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Blog Neglected

Brief bits:

No offers on the condo yet, but "lots of activity," says the realtor. Um, OK.

Riley is doing really well with the star night-light, but has managed to completely refrain from talking before it comes on only once. Most of the other days, his talking involves saying, "THE STAR IS NOT ON YET," in a rather loud voice, admonishing N and Maddie (who are often still sleeping) not to talk, and then waiting for it to come on. He's funny.

The poor little Ri-Man fell off the couch and totally mangled his hear on a radiator. Virtually no blood, but his ear is one big bruise. He's on the mend.

My in-laws get here tomorrow for a weekend. I think it will be good, although I know it will also be hectic and exhausting.

We didn't go to church last weekend; instead, we went to the Children's Museum. So fun! But I missed church and hope to go back this weekend.

Maddie has discovered Polly Pockets. It's the dawn of a new era.

I'm watching Idol this season. Of course I'm watching Idol this season. I'm going to blog about it starting next week, but my early faves are Lil Rounds and Danny Gokey. And I really, really hope Anoop makes it through to the Top 12.