D'oh! A deer!

Apparently I'm the one who can't handle an update, or at the very least find time to actually write one.

Truth be told, I've had plenty of time to write one. I just haven't had the creative juices due to being exhausted from the time I've been unavailable to write. I've either been staring down yet another half-unpacked box-o'-crap(tm) and wondering why the hell we even brought all that with us, or having an emotional affair with the guy in the paint department at Home Depot. I've had so many intimate discussions about finishes and types of primer that I do believe he's planning on buying me a promise ring.

I've destroyed so many baby trees in the last few days that I'm guaranteed a direct hit during the next lightning storm on account of being a horrid environmentalist. I might as well buy an SUV and throw pieces of Styrofoam out the window as I'm driving it for all the saplings I've suffocated in lawn bags this week. I have enormous guilt over this, this blasphemy. And yet I realize that dozens of year-old maple trees sitting less than a foot from my home's foundation is a recipe for some hefty flooding once those roots get fresh and hit second base with the concrete.
Thankfully there are plenty of trees in the yard. So many that I couldn't begin to count them. The people who built this place in 1946 obviously valued their privacy and comfort. We have enormous hedges and big, beautiful, shady trees everywhere. It's blissful.

Please remind me of that when I'm crying in pain as I'm raking up the 10th bag of leaves this fall. This house holds many physical burdens in store for The Maven, I just know it. I've met my match.

Speaking of which, I can no longer refer to this as 'the new home' or, as I jokingly called it all of last week, 'the summer home'. I said I would write down the sordid affair, so I will. Does it sound boring? Tough cookies. Eat away those feelings of frustrating. It's what I do at the end of a long day and I still manage to keep this fit figure of mine.

We were supposed to sign away our old home on the 13th of June, sign for our new home on the 14th and move in the 17th.

Instead, we received a phone call letting us know that our buyer was delayed in the signing of her property so our signing would be pushed back a day. Geekster worked his monetary magic and managed to swing some bridge financing (read: nearly $19,000 on the line of credit on top of what was already on there - thank you generous loan officer!) in order to buy our new home, and we signed for both homes on the 14th.

Ah, but wait. The fun doesn't stop there.

After getting the keys for this place and doing a little jig of joy, we received word that our buyer did not, in fact, have the money for her downpayment on our old home. She was waiting on her buyer to come up with the financing to purchase her old home and the bank was hesitant to give her bridge financing.

We spoke with our realtor who said that the deal could possibly fall through altogether if this didn't get resolved. At that point we would be forced to begin legal proceedings against our potential buyer in order to put the house on the market again.

Oh, and in the meantime we'd have no only two mortages, but also the enormous debt load from our bridge financing.

Fun.

We moved on the 17th as planned. Happy Father's Day, Geekster. Have two homes! Financial burden is my gift to you. Well, that and some (very inexpensive) BBQ utensils. Love you.

Let me tell you, it's hard to get excited about your new home when you're still carrying your old one. It's even less fun when you buy a fixer-upper like we did with plans to use the proceeds of the sale of your previous house to start fixing up the new one. Instead of doing renovations, you're trying to convince yourself that all that wood paneling is, indeed, quite lovely.

Last Monday we spoke to the realtor again. She suggested we wait until Wednesday - a full week after the sale was supposed to happen - before making any decisions. I told her that we, being the kind, generous and understanding people we are, had no desire to press charges or put our home back on the market. That we would work with our buyer for as long as we could manage it financially.

It all sounds so very lovely on the surface, but it's a terribly selfish move. Having gone back to clean the old home the day after we moved, it was never more apparent that the staging of furniture and scented candles really did cover up imperfections. Without those things we'd have a fair bit of cosmetic work to do before we could sell it again easily. All of this with money we wouldn't have because it was all tied up in bridge financing.

And lawyers? Expensive. Maven don't play that.

This is all karma, children. It's karma from my incessant bragging over selling our home in less than a week. Do you hear that faint hissing sound? That would be my ego deflating.

On Tuesday our buyer sent us her email address and phone numbers through our realtor. I sent her a note letting her know that we were rooting for her (and us, but I was polite and didn't say that) and that I really believed everything would work out (because if it didn't I would end up in the nuthouse beyond a shadow of a doubt ... again, the politeness thing though). She wrote me back a very nice email and let me know that she was signing for our house the next day because her financing had come through.

I wanted to believe her because I wanted to stop stressing out. It's bad for my skin, you know, as is apparent by the colony of zits on my cheek the last few days. Instead I tried to put the entire thing out of my mind and went out Wednesday morning - the supposed morning of the supposed signing - and ran some errands.

I came home to the 'For Sale' sign gone from the front yard of our new home. This wasn't a good thing because I nearly missed my turn. People need to warn me when they're going to do these things. I was a little huffy and about to have a word with Geekster when he mentioned that the realtor had just come and gone. The sale had gone through and there was a gift on the counter for us from her.

Know what it was? A bottle of champagne. Apparently really good stuff, too, according to Wikipedia. It's sitting in my diningroom looking self-important and raising our property value just being there. It's going to be there a long while, too, considering that recovering alcoholics tend not to drink things like champagne. I plan to serve it at our housewarming party in a few weeks to my non-alcoholic friends. I'll buy some vintage sparkling apple juice for Geekster and I. I hear 2006 was a good year.

So the nightmare is over. No more summer house. We were able to buy paint and a table saw and I'm shopping for a breadmaker. This house is begging me to make my own bread.

And none of the bad stuff matters anymore because tonight I saw a deer. It was in my neighbour's yard across the street. The gremlins and I were outside when I proclaimed 'Look! A deer! Intrepid, do you see the deer?'

Intrepid, who is ten and doesn't care what his mother has to say half the time and doesn't wear his hearing aids the same half of the time, glanced up briefly and said 'Yeah, mom. I saw the dog.'

'Not "dog", sweety. Deer! Look at the deer!'

And with that we were all transfixed on the beautiful creature who paid us no mind, grazing on the young foliage across the street.

I quickly stopped filling bags of baby trees and backed away from my overgrowth.

Funny how a deer can make things all better.

You want an update?

You can't handle an update!

Or maybe I can't handle typing out one right now because I'm more exhausted than Celine Dion's baby trying to outrun the creepy child-cams all over their house.

What a week. What an incredibly crazy week. Crazy for me, even, and this is The Maven we're talking about.

For example, we owned two properties until today. That, like, wasn't supposed to happen. It was supposed to go smoothly. It was silk, baby. Satin, even. The sale flowed like the tears on people's faces when I leave a party. Then it all came to a crashing halt last Thursday. I'll post more about it tomorrow when I'm ignoring the boxes screaming at me to be unpacked all over the house.

Or maybe that's Spawnling stuck under the boxes. Hmm... Might be worth a look next time.

Alrighty. Off to bed for the big girl who owns the coolest hizzouse in the wizzorld. More tomorrow.

All that she wants is another neighbour

Nothing like watching an assassin movie at 12:30am to ring in a Sunday.

Seriously. This is not what I thought I'd be doing tonight. I thought I'd be doing that sleep thing normal people with three kids do. However, John Malkovich has enticed me into seeing how he can kill three men within a five minute span on a crowded German train. He actually pulled it off. That's hot.

It's been a fairly busy week, which is an obvious state of being give the fact that we're moving in a few days. I've been packing boxes while watching the clueless masses on HGTV whine because they can't sell their homes. Of course you can't sell, stupid. You have roosters stenciled on your kitchen cabinet doors. You have carpet on your bathroom floor. You wallpapered your room a lovely paisley-patterned eggplant. What do you expect, genius? Good thing there are people (losers) like me who love watching you stare in disbelief as real estate agents tell you your home is scary. It's me, the viewer, who makes it possible for you to get $3000 and a personal decorator to neutralize the ugly. You should be sending me flowers. Preferably in white so they'll go with my bright, beautiful rooms. Sucker.

As vain as I am about my savvy designer side, I'm going to need all the decorating help I can get when we move. The house itself is great, but there are some things that really need to change. Like, um, the wood panelling in the livingroom, diningroom and playroom. Oh, and then there's the stick-on linoleum tiles put over the hardwood in the upstairs hallway.

If I don't break out in hives within an hour of getting the keys I will consider that a big accomplishment.

The gremlins will love the yard, though. A half-acre is pretty pimp. We're also going to have these large sticks with green things on them that I've heard are called 'trees'. We have two smaller versions of these 'trees' in our current yard, but they're pity plants. The ones put in by the builder after they plowed over all the mommy and daddy trees to make our neighbourhood. As a token of environmental friendliness, they decided to plant a two-foot stick in the sod on everyone's property. Isn't that nice of them?

Oh, and we're going to get another thing. It's called 'privacy'. That means that when we go outside we won't be close enough to our neighbours to smell what they had for dinner last night on their breath. We won't be able to hear every little conversation about weeds and taxes and other stimulating topics. Gosh darnit, I'm going to miss it so!

Ok, super sleuth, you got me. I'm not going to miss it in the slightest. I won't shed a tear that I will no longer be able to listen to 'Technotric's Greatest Hits' on Red Saturn Romeo's stereo as he whips around the corner toward his house. You know how some people crank their music when they're on the highway and then turn it down as their entering a residential area? Well, if you do know anyone with that kind of tact please feel free to introduce them to my neighbour. He really, really thinks he's cool in his 'sports car' with his 'stereo'. I haven't had the heart to tell him that he drives a Saturn. I just don't think he knows, that's all. Maybe I'll leave him a note when we leave:

Dear Red Saturn Romeo (the car, not the planet),

Hi. It's The Maven who lives down the road. You know, the one with the loud children? Oh, you may not have heard them because you always have your stereo up. That's the reason I'm writing to you. You see, I'm moving today and I never had a chance to tell you how I feel. I first noticed you when 'I'm Too Sexy' was bumping from your phat ride. Then, when you nearly hit my toddler after squealing around the corner and then stopped short, I got a really good look at your brand-name tanktop and gold bling around your neck and knew right then that I wanted to get to know you.

I'm sure you don't mean to come across as cool as you do, but it's unavoidable when you do it so naturally. Your fast car, the way you drive, the music you listen to and those great clothes really make you hot. I think I'm in love with you, but please don't tell my husband. He tries to be sexy, but he drives a Cobalt and listens to rock. He's just not a rebel like you. Your wife is one lucky woman.

We can never be together, but I'll always think of you when I watch The Fast and the Furious, which has great plot and excellent actors. It's quality, like you.

Your Ace of Base,
The Maven.


Sadly, this is my life. I'm just not of the same caliber as some people. I really hope our new neighbours are this interesting. I've heard the ones who live across the street are incredibly anal about their yard. That should be loads of fun! I love people who take a half-acre of natural beauty and destroy any attempt at an ecosystem that could be forming on it. Stupid nature encroaching on their lawn. It doesn't pay the damn property taxes. What right does it have?

Well, back to my assassin movie. That word makes me giggle every time I write it. No, not 'movie'. The other word. Teehee.

Because Summer made me do it

Summer from Mom Is Teaching tagged me to do a meme. This is very nice, considering I enjoy talking about myself far more than the average bear. She seems to like me despite the fact that I've institutionalized my children into the evil public school system (well, one of them so far. The other is going through the required hazing rituals of preschool). I like her, too because she's chock full of awesomeness. Therefore, I am doing her meme.

The rules are simple…Each player lists 8 facts/habits about themselves. The rules of the game are posted at the beginning before those facts/habits are listed. At the end of the post, the player then tags 8 people and posts their names, then goes to their blogs and leaves them a comment, letting them know that they have been tagged and asking them to read your blog.

Only eight things? That's it? That's going to leave people chomping at the bit. I mean, this is me, The Maven. I could go on for hours about myself and what I like, all the while making it a very interesting read.

1. I have a lot of fantasies of grandeur, which I realize isn't terribly noticeable in my posts.

2. I really enjoy a coffee in the morning, but I don't normally care if it's decaf or not. I'm one of those people who truly enjoys coffee for the taste of coffee, as is made apparent by the fact that i only take cream in mine and not icky, nasty, pukey, coffee-ruining sugar. Sugar in coffee is wrong unless the following rules are in place:

A) It is iced
B) It is a flavoured latte
C) You are 12
D) You have no taste and prove it by putting ketchup on everything
E) You look like you could kick my ass if I told you not to put sugar in your coffee

3. I am absolutely hooked on real estate shows. I'll watch them all day if I can, which is nearly possible with all the channels that come through via my satellite. I watch house flipping shows because I'd like to do that some day (read: make a bucketload of money faster than you can say 'be sensible and get a real job'). I watch the 'Sell This House!' kind of shows because I like to judge others by their lack of clue. I sold my house in a week because I'm awesome, and clearly these people could learn a thing or two from me.

4. Meanwhile, I am the biggest procrastinator EVER. I sold my house because there was something tangible in it for me: money and a new house. Those are big motivators. However, finishing an essay worth 10% of my total mark just seems like more of a waste of time than, say, watching real estate television and dreaming about the day when I become a mogul in my own right without having passed a single university course.

5. I don't like war movies because everyone is wearing green and it makes for very boring scenery. Seriously. I watch movies because they're - you know - visual? I didn't like Schindler's List not because of the death and depression, but because it was all done in black and white except for a splash of red here and there. And what do you know? Dull colours in a war movie! The Maven: 1. Film Industry: 0.

6. I secretly get a kick out of driving around in my minivan, talking on my cell and drinking something from Starbucks. I love being that type of person you hate. Love it.

7. I laugh every time I think of lines from my favourite movie, Zoolander. 'What is this? A center for ANTS?!' Hah! Best. Movie. Ever. If you haven't watched it you are ridiculous and need to do so NOW.

8. After nearly a year of blogging, I still get a pang of excitement every time I see a comment on one of my posts. I'm that much of a loser. So thanks - especially for the ones telling me how great I am. My ego requires regular feedings.

I haven't tagged anyone, I know. I like to break rules. I'm a rule breaker.

Oh... That should have been #9. Then I could have been a super rebel.

In which The Maven spills her biggest fear

So, it appears my grandmother is upset with me.

Have I mentioned I have grandmas? Two of them, actually. Good Grandma and Evil Grandma.

Evil Grandma is my step-grandma. I've never once uttered her nickname within earshot, as she might suck the life out of me with her vampiric powers. EG has outlived two husbands and, in her mid-80s, is healthier than I am. She drives, she vacations, she lives independently. I would be jumping up and down if she were the type of grandmother who enjoyed my company and spoiled my children rotten. Instead, she's been plotting against me since I became her son's step-daughter at the age of 18 months (that would be my age at the time, not hers. I shouldn't have to clarify that, but there are some really dumb people out there. Dumb enough to vote for George Dubyah twice, even.)

Yes, Evil Grandma has made my step-grandaughterism known since the dawn of time. My time, anyway. For example, I have a cousin who's the same age as me. Every year she liked to show me (because actions speak louder than words) how much more she loved him. She once came over with a card for my birthday. I think there might have been a nice sum of money in it to a young girl, like $10. I was thrilled! I started thinking about what I could buy with that money. What I would do with it. I was rich now, after all. This was really great! I thanked EG profusely in my cute little dress with my adorably curly hair.

"You know," said granny. "Your cousin's birtday was two days ago." She always mentioned this as if it were a new fact and not as though the day of his miraculous birth overshadowed mine year after year. "I got him a guitar and a year's worth of lessons. He really likes guitar, you know. He was so happy!"

... I, too, liked guitar, as was clearly demonstrated by the fact that I played it all the time, even when she was over. Suddenly, my $10 seemed like step-granddaughter money. And these days, my cousin plays in a band and manages a department in a large music store. I am not in a band and manage to eat a lot of bon-bons in order to heal the emotional wounds of many, many reminders such as these. This was just one example of my relationship with EG. But I digress.

This isn't about Evil Grandma. This is about Good Grandma. The one who has always loved me, always let me know she loves me and, despite her many quirks, has always been an important part of my life.

Good Grandma doesn't like me right now and I don't know why. I called her today to wish her a happy birthday. Sure, I was a day late, but I've had a flu, I'm moving and, oh yeah, I have three kids, including a sick baby. I called this morning, singing her my on-the-fly birthday tune:

Happy birthday to you!
Happy birthday to you!
So sorry it's a day late!
But I've had the flu!


Pretty creative, huh? I thought so. I was driving and soothing a crying baby at the same time, too.

She normally would have laughed her sweet, wrinkly face off. Yet she didn't appreciate my song. She didn't sound happy to hear from me at all. She was cool and uninterested and not at all friendly. In fact, she didn't even try to come up with a good excuse to let me go. Instead, she told me she had something on the stove.

Something on the stove. Sheesh. I'm not even worth a 'I'm not feeling well and have to go lie down'. Not even a 'There's someone at the door.' Diss.

She never invited me to her party, either, but I didn't think twice about it at the time. I figured that's because she has a small place and I have the Torrential Trio. I was happy thinking that was the case. Unfortunately I had to ruin all that by calling. Now I know better, which is kind of sucktacular.

So yes, I've upset Good Grandma. I no longer have a single grandma who likes me. I've alienated the elderly people in my life. Is there a medal for people like me?

I'm trying not to take it personally. She may be upset that I haven't had the chance to spend much time with her lately. There's been so much going on. Heck, I haven't even been blogging. That's clue number one. Maybe she should start reading my blog.

Or um, maybe not. Not after this post, anyway.

No. I can't take it personally. She's a grown woman who can also pick up the phone and call me. She's a grown woman who's moved many times in her life and who's had three children. She should get it, and if she doesn't that's not my fault. This is also the woman who didn't speak to my mother for a year because my mother didn't pick her up from the airport after insisting she NOT pick her up.

Yeah, she's like that. It's a bit unnerving.

It's just that I've never been the one who was shunned before. GG has always adored me, or at least not let me know that she was upset with me. It appears my time has come and I need to carry the torch for a while. The torch of utter dysfunction.

The Sister came over tonight and brought the movie Parenthood. Surprisingly, I had never seen it before. In it, Steve Martin plays a dad who's relationship with his own father was so poor that he fears screwing up his children in the same way. It's mostly a funny movie, but there are some touchy-feely parts, too.

I saw myself in Steve Martin's character. Hey, we're a lot alike, you know. He's a guy... and I'm... Well, ok. That didn't work. But he's funny and I'm funny, right? And as a result, we both have amazing things in our lives. He makes bajillions of dollars and I have a snazzy blog with 3 loyal readers. That makes us peas in a pod, Steve-o and I.

Sometimes I look at where I come from and wonder how the hell I'm ever going to raise healthy kids. It terrifies me. I am one messed up Maven and yet I have the biggest responsibility a person can have: I have to somehow manage to bring up three boys into young men. Men who have values and who are compassionate and who love and who certainly are not messed up enough to blog about their feelings or anything.

They are the only thing I've ever done right in my life. I was an unhappy child, a troubled teen with no friends, a full-blown alcoholic and drug addict by the time I hit puberty, in rehab at fourteen, a high-school dropout. I've never finished college, I've been known to be a lousy friend,I had a baby too young, got married too young and had to work damn hard with my husband to make our relationship a healthy and perpetually loving one. I suck at just about every job I do, I eat my feelings and I procrastinate about everything.

But my boys... my boys are perfection. They came into this world smart and beautiful and with amazing personality. Having them and raising them is my biggest accomplishment and an enormous undertaking. They drive me crazy, they make me want to rip my hair out (I bite my nails and eat donuts instead) and wonder 10 times in a day why I don't let someone with more patience care for them during the day while I get a nice, quiet office job somewhere... And yet I wouldn't have it any other way.

I can't screw this up. I can't screw them up. And therein lies my biggest fear. Because for all the talk of gremlins (and they most certainly are) and late nights and teething and screaming and joining scary playgroups, and constantly working on being a better mother, I must believe that somewhere, somehow, I'm doing an OK job.

I don't know what Good Grandma's issue with me is. For all I know my clothing didn't match last time I saw her and now she won't speak to me for two years. Her loss. If she's not going to communicate with me then there's nothing I can do. And Evil Grandma can continue to short-change me - and now also her step-great-grandkids - on gifts and the like, too. We'll be ok. I can shield them from most of that and instead surround them with people only dysfunctional enough to want to have me as a friend and my crazy family in their lives.

I don't have time for other people's dysfunction right now. I'm The Maven of Mayhem and I have a flock of Gremlins to raise as best I can. Do you think it would mess them up if I put that velcro wall in the playroom of the new house? I'd only use it under extreme circumstances, like when Spawnling decides he'd like to start walking at eight months. He won't remember being up there anyway.



I really, really,










truly,








love my boys.

WHAT kind of ice cream?!

Geekster is downstairs on his computer, when in reality he should be out getting me some ice cream at the store.

'But Maven! You said you were done with eating bad foods at night! You said you don't want your arms to become pontoons and you want to be alive and healthy to watch your boys grow up!'

Yes, sweetness. I did say those things, and I mean every word.

Except the day after scrawling out those lovely sentiments, I came down with *drumroll*... THE FLU!

You know, because I don't have to move in a couple of weeks or anything. And today wasn't Gutsy's field trip to the Museum of Agriculture or, as he lovingly calls it, the Animal Science Farm (which is a very creepy name and makes me afraid for his future).

Geekster took Gutsy to the *shudder* Animal Science Farm. I sat around and watched shows on HGTV about real estate, all the while making conversation with a babbly, drooly, crawling, cruising baby. With the amount of medication I've been on today he nearly made sense. I fed him oatmeal and yoghurt and Fig Newtons as they were easy to find and required very little prep.

Mom of the year award, here I come!

I don't normally take drugs. If I work out, I'll take Ventolin for my asthma beforehand. If I have a bad migraine I'll take a couple of Advil Liquigels. And that, folks, is as far as I'll go. It has to be really awful for me to suppress symptoms. It's the addict in me; tough it out, Maven. Tough it out and let your body fight it off naturally. Don't be a wuss, Maven.

Wussy Maven is currently on four different types of medication. Hoowah! You can imagine what it took for me to get here. I'm on asthma meds, a decongestant (nasal spray, so as not to have it seep into the booby juice), an expectorant, and ibuprofen.

Geekster is now on his way to the store to get me my damn ice cream. Sure took him long enough. Sick chicks need their ice cream, like, yesterday. This procrastination is not acceptable. I don't care if he was 'rebuilding the firewall' or whatever. Short of 'finding the cure for AIDS', there is very little that can acceptably come between a flu-ridden Maven and her ice cream.

He's back. He brought me strawberry cheesecake flavour.

I specifically stated 'something with chocolate in it'. Bastard.

Ok, ok. He's not a bastard. I take it back. It's just that at the same time as he got home, the stupid Ducks scored on my precious Senators. I'm a bit pissy right now, being sick and on drugs and not getting chocolate ice cream and watching my team get beaten for the second time by the team from Hollywood.

No hockey team should be allowed to exist in a place that does not naturally have snow. It's just wrong.

This ice cream, on the other hand, is great. What I can taste of it, anyway.

Stupid ducks. Stupid flu.

Haha, the bird flu!

(this is only funny because I'm medicated, I'm sure).

I'm going to bed.

What is this 'sleep' thing you speak of?

I could make yet another excuse as to why I haven't blogged lately. What is there to tell? We're moving, I have a baby, we're knee-deep in end-of-the-school-year shindigs. Playgroup ended with a potluck today at Squarefoot's house. Better at her place than mine, considering that, well, she has more square footage. Also, my quaint little home with it's charmingly petite rooms is overrun with half-filled boxes and socks.

Not half-filled socks, mind you. I don't want to think about what they'd be filled with. Hopefully feet that are attached to legs that are attached to a body. Er, a living body.

This post is getting increasingly morbid. I should probably switch gears.

It's my brain, you see. It no worky too good-like.

Last night, I drank entirely too much water. This was the start of a very long night. This was also after I bawled my face off to Geekster about how I'm tired of eating away my emotions and how I want to be alive to watch my children grow up and resent how I raised them. It's all part of the great circle of life, or at least parenting. Let's draw a pretty timeline, shall we?

The Maven spends her years eating cookies because her children drive her crazy and she's not allowed to get drunk anymore on account of being an alcoholic and she quit smoking 11 years ago and it would be stupid to start up again because she can think of much cooler ways to die.

The Maven's arms get big enough that she can use them as pontoons and start her own ferry business, carrying people across Africa's Zambezi river.

The Maven's blood pressure goes up, and not just because her ten-year-old decides it's perfectly fine to spill Cheerios all over the kitchen floor and not pick them up until you step on them, but because she's eating entirely too many cookies to curb her stress levels.

The Maven's body takes a long-awaited vacation, skiing up and down the sugary slopes of type 2 diabetes.

The Maven's heart decides it looks good in a fat suit, having built it from scratch ever so slowly since 1976.

The Maven gets sick from things she probably could have prevented if she could just stop dealing with things in a way that's slowly killing her in such a tasty, satisfying way. And besides, there are even cooler ways to die than becoming morbidly obese. Being eaten by crocodiles while ferrying people across the river, for example.

All that to say that I've decided to change the way I eat because I want to annoy and offend people with my blog posts for a very, very long time. Instead of eating cookies last night, I drank water in between my sobs and hugs from my Geekster. Have I mentioned lately how amazing he is? I know you're jealous. You can't have him, though. Not only is he a sweetheart, but he makes the big bucks. No one else could supply me with so many bonbons.

Or, erm, bottles of water now, I guess.

Ah yes, the water...Where was I?

After a late night of talking and coming to terms with yet more of my demons, I crawled into bed at nearly 1 A.M., drifting off quickly into a deep slumber.

Ever notice that when someone says they drifted off into a deep slumber, they're about to tell you how they were jarred out of it?

Just before 4 A.M., Spawnling stirred and tugged at my shirt. I provided the calorie-burning goodness that is breastmilk, only then realizing that I really, really needed to visit the little goddesses' room. I managed to get him to sleep after what seemed like an eternity, at least to my bladder, and winced my way into the bathroom. Then I flushed. Oops. This was apparently a bad idea.

Back in bed with my eyes closed now, just drifting off...

Yes, the 'slumber' word is about to be used again. Let's just skip that.

The pitter patter of little feet could be heard somewhere in the house. My demons may have been released, but my gremlins are very much still present. Gutsy came into the room looking for something to drink.

Wonderful Geekster got Gutsy some water (say that three times fast). Half-asleep Gutsy decided the water wasn't good enough because it wasn't in the right cup.

Daddy don't play that. We decided a long time ago that we will not cater to tantrums based on ridiculous demands, such as the right cup in the middle of the night. Nuh-uh. No way.

As a result of our excellent parenting, Gutsy never went back to sleep. In fact, neither did we. Sure, we drifted in an out, but Spawnling, Geekster and I ended up listening to the sounds of preschooler television and random chatter from a now wide-awake Gutsy, telling us all about what he was watching and what he wanted to do later in the day.

Who in their right mind gets up at 4 A.M. for the entire day? Who? WHO?!

I had a lot of coffee today. A lot of coffee.

My brain is fried and I'm eating carrots, yoghurt and drinking water. I'm also watching the Senators kick the crap out of the Ducks. GO SENS GO!!

Hockey is even better when you're tired. However, instead of writing an essay like I'm supposed to, I'm blogging and watching the game. No cookies and no motivation. Go me.

Taz vs. The Maven

Let's get this one out in the open first and then we shall not speak of it again unless absolutely necessary, as it is in no way funny and probably not a big deal: I have a lump in my breast.

Don't be alarmed. It's a cyst. At least, that's what I was told over a year ago. It acts like a cyst and I've had it for about three years. The darn thing likes to hang out and make me nervous, however, so Doctor Cautious is sending me back to the land of blue goo for a second look. I was originally scheduled for the end of May, but I moved it to the end of June. I didn't have the heart to miss yet another one of Gutsy's fieldtrips at school. And besides, it's a stupid cyst. Either that, or it's the lamest cancer on earth because it hasn't done much of anything for three years but grow and shrink. If it's cancer, it's the slack-on-the-couch-and-wear-track-pants type instead of the go-into-the-office-and-do-your-job type.

So effectively, it would be the me form of cancer. Maury paternity test shows vs. getting a job. This is not a difficult decision.

But regardless, I'm going to hope that it's a cyst. Oh, and the lymph node that swelled up behind my ear? I'm hoping that's Spawnling's cold I never caught, or the sinus infection I think I have, or the wisdom tooth impacting in my gums. None of these things are particularly dangerous, just annoying. Thankfully I don't have time to be annoyed right now because I'm moving in four weeks.

To prove my point, let's examine Wednesday afternoon:

On Wednesday afternoon, two thirds of my gremlins and my beautiful self were invited over to Taz's house for a playdate. Taz is one of Gutsy's preschool friends. He's a cute, highly energetic and very talkative four-year-old. Remind you of anyone? Hint: starts with a G and rhymes with Buttsy. They're peas in a pod, those two.

I'm used to 'spirited' children. I have two and am quite possibly (most likely, but I'm trying to remain positive) bringing up a third through his infancy. I'm old hat at this stuff. When Taz accidentally poked Gutsy in the forehead hard enough that it left a welt, I didn't blink (although Gutsy did, as it narrowly avoided his eye). When Taz told me he was a pirate and proceeded to whack me in the face with a pool-noodle, I smiled back through the pain (I had no idea pool noodles stung like that).

Been there, done that. Taz would need to try harder to get me to flinch. I'm The Maven, breeder and trainer of the Terrifying Trio. I don't do shocked. Sorry, kid. If you want to shock and awe, I can find out when my ex-bookclub is meeting. You might make a few women choke on their sushi and other themed foods. I get to stay and take pictures, though.

Later on, Taz comes up to me and starts drawing on a Magnadoodle. He has me guessing what his various scribbles are. I guessed a dolphin and a starfish and a bird because I'm an amazing decipherer of all illegible preschooler drawings. But the fourth one had me stumped.

Me: Is it a goat?

Taz: Nope.

Me: Hmm... is it... a spider?

Taz: Nope!

Me: Ooookay... is it... a gorilla?

Taz: Haha! Nope! Want to know what it is?

Me with a huge smile reserved for adorable children who's company I greatly enjoy: Sure!

Taz: IT'S A BIG FAT LADY! IT'S YOU!! HAHAHAHA!!!

Me: ....

Taz's mom: OH MY GOD!! TAZ!!!! OH MY GOD!! NOOO!!!!! TIME OUT CHAIR, NOW!

Me: ...

Taz's now very embarrassed mother: Oh Maven, I'm SO sorry. Taz, you can't say things like that! Everybody comes in different shapes and sizes... Oh damn, I'm sorry!

Me with the shock wearing off and the humour of the situation dawning on me: I never would have guessed that!

Good on you, Taz. I am a big fat lady and that was a nice drawing of me. And you know what? I'm moving into a great house in four weeks and I just don't give a crap. Because even in all my fatness, I can still fit through the new front door.

No hard feelings, kid. Want to split a chocolate bar?

You get the small half.

Is this thing on?


Don't cry, Angel Pants. Mommy's blogging again!

Yes, I'm alive. House is sold, new house is awesome, we move in just over four weeks.

And without even needing to say it, it's probably obvious that it's a tad, erm, busy around here.

Also, my social life is through the roof. I had no idea so many people would want to hang out with The Maven. I'm booked days in advance. Days! Me! I jump from one activity to the next, gremlins in tow. Coffee is normally abundant, as are beautiful sun rays which damage my skin in that golden pre-malignancy known to most as 'a tan'.

I want to write. I keep thinking I should and then I do something else, like pack, or watch Spawnling crawl (yes, crawl), or watch him pull himself up (yes, pull himself up), or cruise (yes... Do I really have to say it again, or have we realized by now that the boy is incredibly mobile? He turned seven months old on Saturday, which apparently gave him permission to grow up. I don't recall reading that clause in the contract...), or find out that my husband is taking a business trip to Toronto tomorrow, less than 12 hours after Gutsy threw an enormous tantrum because we wanted him to say 'please' at the dinner table.

It only took thirty minutes to break Gutsy's spirit this time. He's a wild stallion, that one, but my iron will is like the best horse whip ever. Made of... iron... and stuff.

Incidentally, I don't like the idea of whipping horses. Or children. Although sometimes the latter is fun to contemplate for a tempting moment or two.

I'm going to promise myself at least two or three posts a week. Two weeks without a post in Blogland is as long as the line of birthday candles on Joan River's birthday cake. I'm guessing that's about 104 years, give or take a decade.

We'll see who's still out there, periodically checking in to read my crap. I'm guessing that Creepy Walking Couple Man from my neighbourhood has found my blog, because he's frowning at me more than smiling as he and his wife walk by. He's probably upset that I haven't mentioned him lately. Perhaps he'll be flattered and dismiss the previous plans to make me their love slave.

Shudder. I don't know how I'm going to get any sleep whatsoever after that fear-inducing thought. Somebody hold me.

Barring that, you can buy me a latte. I like those.