Extreme Makeover, SAHMayhem Edition

So I may have the flu, and I may not. Who knows? Last night it felt like I had been inappropriately touched by a steamroller, but by this morning it was more like being lightly fondled by a dump truck. I had a bit of nausea today, some aches, and a handful of chills, and the thought of doing much more than checking out LOLCats seemed ridiculously difficult. Mostly I watched Spawnling make a mess and fed him sugary things to keep the peace.

This afternoon I feel almost normal. Well, I think. I don't believe I've felt normal for a very long time. I lost that feeling the first time I stayed up all night with a teething baby. My sanity batteries ran out by 4AM and to this day I still can't find the charger.

The good news? Being sort-of-but-not-really-sick gave me an excuse to give the blog a facelift. The old girl was looking rather tired, even with Pippy Longstocking and her cup of coffee lounging in the background.

And, yes, I made the logo myself. I do have talents other than being very beautiful, really smart, and scrambling to the top of the popularity dogpile with ease, you know.

I'd ask everyone to post an honest opinion of my new custom theme, but instead I'll just have you lie and tell me you like it, even if you don't. I have absolutely NO desire to change it, so I'm afraid any complaints will fall on deaf ears.

And besides, I'm too *cough, cough* sick to design a do-over. What kind of harsh critic are you? Get a life, slave driver.

The Incredible Irony

I was dying for Gutsy to turn seven. Eager. Excited. Stoked.

As the legends go, seven is the magical age of reasoning. Children are struck by the almighty hand of common sense, thus propelling them into a new behaviour where they - get this - stop and think about what they're about to do. They call to memory previous situations and make an educated guess as to what might happen should they choose door number 1 or door number 2.

For example, Gutsy may, upon careful consideration, not scream at the top of his lungs at one of his his brothers if he sees no reason behind doing so, because it never got him anywhere before. He may choose not to throw himself on the floor as soon as the word "no" parts from my lips, because it is not reasonable to do so.

See where I'm going with this?

Anyway, in the last few weeks we've noticed a change in our normally quick-to-react middle gremlin. He yells less, and his claws only come halfway out most of the time. He has this new ability to retract them before it gets nasty. It's a beautiful sight.

So, you can see why I'm not terribly upset that he's getting older. I mean, I still think it's all happening too fast, but the selfish side of The Maven likes that things are beginning to calm down with the Gutster. Intrepid, who was by far our most aggressive unpredictable downright terrifying spirited little pod-dweller, really calmed down around the age of seven. He became the child everyone tells me they envy: Empathetic, funny, outgoing, creative, intelligent - all the things his mother is. In fact, he is such an amazing kid that I am not as afraid of his fast-approaching teen years as I thought I would be.

Yes, seven is a good age. A magical age. The well-deserved eye in the proverbial parental hurricane. I traipsed around the living room last night, delivering joy and chips and pizza to all the other seven-ish-year-olds at Gutsy's party, and quietly celebrating my own personal victory of surviving the first seven years.

Then, today, Spawnling threw a tantrum like I had never seen him throw. He body surfed on the floor, turned 11 shades of red and purple while screaming at us, randomly slapped Gutsy upside the head, called me stupid about 30 times, had three consecutive time-outs, and launched a toy guitar across the kitchen. I finally calmed him down with two library books - one being about underwear. Nothing gets him giggling like underwear.

Spawnling just turned three. We could very well see four more years of this.

Four.

More.

Years.

Are there enough library books in the world for four more years of this?

Irony, I so hate your face.

A Conversation with Gutsy's Friends

Seven boys in my house.

Seven. Boys.

"Tired" doesn't even begin to describe my desire for a long, hot shower and an even longer, uninterrupted sleep. One of those things will likely not happen. Guess which one?

Gutsy loved his party, and everyone had a really great time. Dawson's parents even let him come. Great news , considering that, just last week, I thought I was one ditch-splashing away from a visit from our local child protection agency.

A lot of people have asked what a "half-sleepover" is, so I will explain: A half-sleepover is what parents with experience and clue organize for their child instead so as not to go completely crazy by morning. The children arrive around dinner, eat some pizza, have cake, play some games, get in their jammies and watch a movie. Then, just before everyone gets tired enough to fall asleep and, more importantly, because freaked out little kids start crying about wanting to go home, the party is over! Parents pick up their tired, wound-up, sugar-high kids, we get a full night's sleep, and Gutsy thinks we are the bomb.

We came by this experience and clue honestly. Intrepid's wake-over sleep over a couple of years ago taught us that we must avoid another at all costs. Gutsy stayed up until an ungodly hour and was as easygoing as a rabid grizzly bear at a honey convention the next day. Spawnling was but a year old and woke up every hour or so to laughter and the ongoing use of outdoor voices emerging from the living room.

To prove how traumatized I still am from the experience, I would give away my coffee pot if it meant we never had to have a group of boys sleep in our house again.

(Unless those boys happened to be Chippendales who's tour bus broke down in front of my house. I would be a very kind hostess to them; they could even sleep in my bed. As you all know, I'm a big proponent of co-sleeping.)

It's now 10:30. I am beyond exhausted a full day of party prep and the management of excited, antsy gremlins who woke me up at the jaw-dropping hour of 6:40AM.

Two parties down, one to go: Intrepid turns thirteen on the 30th.

Thirteen. A teenager. We're going to pretend I didn't just say that.

I drove two of the boys home tonight: Elijah and Dawson. On the way out the door, I complemented Dawson on his proficiency at shoelace tying. I said I was nearly eight before I could tie laces that well, but that I do a pretty good job at the age of 33. I then laughed at my own joke.

"You're thirty-three?!" gasped Elijah.

I smiled and nodded. I waited for the inevitable "You look a lot younger than that!" to follow. I get that all the time.

"Whoa!" exclaimed Dawson.

"My mom is only twenty-nine," said Elijah.

"Yeah, and mine is only twenty-eight," Dawson added. "You're older than my mom?"

"I guess I am!" said I.

"And my mom, too! You're older than both our moms."

My smile was more like a grimace now. An old person grimace.

"Yay me!" I grimaced. "The van is this way."

I used to roll my eyes at women who lied about their age, or were hesitant to give it. I would now like to sign up for that club, please. And do I get some free Botox injections?

Bloody hell.

This still counts because I said so

Look. I know what you're thinking. It's 1:21AM and I haven't written a blog post yet.

But here's the thing: It was Gutsy's seventh birthday, we had a family party, I had to buy a pinata for his half-sleepover party tomorrow, Spawnling drove me absolutely batty when I took him out to run some errands today (and naturally, it took twice as long to get anything accomplished than if I had gone by myself).

And then I went to see a movie that was three hours long. I figured I'd be home earlier and could sneak a quick post in before midnight, but James Cameron doesn't like to cut scenes. You've seen Titanic, right? Well, 2012 also involves boats, but adds in a little broad scope planet destruction. Long, fun, a little too long, definitely fun, but I wanted to murder the guys behind us who would just not shut the hell up, like, at all. More on that another time.

Oh, and my 'Q' key is very broken. I don't know why. So every time I tap it, it takes about 15 or 20 tries to make the letter appear. Not that this has anything to do with why I didn't post before midnight, but I need some sympathy for what I'm about to say.

Given everything I've done today, and the fact that I'm dedicated enough to write a post at 1:30 even though I'm absolutely exhausted, and the fact that I'm the damn Maven and can do pretty much anything I want (except murder, I reminded myself several times in the theatre tonight), I have decided that, since I have not gone to bed yet, this still qualifies as a post for November 13th.

It's Gutsy's birthday, and all he wants is for you to agree with his mother. You won't deny him that, will you?

NaBloPoMo, I'm still rockin' you!

And more on Gutsy's birthday tomorrow as well. I have some really great things to say about a really great kid. He's not all screaming and scissor necklaces, you know.

November 14th may commence now. Goodnight.

Respect the Elderly


Tonight, when Geekster and I were out shopping for Gutsy's birthday, I pointed out my very favourite slippers and hinted that they'd make a great Christmas gift.

Then, when we went back to the minivan, I took out the hand cream I use religiously on my cracked, eczema riddled hands, and mentioned that some more of said cream would be a great stocking stuffer.

He snickered ever-so-quietly when I mentioned it.

"What?" I asked.

He snickered again. "Nothing, honey."

"WHAT?" I demanded in a definitely unquiet manner.

"Nothing... It's just that, well, hand cream and slippers for Christmas? Are you eighty?"

It dawned on me then that, at the age of 33, I am really fucking old.

I got home, sat down in my favourite armchair (*snicker*), put my feet up on the ottoman (*snicker*) and grabbed the remote to see if I could find a good documentary on Discovery (*snicker* *snort* *snicker*)

I got a text message from my sister asking me if I wanted to go out for coffee. I only hesitantly said yes because, let's face it, I had just sat down for the evening. Having to get back up again sounded like a lot of wasted energy. What got me was the fact that she was high on painkillers. Don't get me wrong: I'm sorry she has a suspected kidney infection and needs something to take the edge off. But if you've ever seen my sister intoxicated on anything whatsoever, you know it's worth the trip out.

Besides, Photo Lush is eight years my junior. Hanging out with someone in their mid-20's would more than compensate for my geriatric Christmas list, right?

I picked her up at 8:45PM. We went to the coffee shop and had herbal tea and paninis. Unfortunately, her narcotic haze was nothing more than a mellow trickle and was barely noticeable. We talked about weddings, trips planned anywhere from six months to three years in advance, bus tours in historic cities, and kids' birthday parties. I dropped her off at 9:30.

My plans for the rest of the evening? Blog, then hot tub, then early bed to read my library book. My sister's plans? Old episodes of Felicity on DVD and planning out what movies we're going to watch when we wrap gifts later this month.

I feel a bit better now. I may be really fucking old, but so is my sister.

Hurricane Kids


First, I want to honour the men and women who have fought bravely to protect our country, our freedom, and our safety from those who do not think we rock as much as we think we do. While I am far too wussy to join the army, I salute those of you who have and who will. Thank you!

It's a wonder I managed to write that at all. I was sure I'd forget, even though I appreciate Remembrance Day and what it reminds us of. When I signed up for NaBloPoMo, I knew it would be one heck of a commitment. I knew I would have to post every single day for thirty days. I knew I would have a hard time. What I didn't know is how much it would drive home my current situation. I was lying in bed with Spawnling a few minutes ago, waiting for his breathing to slow and his eyes to close and his cute little feet to stop kicking the wall in a very un-cute fashion and fall asleep, for the love of my sanity, please. While I pretended to also be sleeping so he would stop talking to me and take the hint, I thought about what I would write tonight. It didn't take long to come up with a topic: feeling completely overwhelmed. What took longer was figuring out how I would put it into words.

I often use metaphors. In fact, yesterday's post involved one mother of a metaphor (self, that was a fabulous pun!), and today we will continue that trend.

Lots of people equate that overwhelmed feeling with drowning, or suffocating, or some other unfortunate situation that impairs the ever-important human function of breathing. That's great, but it's getting old. I need to use something more unique. I am The Maven, after all, and I don't do imitation very well.

Try to picture life as a beautiful house by the ocean. It's everything you've ever wanted: it has cute red shutters, nice wood floors, and a beach for a backyard. Most importantly, it has everything that matters to you set up so you can see it, touch it, and rearrange it if necessary. You like being in your house because the control is entirely yours. Want to redecorate a room? No problem! Just feel like a light dusting? Sure thing! Need to pull out that old recipe book and whip up something nice? Look no further, it's right there!

One day, an alert pops up on your smart phone from the weather station: There's a tropical depression heading your way. Tropical Depression Intrepid, they're calling it. That's fine. There's nothing like some active weather to spice things up a bit! You close the windows, lock the door, and watch the wind blow. A few things shake inside your living room, but it's nothing to text home about.

Then, another alert lights up the screen: Tropical Depression Intrepid has been upgraded to Tropical Storm Gutsy. Well, dang. Guess those clothes will have to come off the line. And, hey, maybe the shutters should actually get shut for a while. Before you close the last one, you notice something fly by... is that the patio furniture? The roar of the storm can be heard from your bedroom, and you hold tightly to some of your most important things. Still, it's just a storm. You can ride those out: you're a trooper!

Another alert: Guess what? This weather hates your face. It doesn't like your positive attitude and ability to wait it out until it passes. It's having none of that. It is now a full-blown category 4 hurricane called Spawnling, and it's going to eat your house down to the foundation.

***

Wow. What a bummer of a post, right? What the hell is going on? Am I trying to say that I hate being a mom by conjuring up images of weather phenomena causing mass amounts of destruction to all I hold dear? Sure sounds that way, but you know that's not the case, right? If not, you don't read my blog enough and should commit to doing so more often.

Like I mentioned above, I'm just feeling completely overwhelmed today. I have what seems like a million things to do and I just can't seem to do them. Emails are piling up, phone calls are not being returned, the kitchen looks like it was a North Korean nuclear test site (except there are no creepy flags of the Great Leader planted in the rubble), Gutsy's birthday party is on Saturday, Intrepid's is in two weeks, we have more commitments than a metropolitan mental hospital, and more appointments than a droopy-faced heiress at a Botox clinic. Throw in what seemed like an unending wave of illness until a couple of days ago, and well, I've been foaming at the mouth.

Anyway, I've been doing some thinking. Let me finish my most excellent metaphor and we'll talk about that.

***

Your attempt to board up the windows does little to save your house and its contents from the hurricane's wrath. In the end, Hurricane Spawnling and his brother storms suck everything up into the clouds, or drown into the waves, leaving you to wonder what on earth happened to your perfectly manageable and very quaint life house.

The thing is, you can't blame the weather for your problems. Intrepid, Gutsy and Spawnling are not responsible for your insistence on trying to maintain your home after their arrival. A smarter move would have been to accept that you can't possibly keep up with everything else while dealing with natural phenomena of that degree; by realizing you're only human. That maybe you should have been more dynamic in your thinking and accepted life on life's terms.

The hurricane churns, and as it does it spits out a few broken reminders of what you used to have in your house: Remembering everyone's birthday, cleaning the gutters, writing songs, painting the hallway, finishing school, jogging every day... You collect what you can and put it in a bag. You start up the beach toward higher ground.

The funny thing is that there are a lot of people doing the same thing. The beach is positively filled with other bewildered individuals. You all turn and walk up the sandbank, worriedly looking behind you for fear that nothing will be as good as what you're leaving behind.

But you know what? It's going to be okay. The weather is still crazy down by the beach, but it's good up here. You sift through lost memorabilia and find a few things of interest: nights out, contracts you don't have to leave half-finished because the school called, the rare R-rated movie, an uninterrupted conversation with a friend. You dust them off and put them on a shelf, one at a time, in your new place a few miles from where you once lived. It's a cluttered, smelly, inhumanely loud patchwork of a place. It really is. But it is what it. And it quickly begins to feel more like home than anything else. Besides, there are always smelly candles and headphones, right?

***
Acceptance. I need to use some of that. My house will not be clean, I will not be able to see everybody I want to see when I want to see them, my plants will die because I forget to water them, I will take a month to finish a 300 page book, and I will swallow my pride when I hear specialists say "We were supposed to see [insert child's name here] [insert a time so old it should be carbon dated here]"

The problem isn't that I have too much to do. We, as parents, always have too much to do. It's how I deal with it that matters. In the last few days I haven't exactly been the essence of serenity.

Acceptance. That's what I need.

And maybe a little less coffee.

Unless it's decaf.

Why The Maven should not teach school children


Gather 'round, children! We're about to learn something new from our very best friend, The Maven!

Hey, kids! Glad you could all be here today! Wow, there sure are a lot of you. Is it possible to sit the quiet ones closest to me? I'm a little frazzled today and I need to be near people who know how to use their indoor voice.

Oh, and ixnay the osenay ickerpay, will you? Move him far enough away that he can't wipe his fingers on my shirt. Gross me out.

Perfect. Thank you.

Now, kids, we're going to learn about my very favourite word. Actually, it's not always my favourite, but after the day I've had, it gets top billing in The Maven's Dictionary of Awesome Words and Stuff. It's a toughie, so I'll say it slowly and you can say it along with me. Ok? Ok! Here we go:

Va-sec-to-my. Va-sec-to-my. Vasectomy. Very good!

It sounds like a lot of you have never heard that word before. That's okay, you'll likely hear it again in about thirty years, either out or your own mouth, or from the poor woman who is suffocating under a pile of your offspring. I'll pull out my pocket dictionary and hold it up so you can all see - and I don't mean that as a play on words, kids. Your teacher is looking a little pale right now because she understands what "play on words" means. Lighten up, teach, and go get me a coffee, will you? My tax dollars pay for what's percolating in the staff room. Don't worry, the class is in good hands. I am The Maven, after all.

Anyway, here's what the dictionary says about our new word:

Vasectomy is a minor surgical procedure wherein the vasa deferentia of a man are severed, and then tied or sealed in a manner such to prevent sperm from entering the seminal stream (ejaculate).


I see the confusion in your innocent little eyes. And the nose picking from the kid in the corner, I might add. Is that a stress reliever, little man? Tell your parents you need a therapist. There's no shame in it; they probably have one, too.

Don't worry about the technical garble, my little friends. That mumbo jumbo doesn't mean much to you or me or anyone who doesn't have to actually perform a vasectomy. Only doctors have to care about that stuff. We need only to know that it helps mommies and daddies regain their sanity. "Sanity" means your breakfast gets made every day and you don't wake up to find mommy making little origami animals in the middle of the night. It's a good thing.

Let me explain how vasectomies work:

See, Daddy is an oil truck that never runs out of oil. Just when it looks like the tank is empty, he refills it. Kind of like the snot in little Timmy's nose. It's just always there, ripe for removal.

Mommy is a factory that assembles people-- Yes, little Sally, kind of like the Play-Doh factory. The difference is that Mommy's factory doesn't involve shoving some goop into a tunnel and squeezing out... Actually, it's a lot like a Play-Doh factory. When you get to high school, be sure to ask your guidance counselor about Harvard scholarships. You're a freaking genius in the making.

Mommy's factory has a furnace that needs oil from the hose coming out of Daddy's truck. If enough oil reaches the furnace, the factory lights turn on, buttons press and pistons, uh, pist, and the intricate and beautiful process of creating life begins. Nine months later, a gorgeous little human is shipped from the factory and into the loving arms of Mommy and Daddy.

Isn't that a sweet story? I'm getting a little teary. Timmy, stop hogging the tissues and give me one. You're pretty damn proficient with those fingers, anyway.

Eventually, though, the factory workers get tired. Building two or three of four of these baby models gets a little much. They start dreaming of warm beaches and looking at people in swimsuits who's bodies have never grown a baby. So, the day comes when the factory needs to be shut down permanently. There are some things Mommy can do to make that happen, but they involve a lot of demolition and renovations that are uncomfortable and sometimes dangerous. Besides, why does Mommy need to do everything? Why can't Daddy take some responsibility sometimes? I mean, it's always up to the woman, isn't it? "Are you on the pill," and "Here, hold the baby so I can go watch football," and "What do you mean you feel 'touched out?' I have needs too, you know," and...

Sorry, kids. I got off on a little tangent there.

Anyway, the point is that if your Daddy wants his truck to still park in the factory hanger on a regular basis, he's going to have to tie a knot in the hose. Otherwise, Mommy might be too exhausted from dealing with the tantrums and the fighting and the screaming and the crying and the throwing and the destroying and the tattling to want anything to do with Daddy, lest she get more of the same in another nine months or so.

And that is what a vasectomy is. My boys' daddy willingly had one, and on days like today, I am most certainly glad he did. In fact, when I am done with our little info session, I may make him some tea and kiss him and tell him thank you, thank you, thank you, three is more than enough and please excuse the twitching; it will go away once they've been sleeping for a couple of hours.

Any questions?

NaBloPoMo Day 9, or When Life Gets in the Way

Dudes. I almost forgot to post tonight! I nearly blew my chances at being crowned queen of NaBloPoMo, or some other imaginary title involving imaginary money for my imaginary retirement fund.

My excuse? I was really busy being social and productive.

I went Christmas shopping (yes, really), had coffee, herded gremlins at the park, chose not to herd gremlins into the library and instead went alone (smart choice), got a surprise editing contract due tomorrow (It's half finished - see following) and watched House (good episode).

I had plans to write tonight - both for pay and for pleasure - but instead I ended up watching The Breakfast Club, which I reserved at the library. See how this day goes together? It's like a giant circle, or some other mystic thing that sounds better than 'it's like a giant circle.'

I should mention that this is the first time I've ever watched The Breakfast Club.

Yes, it's true: this was my first time. I was a virgin, and the Gatineau Library popped my eager cherry. And it was mind-blowing-ly amazing, I might add. Um, the movie, just so we're clear. The acting was first rate, the script was fantastic, and the characters really moved me. Mostly, I could relate to the criminal and the basket case, with a little bit of the brain. Who do you relate to the most?

*Yes, I just asked a question on my blog in hopes that it will detract from the fact that this post is short and poor. NaBloPoMo can, unfortunately, produce some quantity over quality. Tomorrow I'll aim for quality. It will depend on how much coffee I get into my system and how quickly I can send off this contract. That is a hint that you should bring me coffee if you live anywhere in the near vicinity. I accept any and all kinds as long as they don't have sugar in them. Gross me out! Gag me with a spoon! Totally uncool! Barfsville! Can you tell I've been watching 80's movies?)

Last week, I saw Sixteen Candles for the first time. It was meh. I'm sorry, I realize it's a classic and I might get shunned by John Hughes fans everywhere, but I have to be honest: That was his weakest movie by far. I fancy myself a bit of a teen movie expert. There's nothing I like more than kicking back and watching the mayhem of foul-mouthed horny boys in SuperBad, or excitedly seeing Molly Ringwald make her gorgeous dress out of other, crappier dresses in Pretty in Pink. I will never tire of a good teen movie.

Look, I don't want any arguments about the Sixteen Candles thing. As in most cases, I'm right and that's all there is to it. It was a sucky movie in comparison to the others. Don't believe me? This man will help quell any disagreements:


Apology accepted. Goodnight.

A Date with Gutsy

Sunday is to the Blogosphere like Friday nights are to television: dead. So I'm not going to write anything too long today. I've written several lengthy posts this week, so if you're looking for something more in-depth you can scroll down. My life is, as always, pretty amazing, so you're bound to find something that will captivate your attention.

I'm leaving in a few minutes to spend time with my middle gremlin. Gutsy and I have had a hard go of things this week. We've argued a fair bit and I think I've yelled at him as much or more than he's yelled at me. Need a shining example of good parenting? Right here, baby.

I love him, you know. Like, a lot. He's that amazing baby who hung on in my womb for dear life and did not go the way of the miscarriage like several before him. He has brought me an immense amount of joy, and has made our family so much funnier, and more loving, and far more interesting. What other child could come up with a scissor necklace? Only my Gutsy, I tell you.

For a kid who has a scream that could put an opera singer to shame, he sure can be soft spoken and gentle. He loves Hannah Montana, any game that involves spies, ghost hunting and Stitch. He's a born leader and will butt heads with people when he doesn't get his way, but he can also be incredibly gentle and a great friend. He's a good boy. A high strung, easily-overwhelmed, but amazing boy.

Today we're spending time with his friend Diva and her parents. We're going to the library, then the pool, then out for hot chocolate. I'm going to leave the other two gremlins in the care of their dad, because I have that instinctive gut feeling that Gutsy and I need to reconnect. This week has not been kind to our relationship. It's a good day to buy his love with books, swimming and food.

He's turning seven this week. I have no idea where the time went. I just know that I'm happy we haven't imploded in a fiery death match and that I have not sold him to Gypsies as threatened many times over the years. He's a cool guy and I'm an awesome chick; Sure we can work this out. There's nothing hot chocolate can't fix.