Monday

Little Mans

Happy birthday to my little man!

You're turning two. I just can't believe it.

Even at three-months old you had that look on your face like you knew what was going on with your crazycute smile. Your personality is infectious.

You dance to the beat of your own drum.

You nurture and care for everything and everyone around you.

Including me.

Happy Birthday, my little man. I hope you had a great day. Sure looks like you did.
psst. Mantra Monday to return next Monday.

Saturday

Thankfully Turkey Trotting

Thanksgiving Day was a beautiful day for a Turkey Trot. A balmy 60-something degrees and 15,000 participants.

These are my mens. My husband and my pops. My two favorite mens in the world. I'm so proud of them.

They came, they saw, they conquered.

Both beating their personal bests. My dad's 5k just over 35 minutes and would you believe I missed him coming across the finish line?

I know. A failure as a daughter.
I carved out a spot along the ropes at the finish line, was ready with my camera in hand (I have never stood at a finish line so long so I had no idea how many pukers there were at the finish line! I had to constantly turn my head to avoid seeing the pukers! Did you know that?? I didn't either!) It must've been when my head was turned from a puker that I missed my dad, who crossed just around 35 minutes. It became about an hour and I was still standing there with no daddy in sight and at that point I'm seriously worrying that maybe something happened, I mean, it's been an hour! And then my imagination went wild and my phone was dead so I wouldn't have gotten a call and now at this point I'm picturing him in the back of an ambulance or something...

So my husband called him. My dad had wrapped it up forever ago and already went and got his shirt and his waters. Boy do I suck. But my dad ROCKS! Yay, Daddy!!!!!

Then, as if I couldn't be prouder, my husband finished his 10k just under an hour!!! Under an hour!!! We ran it together and when we saw we were at mile four at just under 40 minutes, we had this amazing realization that we could really do this in under an hour and when we did this last year we had done it in an hour and 12 minutes and we thought out loud, "Holy Crap, we can REALLY do this in under an hour!" So we picked it up and hauled and he got a little faster than I could because my legs turned to concrete stumps and I was trying real hard but he was faster and he was on this amazing mission and I didn't mind being left in his dust at all because he did it! He's living the dream! An under an hour 10k! Yay husband, yayyyy!!!!

I came in less than a minute later, at 1:00:45. Still a personal best for me! Shaving about 11 minutes off of last year's Turkey Trot! Boy, we've come a long way.
And then we went home and had turkey. It was a good day.

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Thursday

A Thankgiving Haiku by Christie O.

Thanksgiving Haiku by Christie O.


Thanksgiving table
surrounded, friendships and food
A happiness feast.

The littlest eyes
So much question and wonder
Thankful for them all.
The "Ganksgiving Feef"
"Vinoculars", "Calmatian."
Give "ganks" for great words.
Happy Thanksgiving to you all as you enjoy your families, friends, and your memories.

Wednesday

Weigh-in Wednesday: The Pre-Thanksgiving Edition

I'm into categorizing all my "situations" this week.

As in, if I'm about to deliver myself bad news, I also deliver myself good news.

Like, the bad news is... our Thanksgiving guest list is shrinking (Wah! I like me a good party.) The good news is... I found fantastic fabric to make a Thanksgiving table runner (did you know that all the fall-ish fabric is GONE?!)

The bad news is I'm behind in everything (as in, I was supposed to make said runner last night). The good news is there's a Curious George Christmas episode on and the "yellow man" is singing! And so is the doorman. And Chef Bisgetti!

The bad news is the kids woke up on the wrong side of the bed/crib. The good news is, my husband's coming home today at lunchtime!

See? Always good news.

So for weigh-in day at the Sisterhood of the Shrinking Jeans (have you joined yet?), bad news is I'm still up a pound since the start of the challenge and I skipped a very important 5 mile run over the weekend on account of Ikea and getting lost in it. Twice. The good news is I'm down a pound from last week! And I am doing a Turkey Trot 10k tomorrow morning with my husband and my dad as my turkey roasts in the oven. Over 600 calories burned before lunch. Sweet.

I'm feelin the holiday love this week. I'm feelin the thankfulness. My cup overfloweth (I really do know what that means now!)

So how did you do this week? Happy Thanksgiving to you and all your family and many blessings from my family to yours!!
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Monday

Mantra Monday: I Got Me a Wall of Motivation

Mantra Monday

I'm in a period in which I need vow renewal. New motivation. Inspiration. A reminder of why I am doing what it is I am doing. (What was I doing again?) Oh yea. A triathlon in April. April!?

That's so far away! What do I do in the meantime????!!!

So for now, I'm sitting here, all complacent in myself and doing things like eating a bucketload of popcorn, in size Large because the tween moviefood worker convinced me it was more economicable and a Cherry Coke also in the large size because of previously convincing economicableness while watching New Moon and secretly switching to Team Jacob and undoing all my good work out-y type deeds while pretending I'm moderating.

So I've put this up:
This is my Wall of Motivation.

But really it's a door.

And some corkboard.

But more importantly, it's my bedroom door, out of which I must walk out of every morning to start my day. In fact I pass through this door many times a day. And it's already working and I barely have anything up! But I'm working on it!

So far (since I've just started it) it has a picture of Chrissie Wellington on it. Female World Ironman Champion. Amazing.

I saw this picture in one of my magazines and the idea for an inspiration wall was born. And I'm not normally one to cut pictures out of a magazine. I haven't done that since about, oh, 20 years ago when Ralph Macchio and/or Kirk Cameron were on the cover of Tiger Beat or Teen Beat or whatever juicy teen idol magazine I happened to be salivating over at the time.

Man, she's ripped.

The other thing I have up was the sticker I got after doing the half marathon last March. I was going to put it on my car until I decided it would be so much cooler if I put up a "26.2 Been There Run That" sticker on my car instead. So since I haven't run that yet, this one needed a home until I do which probably won't be very soon but the stars could align I suppose. In the meantime, I think this one has found a nice home.

I'm going to prettify my little wall by putting up a bedazzled sticker across the top that says "Motivation" and then add to it at will, with sayings, happy things, peaceful things, inspiring things, as soon as I find them. Because it's funny how they're everywhere when you're not looking for them but NOWHERE when you're actually looking for them.

So often I have to switch up the motivating factors and start talking my brain into doing something even when it doesn't quite want to and now is one of those times. Because until I officially get on my training plan for the April triathlon which doesn't begin for a few more weeks, I'm lost. I'm finding myself skipping workouts and doing all those undedicated unmotivated things I've done to get myself to my previous state in the first place which was (according to those mean bodyfat calculation people) "obese". Must stop cycle. Must stop cycle.

So, please, oh, Wall of Motivation, speak to me. Little tiny paper Chrissie Wellington, speak to me. Call out to me. Remind me that I'm moving my body to be more fit for myself. To reach a goal I'd never even considered until this year. To be a good role model for my little tots. To be a wife my husband gets all hot and bothered over. To feel that wonderful rush of adrenaline and pride when I'm flying on my bike or on the treadmill or in the pool.

Cause I ain't feelin those things sitting here on this here couch. That's for sure.

And if I don't listen by at least Friday, you can pop me in the face.

* * *

Join the Mantra every Monday! I love to start off my week with a goal and a Mantra to set myself up for goodness for the week ahead! How bout you?? Grab the button, post your Mantra, and leave the link in the comments so I can come visit!

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Friday

Ganksgiving

Today it is "Ganksgiving" at my son's school.

There will be pumpkin muffins, sandwiches shaped like turkeys and cheese and crackers that look like turkey tracks.

Because it's a "Ganksgiving Feef."

More later! See you after the "Feef".
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Thursday

The Candy Reward, Oh the Slippery Slope

I'm trying to un-do some bad behavior.


Not theirs.


Mine.


Remember how I did a little thing called, give a child candy for going poop in the potty?


Well he's long past potty trained now. And he's still asking for candy. He's not getting candy, but he's still asking for it.


So now we're on the path of the whole "doing good is it's own reward" thing.

Because it's such a slippery slope between the "reward" and the "bribe" anyway and I'm noticing now that he wants "something" for even doing normal things that we expect of him, like cleaning his room and not hitting! What have I done! And now I have to totally un-do this thought process!


I've actually heard him say, "If I do this.. can I get something?"


And I've said, "No honey, you can have a great feeling of accomplishment instead." Which is the perfect way to elicit a glossed-over look in a three-year-old.


In fact I've already heard some of my great monologues and by that I mean that these monologues come out of my mouth and I see his eyes gloss over and I'm still talking and even I am finding myself saying,"What on earth are you saying?!"

The first crazy talk about doing good came earlier this week when we got an empty brown bag from his school with a little note attached to it. I recognized the bag, it is the same kind of brown bag we filled up with turkey dinner and fixins for needy families last year. His school does this every year and I think it's the coolest thing ever. They literally fill the gym with food for families. It's awesome.

Well, I, of course, in my excitement, began telling him what the bag was for and how we are going to use it to help families who have no food.

"Why, Mommy?"

"Because they don't have enough money. Do you know when you're hungry and you ask for something and Mommy gives you some food? Well, some families don't have food when they're hungry."

"Why!"

"Because! And we have to help them, we have to give them some food! They're starving!" Then I started describing how we have food in our pantry and some people don't, trying to make him have a visual of what I mean and all I got was that same glossed over look where he completely hasn't a clue of what I'm talking about because I tend to use bigger words than I should with a 3year old anyway and he says,

"But I'M STARVING, MOMMY!"

And then he wants candy because he's starving.

Oh this talk is all going terribly wrong.

Now every time he's hungry, he says he's hungry because he's starving. And even if he's not hungry he says he's hungry because he's starving.

There's always next year. Maybe.

My latest monologue was with a tiny superhero who was out saving the world this morning and it actually kind of went well and went like this.


Him: I put the mean man in jail, can I have some candy????
Me: No, honey. Besides, it's 8 in the morning.
Him: But I saved someone! And I put the mean guy in jail! Now can I have candy??
Me: No, honey. Doing good things is its own reward.
Him: (blank stare.)
Me: (inner monologue yelling 'hurry before you lose him!') Do you feel good about yourself?
Him: Um..
Me: Are you proud of yourself?
Him: (proudly sticks chest out like chicken) YES!
Me: Are you happy that you did something good?
Him: YES!
Me: See? That's the best part of doing something good! That feeling of accomplishment!
Him: (rides off on motorcycle. I always lose him on the word "accomplishment." Must find synonym.)


It looked like he got it, anyway. Until the next round of rounding up villains and saving people anyway.

Then of course he rode up and yelled, "I'M STARVING!"

Maybe not.

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Wednesday

Weigh-In Wednesday

It's weigh-in Wednesday and the news isn't good for me, I think I might have gained weight dreaming about cake.

Can that happen?

I didn't even get a slice.

Anyhoo, official results for me are over here at the Sisterhood today.

By the way, have you joined the Sisterhood yet? We're losing weight together (or at least in my case, supporting each other's efforts!) and the latest physical challenge is logging running and walking miles. Oh and today's giveaway is jewelry!

Head on over to the Sisterhood to weigh in and go visit everyone else! Happy Wednesday!
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Tuesday

The Post That Almost Wasn't

Last week, I went back.

I walked the second-floor hallway for the first time in 3 1/2 years.

The one I had walked down so many times, at every hour of the day or night, even in my pajamas and robe. Going to visit my tiny baby in the NICU, to talk to him, to sing to him, to hold him or feed him the bottles of milk that I was pumping for him around the clock.

When we left that Friday in April of 2005, I prayed I'd never return.

And I didn't.

My second child came on time, in the same hospital, and I avoided that hallway on that floor.

I was so happy.

This year, life took me back to that hospital, and to that very floor. To families who have their babies right now in the NICU. It was time to complete my circle. To help families walking the very hallway I walked, on the very same journey I took.

It was so much harder than I ever thought.

After the shower we threw for the families, I thought it was time for me to go visit the 2nd floor NICU. I had brought some little buckets full of candy that my mom's group had put together for the staff and I was going to bring them down myself.

It was time.

I could have given them to the NICU social worker to give them. But something inside me made me go. Needed to go.

I thought I had prepared myself. After all, we didn't spend a whole two weeks there, it really shouldn't be that hard. Should it?

So I walked the walk. Across the hospital, up the elevator, making a right turn toward the NICU instead of the left turn, where the healthy babies were in the newborn nursery. And each turn brought back pain. So much pain. An unbearable amount of pain. It was getting hard to breathe.

My hands lost feeling. I was terribly numb. I was nauseous.

It was awful.

It was more awful than I can even express and the word "awful" is the only word I can come up with for just how terrible I felt to be there again.

No, there wasn't closure. There wasn't anything except a terrible rush of painful memories, and the noise, my God the noise, the beeping, the darkness, standing next to the nurses station and trying to force a smile while handing them their homemade gifts and all I felt was the need to pass out.

My legs were weak. My knees were buckling. I couldn't breathe and the urge to sob uncontrollably was overwhelming.

It. Was. Awful.

It was all exactly how I remembered it. Every isolette, every section, every wire, every machine, every chair. I was surprised how actual and how vivid my memory of it was. Because when you go through something like that, it feels like you're walking through everything in a fog. So afterward, you wonder if whatever it is you remember is really accurate.

But it was all still there, just like in my head, 3 1/2 years later. Only this time, there were other mommies with that same lost look on their faces, their bellies still swollen where their babies were supposed to still be right now, just sitting there, helpless, next to their babies, watching. Praying.

At the exact spot where my baby was, a mother held her child while daddy snuggled up close to them.

I had sat in that chair. In that very spot.

My heart cried.

I don't know what I had expected. I thought maybe my memories wouldn't match up, that maybe when I had seen the place where my baby slept and lay waiting for me for all those days, that I could let it all go, once and for all. Like a butterfly. Like a balloon. And send my painful memories with it. My memories of a failed pregnancy. My guilt. My sadness. My broken heart for having failed my child before he was even born. My pain of leaving the hospital without him. The fear I had after his rough entry into this world. I wanted so badly for that to all finally go away along with all of the noise in my head.

But instead, I was so overwhelmed that it physically hurt.

I stifled all my feelings until I got home and I sobbed in my husband's arms until I had no more tears left.

I needed to compose myself before sitting down and writing about it. I almost didn't. But I had to.

I learned something that day. I learned that even though we forget so much, that some memories will never ever lessen. They will remain as vivid as the day we experience them.

And that's ok. No, I can't let the memories go. But I can look at my shiny, healthy, little three-year-old ball of energy and know that indeed, I didn't fail him. That instead, I gave him everything I had when he needed me, every second of me that I could and loved him with everything that I had and more than I ever even knew I had. And still do.

More importantly, I know that it wasn't my fault.

Today is Prematurity Awareness Day.

The research by the March of Dimes is very likely why I had a full-term baby my second pregnancy. It is why my son, who was born at 34 weeks, came home from the hospital in less than two weeks. It is why preemies who are born at 24 weeks can survive today.

Today and tomorrow and for the rest of my life, I will fight for preemies.
Until there is no reason to ever walk down that hallway, or sit in that chair, I will fight.
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Questions from Domesticadia

Motherhood and a permanent residence in Domestic-adia raises more questions than answers. And I almost never ever feel like I know what I'm doing. (Do you have this problem?)

Among the questions I've asked this week are:

1. What happens if a child eats cat poo? (Don't ask.)
2. What is the difference in symptoms between the stomach bug my other son had last week and what happens after eating cat poo? (Updated: Whatever it was, it's gone now.)
3. If the stuffed animals are a casualty of said result of the above, can they be washed in the washing machine, even if it says not to?
4. What will happen to them? (Update: Best friend talked me into playing "stuffed animal roulette". Whoever makes it out of the washer alive gets to stay. And I have to tell you, a little of myself went in the washer with them. I was really worried and found myself really pulling for them. THANK GOODNESS! THEY MADE IT! All of them! George, Winnie the Pooh, Baby Bear and Elmo, guess what? You get to stay!
5. Now. If you wash them in the washer, does it follow too that you can dry them in the dryer?
6. What will happen to them? (Update #2: Yes! I used the "almost no heat" option. They are clean, germ-free, and surrounding my son on the couch as we speak.)

OK. New round of questions.

7. Is it weird if I buy a bottle of wine with a coupon?
8. Isn't it weird that coupons for wine exist?
9. Is it weird for me to buy a Twilight Edward doll?
10. What if it's for myself?
11. What is the difference between roasting a turkey in one of those slow roaster things that are on sale at Target and K-Mart instead of roasting it in the oven? Is it a skin crispyness issue?
12. Where are my hair ties and camera chargers?
13. How did I allow my e-mail inbox to hit 5000?
14. Should I throw a party? That's a pretty big milestone.
15. Do I have A.D.D. or do I just have an uncanny ability to multitask? Because I have been bouncing from this post to the one I started previously, and in between I'm doing laundry and cutting coupons (while wondering also why my favorite craft store even bothers offering 55% off "custom framing" because it still costs at least $150 every time I have them "custom frame" something.)
16. How much caffeine is too much?
17. Didn't I read somewhere that you should NOT pay attention to tantrums and they will eventually stop throwing them?
18. Why haven't they stopped?
19. Should I stop before I get to 20 questions?
20. Nahhh.... Why do I put on children's programming only to have them walk away, leaving me stuck watching Curious George or Martha? Like right now?...

PS. This is exhausting.
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Monday

Mantra Monday: Christie O., MindFreak

Mantra Monday

"In the beginning, it's hard to understand that the race is not against others but against that little voice in your head that tells you when to quit."-Charles Brenke, age-group triathlete


Oh, yes. I know that voice. I heard it in the last triathlon when I was thinking about swimming back to shore and packing it in. Oh that voice can GET SO LOUD! Sometimes that voice acts like there's no other option but quitting. I'm glad I didn't listen, but sometimes I feel like I'm running out of tactics and my head is learning all my tricks. And not just even in triathlon. But during my day.


So I am reading a new book, "The Triathlete's Guide to Mental Training."


It's not about the Triathlon part for me. It's about the head. (Quick sidenote: If you're new here, I've only just begun doing triathlons as part of my quest to lose weight. I am not an actual triathlete. At least not competitively. I'd describe it as "Couch to Triathlon.")


But over the past year, I have learned that losing weight, running, biking, swimming, playing softball, weightlifting or doing any sort of sport at all, eventually requires a certain degree of mental toughness. When you first start out, it's always hard because you're just trying to get through it. Then, after you're consistent for a while, you notice you can go longer and while that part might be easier, it's not really easier because now it's your mind that you have to use to keep going or go longer or get better. Then you have to get used to the idea that even though it's not easy, it really is worth it, and worth motivating for, then when you become one with the fact that it's not easy, you eventually even learn to like it. Dare I say "love" it.


While I have actually crossed the finish line, I have found that getting there was the bigger battle. Like, for instance, my forays into open water swimming (i.e. just bobbing around in the water for a while and almost throwing in the towel). I've come across certain obstacles that I know I can overcome if I can do some training. Not physically, but mentally. Because I get stuck in my head, sometimes a little too much.


The fact is, so many people begin training for 5ks, 10ks, 1/2 marathons, marathons, and triathlons, and while you're all busy getting your body ready, you forget to train your mind. And that's one of the biggest tools in your race. After all, you're spending that entire 30 minutes to five hours (or however long your event takes you) and the hours leading up to it and after it completely stuck in your own head. And if that turns on you, well, then you're finished before you even start.


And that's such a shame, especially if you've already put the time in the physical training part of it.


It was a shame for me to put in six days a week, biking, running and swimming miles upon miles, only to get stuck in the middle of the ocean on race day, bobbing up and down in the cold water like an idiot, watching everyone pass me and not being able to stick my face in the water. All of a sudden. Out of nowhere. Yes, in one split second, your brain can tell you to quit.


Whether or not I listen is another story.

* * *
Join the Mantra every Monday! Grab a button on the side, write a post and link it up in the comments and I'll come visit! It's important for me to start off my week on a positive note every week. How bout you?
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Sunday

The Music Truck

I caught myself humbugging the Ice Cream man today.

I look at him so much differently now that I have toddlers.

I heard him driving through our neighborhood exactly 5 minutes into naptime and cursed him under my breath.

"Damn Ice Cream Truck!"

I felt bad sounding so bitter. But I can't help it! I knew what was going to happen! I had just settled into a peaceful house, that is, until I heard the faintness of the music and knew it was going to be over. Because my three year old was going to run out of bed and run to the window to listen to the Music Truck go by. And that would be it. Naptime over.

Yes, around here we call it a "music truck". My 3 and almost-two-year-old still believe it's just a truck that drives around playing music. They haven't a clue it also serves ice cream (and how absurd it would be that a truck would drive around for the sole purpose of playing circus music). But I am going to keep it that way as long as possible until the jig is up. But for now it's not, so it's a "music truck."

But the music truck always comes exactly 5 minutes into naptime and then again about 30 minutes after the kids have gone to bed.

So that my children hear it, wake up, want to go see it and then do not want to return to bed. Because all they want to do is listen to the music while it drives around our neighborhood, and the neighborhood next to us and the one behind us and the one over there, where the music is still faint, but a little three-year-old's ears can still hear it. He will listen until it has completely disappeared and gone away and if ears could squint, that's what he'd be doing just to listen until its very last second.

I realize that after lunch around 1, and after dinner between 7 and 8 p.m. might be a better time for the Ice Cream Man to, perhaps, sell some ice-cream and I sympathize with the fact that he's a business on wheels in probably a very difficult economy for ice cream trucks and probably even more difficult as it'll be cold out soon and no one will want ice cream because they'll be busy drinking hot chocolate, but still. These times really don't work for me. And forget about it when the kids realize it serves ice cream!

And when I see you at the park at whatever event my city is throwing, I have to physically hold my legs to keep them from walking over to you and yelling at you for driving by my house after naptime and bedtime because I already have to get up and lead my son back to bed a hundredty times a night and that other few just because of the music truck makes me a very special kind of crazy. The kind of crazy where you think you have a hold on things and then some unnecessary disruption in the force happens to make it so that you, indeed, do not have a hold on things.

!!!!!!

(Pulling hair out!)

I remember in my 20's I had a party at my apartment and the parents of a toddler came to my door and knocked and asked us to be quiet. And we didn't. Because we ruled the world. And they came up again and pleaded, because their toddler couldn't sleep. And then they called the police.

I so get that now. This may, indeed, be a musical karma driving around.

When I have to lay in my toddler's bed on a random Friday night in which there is no holiday whatsoever but for some reason there are fireworks and it sounds like World War Two outside and I have to snuggle with him until it's over while we listen to it, I get it. Loud cars with their radios pumping and the bass thumping, driving by my house waking up my kids. Believe me, I get it now. Unusually early landscapers... Oh yes. I get it now.

And I'm so sorry, parents of toddler, for being such a jerk. I promise, I really do get it now. So much so that I actually curse the sweet little innocent Ice Cream man and his tiny circus-song-playing truck.

But Ice Cream Man, if you're reading this, do you understand why I might be annoyed? Yes? So could you just do me a favor and skip our neighborhood for, oh, the next 6-8 years? It's mostly old people anyway! And they don't really like ice cream from ice cream trucks anymore. I never ever see the old people lining up outside waiting for the Ice Cream Truck. So, head over back to the park where all the kids are and where you can hang out and play music at all times of day and night. Thank you. I appreciate it.

And have a nice day!
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Friday

Safe Running and Peace of Mind

This week, my husband learned that a classmate from his high school was killed after being hit by a car. He was training for a triathlon and was out cycling.

He was our age and he left behind his wife and two-year-old. He had just begun triathlon training to lose weight and fell in love with it. He was a photographer. He was a blogger. His son was wearing the same outfit as my two-year-old in one of his pictures.

He was us. Any one of us.

That night my husband went out for a run in the dark. I saw that he wasn’t carrying his phone because it was sitting there, lonely on the counter. He wasn’t carrying his I.D. He didn’t have pockets. All I could think was that if something happened to him and he needed emergency attention, no one would know who he is and no one would be able to tell me he was hurt. Had I not heard about the death of his friend, I wouldn’t have thought twice about it...

Head over to the Sisterhood of the Shrinking Jeans today for the rest of the story, some running safety tips and a great, potentially lifesaving giveaway. Stay safe out there!

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Thursday

Anti-Laundry-ite

I saw this on Twitter. The Laundry Fold 'N Hold.

It's been in my mind ever since.

Please go see it and come back. I beg you. Even if it's just for a second.

First of all, I hate folding laundry. I'd rather clean toilets. This is not a secret here, nor is it a secret amongst my household.

I dreamt of a pair of front loaders once, fully believing this would make me change my foldin-hatin ways.

And then we actually got some. I redid my entire laundry room. Painted. Put up a neat little folding table that I got for $30 from Ikea (best invention ever and so not for laundry folding but whatever!)

And for a few solid minutes, I did enjoy laundry. I enjoyed pushing the cute little buttons and hearing the song that my shiny ruby red front-loaders sing when they start and they stop. My husband can be heard whistling it from time to time.

Our entire house stops and pauses to hear the little chime play and we bask in its cuteness, look at each other, smile, and continue on with our day. Oh, how I wish I could play it for you right here. (Heck, maybe I'll do a laundry-folding Vlog, won't that be exciting!)

And for a good week, I used the little fold-out table and I folded my laundry like Super Folder in exactly 2 minutes and 30 seconds, oh yes! It was all that convenient. I should have been wearing a cape and a leotard with a big SF on my front.

And then it stopped. The dream died. I was asked to turn in my cape.

The laundry would go into the washer and dryer but remain unfolded in heaps and my husband would walk by my basket of clothes like Raymond passed by the suitcase in that one episode of Everybody Loves Raymond and count how many days it sat there. Eventually, like in my pre-frontloader days, it would recycle itself. The clean clothes would become dirty because the dirty would go on top of the clean and I'd forget which ones were clean and which ones were dirty and honestly it would all just become "dirty by association" anyway.

And I was put in laundry-folding timeout.

I deserved it. I'm ashamed.

I wish I were the overachieving, suck-it-up-and-fold-it type-of mom but I'm just not. There are so many other things to do! You take for granted that the wash is in, it's doing its own thing, and while it's doing its own thing, you can do other things! You put all the laundry in, you transfer it to the dryer, it goes in the basket, you repeat and repeat until it's all washed and by then you've been doing all that "other" stuff all day, things that did not allow you to keep up with the folding of each load upon its exit from the dryer, and then, yada yada yada, you're beat, it's 8 p.m. and there's a huge wrinkled pile yelling at you. For a few days. Maybe a week. Who knows.

I am trying to change. If there were a 12-step program for non-laundry-folders, I would join. Truly. I would probably be on that step where you apologize to everyone you hurt along the way by now, too.

But I've got a new policy. If I can't find the time to fold it, I won't even put it in the washer.

But this is a slippery slope too, because before I know it there could very well just be piles of dirty clothes everywhere instead of clean ones. And which one's better? Probably the clean because then I'm only half a slob.

Anyway, so when I saw this video, it was like the Laundry Gods were looking down upon me and striking me with their laundry-folding lightning bolt. I really took it to heart! They were talking to me.

And honestly, it was just plain old hilarious. I'm all for the squeezing in the fitness; I may or may not have been seen doing squats and lunges in the shower while waiting for my conditioner to work, doing pushups over the baby to make him laugh, situps with the baby on my tummy, step-ups on our living room step (or time-out step depending on who you ask), doing laps around the house with the boys, ya know, any little extra calorie burn helps.

But when I saw the Laundry Fold 'N Hold, well, I just about lost it!

No, I haven't tried it yet. But there is plent of laundry that needs to be done right now and there is one at this moment that needs to be folded (I promise, I'll fold it today, I promise! It's a small one!) you can be sure I'll try just about anything to try and actually like folding laundry. Besides, if I must do it anyway, I may as well make it fun and save my marriage at the same time! Win-win!

Right?

What is it about folding laundry anyway?
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Wednesday

Circle Complete

I have officially completely my circle. In so many ways.

The first in our series of NICU showers was yesterday and I'm actually a little overwhelmed and having trouble finding words. Me, without words. I know.

First of all, the room was beautiful! I can't believe I didn't take pictures of the big room! I have only closeups! What is wrong with me! But this is the prize table if that counts. Look at all those goodies!

We had all the showery things like music, games, food and prizes and decorations. The message for everything on this day was: It's ok.

The mommies, daddies, even grandmas and grandpas started to wander in and I say wander because I recognize that wandering look. When you have a child in the NICU, wandering is all you seem to do. You wander from this place to that, in a foggy haze, just going through the motions because your heart is really in that isolette sitting in the NICU and anywhere you wander beyond that is a place you really don't feel like being, even that means taking a short break.

There were only a couple moms from our group there, just a few are attending each shower so as to not be overwhelming. We all took turns speaking, sharing our stories and trying to send the message to the mommies sitting there that the pain, the guilt, the sadness, the grief, the lonliness, it's all very very ok and that there are mommies here for them, when - or if - they're ever ready.

We ate food, played games, and raffled off our zillions of prizes. I got to talking to some of the mommies there and we laughed a little.


And it was a packed house.

I just cannot believe what a great job everyone did in getting the word out, every.chair was full. The media came for a little bit to do a story on Prematurity Awareness Month and they did a great job not being too invasive while being sensitive to the occasion. For that I'm greatful.

HAVE I SAID YET THAT WE HAD SO MANY PRIZES!?

We had to KEEP RAFFLING! And then anyone who didn't get a trip to the prize table got to go up anyway! I kept thinking about how wonderful it was that the item they chose will probably stay with them forever. They'll remember that that's the outfit they got at the shower, or that's the doll or blanket they got at the shower, and keep that one, even if the rest go to Goodwill some day. I feel that way about every little thing I got in the NICU, my son's tiny hat, a quilt someone anonymously made him, those are the things I so cherish.

Here's where I want to say a huge resounding top of someplace very high "Thank You!" to all of you who have donated and sent me items for the shower. Honestly, from the outfits to the photo albums, and with the donated money I got diapers, outfits and toys, you all make my heart melt and sing. Thank you! Thank you thank you thank you! You helped so many people. Thank you.

At one point during the shower, I looked across the room and saw myself sitting on one of the chairs.

Hair pulled back, red eyes that haven't dried yet, drained.

And I remembered that's she's why we were there. She came by and thanked us at the end, even hugged us and said she'll be stopping by our website. I really hope she does. Every family got a gift bag that included a journal, some clothes and some keepsakes, even the families who didn't get to come.

And I was in charge of games! and I need your help! I did a "count the diapers" game, a "feel the baby item" game (they had to guess what the wrapped baby item was) and a nursery rhyme fill in the blank game. That one was probably the one I won't do next time because we had quite a few spanish-speaking families and it didn't translate well. Also, there were some people who weren't familiar with American nursery rhymes. (This is all a learning experience for me.) So I was wondering if any of you knew any other shower games, ones that are kind of fill in the blank-y or that people can wander up to the table to do in big groups, ones that are fitting for English and Spanish speaking people? I have done a lot of searching and I'm looking for one more game that would fit this description.

In the end, it was a beautiful day. I hope it will be remembered by families as a nice, comforting, break.

I do have to say, the end of the day was hardest for me. I mentioned here that I have avoided the NICU in my child's three and a half years but yesterday I went.

It was so very very much harder than I thought it was going to be. So very very hard and overwhelming. That is a post for another day. My eyes haven't dried yet.

But I will say that I've completed my circle. In so, so many ways.

* * *

Don't think I forgot to weigh in today! I am over here today for that!

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Tuesday

Rescue 911: Curious George Edition

The boy's a champ.

Runs for the potty, barfs up a lung and hops onto his motorcycle and zooms around the house like nothing even happened.

He's been doing this for almost a week now, and though it does appear to be getting better, we're staying home again today just in case (and yes, husband has saved the day and is taking a 1/2 day so I can go to the NICU baby shower, how awesome is he?! Love! More on that later...)

Meantime, I give you an episode of Rescue 911 at our house. (When you're indoors for a long time consecutively, these are the things you do.) (Ps. did you know my three-year-old was a firefighter?)

911: 911, what's your emergency?

Caller: Fend guck!
911: I'm sorry, I can't understand you. 'Friend guck?' Can you speak clearly? I can't understand you, sir.
Caller: FEND GUCK!
911: I still can't understand you, sir, can you speak into the phone?
Caller: (now crying) GUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!
911: Standby sir, I'm getting our Supervising Baby Translator on the line with us to help me understand what you're saying.

911 Baby Translator: Sir, what's your emergency?

Caller: FEND GUCK! FEND GUUUUUCK!
911 Baby Translator: OK, you say you have a "Friend stuck?" Can you confirm that for me please?
Caller: Es. Guck. Fend guck.
911 Baby Translator: OK, where is your friend located, sir?
Caller: Imbed. (Urgent wailing now.)
911 Baby Translator: OK sir, try to remain calm. You say he's stuck in the bed? We are sending units out to help you. Please stay calm and stay on the line.
Caller: (Inaudible.)
911 Baby Translator: Sir what are you doing now? Is your friend responsive?
Caller: No. Fend OUT. Fend OUT!
911 Baby Translator: Sir, please DO NOT try to remove your friend by yourself. We have units enroute. If you move your friend, it could result in further injury. PLEASE DO NOT MOVE HIM.
Caller: (Wailing).
911 Baby Translator: OK our units are arriving. Please stand by while our units assist your friend. Please remain calm.
911 Baby Translator: Sir?
Caller: (grunt)
911 Baby Translator: OK, sir, I am told that the responding units will be using the jaws of life, so please remain calm, everything will be ok. Are you there?
Caller: (silence.)
Caller: (more silence)
911 Baby Translator: Sir?
Caller: IP IP OOORAY!
911 Baby Translator: Sounds like your friend is out and everything's going to be ok! Sir? Sir? Anyone there?


(Silence.)

Yep, and, that was that. Oh how they move on quickly. I wonder how George is doing. Think I should send flowers?

Monday

Stay Positive

Mantra Monday

Tomorrow's the first NICU baby shower we're throwing (and if you don't know what I'm talking about it's my preemie mom's group, the March of Dimes and our local HUG Program throwing baby showers for families with babies in the NICU) and last week I mentioned that it's at the hospital where my son was born. So tomorrow is extra special to me.

But my son's still sick. He's been throwing up on and off since Thursday. It's awful enough being on the cusp of victory (yay! he was hungry AND he ate an entire bowl of oatmeal!!) only to be deflated 5 minutes later from watching him run to the bathroom unable to hold it down.

(I know, great breakfast talk, sorry!)

The world stops when there's a sick baby. Packed schedule? Too bad. Things to do? Not right now you don't!

So I may be looking at sitting out tomorrow's shower. I'm trying not to be crushed. I really am.

I just knew tomorrow was going to be an emotional thing for me because I knew I was going to complete my circle by going there. I had my preemie there, and I was going to help other mommies with preemies there. Full circle.

It's just one of those things, right? There's always next year, yada yada yada. I'm a grown woman, things just happen. Maybe the clouds will part and I will be able to go. Maybe not. I'll just have to get over it if it doesn't happen.

Anyhoo, some oddities that my crazy brain thinks are funny and because I'm trying to stay positive and sometimes I need to do that in sort of a warped type of way.

Have you ever really thought about how gruesome the saying, "Killing two birds with one stone" is? I say it all the time! But hey, that's not nice, is it? Never thought about it. Not once.

Furthermore, while we were listening to a Disney CD in the car and the song, "Three Blind Mice" came on, I was all excited. Till we got to the chorus, "...cut off their tails with a carving knife!" Um. Let's just skip this one. Really? I sang that in school all my life? Poor blind mice. And they're blind to boot! We were cutting off tails of poor mice with disabilities! How awful.

Anyhoo. My son is super-aware of being sick and throwing up but it wasn't until this morning that it made me laugh with how he thinks of it in his own three-year-old mind. He wanted some hot cocoa, so I said ok (I would make it without milk) and he said, "But not the one with the marshmallows!" And I said, "Why? You LOVE marshmallows!" And he said, "Nope. Not today. My hiccup will fight with them."

So he's gone on to tell me what foods won't agree with him and equating his barfness to one giant hiccup that will fight with anything that doesn't appeal to it. Very creative!

Ending on a positive note today and for that I turn you over to yesterday's 5k Race Day report and running in knee highs!

Have a good week! Stay positive! I'll be trying my best.
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Sunday

Running in Knee Highs

There comes a time in a girl's life when you sign up for a 5k, finish, then ask yourself that one important question. You know the one.

Where's the beer tent?

It was called the Blue Moon 5k and the beer tent forgot to show up! Didn't someone tell it? Did it confuse its days, did it think the race was Saturday? Maybe it showed up yesterday and sat around all morning and no one came. Or, I bet the beer tent got up too early like I did (I set my watch for 4:30 instead of 5:30. Well, I mean, I forgot to change the time on my watch so I woke up an hour early.) So I bet that's what happened. The beer tent got up too early, saw that no one was there, and left.

Besides the absent beer tent (imagine how 12-step-program I looked walking around in a "Will Run for Wine" shirt asking about the beer tent), this was absolutely the best 5k EVER. EVER! FOR SO MANY REASONS!! The first of which was that:

I BEAT MY TIME! I ACHIEVED THE HOLY GRAIL OF 5K-NESS! The time I've been seeking for a year and a half!

Official time: 29:45. I have long wanted to do a 5k in 30 minutes or under. I know, it's not like a real runner time (those people have 17-21 minute 5ks and they are not me). But I have been running and running and running and I hadn't gotten below 31 minutes yet. When I passed mile one and it said 9:35 on my watch, I wanted to cry tears of joy! I knew at that point it was actually going to be possible!

You know, besides being in your own head or the music or any of those things that keep you going, if you keep your eyes open to the people surrounding you, you'll find inspiration throughout the whole race. I always do. Like the mom who passed me pushing a TRIPLE STROLLER! Now that's a mom who rocks. Complete and total superstar-rockstar-mom. Because a stroller with just ONE child in it is 30 pounds at least! And then there were the 8 and under kids, those little tiny bodies with those little skinnypeople not-yet-developed legs, trucking along. SO.CUTE. (Hell, if they can do it!) There were two little boys who placed in their age group that were the same age difference as my two sons, and all I could think of was how amazing it would be to watch mine cross a finish line one day and I got all choked up.

Then there were the men who I would run alongside for a little bit, who you could just tell would rather give their left arm than be passed up by a girl wearing knee-highs and a headband. They would linger alongside you, pass you for a bit but not too far because all they want to be is just far enough ahead of you that they're in front of you. And then I put the motor on and too bad, SUCKA! You've been CHICKED!

(I really need a shirt that says that on the back.)

But all funny aside, this 5k for me and for so many was part of the Sisterhood of the Shrinking Jeans, where 4 weeks ago, all of us sisters, from all walks of life and all parts of the country, got together and picked the goal of running a 5k this weekend, for World Run Day and also as part of the EA Sports Active Challenge. The folks at EA Sports are really the ones who dared us to do this and we took them up on it! And it has been so.awesome to read about everyone's training over the past four weeks and watch (virtually) as each one of us crossed the finish line. We weren't there in person but I can tell you I saw my fellow runners' faces in my head when I ran! And a few of us ran in solidarity wearing our knee-socks and headbands! I gotta tell you, at first I was a little embarrassed when I got there (I really did look a little silly), but with some encouragement from my husband before I left ("You don't even look that ridiculous!"), I forgot within a few minutes about what I was wearing and actually it was all so supercomfy and even empowering to have taken this creative license! So people were looking, so what! I rocked my headband.

The other best part of this race for me was running with my dad. This was my dad's first race ever, and I am so proud of him. He's been training with all of us the past four weeks too. I was so proud watching him cross the finish line and watching the fire inside him light up afterward as the excitement to do more races was just bursting out of him! Isn't he awesome!!??? Dad, you ROCK!!Oh and to hug my dad as he crossed the finish line and get all choked up because crossing any finish line is always symbolic with a milestone met and a goal achieved and to be able to do that together, was just amazing. My dad. To a million more races!

There is nothing -- seriously nothing -- more empowering than crossing a finish line. I used to say, "I don't care where I finish as long as it's not last." But that is completely untrue now and I'm almost ashamed of even saying it. There is honor in finishing last, just as there is honor in finishing first. Because there is honor in just finishing. Whether it's finishing a race or finishing something you've started, it is all the same. You should be proud. So I change my mind. I don't care about where I finish. As long as I've finished. I will always have my own personal goals in my head about where I want to finish, a certain time I want to beat, a level of performance I hope to accomplish in a certain event (i.e. swimming) because that is just the way I am. But it's not so much about success or failure anymore, in fact my idea of "failure" has changed so much since this all started. It's about putting in the work, having a good time, and finishing what I started and being proud of what I've done. Even if it means having a rough race or a slow time or a crappy swim or a flat tire. The honor is in finishing at all, and if you can't finish, in trying again.

So what a wonderful day for a race it was! What a wonderful day. I can't wait to read everyone's race reports, and if you didn't run this weekend and have no idea what I'm talking about, we will be starting a new round of running and logging miles on Monday, so head over to the Sisterhood to join us for this next go round! (Nope you don't have to be a runner -- you just have to wanna get healthy.) Because there's nothing more motivating than doing this together!
ps. RUN-- DON'T WALK-- TO GO LINK UP YOUR RACE DAY POST AT THE SISTERHOOD RIGHT HERE!

Saturday

Mommy, Where DO Babies Come From???

We ordered out last week for some Chinese food.

My son was sick, so he wasn't up for eating much. Except for, of course, the fortune cookie. And I have a pretty liberal "sick" policy around here; pretty much anything goes (especially when they are struggling to keep anything down). So fortune cookie you want? Fortune cookie you get.

He opens it up and wants me to read the tiny paper.

It says something about a drunk man's fortune or something like that and since I'm really not up for explaining "drunk" to a three-year-old, I need to think quickly. Motherhood is perfect training for Jeopardy by the way.

I hold up the paper and say, "Um, Superheroes are wise and kind." Yeah. That's it.

Sometimes I surprise even myself.

This look washes over his face like I have just paid him the biggest compliment in the world, he can't even comprehend this statement or wrap his mind around it or contain himself. His eyes get real big and a smile literally bursts forth and he is now gleaming. Because of course, he is a superhero and this fortune is exactly about him. It is for him. He's usually Batman, but a superhero nonetheless and the fortune cookie was about him. And he repeats the fortune over and over again. "Wise and kind, Mommy!" "Wise and kind!" Gosh I'm great.

Now, "kind" he knows. But wise is a little different. I had to explain "wise." And it was almost easy because we had already been talking about "smart" and "brain" earlier in the day.

Because the questions have been rolling in. I thought I was at least a year out from this by they way, but they're coming in fast, one after another, I barely have time to answer them before he's on to the next one. Earlier that day, he wanted to know how his brain worked.

So I said that the brain contains lots of answers and it always wants to know more answers. I asked him questions as an example. "What's that color?" He said, "Red." I said, "See? Your brain had the answer and told your mouth to say it. What are we sitting on?" (Don't say 'brain'.) "The couch," he says. "That's right. Your brain knew that too!" I could see in his face that on some three-year-old level, he was getting it.

Well now I've created a monster because when he realizes his brain doesn't know something, he realizes he needs to give it all the answers and now it seems like his brain won't stop telling his mouth to ask questions!

"How does a frog jump, Mommy?" (He uses his legs.) "How does a car go?" (It uses its wheels.) "But how?" (It has a motor that makes the wheels spin.) "But how?" (It eats gasoline that makes the motor run which makes the wheels spin.) "Why does the fan spin, Mommy?" (It uses electricity from the wires that come in through the top of the fan.) "How?" All of our houses are connected by wires and electricity is in the wires and the electricity in the wires turns the fan on, the lights on, the tv on, all of that."

Blank stare.

Sometimes I think it's funny to overexplain things to see what his reaction is.

On the flip side, there are times where I wish to completely underexplain as much as I can. Like, that particular question that we mothers are not quite ready for once it is asked. You know the one.

You think you have plenty of time to drum up some genius, but no. It comes out when you least expect it. The one and only. THE question.

"Mommy, how do you have a baby?" Or "Where does the baby come from?" Or "How does it get there?" Or "How does it come out?"

He's three-and-a-half. I so wasn't ready for this.

They all came rapidfire, too, one after the other.

And as I began to sift through the questions, I answered each one, thoughtfully divulging just enough information but refraining from too much. I was almost even proud! I was on a roll!

But by the third question, it turned into my mouth answering questions and my mind turning to look at my mouth, saying, "What are you saying TURNIT OFF!" I could feel myself sinking deeper and deeper into the big ol' hole I was digging for myself and there was nothing I could do. By the end, there was something to do with God having a magic wand and pointing it at my belly and saying "Alacabam!"

Oh boy.

(He's three-and-a-half, he'll forget this by naptime, right?)

I embarrass even myself sometimes. And really, come on. I'm a creative girl. That's the best I could come up with? God has a magic wand?

Sigh.

I swear it all started off so well! I thought I was acing this!

By the end I wanted to turn and run.

And maybe say something supergenius like, "Let's ask your father when he gets home." Which, let's face it would probably go straight back to me in the end anyway.

I hope I have a chance to start over and re-splain. But for now I'll ask you. He's three-and-a-half and I'm interested in the less is more philosophy. While also being somewhat honest. (This sounds like a Craigs List ad). Actually, I would like to say the exact opposite of what I've already said so far. So. Help a mama out. Any tips?

PS. We opened up a second fortune cookie the next day, one that was left over. It said, "Eat your vegetable and you'll grow up big and strong like Popeye."

I swear. I'm not even making that one up.

Thank you, dear fortune cookie people. Thank you.

* * *
I'm over at Shrinking Jeans today too, giving away a pair of running pants from One More Mile! Contest ends today!
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Friday

One With My Embarrassment

I have an (unnamed) friend who went to the grocery store, felt a little drafty from behind, did all her shopping, left, then realized that her skirt was tucked into the top of her panty hose the entire time she was shopping.

I know you won't believe it, but that wasn't me.

I have, however, embarrassed myself quite enough through the years and even though you think the people who witnessed your embarrassment have forgotten the vision that hath been burned in their brains, I'm here to tell you, no they didn't.

Sorry.

See? I'm still telling my friend's story, it still makes me laugh to this day, and I wasn't even there!

Yes, people are in need of a good embarrassing story to tell and they like to tell your story because they're embarrassed about their own stories and to be honest, someone else is probably at a Christmas party telling their story anyway! So it comes full circle and the world's all a big round of telling each other's embarrassing stories anyway and that should make us all feel better, because yes, while it is true that probably someone at some Christmas party or office party or sorority gathering is telling the story of how you messed it up one day, take comfort in knowing that we not alone in our embarrassment, and that everyone has their stories.

The trick is being one with it.

Because everyone likes a good embarrassing story. It almost always makes their inner monologue say something like, "Whew, someone did that too." Or, "Whew, someone is more ridiculous than I am." Other people's embarrassing stories just make people feel better about their own. Your embarrassment is a sort of a support group for confidence everywhere! Don't worry. You'll spot someone doing something stupid soon enough and feel better about your own, too. It all comes full circle eventually.

This year I took a photography class (the last class was last night -boo hoo) and it brought me to my old college campus, USF. I was so excited I was going to be taking a class and it was going to be in Cooper Hall, where I spent nearly half of my undergrad.

Would you believe it is as old and rickety as it was a hundredty years ago when I went?

Anyhoo, as I was descending the steps from the third floor and getting down to the very bottom, I was struck with a memory from my yesteryears. Back when I was an actual student, I was on those very stairs, climbing down with a friend of mine during the "rush hour" in between classes (it was where all the english and lit classes were and where most students had to take all their requirement courses so most of the school was in that building at some point in their careers) and when I got down to the last four steps, I missed about three of them.

I wasn't paying attention, and in the middle of everyone, I fell down the last three stairs. Completely missed them and landed on my tookus.

I was wearing a skirt. I had stuff in my hands. It wasn't graceful.

Then there was a time when I took a performance class, completely blanked during my monologue and fled the classroom. I don't know why I fled, I just picked up my stuff in embarrassment and left. I remember hearing the teacher yelling after me, "Don't go! Make something up! It's ok!" Now, I'd just stand up there and fart or something to fill the emptiness and embarrassment (you can't get much worse than a bunch of blank faces staring at you when you got nothin. You may as well be standing there in your undie. You can hear the crickets and everything.) The reason I tell you that people remember is because that very story came right back up when I met a friend from college on Facebook. Darn you, Facebook! I thought that memory was mine!

Nope. People don't forget. Sorry.

But it's ok because they've done it too. We need the comic relief, so it's ok. We should really stop taking ourselves so seriously anyway.

So my latest foray into embarrassment happened last week when I was headed to the gym. The kids were up and we were out of the house all dressed and prepared and unfrazzled because we were on.time. and I dropped off my son at preschool and headed off to the gym with Mini and he went into the gym daycare and actually ran off without even looking back! Which as you may know from reading my tweets that it has been quite a journey to get to that point, so we were having a breakthrough! Right then! A breakthrough!

Literally, the clouds were parting, the sun was shining down right on me, birds were chirping, I had a spring in my step, I turned and headed off for a nice leg workout and a run and did one of those hops where you click your heels in midair.

I got to the legpress and I look up.

Well, isn't that just great.

I'm wearing two different shoes.

I was wondering why my right shoe felt tight on the drive over.

A Christina Aguilera song was playing over the intercom right at that moment, and the chorus was singing, "It don't get better than this!"

I immediately wanted to cover up my shoes or put them down or hide them or something. I was looking around at everyone wondering if they had noticed already and if they were in on the joke. And then I looked at everyone else's shoes to see if anyone else had made the same mistake that morning. Then I was just looking at other people's shoes to see if I would have noticed whether they were wearing two different shoes or not.

I really put a lot of thought into it.

Oh, I got through the rest of my leg workout. Walked all funny back to the locker room trying to regroup. Do I finish my workout? Mini is happy as a clam in kidkare, I have to! Do I just strut along and become one with it? What if someone asks? Am I testing out some shoes? Did I lose a bet with my three-year-old? What do I say??????

Because really it was just another instance where I thought I completely had it all together and all of a sudden I realize I don't. I feel caught up some times but really most of my day consists of a series of just trying to keep ups.

Which is ok because most people don't really have it all together even when they look like they do anyway. And they do things like pack their shirt into the top of their pantyhose, too.

I did go on to run a great three miles on the treadmill, I even forgot about my shoe briefly. Although it did turn into a fantastic very scientific shoe study because on the left was my new shoe and on the right was my old shoe and I realized by wearing them both (which I wouldn't have done on purpose) that the right one was so uncomfortable! How could I have run like that?? The left, which I affectionately call "fugly" shoe, may not be a looker, but it is the most comfy thing I've ever worn!

So at least there was that.

That's the good part about getting older. You start to care a little less each year about your embarrassments. Maybe that's why we eventually find ourselves in housecoats and plaid pants that are way too high.

I can totally see it now.

What are your embarrassments?? Come on. I know you want to make me feel better about my own.

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