What makes it better?

In October, after a road trip to South Dakota, by way of Wyoming, I declared I was done with McDonald’s.  I had had my last ever Two Cheeseburger meal with Coke.

My reasons were more health-conscious decisions than political.  I thought it a good thing to wash my hands of this sort of fast food.

It was good and it was permanent.  Forever.  Done.

It’s not that I eat McDonald’s very often.  I will do the occasional fries and a Coke or order off the dollar menu when I’m running errands–no more than once a month.  And, I’m a huge fan of their iced coffee in the summer.  Light and sweet.

I’m going to side note here for just a tick.  It’s a McDonald’s story.

When I was at school in London in 2003, a friend of mine was telling us over lunch in the refectory that her economics professor started their first class with a question for the students.  ”What are some patents you can think of that came out of America that have had a global impact?”  A hand shot up immediately from the back, a girl in our dorm from Czech Republic.

“Yes, go ahead,” the professor said.

Mac-Donalds,” she remarked in a British-English accent and the class roared with laughter.  Snark, snark.

“How about the light bulb, idiot?” my friend hurled back at her.

I think they got into a fist fight later on in the term over who was standing in line to use the payphone first.  It was hate at first breath for those two.  There were political and social issues in that school – quite a few now that I look back on it.  The school was a mash-up of European, British and American students mostly living together in tiny rooms just as things were getting extremely tense in Iraq and American involvement and war was imminent.

I digress, as I told you I would.

That day in Gillette, Wyoming, I decided I was over McDonald’s – as it were, Mac-Donalds.

I did really well for three months.

And then, while at the airport in Hartford in January with C, after being seen off by my parents who had turned around to leave once we went through security, a lump rose in my throat like no other and I knew I couldn’t keep it down.

I burst into tears and had to excuse myself and go to the restroom.  I hate leaving home.  Every single time.  I haven’t lived at home since I was 18, but there’s something so comfortable about my childhood and my parents and my cat, Miles Glitter Kitty, that I just sometimes feel like I need to hold on.

When I came back, C was sitting in a white wooden rocker (they have those at Bradley International) and had saved the one next to his for me.

“What can I do to make it better?” he said in his normal, calm demeanor.

I sniffled.  ”Egg McMuffin, please.”

And that was that.  I didn’t shed another tear and we were back in Mile High by noon.

How do you self-soothe?

Invitations in a Flash

…this was the weather.

Well.  Kind of.

This was the weather.

Notice those pretty balcony rocking chairs going unloved?

Last week, after C’s busted lip and a weekend of ski happiness, we got down to business.

This is what we did…three nights in a row.

Skip a lot of blah, blah – addressing, stamping, sealing, bickering.

Then we went out on a date on Thursday night.  It was romantical and VERY necessary.

And then on Friday, I walked down the street and sent them off.

Ciao, ciao!

Mary Jane. Not just a pretty face.

[This post contains graphic material.  I'll let you know when you're about to get to it.]

Since we’re getting married soon, C and I have been in well-behaved-money-saving mode for two winter seasons and have not purchased the full Colorado ski pass – which sets one adult back about $600.  Plus, there’s the drive up from Mile High (gas, time, more gas, traffic, more time) and the stress of getting back in the car at a decent hour on Saturday or Sunday so you can beat the traffic back to the city.  It’s no longer a pleasant day trip.

Of course, to add to those up front costs, there is also the meals and the inevitable apres ski beer(s).  Add to that, the guilt of not going up to the resorts every weekend and using the heck out of the pass after you’ve spent a fortune on it.  I’m one of those who, at the end of the season, likes to sit back and say, “Gee whiz!  I skied 38 times this season.  That’s $15.79 per day!  I rock.”

What we did this year was purchase a four-pack of ski passes to Winter Park and spend two full weekends skiing and staying overnight in town.  We used the last two passes last weekend and had two very good days (considering the weather has been warm and lovely and it’s almost a crying shame to leave the city when the parks are filling up with hipsters rocking hula hoops and happy running dogs and quilts and picnics).  I’m becoming more comfortable with bumps and C took me down one of his favorite runs on Mary Jane – Outhouse.  It’s a vertical black (black diamond to you East Coast skiers).  I made it down with C ahead of me and just as I was about to come off the run onto more flat snow, I watched him fly off an icy patch and yard sale.

Both skis and one pole flew off into oblivion.  He landed…on his face.

We wear helmets in Colorado.  This is a good thing.

[Graphic reading ahead.]

When I got to him, he’d picked up his head and was running his tongue along his bloody teeth.  The good news here is that he was licking his teeth and they were still attached.  I mentioned we’re getting married this summer, right?

“Is it bad?”  C asked me as I brought his skis back to him.

“It’s less bad and more bad ass,” I explained.

He was happy with that.  I was happy his teeth weren’t loose and his head wasn’t broken.

I love this boy and want to keep him in tip-top shape.

Anyway, the point of this story is that my graceful, back-country skiing soon-to-be fell on a black run and I did not.

This is a photo I found of Outhouse on the interwebs. Good thing I didn’t see this before I agreed to ski it.

 

A la votre! Wedding bands are in!

It gets more and more real and more and more…close.

Today for lunch I met C at our jeweler and we picked up these beauties.

 

Because Chris is a boy and he’s never worn a ring before, he’s petrified of “losing” it, so insisted we get one that “wasn’t very expensive” for him.  In fact, the ring cost the same amount as the engraving.  Score!

I thought I’d make it simple and get a ring that matched my engagement ring – a rocker cut white gold band that was simple – no extraneous diamonds.

Simple it was not.

Who knew the setting Chris purchased was custom-made by the jeweler?  For two weeks I was without my engagement ring so they could make a mold of it and figure out how to make a band from that mold.

Two weeks after that I was presented with a plastic ring to try on so they could ensure correct sizing.

Three weeks after that, the ring in white gold was done.  Voila!  It is stunning.

“Now for the easy part,” our jeweler said, “engraving!”

“Great!” we smiled at her.

“So what do you want it to say?” she asked.

 

 

“Oh shoot,” she said, “How do you spell that?”

So two months later, we got them back.

I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine.  - Song Of Solomon 6:3

Big Girl Job, Big Girl Purse

I was lucky to graduate from college with a full time job.  Different times, different place.

That full time job started in the spring, just as the over-sized everyday satchel came back into fashion.  I bought myself an XOXO faux pink leather satchel and it quickly became my one and only.  It was a purse for big girls.  Big girls with full time jobs and leases on their own apartments (hence the faux pink leather).

It came with me everywhere.

I worked at a TV news station nightside, which, on the east coast means the hours were from 2 p.m. until you get to leave.  Generally, if the scanners weren’t going crazy and a high rise wasn’t burning down or there wasn’t a homicide in Schenectady, that meant you could leave after the 11 p.m. news went off the air.

Nice job, everyone, let’s go get drinks on Lark Street.

Fabulous.  Let me grab my big girl pink purse.

It came with me to Washington, D.C., to Indianapolis, back and forth to Brooklyn, to the New York State Fair in Syracuse and down the Cape quite a few times.

The satchel has since been sent to Goodwill.  I regret it to this day.

The end.

Kind of.

Do you Etsy?  I don’t.  I browse but have never posted or purchased.

That may change because this week I saw this bag on another blog I read.  Floored.

This is like the professional version of my big girl purse.

I think I’m old enough to handle real pink leather now.

jennydesign - Etsy

 

I adore it.  And I have a birthday coming up.

Cheers!

Chocolate Cake in a Cup = Mobile Work Happiness

For me, the most difficult part of mobile work days at home is keeping my hand OUT of the fridge.

It’s a HUGE challenge.

While I’m on a conference call, I may make myself a chocolate milk or whip up some brownies.  Seriously.

Thankfully, I only work at home at most once a week or I’d be 700 pounds.

Today, I decided to try a little treat I picked up at Cost Plus World Market last week during their rug sale.  World Market has all sorts of global treats – including Dr. Oetcker’s Mug Cake.  It’s from Canada, but that counts as global.

So I made it for lunch today.  I went to spin class this morning.  So that makes it okay to have chocolate mug cake for lunch.

It took two ingredients to complete this very complicated recipe–butter, for the inside of the mug and five tablespoons milk.  I used skim.  It most likely cancels out some calories.

 

Stir until well-blended.  That’s a  little baby rubber spatula.  They’re great for getting the last bit of mayo out of the jar and they are just adorable.  Smooch.

Microwave for one minute 15 seconds.

It boiled over but isn’t that just so pretty and delicious looking?

It didn’t exactly look like the cake on the box.  But I’m cool with that.

Yummy.

I thought it could have used a bit more sweet.

And.  It would have been more beautiful once I sprinkled the powdered sugar, but I had already taken two chomps, so it looks a tad uneven.

I rate it a 3.5 out of 5.

It’s a definite high five satisfy to a chocolate craving.

 

 

 

 

Hiring Friends to do a Stranger’s Job

Take heed, future engaged couples.  If  I had to do it all over again, I would not make the following mistakes.

1. Hiring someone I know to provide a paid service.

Make sure the organist is not your second cousin, you didn’t used to work for your caterer or the DJ is a guy you went to high school with.

Case in point.  When I was in high school I worked at a coffee house that was on the first floor of a concert venue in my small town.  I made, served and sold coffee and sweets for jazz concerts in the coffee house and played hostess for larger concerts upstairs.  I got the job through my French tutor, who owned the venue with her husband.  Tres bien!

If there was a concert that was large enough to deserve more than just coffee and dessert, the venue generally contracted the food to a husband/wife catering team who did a lot of business in the town and in the county.  The catering couple were known for their savory European-style food and made the very best Linzer torte cookies.  They catered for many venues in town and did a lot of private parties.  My parents hired them for all our graduation ceremonies – high school and college.

So of course, when I got engaged, there was no question who I would hire to cater the affair.  It would be Mrs. X.  She had the date open and money was put down on the deal.

I should have gone with my gut after calling Mrs. X to make a first appointment and getting very little response.  It was a sign.  Finally, when home over Labor Day, I got a hold of her.  She met with us at our reception site and blew right through an agenda for the day and food choices.  She gave us some menus and said we could do a tasting over Christmas and to email her with our thoughts on her food offerings.

We emailed her right away and asked what she thought about how they all went together.  We heard nothing back.  Another email and two calls later, still nothing.

Finally, in November, I caught her on the phone in her kitchen.

“Right,” she said.  “I can’t do a tasting at Christmas.  I’ll be out of the country for five weeks.”

Even after Christmas we didn’t hear from her.  I kept calling and emailing.

Then, at the very end of January, with four months left to the wedding, she emailed me from Europe with some bad news.  Emailed.  It was like breaking up on a Post-It.

She was unfortunately not going to be able to cater our wedding due to a litany of issues and she put me in touch with another caterer she wasn’t totally familiar with, but thought could handle our wedding.  Turns out, that caterer had never hosted a party with more than 60 people.

Lesson learned.

2. Not getting it in writing and sending a check willy-nilly.

See 1.

Snazzy: Dressing Table Bench

Grandma Betty had very clear visions for her 1950s Garrison Colonial Revival home in a small Hudson Valley town in New York State.

The more Victorian furniture, the better.

Her dark wood dressing table became mine after my Poppa passed away about fifteen years ago and my parents moved it into my childhood bedroom.  I think the piece is the picture of elegance and is ridiculously unnecessary for the modern woman, but that’s what makes it so special.

Unlucky for me, I live 1800 miles away from my childhood bedroom and only get to sit at the table and pretend I’m someone else when I’m home on brief holidays.  But while at my parent’s house last week sucking up their WiFi with my VPN, I took my lunch break and re-covered the seat on the dressing table bench.

That’s right.  It’s so easy it can be done over lunch.   Hey-yo!

Dressing Table 1

What I thought was interesting is that the fabric on the bench seemed to be original.  There are furniture tacks on the underbelly and it’s worn to the quick on the corners.

Dressing Table Bench

There are many reasons to believe this is not a bench that was sold with the table, but it does fit well (the turned legs and the stain for one).  I imagine Grandma Betty driving Poppa bananas tooling around Rhinebeck or Hudson looking for the “perfect” bench to go with the dressing table, which I’m sure came from an antique auction.

Bench seat

Rather than being nailed in, the seat was screwed in, so I used my dad’s drill to get the screws out.  The seat popped right off.  Easy cheesy.

Beneath the bench

So, my momma loves fabric and there are rolls and bolts of it all over my parents’ house (just TRY to contain them to her office).  I found this roll of Waverly material behind the door to my bedroom (handy!) and got to it.  I did not follow the classic This Old House approach to measuring–Measure Twice, Cut Once.  Rather, I took the Bridget approach–Measuring-is-for-civil-engineers, Just cut it.  And that’s the beauty of recovering a very simple rectangle of a furniture seat.  If you can wrap a gift, you can recover a bench.

Fabric

Fabric measurement

Flip the bench over and start wrapping your gift.  Again, something that makes this particular bench a breeze is that there’s no batting.  Batting is a more intermediate project.  This is for beginners like me.

Folding

Make sure the fabric is pulled taut and staple with all you’ve got.  Use your muscles.  I don’t have a photo of this step…but you all know what a stapler looks like.  If you don’t know how to use one, pretty much the only rule is to not put your finger or any other body part in the way of the stapler and the item to be stapled.  Ask your neighbor if you have any other questions.

Finished

Flip it back over and screw it back in.  Sit on it and look at yourself in the mirror.  Here’s where you say, “Omigosh.  Isn’t that lovely? What a breath of fresh air!”

Really finished.

That piece of cheetah also belonged to Grandma Betty.  It is a muff.  I don’t know if I mentioned she was the quintessential great-looking-swinging-single-working girl from Manhattan back in the ’40s.  She adored fur.  I do have very fond memories playing with my brother at her house and pretending her minks were our pets.

There you have it.  Snazzy your world.

 

Trapper Keeper Thoughts

deardiary

As a kid, one of my favorite things to do was sit quietly somewhere (on the lawn, with my toes in the lake, in bed on a Saturday morning) with a blank page in front of me and a pen full of ink.  I loved journaling.  I loved writing about what was happening and how I felt.  I never knew what I would do with all my tomes of thought, but as I got older and one of the shelves in my room became filled with volumes of my story.  I appreciated my effort and saw it as somewhat significant.

Last week, when I was visiting at my parents’ house, I revisited some of my story.  I poured over Volume 1, which is a pink hardcover lined diary with an illustration of a cat on the front cover.  I received it for my seventh birthday from Michael.  I read through the five high school volumes – so full of angst and drama and took a look at two volumes from my freshman year of college.

Here are some short excerpts I found amusing.  They’re like snapshots from my life.

“July 1, 1990
It is Michael’s birthday.  We gave him a turtle.  Michael really liked the turtle.  He loved the turtle so much that Michael rote [sic] a letter to me that said: Thank you for the T. food and the T. raft.  Isn’t that cute? He just turned six.”

But things only went downhill from there.

“January 5, 1994
Dear Diary, This has been the worst day of my life.  First, I remember as I step on the bus I haven’t got my gym clothes.  Then I can’t find my book or my binder.  And after school I had an orthodontist appointment.”

And then things got even worse than the worst day of my life, apparently.

“March 31, 1994
Dear Diary, Yesterday we buried Scrambler (our hermit crab).  I’m very sad.  On April 17, it’s my birthday…”

After that line, I proceeded to make a long list of what I want including Billy Joel’s River of Dreams.  Good luck in the afterlife, Scrambler.  I’m not one for mourning too long.  Hope you’re kickin’ it with your crabby homies in heaven!

I was big into current events and read the paper almost every day after school.

“April 25, 1995
…a federal building in Oklahoma City was bombed…100 people are still ‘missing’.”

My mom and I just talked about how much fun it was when the boys were away and we could do our own thing.

“1.21.96
…Last night my dad and brother went to Camp Rotary [Boy Scout camp]!  My mother and I rented two movies – Little Women and Green Card and ate cookies!”

In the beginning of high school, thankfully, there were more important things in my life besides sex.

“August 24, 1997
…Today, Poppa gave me 28 Pepsi Points.  Yes.  Michael only has 20 points and he’s not going to get anything so he gave them to me too!  I have 88 point all together now [smiley face] I’m buying the Pepsi cap and Michael and I will share it.  I was going to get the phone card, but then I realized I had a LOT of points and I liked the cap.  It’s neat.  Brooke got one last year.”

And then all of a sudden, I was super interested in sex.

“5/7/01
Thinking about Mike all day long.  Lost his shorts in the wash.  [heart] B”

I’m actually not even sure who (or I guess which) Mike that was.  On second thought, I suppose he was the one walking around campus without shorts.

So keep writing.  It’s easier to remember your story when you can go back and refer to it.