Monday, March 10, 2008

Last Night Was NOT My Night

Of course Creed’s croup had to get worse before it got better, and since I’ve spent a lot of time holding him while he coughs in my face, it was only a matter of time before I got the same virus. It has been nasty.

The worst part about being sick, while trying to take care of a child who is sick, has been having a husband who HAS to leave us on our own so he can take care of people who are even more sick at the hospital.

I woke Sunday morning with that my-body-aches-and-I’ll-break-into-a-sweat-if-I-try-to-stand-up feeling. Luckily Larry didn’t have to leave for work until 11:00 a.m. (which was really 10 a.m.) so he took Creed until then and then I spent the rest of the day laying on the couch with Creed watching Noggin and Animal Planet while I worked on coughing up my small intestine (no, I didn’t mean coughing up a lung, it was way worse than coughing up a little ole’ lung).

We made it through the day, and I put Creed to bed, knowing I would have to get him up soon to pick up the Zozes from the airport. Larry had committed to picking them up on their return from France without thinking about the fact that he would be working the overnight shift on Sunday, but that was fine with me until Creed and I got so sick. Truthfully, I was perfectly fine to drive, and the Zozes have done a million wonderful things for us so I was still happy to be able to do one little thing for them.

Donny called when they arrived. I packed everything I would need up in the car and then I got Creed and bundled him up. I strapped him in his carseat, opened the garage door, and then it happened; my car would not start. It only made a horrible clicking noise (does that mean my battery is dead? I have no idea). Creed’s screaming, I’m saying a little prayer to myself, but no, the car will not start. I run inside and try to call Donny back to tell him we won’t be able to come (because they are so nice I know they won’t mind taking a taxi). There’s no answer. I page Larry and he calls me back after a few minutes, and I tell him the car will not start. He starts telling me this story about Donny paging him earlier and I hurt his feelings by shouting, “If this story has nothing to do with helping me solve this problem, I don’t have time for it right now!!!!!” We hang up while I frantically try to figure something out. I try calling Donny again, still no answer and I’m getting a weird busy signal after three rings.

The I realize that the Zozes cars are safe in their garage three doors down, and I can probably use one of their cars, as I’m pretty sure they’ve used our car to drop us off. I’m sure they won’t mind, but after a frantic search everywhere I can think that Larry might put the Zozes spare key to their house, I cannot find it. I page Larry again. He calls me back and tells me that their house key is actually in my car. I pick Creed up get the key and slide my way to the Zozes. Mind you there was just a blizzard here and the 20 inches of snow in the sidewalks have not been cleared so I’m sliding down the street. Knowing that Larry has at least cleared a walkway for the Zozes down their driveway to their garage so they won’t have to drive their luggage through the snow, and then I realize that I forgot to ask Larry for their garage door code so In my pajama pants and ballet flats, I have to hike through the snowdrifts to their front door, with 26 lb Creed in my arms. I finally make it inside, and I’m sure I scattered snow all over there house, and I begin the search for their car keys. I’m sure they have to be there because why would they take their car keys to France? I look all over their first floor while Creed’s laying on the floor bawling and then I calm down and realize that I actually know exactly where they keep their spare keys. Duh!

Ok, so I have their keys, I’ll just call them and make sure that’s ok and telling them that I’m really sorry that I’m late, but I’m finally on my way. Oh wait, after a quick look around, I remember, the Zozes do not have a home phone. At that point, I’m so late I just have to hurry and leave. I pack Creed up in their big Santa Fe and get ready to go. I do not have time to shovel the driveway, but I figure their big SUV will make it just fine. I don’t have the guts to gun it in someone else’s car so I make my way slowly down the driveway, I make it halfway into the street and the front tires get stuck in the big drift from the snow plows. CURSES!

I try and try and the car will not budge. I leave Creed locked in the car and get the Zozes snow shovel. I dig and dig and keep getting in and out of the car trying to see if it will move yet and it doesn’t budge an inch. By now Creed is screaming at the top of his lungs, and I’m sure one of the neighbors will hear and come out and help me, but they do not. I can’t find the hazards lights in the car so I can’t just leave it hanging out in the middle of the street and the Zozes don’t have a phone so I can’t run in and call anyone. Besides, I can’t call the Zozes now and say, “I’m sorry, I know you’ve had a travel nightmare getting back from France, but now after I’ve made you wait forever, I am not coming to pick you up, and oh, by the way, your car, that I did not ask to borrow, is stuck in a snowdrift and hanging out in the middle of your street so ummm, good luck with that!”

I can’t traumatize Creed any longer I finally figure out where the hazards are, and I take him out of the car and walk back to ask some of my own neighbors for help. The first house that I knock on had all of their lights on even though it’s 11:00 p.m., my little neighbor answers and says her parents aren’t home. CURSES! I hike across the street to my next door neighbor who also has several lights on and they don’t answer the door. Granted, it’s late at night, but I’m holding a screaming baby, so you’d think they might check it out.

Then the older sister of the little girl across the street comes out and asks if she can help. She offers to watch Creed in front of the front window where I can still see him from the Zozes while I continue to try to dig my way out. (I do know them fairly well, and they love Creed, but I was still feeling like the worst mother in the world at this point. I kept telling myself that all of the cold air was doctor recommended for Creed’s croup, but I knew the crying wasn’t.) By then I’m also crying and I give up on the snow shovel and get a real shovel and try that for awhile. I’ve long ago taken off the thin jacket that I was wearing because between carrying Creed, shoveling my heart out, and my fever, I’m burning up so I’m in a short-sleeved t-shirt and soaking wet pajama pants.

Finally, after ages, I actually get the car free! I pick up Creed, we drive to my house and call the Zozes to tell them we really are on our way now and I apologize profusely and tell them I’m going to come in their car. Of course they are as nice as they can possibly be about everything, but I felt so bad. All of that seemed to take forever, but I only ended up being just over an hour late to pick them up, but I knew they were already really tired from all of their travels.

Anyway, the rest of the journey was uneventful. I got home and didn’t even bother to put away Creed’s carseat and left my soaking shoes an pants on the hall floor and we went to bed. In fact, I haven’t had the heart to cleanup anything since then so my house looks like this right now.

And the rest of the house just gets worse, I promise! Embarrassing, but true. I should probably get up and at least clean up the dishes and the food that Creed has thrown on the floor.

The good news is that Larry will soon be coming home from his 30 hours of work so he can get some sleep, but he has the day off tomorrow and my friend Elle is going to babysit for part of the day so we may just clean up this mess yet! For now I'm not answering the door or the phone and I'm spending as much time in bed as I can!

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Creed's First Blizzard

I opened the door this morning and what did I see? Snow above Creed's head! It was a snow drift, but mind you that you have to step up at least 6 inches to get in the door. Larry had to check it out from the outside. All you Utah people may be scoffing, but this is a crazy amount of snow for Ohio. And this was before it snowed all day long.
Creed and I bundled up to play for a few minutes while Larry shoveled the driveway.
Creed doesn't have a snowsuit so I layered the poor guy in socks, a onesie, two pairs of pajamas (one of them was even fleece), jeans, fleece lined track pants, socks and mittens on his hands, his heavy coat, boots, and his hat. He could barely move, but he didn't seem to mind sitting in the snow (and he's sitting in an area that Larry already shoveled, but the snow quickly covered)
Creed's showing you that he enjoyed the 15 inches of snow that fell over the last 24 hours.

Video Snippets for the Grandparents

Creed has The Croup AGAIN! so the blizzard outside isn't the only thing keeping us penned in. The good news in that he seems to be taking it pretty well (our doctor said, "Only Creed would be smiling and laughing while he has the croup!") so we took the opportunity to catch some video of Creed's life these days.

First, he would rather walk than crawl everywhere, which has been pretty exciting.

And Second, he loves to be read to. He spends a good portion of the day crawling over to us with his favorite books so here's a sideways clip of me reading to him (Larry didn't know that you can't hold our little point and shoot camera sideways when you are recording).

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Baby Shower Name Game

For those of you who need an answer key.Listed from left to right, top to bottom:

And the Grand Prize winners and Elisa and her Daughter Miriam. I'm going to have to come up with an awesome prize for them because they got 21 right. The winner at the baby shower got 11.

Thanks to everyone who played along!

I don't need a crystal ball to tell me we have a problem with clutter around here

Everywhere I look these days, I find advice for de-cluttering and cleaning out. Martha has an article about it in this month's magazine. My mom even has a post about it. At this point we can use all the advice that we can get because we're busy preparing to sell our home.

Now I own a whole lot of stuff, but I think it's been eye-opening for Larry to see that he has boxes and boxes and boxes just full of papers. He's spending many hours in the basement reading and sorting, which is how he uncovered this little jem. You really must click on it to enlarge it and read it yourself. Larry says he actually doesn't remember who Nadia is, but I think maybe she wasn't joking about the crystal ball because boy was she right about Larry one day having a wife who would nag him to clean up his stuff which would cause him to find those old letters.

Larry and I could not stop giggling when we read it.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

I Am Packing My Suitcase & Going To The Moon!

I finally finished a new project!

Creed has been able to reach his mobile for a while and he's started tearing the animals off of it so it had to go. I decided to make a new one that we could hang from the ceiling, far out of his reach (I actually moved it higher after I took these pictures).

It took me a long time to get it to balance, but I'm so happy with how it turned out! Creed loves to watch it twirl.



I'm thinking about coming up with some new mobiles for my Etsy shop, but I'm not sure if they would sell because they would have to be priced kind of high to be worth it. For now I'm just having fun sketching out my ideas.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Columbus Corners - Tasi Cafe

Larry and I went out for Valentine's Day the next Saturday because we didn't want to ask anyone to babysit on Valentine's Day. The plan was to head to the new Cameron Mitchell restaurant in the Short North, Marcella's, and then head to a dollar movie (classy, I know, but Larry was taking me to see Enchanted so he scored big points with me). Marcella's ended up having quite a wait and we didn't want to leave Creed for long so we decided to walk over to Tasi Cafe because I've been dying to go there since it opened.

Tasi Cafe is a new restaurant opened by the owner of Rigsby's in the alley behind Risgby's (680 North Pearl Street - the old Pistachio location). It's named after his wife and it serves breakfast all day, but also has great lunch and dinner menu options. They do as much take-out business as they do dine-in.

It's small, you order at the counter and there are only a few tables, but lucky for us there was no wait. Since we weren't waiting for a waiter, this ended up being a quick dinner for us, but there was no compromise on the food. Most dishes are between $6 and $10 and almost everything is made from scratch. Larry opted for the lobster mac-and-cheese
And I went with the roast chicken.
And we split a fruit salad.
We both left very happy. We can't wait to go back to try their breakfast some time.

A Little Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice

We had a baby shower for my friend Ellen at my house this weekend, and thanks to Kristin and Kristina (the two on the right side of this picture) it went really well and I didn't have to do much.
Basically, I made limebars. Then I made these tissue paper pom-poms (with directions from Martha, of course) (Thanks for the idea Faith and Cassie). Kristin came up with the cute decorations hanging behind us in the picture of the group of us and she made matching party favors for everyone.I'm sure you can guess the sex of the baby from these pictures!
Then I was in charge of one game. If you know me, you know I hate baby showers games so I tried to come up with something that wouldn't be awkward or embarrassing to anyone, and this is what I came up with: The Name Game. Every parent-to-be has baby names on the brain and soon they'll be introducing their baby to all sorts of fictional friends so this was a chance to review some old and new. I tried to come up with a good mix so no one would be completely at a loss, but a few of them are hard so everyone would get them all right either. It looks pretty shabby because I can't open Photoshop at the moment or my computer will crash, but you get the idea.

And just for fun. How many of these characters can you name? I will send a prize to my friend or family member who can email me with the most character names, but you cannot get help, consult your own library or search online. Be honest because this is just for fun! I think if you click on the picture it will get larger. Good luck!

I told you that Creed is growing up fast!

Thursday, February 28, 2008

An Affair to Remember

So the previews for a new movie are making me relive a traumatizing event from my childhood that I have to share with you to get it off my chest. Every fourth grader at Rock Canyon Elementary school looks forward to one big-time event: the Fourth Grade Wax Museum! Every student writes a biography on a historical figure and then they get to dress up like the people they studied and stand for thirty minutes in their wax-figure-impersonation glory while the rest of the school tours the museum and "learn" about the people (ie, do their best to make the "wax figures" laugh or wiggle).

I was so excited when the whole grade gathered with their teachers to sign-up for their historical figures. My mom had convinced me to sign-up for Pocahontas (I'm sure it had nothing to do with the fact that my sister was an Indian for Halloween and the costume was just waiting to be used again). There would be no duplicates in this wax museum, oh no, as I stated, this was big-time stuff, but I wasn't worried because we got to sign-up in alphabetical order so with the last name Borup, I thought I was safe. That is until my friend Bonnie Beuss got her turn and sign-up up for Pocahontas. I tried not to panic and stated my second choice, Annie Oakley, but I'd been so caught up that I hadn't heard that Anne Barrett already picked Annie Oakley. The teacher in charge told me I would get another turn to pick after everyone else went. But then all the good historical women were spoken for. Joan of Arc, taken; Amelia Earhart, taken; Kristi Yamaguchi, taken . . . I couldn't come up with a single idea. I wasn't the only one left in that predicament so several of us went home with notes that we had one night to come up with some new ideas for the wax museum.

I went home in despair. Who could I possibly choose? At the dinner table that night my parents threw a few names back and forth, and I'd never heard of any of them. I told them I had to have at least two names and they better write them down since I didn't know who they were (I'd asked them for details, but they told me, "That's what research is all about. You'll learn all about them.")

Then next day, I showed up at school with two names written on a slip of paper in my mom's handwriting: Madame Curie and Anne Boleyn. My teacher gave me a quizzical look and asked me which one a wanted to me. Still disgruntled that I wasn't going to be Pocahontas, I told her I didn't know anything about either of them. She said, "One was a queen and one was a scientist. Which one do you want to be?"

My fateful reply? "The Queen I guess."

"OK, that's Anne Boleyn."

I didn't give it much more thought until we headed to the library the next day to begin our research. There wasn't a single book in the whole school library on Anne Boleyn. The only info on her was a section of the B World Book Encyclopedia. I knew I could never come up with a five-page paper from those little paragraphs, but I skimmed through it anyway to see what she was famous for.

Then I knew.

Anne Boleyn was one of Henry VIII's many wives who was famous because he said she cheated on him and then her head got chopped off. I was signed-up of to dress up like someone who was famous for getting their HEAD CHOPPED OFF!!!!!!

I rushed to my teacher and told her that I needed to switch. I did NOT want to be Anne Boleyn. Sadly, someone else had already signed-up as Madame Curie and she said it was too late to change anyway. She was sure that I could figure something out.

Looking back, I'm sure my parents thought that was a pretty funny thing to do to me, but they paid for it in the end too (Note-to-self, if I ever have a daughter, do not send my innocent nine-year-old to sign-up to pose as Anne Boleyn!). My dad ended up getting stuck looking for more information on Anne Boleyn at the BYU library and helping me dredge through my five-page report (He also come up with the idea to add some color copies of portraits of Anne Boleyn to take up more space in my report). My mom ended up scouring the city for an Anne Boleyn like costume that would fit a nine-year-old and finally found one that she could rent.

And the final product speaks for itself.

It's taken me years, but I can finally say that I find this picture very funny.

I forgive you mom and dad!