Friday, December 30, 2011

2011 Year in Review

I don't normally do year in review things, but 2011 was so weird and so much happened - and at the same time, so many things are about to change in 2012, too - so why not take some time to reflect on the last 12 months?

TOP EVENTS

1. Moving to La Jolla



2. Going part-time: this is where I was when that decision was being made for me.




3. Starting kindergarten




4. Matt turning 40 / trip to San Francisco



5. Awkward 20th high school reunion cocktail party. Check out my fancy hair and makeup.



6. Visits from Mops (and Pops!) and Barnaby (Please send photos!)

7. Getting a new sister-in-law and Aunt Nicole / Alex and Nicole moving away



8. Getting stuck in the elevator. And rescued.




9. The sad, slow death of our fish, Sparkly Rainbow Flowers. RIP.

10. Getting a new, part-time job

TOP SONGS:

Ella's favorite:


Marina's favorite:


My favorite:


Matt's favorite: "Regina Spektor Pandora station."

TOP MOVIES

Nina: "Blue Valentine" (technically released in 2010, but I saw it in 2011), "Bridesmaids" Amodovar's "The Skin I Live In"
Matt: "Hugo," "Melancholia"
Marina and Ella: "Rio," "Winnie the Pooh," "Muppets"

MORE 2011 SNAPSHOTS







Monday, December 12, 2011

Things I like: "It Chooses You"

On our recent trip to San Francisco - which is what we finally decided to do for Matt's birthday - we made our requisite stop at the City Lights Bookstore.

Have you ever gone book shopping with Matt? It's sort of ridiculous. Growing up, spending large amounts in a book store was my thing. But he takes it to new levels. He will stand in front of every display, check out every "staff pick," and by the time I wander back to him, he's got a stack of four or five books ready to take home. It's to the point where I rarely ask what's in the pile. And at City Lights, where it was stuffy and I was holding a jacket, a sweatshirt, a scarf, a hat, a purse, and two books of my own, I didn't ask.

We were in the back, by the stairs leading up to the Beat section (a section in which I spent an embarrassing amounts of time when I was in my 20s). Suddenly, I saw a book by Miranda July, one of my favorite directors/writers/modern artists. It was about the trouble she had writing her second movie, "The Future" and how she procrastinated by interviewing people who put ads in the Pennysaver. I added it to my pile. Matt took it out of my hands and returned it to the shelf and then showed me that the book - "It Chooses You" - was already in his pile, a present to me for taking him to San Francisco.



I read it in the plane on the way home. It's about everything. About writing, about wondering if you're good at what you do, about trying to connect with people who have nothing in common with you, even a bit about movie stars (very indie movie stars).

It reminded me a lot of when I wrote these articles called Passages about people going through a major life change - mostly weddings. I did it for one, maybe two years and interviewed hundreds of people about how they fell in love. They were very intimate, personal stories and it often felt strange, like a privilege and also like I was imposing, to hear them.

This book reminded me of those times.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving bread baking 2011 . . . the tradition continues

If it's Thanksgiving, it means bread's being baked in our house. (And this year, it also means it's Ella's birthday, yay!)

So here we go, Thanksgiving bread liveblogging starts now.

Here's the recipe, full of splatters, which is proof that the bread does not, as my family suspects, come out of a tube with a little white dough boy on it.



The soundtrack is the same every year, "The Nutcracker." The girls take a ballet break to turn flour into dough.



Last year, Marina's teacher had also studied pastry-making. So that automatically makes her the most qualified baker in the family.



The birthday girl helps pat the dough into a nice, smooth ball.



DOUGH HANDS AND APRONS!!



Here's what we do in the hour it takes for the bread to rise:

Make an art gallery!



And have a bit of protein before the carb-loading begins. Thanks, Trader Joe's Chicken Mango sausage!



After the bread rises, you have to cut it into triangles. But the girls have their own ideas about how to keep busy.

Today they decided to switch personalities. Marina, the child who hates dirt, is the "messiest girl in the world."



And Ella sits nicely at the table with a neat pile of flour.



Annnnd . . . .fresh, warm, yummy bread. They came out amazing this year, which I think has something to do with the salty, sea air.




The girls had so many of these while watching "Olivia," that they didn't eat an ounce of their Thanksgiving dinner. I wish that was a joke.



Happy Thanksgiving 2011!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

New things

I haven't updated in a while so here is a quick post about random things:

1. Marina told me her favorite places are the Hotel Marina Coral in Ensenada and school. Those words make me feel better when two bedroom living starts to feel cramped.

2. Ella has enough hair for a ponytail. And she thinks her hair is black.

3. Matt bought a running sweatshirt at Lululemon, thus completing his transformation as a true La Jollan.

4. I've been exercising with a trainer and can now do plank for longer than 10 seconds.

Friday, October 21, 2011

The Safe House

The Safe House is the creative writing piece I submitted in a contest last month. I actually thought it was going to come in low because it's so out of my comfort zone, it's not a character loosely based on myself like so many other things I write.

I didn't even bother letting Matt read it.

But it placed second in my group and now some family and friends have asked me to post it online. I do feel very weird posting a piece of my writing here, even though I write about pretty personal stuff.


So I guess that made me decide to go ahead and put it online. So, eeeek! Here it is.

The genre was open, the setting had to be in a playground, and the words we had to use were "police tape." We had 48-hours to turn it in.


The Safe House


The playground closes at 9 p.m., but I don’t care.

It’s super easy to hide in the tube slide while the campus guard sniffs around and shuts off the lights. I like it when it gets dark and everything around me has that golden, nighttime glow you only find in Southern California.

Once, I brought my roommate out here, but she hates breaking rules and thought mosquitoes and cockroaches were attacking her, so she never came back. Not even in the daytime. I mean, the bugs are pretty big here, so she’s not officially one of the crazy ones.

The other girls in my dorm think I come out here to kiss the locals, but that only happened once. Anyway, Los Angeles boys are too pretty for me, I’m from Turlock, you know?

Sometimes – most of the time – I just can’t handle all this group stuff. Blah, blah, blah, your dad’s a drunk. Boo hoo hoo your mom was too wasted to make you breakfast. We get it. It’s unoriginal.

Here at the playground, I can just sit and be Leigh. My brain quiets and the memories our counselors try so hard to get out of us return to their rightful spot way in the back.

The counselors aren’t actually so bad. Even the one who brought me here didn’t make me answer a bunch of questions on the long ride over here. I’m sure it wasn’t the first time she’s had to escort a teen out from behind police tape.

It was their last chance to keep me around, but my parents blew it. Scratching your child’s face with a knife in a drunken rage is not the best way to keep Child Protective Services from coming over.

All the counselors want me to talk about it, but I don’t see the point. I get good grades, I don’t drink or smoke, and I have friends with the kinds of families you see in magazines.

So what if I get panic attacks? You wouldn’t believe how many fancy houses have medicine cabinets filled Xanax and Effexor and Paxil. Anxiety disorder is a pretty good side effect compared to those anorexic girls, or the cutters.

Suddenly, a voice coming from the bottom of the slide startles me out of my thoughts. A flashlight shines in my direction.

“Is someone up there?”

“Who wants to know?”

“Sorry, it’s just, my mom said she heard thumping back here and sent me out to check,” he says. “I’ll tell her it’s just a girl.”

Instead of walking away, he sits on a swing with the flashlight between his knees. I peek at him through the monkey bars. He’s probably 16, like me, and he’s wearing a skullcap. Natalie says they’re called yarmulkes.

Our safe house is hidden in an orthodox section of L.A., an area where our parents would never dream of looking. A neighborhood without a bar for miles. The orthodox families keep to themselves and mostly look away when we walk by, which is just fine.

I move over to the curvy slide, closer to the swings and watch him for a long while.

“Are you even allowed to talk to me?” I finally ask.

“No.”

“So why are you still here?”

“It’s quiet,” he says. “My house is so loud. Do you mind if I stay a while? Will I get you in trouble?”

I slide down and sit across from his swing to get a better look. He’s pretty. The flashlight shows he has dark hair and a spattering of freckles across his nose. He’s dressed in cords and red Chucks and looks nothing like the other teen boys we see on the street.

I tell him my name is Leigh and he says his is Dovi. I laugh.

“What?”

“I’ve just never heard a name like that,” I tell him.

“And there’s not many girls named Leigh where I come from.”

He tells me this was once his playground but the school kept getting tagged with terrible messages and they had to move to a more secure building. He would come swing after dinner for some time away from his six brothers and sisters. But since they turned the school into an all-girls home, he hasn’t had the nerve to come back.

“Are you, um, troubled?” he asks.

“Nah,” I say. “Most of us here are pretty normal. We just have troubled parents.”

He says he’s sorry and that his parents aren’t the sanest set on the block, not with seven kids.

He laughs when he says this and stares off toward his house.

I shouldn’t do this. I know from Natalie that he has rules that are way stricter than the ones we have here, but I reach out and grab his hand nonetheless.

Dovi jumps a bit, but doesn’t move it away.

“I’m not going to try to kiss you,” I say.

“Good,” he laughs.

He squeezes my hand tighter and I move to sit on the swing next to his. He turns off the flashlight and we sit, in the dark and the quiet, hand in hand.

I haven’t cried since I was 12-years-old, since the first time I was taken away.

I try to make it stop by thinking about funny things – the stinky Turlock cows, my mom’s too-tight yellow dress that I stole and brought with me - but that only makes me cry harder.

I don’t know how long we’ve been sitting here, crying and listening to the music of the squeaky swing chains, but eventually we hear his mother calling out for him, startling us into reality.

“You better get back,” I say.

“Yeah.”

Neither of us moves until we hear his name being called again. I get up from my swing, move my face close to his, but I don’t kiss him.

“Thank you,” I whisper.

And I finally let go.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Accidents

Something crazy always happens to Ella.

Today she swallowed a mint. Yesterday she fell and came home with six band-aids. The day before that she hit her head on the table.

She's also the child who ran with her eyes closed straight into a metal pole. And the one who fell backwards off a wall. She got pink eye when no one else did. Her face swells up when a dog licks her.

I don't know if it's because Ella's extra adventurous or daring. Maybe, like my mom and brother (yes! you!), she's in her own world and doesn't pay attention to things like poles and steps.

Friday, September 23, 2011

400

The new normal is taking a while to settle in and maybe later I'll write about being a constant, anxious mess or I'll get over it.

But I thought I'd use this 400th post (!) to let you know that we have braved our fears and took a ride on the newly-repaired elevator. Just to show Matt that we're not afraid. And now that we proved that point, we never have to get in that thing again.

Friday, September 9, 2011

The elevator story

By now, almost everyone knows that the girls and I got stuck in an elevator for two hours during the biggest power outage ever to hit San Diego.

I told the story on the radio. It was on TV. On Twitter. Everywhere. But it's all been bits and pieces.

So here it is, what really happened.

Ella and I walked over to pick up Marina from kindergarten, happy to be there right on time. Marina was telling us all about her day, how the class got 100 stars and they'd be getting lemon popsicles the next day. That they were supposed to wear yellow on Friday and maybe, maybe her teacher would be able to find yellow popsicles to match.

Usually, when we get home, Ella and I take the elevator while Marina opts for the stairs. It's only two flights, but I'm always loaded up with backpacks, lunchboxes, work folders, mail, sweaters, etc. so I throw everything in the elevator and ride up.

On Thursday, we stopped to chat with someone from Marina's class (who is also named Marina!) and for some reason, my Marina decided to get in the elevator with us. She had actually climbed three steps, stopped, told us to wait and ran inside.

On the way up, the elevator started going slow. We live in an old building and the elevator has been broken two or three times since we've moved in. So when, all of a sudden, the elevator stopped and the lights flickered out, I assumed it was another glitch. It was dark in there. Really dark. The elevator has double doors, one on the inside and one on the outside. It was also hot, one of the hottest days of the year. Thank God I had my iPad in my purse because I immediately pulled it out and used it as a flashlight.

Marina was so, so scared. She was yelling things like "This is the worst." "Help!" "I want to be with my Doggie and Lambie." And Ella was stone quiet. After a few minutes of reassuring them, I pressed the emergency call button on the elevator but it was busy. Damned old building, I thought. Then I called Matt and, through terrible reception, told him I was stuck in an elevator and could he please call our neighbor who has the number for the elevator company. All that time, Marina kept screaming "get us out!!!" so loud that I could barely hold a conversation. Ella put her hand over Marina's mouth and told her to be quiet and calm down.

I called 911, only to find that it was also busy. Even at this point, I still didn't realize there was a power outage all over Southern California. I just thought the recent city cutbacks were really putting a strain on the system. I remembered hearing about a local person who died while waiting for the fire department to respond because the nearest station to him was furloughed.

Those are the thoughts I was entertaining while trying to make it FUN! for the girls. Look! Let's play games on the iPad! Let's talk about what we did at school! I even told them about the time I got stuck in an elevator at SDSU and, see? Nothing happened. As I was telling stories, Marina was on my lap and Ella was laying down next to me, barely moving.

It was getting hotter. The air was thicker. I wanted to push Marina off me because the heat and jitters were creeping in, but I couldn't let them see me freak out.

So I turned to Twitter, still clueless. I asked for someone to please send me the number to the fire department because 911 wasn't answering. That's when someone told me there was a citywide power outage and it was likely we wouldn't get rescued for hours. This news actually made me feel better. A power outage in the city never lasts more than an hour or two, I figured. Even if no one could get to us, certainly the power would be back up shortly.

I finally got through to the fire department. They basically told me that there would be no help, not for many hours. I begged them. I have two small kids, I said. One of them keeps falling asleep. "If anything happens, call us back," they said. "But it took me 45 minutes just to get through the first time!"

Soon after, I heard Matt's voice. Ella heard her dad's voice and finally let the tears come out of her eyes. Then we heard more voices. I thought it was the elevator company. Three men had crowbars and managed to jam open the inside door, which immediately let in some light and air.

We calmed down. A fellow mother from our building pushed popsicles through the hole for the girls to eat. We looked at pictures of better days on the iPad.

After about an hour, they got the outside door to open just wide enough so that I could lift Marina and Ella out. I was then able to step up and slide out (and have a nasty bruise to show for it).



Turns out, it wasn't the elevator company. It was three neighbors from the apartment building next door who got us out. It's one thing to see neighborly behavior on TV, but it's so humbling to actually have strangers do something nice for you. Tomorrow, I am baking them cookies.

(And the fire department? They didn't show up until 8:30 p.m., five hours later.)

After it was over, I sat on the couch stunned. I'm still stunned. So many things ran through my head.

Like how I almost didn't take my iPad with me that day. Marina's been using it before school to play kindergarten word games. I thought about leaving it for her that morning, but then selfishly decided that I wanted to listen to my Marc Maron WTF podcast and stuffed it in my purse at the last minute. Without it, we would have been stuck in a pitch black box.

Also? Sometimes Ella rides that elevator by herself because she likes to be independent. Just the idea of my little one in the elevator by herself in that situation makes me sick, literally. My stomach gets all knotted up and I break out into a panic.

But we were lucky to all be together. We were lucky we were able to get through to Matt right away. We were lucky it was over after only two hours, especially when so many more people were probably stuck for longer. And, most of all, we were lucky to have such an amazing support system.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

It happened

Kindergarten finally happened.

Honestly, when I was searching and moving and participating in awkward playdates, I knew it was on the horizon, but I didn't think it would actually, really, truly happen.

But it did.

My first child went to kindergarten today. She ate some cereal, got dressed, said goodbye to her sister (who starts school an hour before), played some iPad word games while her mom got dressed, put on her backpack and walked to school.

She wasn't scared or nervous or any of the things I was. And when I left her in her lovely classroom, she didn't cry. And, surprisingly, neither did I.

Here's the story in pictures:




Her backpack is gigantic, yes. But notice who is hanging off it: our pal, Rockandrolla, the mascot of self-confidence.



There was a table with Berenstein Bears books and that's where we started the morning. I did not tell her to wear an emo hoodie, by the way, that's all her doing.


If Marina's friend from preschool wouldn't have been there, I really don't think the drop-off would have gone as smoothly as it did. But as soon as the friends saw each other, they immediately went off to play and forgot I was even there.


This is the Play-doh station. See? Kindergarten is still fun and games. I heard horror stories that modern kindergarten is all regimented and serious. Happily, that doesn't seem to be the case.





At the end of the day, when we were walking up the stairs to our apartment, she said she would tell me her favorite part of the day when we got inside. (Drawing her self portrait, followed by a tour of the school in which she got to walk through the "hospital," or as adults call it, the nurse's office.)

"Will you also tell me what you didn't like?" I asked.

"There was nothing that I didn't like."

And that's when I finally breathed.
 


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The new normal

Remember how crazy I got when I was looking for the perfect school? The hours and hours I spent touring campuses, meeting principals, taking notes on bathroom cleanliness? How I packed up our house and moved us to a completely new neighborhood?

Well here we are, a week away from the big day, the first day of kindergarten. And once again I am freaking out. Only this time, I'm totally caught off guard by it.

I did everything I could to prepare, but I didn't really let my mind realize there'd be way more stuff to worry about.

Is my child going to make friends? Is she going to be sad when she goes to pick up her sister and sees her old friends all happy in their kindergarten uniforms? Am I going to fit in with the other parents even though we don't have a big house or extra money to buy tickets to the gala and the cocktail night and everything else?

It probably hit me hard today because Ella went to school for the first time without her sister. And it's just the first in a series of new things that will be happening before they become normal.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Goodbye

Friday is Marina's last day of preschool, ever.

Officially, she was done in June, but she's been going to summer camp in her exact same classroom, so it hasn't actually felt like a major transition was on the way.

But tomorrow is the last day I'll be picking her up at the place I've been picking her up since she was seven months old.

I remember being so scared to leave her there, in the baby room, when it was time for me to go back to work. And now I'm scared for her leave all that's familiar and begin a new life as a big kid.

Preschool is where she took her first steps and babbled her first words. It's where she learned about sharing and taking turns. It's where she made best friends and learned that boys will play guns even though she doesn't want them to. It's where she learned to write her name, draw pictures and memorize the Shabbat songs I sang when I was her age. It's the place that loved her as a baby and transformed her into the lovely child she is today.

And so, preschool, all I can say is thank you, thank you, thank you.



Here is Marina visiting her class at 6 weeks old. Though she was registered on this day, she didn't officially begin until five months later.



This is the day she graduated from the baby room, where she was for a year and a half.



Marina celebrates Ella's birthday in the 2-year-old classroom, where they both spent time.



The official last day of school with one of her best friends.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Reason #8 I love our neighborhood

Happy color wall = fun times!


Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Adventure day: Drybar

Sometimes being a part-timer is stressful and depressing. But other days it frees me up to go on solo adventures.

(I had quite an adventure yesterday too, when I took the girls to Sea World all day - for nine hours - by myself.)

But this adventure was what some people would call "me-time," but I won't say that because I hate when people say "me-time."

I've been pretty vocal about how excited I am about Drybar opening in San Diego. Drybar is a salon that only does blow-dries. Because they don't cut or color or anything else, I don't feel guilty going there. I don't feel like I'm betraying my mom, who is a hairdresser herself (and a very good one).

The salon is literally like a bar, a very fancy, pretty bar. It's a bunch of chairs all in a row and you can pick the kind of straight hair you want from a little book. I got the generic one: straight with some "body" or whatever.

My hair got washed and then dried straight while they gave me Diet Coke, had "The Devil Wears Prada" with captions on a TV in front of me and they had so many gossip magazines that I felt like I had to read one. (Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez in Hawaii? What? Really?)

It was all presented so nicely, everything had a lovely yellow accent to it that I don't think I'll wash my hair until after my high school reunion weekend, whether I go to it or not. (And that's really the heart of this story, but I'm not getting into it.)

So here's the result





Monday, August 8, 2011

What Miranda July said . . .



"This is my little girl. She is brave and clever and funny. She will have none of the problems that I have. Her heart will never be broken. She will never be humiliated. Self-doubt will not devour her dreams," from an art installation by Miranda July.


Monday, August 1, 2011

Checking in

You'd think as a part-time employee I'd have all this time to eat cookies and watch hours of Real Housewives of New York.

And you'd be right. I have done those things.

But I also haven't had an entire day off thanks to small jobs I've picked up - whether it's writing a paragraph about art or interviewing Anderson Cooper in person. (Yes!)

I don't think I'm earning the same amount of money I did before "the change," but I've been busy in a way I haven't been since I was starting out. And I really like having the juxtaposition of my regular job and being able to meet and work with new people.

Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays I often take a walk around the neighborhood while listening to Marc Maron's WTF podcast, throw in a load of laundry or cook something, sit at the little table and write.

So, anyway, that's how it's been the last month. But I know you really want to know about Anderson Cooper so here it is: he was perhaps the loveliest interview I ever had, very smart and well-spoken.

Usually, when you have 20 minutes with a celebrity, it goes by so slow because it's nervy and awkward and forced. They're not going to tell you anything too personal and how much can you really talk about a movie or album that hasn't been released yet.
But I felt like with Anderson (I call him Anderson) the interview could have gone on because he's had such a fascinating upbringing and has experienced more than most of us ever will.

Here's a link to that story.

Monday, July 18, 2011

A very brave tale

Look at this picture. What do you see?



Yes, a chocolate mouth. But that's not what I'm talking about. Look closer. AT HER EARS. Yes, those are earrings! Ella got her ears pierced today! Now she will be accepted by our Ensenada relatives.
(Joking! Sort of. I mean? We do get looks when we go to Mexico because 1. I'm not wearing makeup and 2. my kids don't have their ears pierced. But we're getting there!)

The thing is, it was actually Marina who was supposed to get her ears pierced because she's five-years-old. But as I'm slowly discovering, we've got a needle phobia on our hands.
When my normally sweet, almost shy daughter sees a needle coming toward her she will scream. Like those people who holler and thrash about in doctors' offices, freaking out the patients in the waiting room.

So to avoid such drama, Marina went on a well-timed trip to the bathroom while Ella sat on the chair and got holes punched in her ears. Marina was not there to see Ella's smile turn into a frown or hear the heaving sobs of pain afterward.

"Don't do it," Ella sniffed. "It hurts."

But Marina went ahead and took her seat. As soon as the very jaded lady at Claire's Boutique touched Marina's ears, however, that was it. She wanted nothing to do with it.

"I'll just wait for another day," she said, and hopped off the chair.

I have a feeling that day will never actually show up.


Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Feelings

I have this thing I can do where I can distance myself from things. It's not a good or bad thing, it's just sort of how I operate.

As a result, it's very rare for me to get emotional in public (unless I'm watching a TV series made my Jason Katims). Up until Saturday, I could only remember one situation where I got overwhelmed with "feelings." And that was at the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam, so I mean, really, does that count?

But on Saturday I was sent to write about local Sudanese celebrating their new country, The Republic of South Sudan. Just a few months earlier, I had interviewed a few of the Lost Boys who lost their homes and families in the 1990s. Their stories were similar to the ones my grandfathers tell about surviving the Holocaust.

And now these same men were celebrating their freedom.

I walked in and there was canned 1980s African music playing and women were greeting each other in high-pitched native calls that I'd previously only heard on TV. And they were wearing such beautiful, bright dresses and they were so filled with joy that they danced in the courtyard.

At that moment, I became overwhelmed with emotion for the second time.

I imagined this is what it was like when people like my grandfathers heard about Israel. At that minute, I understood. And not in a political way but in a pure celebration of being able to be who you are.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Girl power

Meet my new mascot and friend, Rockanrolla:



Her packaging said she's supposed to help people feel less shy and more like rock stars. I mostly like her because she's got orange hair and tiny headphones. But if feeling like a rock star is an added benefit, I'll take it.

And just in case, my future kindergartner has already reserved Rockanrolla to accompany her on the first day of school.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Five

On the day Marina turned five, she took these photos of herself. It was at the end of a long, birthday weekend extravaganza and she was running low on sleep (still is, actually) but she looks like some sort of bohemian California magazine ad.






We waited many, many hours for the 4th of July fireworks extravaganza to begin. And there was a lot of time for pictures. Here are others.

Mom and first-born are soooo tired.



Usually I think Matt's running shirt is a bit on the unstylish side. But Marina made it look like a piece of street art:



She took close to 30 pictures before she finally managed to capture a seagull.



And she lucked into getting a photo of her dad NOT wearing a Red Sox hat.

Friday, July 1, 2011

The cost of mangoes

We recently took a trip to Ensenada, where a cup of mango sprinkled with chili and lime costs, I don't know, a dollar?

It's one of my favorite treats from Mexico, second only to the sweet lemonade they make with sparkling water.

And luckily for me, they sell Mexican style fruit cups at the farmers market next to my house. Look how pretty it is, they even have the bright tablecloths I love so much:



But, holy mother, you would not believe how much I paid for this. Seriously, take a guess. The first person to get it right wins either a brand new box of fancy "cucumber soothing eye gel" or a copy of Rick Springfield's memoir, "Late, Late at Night." Your choice.

Seriously.

I'll take your guesses in the comments.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

WAKE UP!

Sometimes I wonder if families living in big houses get to sleep in. Because at our place, when one person wakes up, we ALL wake up.

At some point between 5:55 and 6:45 a.m., a door will pop open, a bathroom light/fan will turn on and little footsteps make their way to the crayons, paper and scissors in the living room. On especially terrible mornings, we'll wake up to phrases like "No!" "That's mine!" and "I'm telling!"

Soon after, Matt and I will play an unspoken game of chicken to see who can stay in bed the longest, though I almost always win because he doesn't realize that I have my Dad's genes and his nickname is Huevos de Oro. Which, loosely and nicely translated, means lazy.

It's always been like this at our house. I know there are families who do this thing where one parent sleeps in on Saturday and the other on Sunday, but we never found a way to make that work. I don't like it, but I'm used to it.

Except this morning, when I wanted more than anything to stay in bed and feel sorry for myself. I began to fantasize about the brown house down the street. I drive by it everyday. It looks like Ralph Lauren or Tommy Hillfiger lives in it: all-American wood with white trim, balconies, three floors.

I'm sure that when someone in that house wakes up, nobody hears anything. And it must be luxurious.

Usually at this point I'd wrap up the post by saying something heartwarming about people in big houses missing out on the pitter patter of little feet. But screw it, I really love sleeping.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

This is how I make lemonade

Today I became a casualty of the newspaper industry.
Sort of.
I didn't lose my job, but I did become a part-time employee. Though because I'm still part of the company, I will not get into details or feelings or any of that. (Sure, I've got feelings and (not many) details but that's not what this post is about.)

Aside from announcing my availability for freelance work, this unexpected news has inspired me to change the focus of my blog. It's been without direction for a while now - aside from my insane school search, of course.

But now, it's full of focus.

See, I live in La Jolla, blocks away from (former UT publisher) David Copley's estate. We live here, in a small condo downtown, for the excellent public schools. As a family of print journalists, we aren't the stereotypical residents, but we knew that coming in.

It hasn't bothered me that I can't shop at the furniture store down the street or even get an appointment to buy clothes at certain places. (Though I have been quite vocal about the high cost of cocktails around these parts.)

The conversations at local coffeshops are about (in no particular order): Europe, business, literature, pilates, YSL, classic cars, real estate, cells and kettle bells. Once, when I was driving my VW Golf to the Y, I looked in the rear-view mirror and realized a Rolls Royce was following me.

That's just the way it is.

Even so, I've been able to buy a latte without thinking about it, just like many of my neighbors can. I've purchased Italian pasta at Jonathan's, a market with carpet. I have a flower guy.

But that's about to change. In July, I become a part-time writer/full-time mom in one of San Diego's fanciest neighborhoods. This is where I'll talk about it. Or whatever.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

A day without me

The girls are on break for three days. (Shavuot. Don't ask.)

And they've been hanging out with their dad. So, naturally this is how they spent their Wednesday afternoon:



And, I mean, come on, how is this not a Padres ad yet?