Parenting Travel

The beach

This is a photo I took of my daughter while we were at the beach this week. In preparation for the upcoming photo shoot I’ve been gauging the kids’ behavior in each environment. The ocean — beautiful, vast, humbling, soothing…yeah, the kids still hate it. The only way I was able to bribe them to sit on the beach with me was to bring boxes of salty snacks and juice boxes that a good mom wouldn’t buy. So I’m leaning toward park pictures now — I’d prefer not to end up with a photo essay entitled “The day we spent a ton of money hiring a professional photographer so we could have pictures of crying and whining and look more dysfunctional than usual”. I keep telling the kids that they’re going to be ostracized in California for not liking the beach.

A couple of weeks ago a friend of mine, who apparently spends quite a bit of time hanging out at a publishing company, recruited my kids to be photographed for a children’s book. My 4-year-old liked it. A lot. I’m worried she could easily be led down the Britney Spears path. My 2-year-old, on the other hand, frowned harder whenever they told her to smile. She is tending toward the opposite path. She has a real talent for chugging milk, so it’d be a serious loss to the college fraternity party scene if she ends up becoming a recluse.Posted by Picasa

Parenting Uncategorized

Good cheap fun

I have a headache. I have hip hop dance class tonight, so I’ll be even worse than usual (that’s sort of like saying “greater than infinity”). Instead of spending quality time with my kids like I’m supposed to after work, I’m letting them engage in some good cheap fun: playing with ice cubes! Yeah, it’s really fun at my house.
I think I got the headache from work. I don’t understand why we can’t have windows that open in office buildings. It’s like they’re trying to make it a germ incubator. I’m tempted to walk around the office with a mask and gloves now that flu season is starting — it couldn’t make me any more of a pariah than my recent spanking and biting incident (by the way, I have been avoiding walking by the IT department at all costs.

Faux pas Uncategorized

X me

So I finally started to play around with Facebook and installed this application called X Me. With this application you can do whatever to your Facebook friends — you can hug them, bite them, spank them, give them beer, etc. Let me start by saying that some of my Facebook friends are people who I haven’t even ever spoken to (like that guy Dan in IT). So I installed X Me, and decided as a joke to spank my husband. I also decide to wave to my brother-in-law’s girlfriend, and to give a hug to my friend Libby in China.

To my horror, I logged in the next day and saw that I apparently spanked Dan, the guy in IT who I don’t even know, I bit Gabriela, my brother-in-law’s girlfriend’s brother’s girlfriend (who accidentally invited me to be a friend on Facebook — we’ve never met), and as a dressing decided also to hug Gabriela, who again, I don’t know, but who will surely run away from me should the occasion ever arrive to meet in person.

I was so careful to select the appropriate people (I actually triple-checked) so there is something wrong with this application! I’m sure of it! This is not for my generation.

Parenting Travel

Hip Hop + Disneyland = Bad Idea

So I did end up taking a day off from blogging after my first hip hop class, because literally every part of my body hurt. It wasn’t the normal kind of exercise soreness — it was the type of soreness caused by extreme stress on muscles that have never before ever been used. I am not genetically predisposed to do hip hop. I probably don’t even have the muscles that are required to do it successfully. But my neck — after an hour of trying to alternate between snake-like and robot-like moves — was killing me the next day. Only, not right away.

You see, long ago, in a galaxy far away, before I had even made hip hop plans, I decided that the best time to take the kids to Disneyland would be 1) off-season, and 2) in the middle of the week. I mean, who can take their kids to Disneyland on a Wednesday in October? Apparently, millions of people. By the time I got there the lot was packed. And here is important Disney tip #1: do not bring a large double- jog stroller that does not fold up. Contrary to my assumption that a place like Disney would have wild accommodations for handicapped people and people with children (people handicapped by children?), the trams that take you from the parking lot to the theme park only have two rows that accommodate said passengers. So on the way in, I waited til 6 trams passed before I could get onto one that had space for me. On the way back, it was worse — it took me an hour to get on a tram because handicapped people had first priority — so every time I was at the front of the line, a handicapped person would appear and get ushered on. The “handicapped by children” people are screwed.

So I finally got to the theme park, at which point important Disney tip #2 kicks in: do not go to Disneyland after your first hip hop class because the stiffness will kick in at exactly 10 AM when Disneyland opens and you realize you have 12 hours ahead of you pushing 60 pounds of people around a giant theme park. I was feeling totally fine until 10 AM, when I suddenly became an octagenarian and groaned my way around the park.

As luck would have it, I then stumbled upon important Disney tip #3: check that there isn’t anything wrong with your stroller before leaving the parking lot. Yup, my stroller broke. I was 5 minutes into Fantasyland and I groaned my way down to the ground to assess the damage. Should I abandon the stroller and attempt to walk the kids around? Should I scream for help? After about 15 minutes of sheer determination I was miraculously able, with my hands as my only tools, repair the stroller. I will now fast-forward past all the whining, crying and saying that they have to pee after finally getting to the front of a long line, to the part where my girls met Ariel the Little Mermaid. My 2-year-old rightfully asked, “Why do you still have fins?” (She’s right — Ariel’s supposed to be a human now.) We also stood in line for over an hour to meet some other princesses, and they turned out to be the B-list (Belle, Pocahontas and Jasmine). Bummed out by this, my 2-year-old asked Jasmine where Cinderella was. I’m sure Jasmine was annoyed. I bet she hates those A-list princesses.

Anyway, add to that the traffic on the way back (add an extra hour on for that, actually) and I will summarize that I never want to do that again anytime soon.

Food

Using up left-over chicken

I always seem to have chicken left over. Is it just me? Do people hate my chicken? I digress. The point is, I always have some of it around, and the efficient side of me wants to have something innovative to do with it (to digress some more, apparently a few restaurants in Hong Kong have started charging people for the food that they leave on their plates at all you can eat restaurants. I guess they have so much garbage there that they don’t know what to do with it — so it’s one of the ways they’re trying to reduce garbage. I guess they didn’t grow up with my mom — let’s just say that if you did you would never leave food on your plate.). My husband doesn’t like leftovers, so I have to do some food alchemy so that he can’t detect the left-over-ness of it.

I’ve done salads (shred it up, toss it into a salad; or put it together with some mayo and celery and — viola, chicken salad) and casseroles with varying success, but the best ways I’ve found to use it are in fajitas (again, using a shredded version of the chicken) and — my new favorite method — in tortilla soup. In case you don’t know how to make it (or at least don’t know how to do it the way I do, which I am sure is an abomination of the proper way to do it), here’s what I do:

  • Shred up the chicken.
  • Heat up some chicken stock; salt / pepper to taste.
  • Chop up some tomatoes, avocado and cilantro. Distribute some of each into however many bowls you will be serving.
  • Get some tortilla strips (or you can make some, which is pretty easy, and which I used to do, but since the theme of this blog is laziness in this case we’ll assume you buy them).
  • Once the stock is hot, ladle it over the bowls that contain the chicken et al. Throw in some corn if you’d like. I’ve also put in some shredded cheese before, but it’s up to you.
  • That’s it!

Tomorrow I start my hip hop dance class. I watched some hip hop videos online tonight and am realizing that I should be very, very scared. Apparently, you have to have abs and cardiovascular fitness in order to do this for more than 2 minutes. The class is for an hour (which, by the way, is sixty minutes). I may not post tomorrow — I may be at the hospital.

Health

How not to get really, really sick

I’m not a doctor. I don’t even play one on TV. But I can’t afford to get really, really sick, because there are people to feed and drive around and jobs to do. In fact, somewhere along the way to parenthood it became illegal to be sick — if my husband is sick, rather than feeling sorry for him, I’m usually annoyed. So here’s my strategy for not getting really sick. It’s ok to be a little sick — that is, you’re still functional but have a slight cough or congestion — but the type that gets you laid up in bed hiding under the covers is pretty much unacceptable once you have kids.

  • As soon as you feel the tiniest inkling of getting sick, like an itchy throat or general malaise, or if you’ve been near sick people, take some Cold-Eeze. I’ve tried both Airborne and Cold-Eeze (I’m sure the generic zinc lozenges work just as well) and have had better success with the latter.
  • Keep taking it every 4-6 hours til the feeling subsides.
  • Sleep a lot. If I feel something coming on, I try to go to bed shortly after the kids do. When I used to travel a lot for a demanding job, I found that sleeping was the best way to prevent illness (as well as recover from it). I’m willing to bet this is actually the silver bullet when it comes to mitigating a cold.

I also pop multi-vitamins regularly if I feel like I’m fighting something. It’s been years since I’ve been so sick that I can’t do anything, so I think I’m on to something here. Give it a try — your family will thank you (or at the very least, they won’t resent you).