Category Archives: Uncategorized

Textured Finish

When I was shopping for the new refrigerator, I narrowed it down to two options. They were very similar, but one came in a absolutely smooth white glossy finish, and the other came in the textured white I was more familiar with as the owner of a refrigerator that was made before some of you were born.

The salesperson said the glossy smooth kind was more current. I wondered if it would get all scratched up and crappy looking, and she said no, she didn’t think so, “unless you put a lot of magnets on it or something.” Which is kind of funny, considering my fridge:

Front: photos of friends’ children, school reminders, children’s drawings, timer, coupons, Leap Frog alphabet magnets set plus two supplemental lowercase letter sets.

 

Photos of kids, decorative magnets, kitchen utensils hanging from magnetic rack.

 

Grocery list, school information, commonly used phone numbers, magnetic basket holding pens and pencils and batteries, baggie for box tops, decorative magnets, magnetic notepad, recall notice about one of our cars, and a little cluster of magnets in case we have something else we need to put on the fridge.

So I got the textured finish.

Same as the Old One Except 22 Years Younger

If you’re wondering what happened to the downer post “Emotionally Messy,” I took it down. Because GEEZ. But I can summarize it for those of you who missed it:

  1. I am still a little…off, emotionally-speaking.

I was looking through my old journals to get the information I needed for the post about milestones, and since walking happened around the same time as weaning, I kept encountering the exact same sentences again and again, in 2000 and in 2002 and in 2006—about how I was soooo irritable and sooooo moody and soooo emotional and how if it didn’t stop I was going to ask the doctor for a prescription. And then evidently it gets better and there’s no mention of it until the next baby is weaning.

I find it helps to spend money. And so it was good timing for our 22-year-old refrigerator to shuffle off its condenser coils (I think appliances can SMELL economic stimulus checks), because normally I would be so cheesed to have to buy a new one, but instead I was skipping like a schoolgirl. Well, plodding like a mother with a double stroller.

I hope it works out, because it was an exceptionally smooth and easy purchase. My dad (he’s the family expert on What’s the Best Thing to Buy) did all the research and told me the two he recommended, and then I went in and lucked into a salesperson who was laid-back and non-pressurey, and I just chose a refrigerator and bought it and the end.

Look. It’s my new fridge. White. Fridge-like.

I ruined my high, though, by taking the twins to have their pictures done. Generally I go around recommending the JCP Portrait Studio all over the place: I left Sears for them, and have never been sorry. And I’m still really happy with the pictures they take. But the last two times I’ve been there, they’ve gone way over the top trying to push all their expensive portrait options. I keep saying, “Oh, no, thanks, I always just order sheets,” and they KEEP SHOWING ME MORE OPTIONS. And then cooing over their own work, like, “Ooooo, that’s so CUTE! How can you resist??” With me actually not having any trouble resisting.

Today she actually pulled out, “Awww! You HAVE to get that one! You’ll never get these moments back again!” Um, true, but this creation you’re showing me represents only THIS moment, of YOU trying to SELL ME STUFF while my children fight in their stroller and I am clearly itching to get out of here. And since I just bought prints of all three of those poses, I don’t see why I now ALSO need to buy them clustered on the same page, with a fake-paint-splashes background and “We love you Mommy!!” written in a stupid font. I mean, frankly I think the particular combinations you’re putting together there look tacky, but I don’t want to say so because after all this is your CAREER here.

Then, when I’d persevered and gotten ONLY what I wanted (I just said, “Okay! Now! I need a 10×13 of that one, and…”), she put on an Excited Tone of Voice and said I’d ordered enough sheets to qualify for a SPECIAL PACKAGE DEAL! The special package deal? I could spend TWICE AS MUCH for the same pictures! AND I’d get a FREE 8×10! Has she lost her mind? Do they not pay them enough to afford food, and she has gone all dizzy and confused with hunger?

I realize it’s that they HAVE to do this, and not that they get any personal joy out of pressuring me. Probably they have bosses breathing down their necks saying “SELL SELL SELL!” Perhaps there are nasty attack animals in the back room, and anyone who doesn’t meet a certain hourly quota has to spend “quality time” in the cages. But the thing is, if they don’t knock it off, they are going to lose what they DO sell me. You know what I need, is a little sign I can hold up silently, with a bored flick of the wrist, after the first few vocal repetitions of the same words: “No, thanks. I just buy the sheets.” Maybe the bottom half of the sign can be a white board, so I can add rude endings as needed.

Well Within Normal Range

Henry had his one-year check-up this morning. I was a little worried he was going to get a Bad Baby sticker: he still doesn’t pull to standing or even TRY to pull to standing, and he’s only just starting to get onto his hands and knees (he army crawls).

I don’t know why I worry, since ALL my kids have been like this, and in fact Henry is earlier than some of the others: Rob didn’t crawl until a year old, and Elizabeth didn’t pull to standing until 14 months. And sure enough, the pediatrician says Henry is well within normal range.

I actually DON’T worry much about their development; what I worry about is OTHER PEOPLE worrying. “I’ll bet he’s walking all over the place now!” they say. And then when I say, “Oh….uh, no, he’s just crawling,” they get a funny expression and darty eyes, like, “OOoooo, dear, that’s not good. Should one of us…tell her so?”

Have you noticed this: People talk about the milestones their babies reach early, but they’re a lot quieter about the ones they reach “well within normal range”—also known as “late.” A baby who walked at 10 months? Everyone including the deli clerk has heard ALLLLL about it. The babies who walk at 17 months are just as normal, but we don’t need to bore the deli clerk with all the little details.

This greatly affects people’s perceived statistics: if you hear a lot about babies walking at 10 months, 11 months, 12 months, you might even think it’s SCARY and ALARMING and NEUROLOGICALLY SIGNIFICANT if a baby isn’t walking at 13 months. And yet it isn’t: none of my kids have walked before 14 months, and one didn’t walk until 17 months, and all of them have been still been within normal range for those things. And this is why I am telling you about it (you over there—quit yawning!): to improve the perceived statistics.

Why I Hate Wallllmart

The employee pep rallies they have, the degrading ones where the employees are forced to “Give me a W! Give me an A!” etc., clapping and yelling how much they love working at Wallllllmart, every single day. How many days could you do that before you brought in a squirt gun and started using it?

They raise a price briefly, then “rollll it back” and brag about it: “We’re rolllling back prices allll over the store!” Uh huh. Those crackers WERE $2, until a week ago when you marked them up to $2.47. Then you rolled them back to $2. Wow, you do rock.

If something is marked “rolllled back,” it’s highly likely it’ll ring up at the pre-rolllled-back price. I’ve shopped at three different Walllllmarts in three dramatically different parts of the country, and they’ve all been the same. If it says “$1.50! Was $2.78!” it might ring up at $1.50 or it might ring up at $2.78. I try to keep an eye on things when they’re being rung up, but I’m usually distracted by the kids.

If something is “30% more free” on the packaging, Walllllmart will often have it at a higher price—i.e., the extra is NOT free. If the 10-ounce one is $1.00, and the “30% more free!” 13-ounce one is $1.25, that is not 30% free, that is 30% for 25 cents. I know not everyone is good at math, but I have tried to explain this to SEVERAL Wallllmart employees (including, in one case where I was there without children and highly determined, the STORE MANAGER), and NONE of them understood what I was talking about, except for ONE perfume-counter worker who instantly grasped the situation—and then couldn’t get her manager to understand. (Her manager kept saying, “Yes, but see this is a THIRTEEN-OUNCE. That’s why it costs more. It’s a larger size.” And she and I would say in unison, “But is says the part that makes it ‘larger’ is supposed to be FREE.”)

It is often difficult to find the prices on things. Shelf tags will be missing.

When you can find prices, the unit prices are unhelpful. One kind of vegetable oil will give the price per ounce, one will give the price per liter, one will give the price per gallon, and one will give the price “per each.”

They will be out of something for months at a time. On every visit, the shelf space will still be there, empty. They are unable to tell me when—if ever—they will be getting more. It is out of their hands: they are merely conduits for the Delivery Gods. They’ll be getting a truck in on Thursday; I could check back then. I understand that they don’t have stone tablets telling them of each Twix bar that will be delivered and at what minute of what day. But I would like them to DO something about it if they haven’t received a shipment of Twix in three months. The empty shelf space is not good for either of us.

The employees put pallets and carts in all the aisles, so that you can get trapped: every way out is blocked, and the only way out is the way you came—halfway across the store. In an emergency, where they run out of pallets, they will fling their own bodies in front of your cart.

Their bags rip. Sometimes the clerk goes through a couple ripped ones just bagging things up. The others rip in the car, or while I’m carrying things into the house. I once had three glass jars of jam fall to the basement floor as I carried the groceries down to put them away. Astonishing mess.

Their bags shed choking-hazard-sized ovals of plastic, just perfect for a baby to inhale. I panic every time I forget to bring my reusable bags with me and have to use those horrible dangerous plastic bags. Other stores use plastic bags and manage not to shed those little shapes.

If I hear it called “Walllly’s World,” as if it’s a fun and happy amusement park, I’m getting out the squirt gun.

Reminder

If you want to enter the raffle to raise money for the Preeclampsia Foundation, you have today and tomorrow and that’s it: Preeclampsia Awareness Month will be over, and you will be out of luck! Shannon is running the raffle, and she has made a gorgeous baby quilt I want to CHEW ON, it is so gorgeous. And after she chooses a winner, she’ll send me the remaining names and I’ll choose another winner. I forget what I offered, but I think it was a choice of either a treat or a book. Plus, I tend to use a flat-rate box/envelope and fill up the empty space with miscellaneous crap from my house. Bonus!

Education

The term is not “magic bullet,” it’s “magic pill.” That makes a lot more sense, doesn’t it? Compare: “There’s no magic bullet for weight loss” vs. “There’s no magic pill for weight loss. “Magic bullet” IS an existing term, but it is used to describe, for example, the way a medical treatment might be able to zip in and kill JUST the bad bacteria, without harming the good bacteria: a magic bullet, weaving into the middle of a crowd of hostages and killing just the bad guy. It is NOT used to describe the concept of “an effortless way out.” That is when you use the term “magic pill”: You can’t just take a magic pill and make the problem disappear. Magic PILL. No one is SHOOTING AT the problem and hoping for good results.

When people make fun of the “hot fudge sundae and a diet Coke” combination, that’s the same as saying that if you spend money it’s stupid and contradictory not to spend more. I mean GEEZ! Why would you spend money AND not-spend it? If you’re spending some, you might as well keep spending, even if you don’t want to! If you buy a couch, you have to buy a new bed, DUH! …And this is all assuming the diet Coke means what those people assume it means, which is that the person is “dieting” and therefore being a stupid moron by eating ice cream. I drink diet Coke because I prefer it. I hate regular Coke: it’s way too sweet, it never seems cold enough, and it’s not thirst-quenching. But I guess I should drink it anyway EVEN THOUGH I DON’T LIKE IT, if I’m eating ice cream: if you eat ONE item with fat and calories in it, you are DUTY-BOUND to eat the maximum possible fat and calories with all other choices you make. That makes NO SENSE.

And speaking of making no sense, “giving 110%” ALREADY made no sense, but now it’s getting worse: people are saying “giving 150%” or “giving 200%”—because apparently now 110% doesn’t sound like enough. AAAAAAGH. The most you can give is 100%, just as the most you can fill a glass with liquid is 100%. In fact, even “giving 100%” is a huge exaggeration: I suppose there might be occasions where someone would literally be giving 100%, but those times are rare.

Color Me Swistle

My mom likes Marshalls, so we went there on Saturday. I don’t usually like Marshalls: I’m always finding things that I like ALMOST enough to buy, but either I don’t like them QUITE enough or they’re just a LITTLE more expensive than I want to pay. Or it’s a brand I’ve never heard of, so I’m thinking, “Is this a ritzy bar of soap marked way down, or is this a cheap bar of soap that is made to LOOK like a ritzy bar of soap marked way down?” Or I’ll find something I like, but it’s in every size but the one I need. I find the whole store depressing.

But look what I found there on Saturday!

It’s a set of purse accessories: business card holder, lipstick case, and there’s also a round compact (not shown) that my mom has because the enamel piece had come unglued and she’s gluing it back on for me. (SPOILED MUCH?)

Do I NEED these? No. But the whole set was marked down to $5, and they’re satisfyingly heavy, and I….well, it was like my heart reached out for them and grabbed them with grabby little hands. I just WANTED them as soon as I saw them, so they came home with me. I’m going to have to get business cards now, I guess.

And do you notice something about the COLOR of those items? They’re Swistle-colored! (= same as the color of the blog background, for those of you reading this in an RSS reader!)