My Real Life

January 17, 2023

Turkey Driver

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

I made someone mad today.

I went grocery shopping, and it was the first trip I’ve made where I haven’t had to pick anything up for my father-in-law, who we lost last week.

I was definitely in my head as I drove from one store to the other (I shop in two stores to save some money) and I must have been driving too slowly for the driver behind me.

They slammed on their horn, long and loud and then swerved to pass me.

However, we were pulling up to a red light at the time, so they wound up idling right next to me.

I inched up a little so our windows were parallel and looked in the car.

The woman started frantically gesticulating while mouthing (I assume she was yelling, but I could only see her mouth move) something like “Why can’t you drive? You’re so slow! What’s wrong with you?”

Her anger seemed disproportionate to the situation.

So, I simply smiled, raised an eyebrow and mouthed back “Really?”

And, man, did that piss her off.

She starts gesturing, pushing her hair back from her face, like model, in what I assume was a dig at me, like I thought I was so special. She made like, a “La-Di-Dah” gesture with her hands and then continued to act like I was somehow pretending to be better than her.

Friends, at the time of me writing this, I haven’t showered in two days. My hair is greasy, I’m wearing the same clothes I wore yesterday. I’m exhausted and have bags under my eyes. In no way, shape, or form do I look like someone who thinks they are too good to follow the rules of the road.

She then started mouthing all sorts of things that I didn’t understand, and then started hugging her shoulders and mouthing “OOOh, I’m so scared! I’m so scared!” and making faces at me.

All the while, I just sat there, watching her, smiling.

She was SO mad, at this point, and I noticed a little shadow in the back seat, so I assume she also had a child in the car with her, watching this all go down. At one point she turned to say something to them, so I know there was someone back there, I just don’t know who.

But, I couldn’t muster up the energy to be angry back. And I didn’t want to be. I didn’t want her child to be afraid, and I just wasn’t angry, despite her theatrics.

The past few days, the mantra has been that “peace and harmony” is the way to go, and I recalled a story that my husband told at the repast, following his father’s funeral, two days ago.

In discussing how even tempered his father had been, he said that the most scandalous thing that his father had said was when someone cut him off in traffic and he came out with (imagine this in a thick, Jersey City accent) “Aw geez…what a turkey driver!”

And as that story went through my head, I just started to laugh. I laughed and laughed at the antics in the car next to me, and I laughed at the memory of that beautiful man saying “turkey driver” as the biggest insult he could think of.

The light turned green and she zipped through the intersection and way ahead of me and that was the end of our interaction.

The point of this story?

Be gracious, friends.

Be patient, be kind.

I absolutely could have been someone who was distracted with their phone or someone who wasn’t paying attention to the road, or who was just a bad driver. I could definitely have earned her anger.

But, I also could have been exactly what I was. Someone who was sad and lost in their thoughts and not driving exactly the way this woman wanted me to drive.

And for all I know, she had just gotten a call and was on the way to the hospital, or was trying to get to someone quickly who needed help.

Don’t meet anger with anger.

Just be kind. We’ve all got stuff going on.

Just be kind.

January 16, 2023

Things I Don’t Understand

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am
Tags: , , ,

I’m a pretty bright woman.

I’m never the smartest in the room, but I consider myself to be fairly intelligent.

And yet, there are many moments in my day when I realize that I 100% do not understand how some things work.

I share this, because I can’t be alone in my head scratching. I know that there are other people out there that wonder the same things, but maybe just don’t say them out loud.

Because, a lot of the world is able to be deciphered.

But some of it? Not in a million years.

Take backflips, for example.

I have looked up the physics of backflips. I have watched slow motion videos where people have explained how to engage the body in such a floppy, twisty feat, and I have, myself, been a gymnast.

And yet…

The backflip? I don’t get it.

If I jump up and throw myself backwards, at best, I’m just landing flat on my back.

At worst, I have the correct arch in my back, but have landed directly on my head and broken my neck.

I don’t get it.

And people do it with such ease. They just jump and throw themselves backwards, and some people don’t even use their hands!!!

I swear there is some type of superpower involved in a backflip.

And if we are talking about things that don’t make any sense being in the air, let’s take a moment to discuss airplanes.

Like…what?

I love to fly and wanted to become a pilot when I was young. But my love of flight and airplanes never translated into an understanding of the physics behind it.

I’ve looked it up on numerous occasions and found the explanation.

Planes fly so fast, and the wind is going so forcefully over the wings and down that it creates lift which counteracts the weight of the plane.

I read the words, I understand what they are saying, but I don’t get it at all.

At all.

A plane is about 90,000 pounds. How is wind able to keep that afloat? That’s 90,000 POUNDS!

If airplanes all had rocket boosters underneath them, keeping them up, like some really high hoverboards, it would make more sense to me.

But nope. Just a smooth underside and little tiny wheels.

It’s not going to stop me from wanting to fly, but it certainly makes my head hurt to think about.

And what are Bitcoin and NFT’s?

My class and I have watched so many student news programs about these two things, and I watch and soak in every word. And then I look at the kids and ask “What did they just say?”

I mean, I even googled the definition. Do you know what that jerk said to me in response?

“a type of digital currency in which a record of transactions is maintained and new units of currency are generated by the computational solution of mathematical problems, and which operates independently of a central bank”

Excuse me? That is supposed to be a clarifying definition???

So, I googled “Bitcoin for Dummies” which brought me to a Bitcoin cheat sheet.

The simplified definition they gave me?

“There is no Bitcoin, actually. There’s nothing tangible, of course, but there’s not even some kind of digital representation of a coin. Rather, Bitcoin is represented by records of Bitcoin transactions in the Bitcoin “ledger,” which is stored in a “blockchain” ― something else that few people understand”

Oooohhhh….yes. Now I completely and totally understand.

C’mon, people. At this point I think it is just some made up thing and that a whole bunch of people are in on the joke and are just laughing at the rest of us. Or me. They are just laughing at me.

And as for how land line telephones, cell phones, wifi, and internet work?

I got nothing.

Make me feel better, friends. Tell me something that doesn’t make sense to you, even though it’s been explained to you over and over.

January 9, 2023

Have I Ever Told You About…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am
Tags: ,

When I was a kid, my parents and grandparents used to tell me the same stories, over and over again.

Being a typical kid, I likely rolled my eyes and said “Yes, I know. You’ve already told me this one.”

I know every detail of the time that my Dad DIDN’T win the John Phillip Sousa award, his senior year in high school. More to the point, I know that the band director, that year, said that they weren’t going to give the award that year because no one in the senior class was good enough for it. Um, really? Thanks, jerk.

I also can tell you, word for word, the time my Dad got hit in the face with a baseball and ran home to my Grandma, who was working in her beauty shop.

I could tell you the story of my Grandpa Lawrence, who was pitching for a Cleveland farm team and as he threw a pitch, everyone thought a gun had been shot, but it had been his bone breaking from the force of his throw.

Or, perhaps I could regale you with the time my Mom was dating a young man and went to the opera with he and his family. When they got to the restaurant after the show, the wandering musicians were packing up, but when the father said they should open up their cases and play, they opened up their cases, picked up those instruments, and began to play. Because, friends, when (insert mob boss name here) says play, you play.

I assured myself that I would never become an adult who told the same stories, repeatedly, convinced of their innate captivating nature.

No, I would be an adult who told stories once. Fabulous stories that had everyone on the edge of their seat. Including my children.

Guess what, friends.

The other day, Monkey Girl and I were driving as she was delivering an Instacart order, and we passed a residential complex.

“Didn’t you know someone who lived there?” I innocently asked

My eyes were on the road, but I heard the eye roll and she responded “No, Mom, but I know you did. Her name was Sena and you two almost burned down the complex when you were making funnel cake once.”

Oh. I guess she knew that one.

More evidence to my failure to be the “one-time storyteller” I dreamed of being is the fact that, if I start a sentence with “Did I ever tell you about the time…” any of my four children will finish the sentence with “…you and Grandma were driving to Lara Allen’s birthday party and a car was coming down the road and slipped on ice and flipped over and you had to run to a nearby house and have them call 911? Yes, you’ve told us that one.”

Or, on a recent college visit with Monkey Boy to my alma mater, I began “It was on this street…” and the story was finished by one of my children “…that you and Sandy were walking home from the store in the middle of a rainstorm and cars just kept splashing you until you were soaked and you laughed so hard that you peed in your pants. We know.”

There are so many other examples I could give you to demonstrate my repetitive storytelling, but now that I’ve lived a little more, I have a new perspective.

Here’s my take:

While I used to see this, in my parents, as evidence of a faulty memory, of a longing for a different time, or of a boring life where there were only a few stories that were interesting enough to share, I’m starting to see it differently.

Any time anyone wants to tell you some story from their life, they are trying to connect with you. Trying to give you a glimpse of who they are, or maybe even, who they once were. It’s a reminder that our lives are so much bigger and broader than the day to day that most people see. The sharing of life stories is an invitation to share an experience and an opportunity to appreciate someone just a little more.

So, even if you’ve heard it before, the next time someone offers you a story about themselves that you know by heart…just listen. And appreciate the fact that they care enough about you to share that bit of their life with you.

January 3, 2023

TikTok

If you’ve been a long time reader of the blog, or friend of mine, or colleague of mine…heck, or even casual acquaintance of mine…it’s no secret that I am a consumer of entertainment.

I love books, movies, tv, Facebook, Instagram, streaming networks…all of it.

I love a story and I love to be entertained.

Heck, I even have a podcast dedicated to streaming platforms. (Didn’t know that? Check out the Boomtron Podcast wherever you listen to your podcasts)

During the pandemic, I found a new method of entertainment, and it’s the TikTok.

I know all the arguments against TikTok.

These fast snippets of videos will teach your brain to lose it’s attention span. It’s voyeurism at it’s height. China is watching you through the app.

All of that may be true, but let’s be honest; my attention span wasn’t anything to write home about before TikTok, and my Mom taught me at an early age that the best time to drive through a neighborhood is at night so you can look through the front windows of homes and see what people are up to.

And if China is spying on me through TikTok, here’s what they’ve learned: (if you now, you know)

-I like to watch people’s morning routines

-I’m obsessed with junk journals (thejulietjournal)

-I love to listen to people talk about books

-I’m super concerned if Kat Stickler will find love again (katstickler)

-I am of the opinion that GenX continues to be the superior generation

-I know way too much about Matt and Abby and their growing family (Matt_and_Abby)

-I want to be like Cecilia from Svalbard, a small island near the north pole (sejsejilja)

-I’m still mourning the loss of Noodle and it will forever be a no bones day without him (jongraz)

-I’m considering throwing it all away to go live in a van and travel the country (abigailmartin)

However, I’ve also learned some important things on TikTok.

Even in the world of book lovers, which is the largest community I am part of on TikTok, (lovingly referred to as BookTok), people can argue about absolutely anything.

-Kindle v Audiobook v Physical Books

-People who read too much v People who read too little

-People who read literature calling people who read fantasy or rom-coms “fake readers” v People who read fantasy or rom-coms calling people who read literature “fake readers”

Can’t we all just agree that books are the best and leave it at that???

In addition to the things I’ve learned, TikTok has also raised some questions for me:

-I don’t go to a gym, but for those of you who do…are you only allowed to go in skintight clothes? Because all the videos people are making of themselves at the gym are of them in skintight leggings and sports bras. Like, what if the whole reason someone wanted to go to the gym was because they aren’t comfortable in those clothes and would like to get there? I have yet to see someone, even in the background of these videos, in baggy sweats.

-Does everyone reset their kitchen at night? Like, are all of you out there making sure there are no dishes in the sink, your kitchen floor is mopped, and the dishwasher is running before you go to bed? Does nobody just say “Forget it…I’m going to bed?”

-Is washing my face and only using my Olay moisturizer not enough? Because the people on TikTok are using about 7 different lotions and toners every time they wash their face, and I’m sorry, I have neither the money, nor the energy for that before I’m going to bed at night.

-Why aren’t all teachers on TikTok? The amount of free ideas that people are sharing for all grades, all subjects, and all levels is astounding. Forget Teachers Pay Teachers…this is better.

So, yeah, I know TikTok is supposed to be for the younger generation, but believe me, there is a well-represented crowd of people who are 45+ making some amazing content out there.

And sure, TikTok can be problematic, but so can anything if it’s misused. The more you watch of any one thing, the more whatever media you are using will feed you that type of content. I can go for days only seeing book videos, because those are the videos that I watch in their entirety and like. Like a good waiter, the app feeds you what you order.

Would I let Tiny on TikTok?

Nope. Not on your life. Not yet.

But I’m 51 and scrolling through TikTok is one of the things that brings me joy, makes me laugh, and makes me think.

Not your cup of tea? No problem. Don’t go there.

Me?

I’m staying.

March 5, 2022

The Weight of the World

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 9:57 am
Tags: , ,

I don’t sleep well.

I fall asleep beautifully. Fairly soon after my head hits the pillow, at night, I am asleep.

I usually suggest to Real Man that we watch some show together, to which he always responds, “You mean do I want to watch a show while you sleep?” which is basically exactly what I mean, but I like to at least pretend like I’m gonna be in the game for awhile before tapping out.

But, even though I can fall asleep in the blink of an eye, I can’t stay asleep.

I usually wake up around 2:30 to 3:00 in the morning. And the moment I’m awake, my brain starts racing. This is the time that I start trying to hash out the problems of the world. Sometimes I can distract myself by popping in my AirPods and listening to a show that I’ve watched a million times so I don’t have to pay attention to the story, but can drift away in the familiar plot.

Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t.

Benadryl knocks me out, but doesn’t keep me out. Tylenol PM is my nemesis because it somehow gives me restless legs, which, of course, does not help me sleep.

So, sleep is not my friend.

Sleep has been made easier, however, by the introduction of a weighted blanket into my life.

I originally bought one for Monkey Girl, who has her own sleepytime issues and she immediately raved about it. I heard it was good for anxiety, so I bought one for Tiny who worries about everything all the time. He loved it.

Santa decided everyone in the house needed one, and everyone was…underwhelmed.

But man, I loved mine.

When Monkey Boy decided he didn’t need his, I decided I needed two. I can’t sleep, my mind races, one should be better than two, right?

And it is.

Sorta.

We have the 15 pounders, so I am now sleeping under 30 pounds of blanket, and that is not an exaggeration.

It’s amazing. It feels like I’m wrapped up in a big, solid hug all night long.

The only problem is that I don’t like to sleep in the same position all night. I toss, I turn. But under 30 pounds of blankets, I can’t really “toss and turn” as much as struggle and fight my way from one side to the other.

When I wake up in the night, my first instinct has always been to move. Shift to a cool spot on the mattress or pillow, readjust my neck, rearrange my arms.

It’s no longer that easy.

I’m trapped in position, because I’m now under the intersection of the weighted blanket that Real Man sleeps under and the two that I sleep under, meaning I am trapped under 45 pounds of blanket. As I struggle to turn over, I make sounds reminiscent of a heavyweight lifting competition. Sometimes I just lay there and deal with the crick in my neck and the Charlie horse in my leg because I know I’ll probably hurt myself worse trying to escape.

Sometimes, I can’t breathe, and so then I decide to move, and I’m fairly sure that is the reason for the tendonitis in my left shoulder. Trying to escape the weight of the blankets so I can get comfortable and get back to sleep. Some nights, the position I find myself in means that I actually can’t lift the blankets and so I try to slide out and off of the side of the bed. When I eventually fall to the floor, I usually just sit there for a moment and then when I go to climb back up onto the bed, I’m now cold, and instead of saving myself from more torture in about an hour, I pull the blankets back and climb back under because I need to warm back up.

I’m a mess.

I should just start sleeping without the blankets. I know this.

But, at this point, I’ve damned myself with these blankets, because if I try to sleep without them, I feel like I’m going to float off the bed and I can’t fall asleep because I actually wake myself up with dreams of, not falling, but flying.

And, if we are honest, those 30 pounds of blankets are 100% keeping me safe from the Pennywise-looking demon that lurks under my bed, just waiting for a toe to escape the edges of the mattress.

So, I shall stay imprisoned…I mean snuggled and warm…in my steel cocoon for the remainder of the winter. And when summer comes, I’ll either have to learn how to sleep on the ceiling after I’ve floated away, or I’ll waste away to nothing from sweating off every pound my body has.

But at least I’ll be asleep.

February 28, 2022

Jurassic Love

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

I had to do a search on the blog to see if I had ever blogged about this, because I find it hard to believe that, in all these years, I haven’t blogged about my immense love of the Jurassic Park franchise. However, to my surprise, (and delight, so I could write this post), I have not.

Now, I need to clarify, I don’t love dinosaurs. I mean, I don’t hate dinosaurs, but I’m no Ross Geller. (If you don’t get that reference, this might not be the blog for you)

My family doesn’t love dinosaurs either. The monkeys never really had dinosaur action figures or posters or the like. In fact, long-time readers might remember this little failed adventure into the age of the dinosaurs.

What I DO love, though, is Jurassic Park. And Jurassic Park 2. And Jurassic Park 3. And Jurassic World. And Jurassic World 2. And Jurassic World 3, which is coming out soon, but I know I will love. Oh, and the Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous animated series on Netflix. You got kids who like Jurassic Park or World or Dinosaurs? Watch it with them. It’s one of the best animated series I’ve seen.

Before you ask, yes, I read the books. Michael Crichton is one of my favorite authors. Timeline, Prey and Sphere are some of my favorite novels.

I read the novel, Jurassic Park, on the back porch of the house in which I grew up. It’s one of a very few books that I remember every detail about the experience of reading. Back porch, the summer of 1991. It was about 7 months after it had been released and while it had been on my radar, who had time to read in college? I read that book for two days straight. I didn’t hang out with my friends. I barely came in to eat.

I was captivated by the idea of bringing dinosaurs to life. The idea of something being “out of it’s time” is a concept that I’ve always been intrigued by. I’m a huge Dr. Who fan and anything related to time travel, I will watch or read. Jurassic Park is a bit different, though, because no one and nothing is traveling through time, we are just bringing something that no longer exists into our time and, man, does that get my mind racing.

I saw the first Jurassic Park movie the summer it was released. My parents took my college boyfriend and I, (he was visiting from Indiana for a week or two), to see it in the theater. That first moment where they see the dinosaurs in the field made me tear up. I can remember how the theater rumbled with the distant footsteps of the t-rex and how it felt to have that sensation paired with seeing the water in the cup ripple. That distinct sound of the t-rex roar, the first time I heard it…oh man. It remains one of my favorite sounds in cinematic history.

A few years ago, we went to Universal. If you are new to the blog, you can read about that trip here. There was nothing in that park that I didn’t love, but when we walked into Jurassic Park…I can’t even begin to describe how I felt.

I know, I know…it’s a book, it’s a movie…it’s not real life. Calm yourself down, Amy. But that’s why I read books, and that’s why I watch movies. Because I love to get wrapped up in the stories. I love to imagine the “what if” behind it all. And this one is a doozy!

Friends, what if you looked out of your window one day and saw a brontosaurus eating leaves off the trees in your backyard? Or if you were on a walk with your dog and felt the ground shake in advance of a t-rex cutting off your path? We have scientists who have cloned sheep and artificial hearts keeping people alive. Why not this, too?

It’s okay if you aren’t a fan. I’m fan enough for all of us.

This new movie? It’s bringing the Jurassic Park and Jurassic World families together. Dr Grant, Dr Sattler, Dr Dearing, and Grady all together in one movie? AND DR IAN MALCOLM? Come on. How can I resist?

So, why am I sharing this? No reason, really. It’s just been rolling around in my head since I saw the preview for the new movie. And I think we all have some things that we are just super fans of. I have a friend who travels around to watch Dave Matthews in concert whenever she can. Another friend has about 10 copies of each book in the Harry Potter series in all of the different book jackets, in multiple languages. There are David Puddy-like face-painters for their sports teams, and people who cosplay their favorite anime characters, and people who tattoo their entire arm in Marvel characters.

Me? I just wanna hear that t-rex roar.

February 26, 2022

If You Could Only See

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

I had to get glasses when I was in fifth grade.

Believe it or not, I got my glasses and my retainer in the same week, so fifth grade was super awesome for me. But that’s a story for another day.

In 1983, ocular fashion was not, well…fashionable. Glasses were either big and plastic-looking or round and wire-rimmed; but not in a cute way. It’s hard to find pictures of people with glasses in the 80’s where you think, “Wow…those glasses are something!” and the “something” you are thinking of isn’t pretty awful.

By the time I got to high school, stylish glasses still hadn’t be invented, and so when I decided to reinvent my look, during the summer before 9th grade, part of that metamorphosis was leaving the glasses at home.

Did it mean I couldn’t see a darn thing on the board during class? It sure did. Did it mean that my normal klutziness was exacerbated by the fact that I couldn’t see two feet in front of me? I have the bruises and permanent scars to prove it. But did I look good? I have no idea, because my reflection in the mirror was all a big blur.

College rolled around and I finally started to suck it up a little and wear my glasses on occasion. My eyes had gotten worse from strain and so I had to admit that I needed some help if I was going to function day to day.

I went to my eye doctor and said that I was ready for contacts and he smiled and shook his head and said “Contacts aren’t for you, kid.” Something about the shape of my eye or something…they would either adhere too much or not at all. But I thought that was ridiculous. I figured everyone can wear contacts, as long as they know how to put them in and take them out, right? $300 on contacts and a trip to the infirmary to have the nurse peel it from my eyeball told me I was wrong.

So, glasses it was.

Disclaimer: My maturity about needing glasses did not extend to my wedding or my formal wedding photos. I knew what Real Man looked like and felt fairly certain he wasn’t going to swap out with some other guy as I was walking down the aisle. But our candid photos? There’s barely room for anyone else in those pics because my big, round, wire-framed glasses take up so much room.

Formal Us…No Thank You to my Glasses
Non-Formal Me…Glasses Needed So I Don’t Introduce Aunt Elsie as Aunt Ottilie

This is all a fairly common story. 75% of adults in the world need some type of vision correction. I’m not special. I know this.

However, in my family, vision is no joke. My Dad was diagnosed with Macular Degeneration in his 30’s and lost the vision in one eye fairly quickly. He’s been waiting for the other shoe to drop for years, and finally, in his late 70’s, it has begun, but thank goodness, he’s under the care of many specialists who are doing their best work to keep that man seeing everything the world has to see.

So far, I’m not showing signs of MD. The doctor knows the family history and checks every time I’m there. I’m so, so grateful for that.

But, at my last eye doctor appointment, a few weeks ago, my doctor was surprised in the rate of decline I’ve had in my vision since my last appointment, a year and a half ago. In a way, I was grateful to hear him say that. In some part of my mind, I think I thought I was imagining it or that I had just forgotten how my progressive lenses worked. But, after he checked my eyes and I explained that I can no longer play the piano, that ringing my handbell music is almost painful, and that reading has become something of a chore because of the angle I have to hold my head at to see the words, he said that what I was reporting matched with what he was seeing. My prescription has changed greatly, more than he would have anticipated, and I needed new glasses. Immediately.

Knowing there was a fix was such a relief. So I went to the little optician that is housed in my doctor’s office, where I had purchased my last pair of glasses, and handed her the prescription and told her that I needed to have new lenses made for my frames. To which she replied, “Okay, you’ll have to leave your glasses with us for about a week.”

I said “Wait, you have the frames I have on file. Can’t you just order new lenses?” To which she replied, “It doesn’t work like that here. I have to send them out to have the new lenses fitted, especially with this type of prescription.”

I said “I can’t leave my glasses with you. I can’t see without them and my last pair of glasses is now two prescriptions out of date. I won’t be able to see out of them at all.” She looked at me and said “Well, then, if you aren’t going to buy a new set of frames, I really can’t help you.”

Which immediately made me cry. Right there. In the store.

Because I truly cannot see without my glasses. But, at that point, I also couldn’t really see very much even with my glasses. And she couldn’t/wouldn’t help me.

So, I left. And wrote a post on Facebook asking people where the best place to go to get my glasses would be. Without breaking the bank. Because the lenses are already going to be so expensive because of the prescription, but frames are also usually pretty pricey. And money isn’t something that we have a lot of, over here.

People came back with a lot of suggestions, but overwhelmingly mentioned Warby Parker. So, that’s where I went. With their app, I was able to see the frames on my face and then they sent me 5 to try on, free of charge. I picked the frames I wanted, uploaded my prescription, sent back the frames I tried on, and a week later, today, in fact, my new glasses arrived.

It’s no exaggeration to tell you that my hands shook a little as I was opening the box this afternoon. And when I put the glasses on, I teared up and then felt giddy. I ran to the piano and sat down. I can see the music. I picked up a book. I can read the pages. I sat down at this computer to write this blog post and I can comfortably see the screen as I type.

Are there trade-offs? Yep. These glasses don’t have the springs that allow them to bend open a little wider to fit my face, so I’m undoubtedly going to get headaches until I can find someone to safely heat and widen the arms. They also didn’t offer the blue light protection on this prescription, so since most of our schoolwork is now on computers, there will still be some eye fatigue. And they weren’t cheap, but they wouldn’t have been cheap anywhere. I calculated that the cost of these glasses is the equivalent of me teaching 15 piano lessons.

But, in the grand scheme of things, I don’t care about any of that.

Because, for now, I can see again, friends. And that is a gift.

February 16, 2022

We’ve Been “-dled”

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

Nothing is currently dividing my friends on social media more than the recent online word game, “Wordle.”

Half of people I follow and am social media friends with post their daily scores with glee. The other half post memes about how they don’t care about your Wordle score and how people will do anything everyone else is doing just to fit in.

For those of you who have been living under a rock, (or who cultivated their social media consumption to not see the latest crazes), Wordle is a word game, where the player must guess a five-letter word. Once you enter your first guess, the game lets you know how many letters you’ve guessed correctly and in the correct place, and how many letters you’ve guessed correctly but in the wrong place. The game does this in a way that is reminiscent of the 80’s game “Mastermind,” of which I was a huge fan, by turning the letter blocks green or yellow.

We love word games and crossword puzzles in our house. I have a folder on my phone dedicated to a variety of word games. I love language and words, so word games? They’re my jam. I had a subscription to Games Magazine: World of Games for a few years, as my Dad subscribed when I was a kid, and as soon as it would arrive, Real Man and I would sit down to work on the word games.

So, I play Wordle, every day, along with Real Man and a few of the monkeys. We have a group chat where we send our scores to each other. However, we don’t stop there. Because we also play Dordle, which is Wordle times two. In Dordle, you are guessing two words, in two separate grids, and you just hope that they have letters that are similar between them so you don’t run out of guesses on word two while guessing word one.

But wait! There’s more!

Last night, Real Man texted us all with a link to Quordle. Yep…four words at a time. Amazing.

And, because we also love math, we play Nerdle, and have to correctly guess the game’s equation, including the answer. Then Real Man’s cousin posted on Facebook about Mathler, where they give you a number and you have to guess their equation to get to that number. There’s also Hard Mathler, but for that one you need parentheses, and I’m not playing that game. (Real Man kills it every time)

Those are the ones that the family plays, but when people call it a phenomenon, they aren’t kidding. I wish I had bought stock in “-dle” games at the beginning of all of this because I would be a very wealthy woman today. Or not, considering they are all free.

There is Swiftle, for fans of Taylor Swift, where you have to guess lyrics from her songs. There are also less…respectable versions of the game, which the family and I don’t play (at least not in the group chat).

So, call me a sheep. Call me a follower. It’s okay. I don’t mind. Because the other day I got the Wordle in 2 tries and felt like the Queen of the World-le.

February 14, 2022

What was I Thinking?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

As I mentioned in my previous posts, it’s been a hot second since I last blogged.

When I came back here, I had a few things to clean up on my dashboard, and while I was in there, I saw that I had about 25 drafts of posts in my draft folder.

That was a surprise. Even in the old days, I usually don’t start writing something (something blog post sized, at least) if I’m not going to have time to finish writing it. I know myself…I need to finish when I start or it’s not happening.

Yet, here was some evidence that sometimes I don’t, in fact, finish what I start, and I was intrigued. I started to open the drafts, one at a time, eager too see what was on my mind those many years ago.

Some of the posts were partially written. For example, on New Year’s Eve, 2013, I started a post called “Things I Learned From the Walking Dead.” The obvious first question is, why was I writing a blog post on New Year’s Eve? Why wasn’t I out at a party? Oh yeah…2013. 2 year old, 7 year old, 9 year old, 12 year old. Got it.

Anyway, here’s what I had so far:

On Christmas night, Real Man and I finally took everyone’s advice and  started watching The Walking Dead on Netflix.

Why we waited so long, I’ll never know, because it is awesome.

We were hooked right from episode one, and the benefit of watching on Netflix is that we could binge watch our way through, stopping only when we realized we had better get some sleep because work was beckoning in a few, short hours.

Much like the virus that has zombies overrunning the United States, The Walking Dead has infected my brain and I find myself thinking about it much more than anyone should think about any television show.

Some of my ponderings are storyline related, but sometimes, I find myself thinking about what I have learned by watching the show.

Because the lessons are vast.

1.  If it seems like a zombie apocalypse is imminent, I am getting myself to the ENT and having some high-powered hearing aids made, because, apparently, zombies are sneaky squirrels.

People will be having a conversation right in the middle of the street and then, BAM, zombie right behind them.

See, I always thought that zombies walked around consistently making “Uuuuuuuuggggghhhhh” and “Aaaaaaaaahhhhhhh” noises, but apparently, that was a misconception.

Occasionally they will let out a sound or two, particularly when they are running or feasting on a particularly tasty human, but for the most part, they shuffle quietly about the town, minding their own business, until some sound catches their attention.

2.  I need to create a stockpile of antibiotics.

Who knew there were so many ways to get hurt in a post-apocalyptic world?

We definitely need some more first aid kits, but those first aid kits aren’t going to do us a world of good if we don’t have antibiotics to fight infection, and with my accident-prone daughter, we are going to need them.

3.  If I’m not right next to Real Man when the zombie apocalypse begins, I really shouldn’t just assume that he’s dead until I see his body or his zombified corpse stumbling toward me.

Because, people, bad things happen when you assume your spouse is dead in the apocalypse.

Okay, so, I think I stand by that post, except for the fact that I stopped watching about three seasons ago. I loved it while I loved it, but at some point, I found I couldn’t stay awake any more when it was on. But, I’ll carry those lessons with me, just in case.

Some posts were less well formed, like “Random Thoughts” on August 13, 2012. For that post, all I had written was “Alec Baldwin and George Carlin.”

Um…what?

Most were just titles, though, and I am left wondering what I was planning on saying in them.

On August 24, 2011, I titled a post “Me and My iPad…A Love Story” and then I didn’t write anything. What was that about? I’m assuming that is when I first got an iPad and I used it solely for myself. Before the monkeys got their grubby little paws on it and filled it with kid games and took up all my memory so even my Kindle and Nook apps couldn’t hold any ebooks.

Ahhh…those were the days.

I had to chuckle at a post titled “Anniversary” which was aptly posted on October 3, 2011; our 13th anniversary. All I had written for that post was “In case you’ve forgotten…” Perhaps a reminder for Real Man? (Who, in fairness, has NEVER forgotten anything since we were 16 years old and first met) Perhaps a reminder for myself???

But, what were my “Random Thoughts” on August 13, 2012? And who was “Plotting” what on December 20, 2010? On June 30, 2011, what exactly was the “Conversation with My Boy?” and which boy was it? (We’ve got some choices over here.) Why was I “Deconstructing Mother’s Day?” on May 9, 2011?

The drafts folder was a wonderful glimpse at my episodes of “bloggus interruptus.”

Over all the years of the blog, I’ve shared more of my life than is probably normal, and yet, I’m completely consumed with wondering what the intentions of those posts were. I was going to delete them all, but decided it’s more fun to keep them. Because maybe one of these days, something will happen here that I want to blog about and “Stick a Fork in Me…I’m Done” will be the perfect title for that post.

February 12, 2022

It’s Not the Growing Up…It’s the Leaving

Filed under: Uncategorized — Amy @ 6:00 am

My monkeys are all on the cusp of new ages. February brings a change of age for all of them, and even though the big joke in our house is “Wanna see Mom cry? Talk about us growing up and leaving!” the “growing up” part is actually…well…growing on me.

Let me brag a little first, and then I’ll get to the point.

This month will see Monkey Girl turn 21 and in the beginning of the second half of her junior year in college. She’s almost done with her nursing program, working at a physical rehab facility and doing the job she was born to do. She’s the president of her sorority, she has good friends, and she’s happy. Not all the time, because she’s human, but she’s figured out how to “adult” and she’s doing pretty well at it.

Next week, Monkey Boy turns 18. We just had his Senior Night for his high school hockey team and he plays in his last high school games ever over the next week. He has a job and has applied to colleges and is making decisions that will follow him into adulthood. He has good, solid friends. He’s mature. He’s responsible. He’s growing into the man that I had always hoped that he would.

As of this blog post, Baby Monkey is now 16. He gets his permit next week and will start driving. Baby Monkey is 16. I needed to write it again because it’s still hard for me to grasp. The kid who made daily costumes for himself out of construction paper is 16. But while he’s no longer parading around Target in a Batman costume, he still remains true to himself. He never does something to follow the crowd. My quiet, sweet, hilarious boy has found his friends and is living his life, as always, on his terms.

And by the end of this month, Tiny will be 11. He wasn’t even a twinkle in my eye when I started this blog, and yet, here we are. Next year he will be in middle school, changing classes, using a locker, and changing for gym. He’s still the most sensitive of the monkeys, but man oh man, is this kid a love. He never wants to see someone with hurt feelings, tries to be kind whenever he can, and makes me want to wrap him in bubble wrap to protect him from a world that has shown him, on more than one occasion, that kindness isn’t always returned.

I used to really struggle with the monkeys getting older. I missed having babies in the house. Missed the innocence. Missed the firsts and dreaded the lasts. Don’t get me wrong, I’m still not a big fan of the lasts, but I’m realizing that with lasts comes a different kind of firsts. Last day of high school leads to the first day of college or the first day of whatever path your child chooses to take. Last night in a dorm room leads to the first night in a new apartment. Last time I drive them somewhere leads to the first time they drive there all by themselves.

But there’s something else. And it’s something that is so good and so unexpected for me. And that is how much I enjoy hanging out with these monkeys as almost grown-ups. We have real conversations about things that don’t include cartoon characters or silly songs. It turns out, we all have the same sarcastic sense of humor, and we laugh together…a lot. We talk about world events, the books they are reading for school, sports. We have group text chats. They have different perspectives on some things than I do and I love hearing them explain how and why they came to their conclusions. I really like the people they have become.

Oh, and…

WE DON’T HAVE TO ACCOMPANY THEM TO THE BATHROOM.

Listen, I do sometimes long for those little faces, snuggling those little bodies, and hearing those little voices. But I’ve made my peace with the growing up because there’s joy to be found in this space, too.

The leaving? That’s one I’m still coming to terms with and think it will be awhile before I get there. I don’t love not seeing Monkey Girl for months at a time, and I’m not looking forward to Monkey Boy leaving in the fall. Even Monkey in the Middle is spending more time out of the house with marching band and jazz band and pit band and movies with his friends, etc, and I miss having him around. I miss them when they go away. A lot. I know, I know…it means I did my job and gave them wings to soar and blah blah blah blah blah, but I don’t like it.

Like I said, I’m not there yet with the leaving. And having Tiny means they aren’t all going right away anyhow.

But the growing up? It’s not so bad.

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