Monday, November 23, 2009

What a novel idea

So Erin and I are going to Phoenix to visit my mom for Christmas, and it's going to cost alot to get there. Therefore, we have decided not to buy presents for each other, and instead we made a deal to each write a novel by Christmas day. November is actually National Novel Writing Month, but we decided a late start was better than no start.

So today I began outlining. I am having my students write a historical fiction piece as a culmination of our reading and writing instruction this year, so I figured that I would begin with the same genre. I am basically going to follow the model I will be teaching them later this year, only in greater depth. They will write short stories but mine will be longer.

So here's the gist so far: The story surrounds the Watermelon War in Panama City, 1856. This real event will be used to frame the narrative.

Angel de Soto is the son of a recently freed slave in Colon, Panama. He and his father operate Colon's first non-railroad owned printing press. They are somewhat at odds w/ the Railroad administrator due to being competitors w/ the company paper. Angel believes that at the other end of the line, blacks are respected and treated as equals. Unhappy with his father's passivity concerning the family business and their racist treatment, Angel hops the train to go to Panama City to see for himself how things are on the other side.

He gets caught up in the riot that occurs, and comes to realize that racism is not always where you expect to find it, nor is charity.

Anyway, I fully expect to have it done by Christmas. That being said, I am not too concerned with it being good. I just want to do it.

Not much else to say. Here are a few more pics:






Sunday, October 18, 2009

Leaf-peeping in the neighborhood near the river

Erin, Nick and I went for a walk today, and this is what we saw.



Monday, October 05, 2009

Fall in Idaho

Not much to say lately... just some more pictures from the last month or so.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

More Camera Fun

Erin, Nick and I went out for burgers and soft-serve at the Fanci-Freeze this evening. It was a beautiful night, so on the way home we stopped off and walked along the greenbelt next to the river to see if there was anything interesting to photograph. Here a few of the pics we took, along with some others from this week. I'm actually planning on reading the directions that came with the camera tonight, so hopefully the quality will improve. One of the nice things about this camera is that it catches details you don't notice when taking the picture. For example, the eyes on the spider pic are pretty cool I think.







Tuesday, September 01, 2009

My town can beat up your town

OK, maybe not. Actually, everyone here is so damned nice I doubt it would ever come to physical blows.

In any case, if I had it to do over again, I'd have moved here to Boise straight from Lubbock and by-passed the 9 years in Vegas (Boise was on the table before we even left Texas).

I really wish all of my friends in Texas would come here for a visit, because it so much like Austin here that it's uncanny. A huge music scene, a committed (and practical)activist community, generally liberal political bent, etc. Plus, within an hour's drive there are so many wild places to explore. AND, Boise has the benefit of NOT being in Texas. Maybe after Texas Secedes, you can come for a visit and decide to move here.

I haven't posted in awhile because there have been so many little things that have made me happy and that I've wanted to brag on that I feared I'd get on everyone's nerves. So instead of focusing on that stuff, I am going to focus on the new camera we recently bought. Erin and I have wanted a digital SLR for years now, and we finally got one. I don't know much yet about good photography, but the camera makes up for my deficiencies, and I am going to learn, either through as community group or a class. Anyway, here are a few photos I took today; the first batch from our brand-new Canon! :)











And this last one was taken by Nick. Pretty good for the first time out, I'd say!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

You've been... Christmas'd

I was cleaning up links in my browser when I came across this site, INSTRUCTABLES, which I used for science club ideas a few years ago. As I was browsing all the neat projects, I came across the coolest gun ever:



I do believe I will be building one of these with my class this year.

Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Mah-wedge, Sweet Mah-wedge

So E and I have been married eight years today.

DAAAANG!

It's good to be me.

In other news this week...

- Saw excellent film called "Moon" at Flicks, the Indie theater downtown (think Alamo theater, but a little smaller)

- Took old computers and electronics to be recycled, then hit the Fly Shop to buy some grasshopper patterns

- Went to Saturday market, and it was an actual market w/ lots of locally produced veggies, art and crafts. Bought a neat spoon. And some dill cheese curds

- Ate BBQ and did some fishing on Grimes Creek and Mores creek.
Score: Tyson 2, fish 0

- Went to UU church on Sunday: sermon was on how "Battlestar Galactica" relates to improving our own lives

- Visited DK Nature Center downtown: full of trout and birds, and is free

- Finally found an excellent pizza joint w/ thin crispy-crust pizzas at "Protos", again downtown

- More milkshakes from Boise Fry Company

- Benefits orientation w/ school district

That's about it.

Monday, July 20, 2009

I wonder what FOX news has to say about it

Wow...

We just got our cable hooked up, and I stumbled across the most mind blowing movie. Really unbelievable.

Prom Night in Mississippi.


It's a documentary. No BS, real life. Last year.

It's about the town of Charleston, Mississippi, which finally desegregated prom last year.

Just watch it if you can. And check out the link.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Why my parents should get out there and vote

Ah, Arizona... only you can make Nevada look smart.



"If you took all the fools out of the legislature, it wouldn't be a representative body."
--Molly Ivins

pretty much sums things up.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Something reassuring for my mom

OK, this is for you mom. I know you're worried about the trip over the dam, but you can't tell how high it is at all. To see for yourself, when you are done reading this post, click on the Google street view of the trip over Hoover Dam and it will open up a top-down view of the trip for you. Then, click on the words "street view" as shown in this picture circled in red (not in the picture, but once you click the link above):



It will show you step by step what the trip over the dam looks like.

You can look left or right by clicking on arrows in the navigation arrows, shown in the picture below:



and you can go forward or backward along the road by clicking the little arrow links on the yellow line, as seen in the next picture:




It's quit a bit shorter than going the other. way.

Isn't the Internet amazing?

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Boy-see, not Boy-zee



Sweeeet....

I was offered the job, and I am taking it. We're headed to Idaho!
By the way, the picture above? It was taken in the middle of the city!

Saturday, June 06, 2009

My subconscious has a sense of humor

So I didn't get hired in Kalispell. It was very disappointing, but I guess it wasn't meant to be. I have apps out at 6 other schools in that area, plus 2 in Idaho and 1 in Colorado, and Erin has an offer in Colorado, so we will decide by Wednesday where we are going.

Last night I had a dream that I went to a McDonalds for french fries (don't ask me why) and I wound up taking a job there. It wasn't too funny in the dream, but when I woke up it kind of cracked me up.

So keep your fingers crossed for us. Colorado would by no means be bad, it's just farther down our list; I just hope we hear from one of the schools in Montana or Idaho before we sign papers for Colorado. It would be a bummer to get an offer there after we were committed to somewhere else.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Who I've been hanging out with







Another opportunity presented itself today for me to get nose-to-nose with a hummingbird. We were eating dinner on the porch, and I noticed that a hummingbird at the feeder appeared to be eating an ant. Only he wasn't eating it. It was eating him. The ant (a big sucker) had bitten the bird's tongue, and the bird couldn't get it off. We watched the bird struggle with it for a few minutes before we realized it was stuck, then Sara went in and go a paper towel, grabbed the bird, and then Jan plucked the ant off. The bird was exhausted and sat in Sara's hand a few minutes, before buzzing to the feeder. I got a good closeup, but it is a little dark. Then we went and took pics of the neighbor's baby foal Bella. Oh yeah, I got some good geese shots too. I miss living where there's more than just spiders and rattle snakes.


Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Where's Waldo

I've have been quite busy since my last post. I had to basically get all my end of year work like grading and packing the classroom up done by last Friday, so I was up at school late, and I had 2 doctors appointments last week as well. But I am happy to say I got everything at school done, and so I never have to go back there again!

Since Thursday, I have been on a job-finding mission. I had phone interviews with Boise and Missoula. I flew to Salt Lake on Saturday and rented a car because driving is painful with my neck problems, and the flight was cheap. I drove from there to Idaho Falls for my interview yesterday, and then I headed up here to Missoula, a good six hour drive.
Today as I was headed out the door to an interview in Kalispell (a 3 hour drive), I noticed that the tires on my rental were bald down to the steel wires. Thankfully our friends Jan and Sarah, who I am staying with, loaned me their gi-normous truck and I made it to my interview on time. I think it went well, and I should be hearing back from them by Friday.
So tomorrow I have to take the rental to Firestone to replace the tires. I was expecting a hard time from the rental company, but they have been great so far. Tomorrow after I get the tires replaced I am going to drop three apps off in Florence, Stevensville and Hamilton, all tiny towns within 60 miles of Missoula. Then on Thursday I have a phone interview with Eagle, Colorado. Then I am headed back to Salt Lake, to fly home Friday afternoon. I have been so busy I haven't even had time to go fishing! (OK, that's a lie. I brought my fly rod as a carry-on, but I have had little time to fish, and the rivers are all still blown out from the run-off, so it's practically like not fishing at all, considering where I am...)
If all goes well we should know by this weekend where we are moving. As of this moment, I am pulling for Kalispell, but a lot can change in the next few days. I'll keep you posted.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Rivers, part one

People mark the progress of their lives in many ways. We all share common measures, like the rites of passage our children go through, or the intimate relationships we’ve had. But every one of us also has more personal measures. Maybe it’s the music we loved, or different hairstyles we sported, or the moments we ate new things for the first time. An important one for me is rivers.

It’s no surprise that water has marked the canvas of the best moments in my life story. According to Ed, the old Vietnam vet who I briefly lived next to after my house burned down, I am triple Pisces. A fish’s fish, with fishy temperaments. Ed had a hole the size of a softball in the middle of his back, and was prone to bad fits of PTSD. Naturally, I didn’t question his reading, even if I did find it a little silly.

I don’t buy into astrology, but if I did, it would make perfect sense that many my most peaceful and profound moments happened in or near the water.

Up until I moved to Vegas, I always lived somewhere wet. Lubbock was no rain forest, but most years it rained often enough to keep the lakes from drying up, and the thunderstorms that would roll in in the Spring would sometimes dump several inches of rain. Before Lubbock, I had lived my whole life in Colorado, within walking distance of streams and lakes and raging rivers.

Today, I was sitting outside watching my class play soccer on the artificial turf. It wasn’t too hot, a pleasant surprise for Las Vegas at the end of May. I was listening to an 80’s playlist, daydreaming about where we were might move, fantasizing about catching fish. At that moment, I was struck with a sense of euphoric recall. I remembered a time in first or second grade, when my best friend Jodi and I were wading in the Snake River, which wound its way through our back yard. We had caught some frogs, and I could feel my frog’s cold wet little body in the palm of my hand. I could feel the tight constriction of my rolled-up pant legs on my calves, and the numbing cold of the water which leached into them. The water splashed up with our every step as it curled lazily past us, on down river.

Next my mind jumped to a scene, maybe in the fifth sixth grade. My mom, my step-dad Bob, our dog Hoss and I were eating a picnic lunch somewhere next to Clear Creek, just outside of Georgetown. We had meat and cheese sandwiches and Pepsi for lunch. I was standing in the water looking back at my parents, as Hoss ran up and down the riverbank, occasionally dodging into the willows which were swaying lazily back and forth in a slight breeze. I can still clearly see Bob's bushy seventies-style beard, and my mom's delicate form as she stood before the willows, a Pepsi in hand, the mountains and blue sky in the background making a perfect picture frame.

Fast forward to high school. There was the time we all took turns jumping from the cliff into Bear Creek, swollen high and dangerous with Spring run-off. So cold it numbed you completely in the time it took to cross the twenty feet to the other side. So small, the hole you jumped into was at best 3 feet wide and 2 feet long, carved out by a small waterfall. It was only ever deep enough in the Spring, when the icy cold melt water would swell the pocket to maybe six or seven feet deep. You had to land just right in the spray of the waterfall without getting sucked down by the undertow. You'd plunge in, emerge, lips purple, extremities numb... and then you'd paddle furiously against the back current, lest it sweep you into the rocks beneath the falls. Then you'd make it to the shallow water, crawl out and back up the cliff, soaking in every little ray of sunshine as if your life depended on it. And in a way, it did. It’s amazing no one died.

Then there was the time we waded across the wild waters of Clear Creek, just upstream from the Central City turn-off. Spring again, waves raging like the surf, the water the same color blue as the glass insulators we used to find on ancient telegraph poles near Montezuma. We stupidly forged the river, getting swept downstream a hundred yards before reaching the other shore, too ignorant to know the danger we narrowly avoided. Someone had drowned in the same spot a week later. We didn’t know though, and we wouldn’t have cared. We were hunting for a cave, and instead found a little lean-to at the top of the ridge. On our way back down, someone was taking pot-shots at us from across the canyon. The gunshots echoed off the canyon walls, and rock exploded above our heads.

Spring again, rafting down the South Platt in a leaking Sevlor raft. Four of us in a two-man boat, and one driving the road keeping pace. We switched out drivers every mile or so, emptying the raft of water and inflating it again for the next stretch. Somewhere around mile five, we had to swing wide to the right to avoid a waterfall, and Dave, the weak link in our bunch, over-compensated. We made it past the waterfall, but got spun around backward. In a perfect world we would have gone far right, making safely under the tip of a fallen tree, which was above the water by a narrow margin. Instead, we were swept against the tree, hitting it broadside, our leaking raft no match for the current. It folded, and got sucked under the tree by the wicked current. The others managed to bail out to safety, and were clinging to the tree, but not me. I was on the upstream side of the raft, and it was between me and the tree. I couldn’t grab hold. The river sucked me under right behind the raft. I hit my head on a protruding branch, got a nasty cut, and for a brief moment I thought that my luck had run out. I was pulled under and dragged maybe fifty feet downstream by the undercurrent, but then, as if by magic, the current released me. I popped to the surface like a cork, blood running down my face in rivulets, my friends hooting and hollering from the bank as I dragged myself ashore. Never before or since had I felt so alive, nor so invincible.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Facebook Top 5

Top five reasons I should kill myself:

1. I am tired of hurting.
2. Hardly anyone would care, not really.
3. Life is just not fair, and I can't get over that.
4. I eventually hurt everyone I love.
5. That would show them.

Don't worry, I'm not actually suicidal. I just had a difficult day today. I was thinking about how when you're feeling shitty, it sometimes seems as though the feelings will never change. I was thinking, I can understand how someone could want to end things. Why someone would want to end things. But I don't. Want to end things, that is. I know that feelings are transient, and to use an AA slogan, "This too shall pass."

I was thinking about how in the last few days I have sent friend requests to five people on Facebook, all of whom I was extremely close to at one time, and none of them have responded. A few of them I know for a fact were hurt by something I did or failed to do, and a few of them I just lost contact with. But the fact that I can hardly find anyone from my past, and that most of the few I have found are not interested in talking to me, has kind of got me down.

So as I was driving home, I was thinking about this recurring theme in my life, being on the outside looking in. Not belonging. Suffering the kind of social status where my friendships were always peripheral. The kind where I was always the caller, and never the called. Where I wasn't missed when I didn't show up, and I wasn't included unless there was something I had that was needed. The sort where no one would care when I was gone.

But it wasn't always that way. For most of my life I've swung like a pendulum between two social worlds, the lonely and empty one above, and one in which I was at the center of things. Close friends, late nights laughing and having fun, intense love, both romantic and platonic.

But those good times now seem like a dream. And the people from them, the ones I loved and who loved me, simply disappeared. It's been years, five at least, since my social life swung back toward empty. So now I am seeking connections to the past, trying to reconnect, to recapture a little of the good things that were, and I'm turning up empty handed. It's kind of a bummer.

So now I'm wondering, should I be waiting for the other shoe to drop? How did I fuck things up so badly with the other people who used to love me that they won't talk to me ten years later? Am I doomed to do the same thing to those in my life today?

God, I hope not. If we are friends, be my friend and don't let me alienate you; I seem to do it without realizing before it's too late.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Boners Ahoy!!

How can one guy be so funny? He just makes my day over and over again.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

A Chair Full O' Sass

Things have gone from annoying to unbearable at work in the last few days, but for now I'll save the details for another post when I have the energy to spew it all out.
In the mean time, I put forth the proposition that nothing is so bad that it can't be improved at least a little by kittens. For example,











See? Now don't you feel better?

Monday, April 20, 2009

Hannity and the rational voices of dissent

I am finally conceding that I was wrong. Democrats are evil. Teabaggers are being taxed without representation. Obama is a fascist... And above all, Democrats want nothing more than to destroy America. I know this is true, because of the following quote I heard tonight on Fox News. I quote...
"The Left admits that they are just using the economic crisis as an excuse to go wild raising taxes, increase federal spending and enslaving America's children!"
I simply can't believe I fell for it.
Billyfishes of America, you were right all along!

Sunday, April 12, 2009

What's been up

Wow, lots has gone on since my last post.

I turned in notice on Friday, right before the break. I'm not signing on for next year. This has been years in the coming, and I just can't take working in this environment anymore. I'll spare you all the details (you can look back over 3 years of blog posts to see my discontent) and just leave it at this: I'll be employed elsewhere next year.

So, since my last post, Nick went to visit his mom in New Zealand. He was gone for two weeks, and had a good time do all kinds of fun New Zealand-ish stuff.

Also, Erin and I went to Montana to visit our friends Jan and Sarah, and to drop off resumes and interview with a few School districts. We have decided that we're going to do whatever we can to get out of Vegas this summer, and Montana is where we want to go. We would like to wind up in Missoula, but the school district in Helena was awesome, and the principal in Troy is the kind of guy I'd like to work for. Overall, Montana turned out to be a lot more progressive than we expected, which was fantastic, and we're really hoping to get job offers in the next few weeks. Anything will be an improvement for me. I think the stress of my sucky job is a huge part of what's been ailing me for the last couple of years. I realized over the last few weeks that I have been genuinely unhappy lately, and my job is the main thing making life that way. I need a change.

So anyway, we drove 990 miles nearly straight north on highway 93, which runs right by our house, 100 feet or so away from our front door. We diverted twice in order to save about 60 miles, and to get the chance to drive through some desolate, but pretty, landscape.
After a night in our van and 2 in Missoula with our friends, we drove the 200 or so more miles to Troy.
Troy was an interesting place. A town of great poverty set in a beautiful river valley. The school is 70% free/reduced lunch, which is a demographic that tells a lot. Even the worst of our inner city schools doesn't have that high a number, and the poverty is easy to see in the condition of the buildings and the prices at restaurants and stores. On the bright side, the schools seemed quite progressive, and the small-town feel of the place would be a welcome change. Also, it would do us some good to be able to work in a community like Troy, as you don't really get the same kind of opportunity to combat poverty in a city school setting. AND the sheriffs' calls section in the local paper are hilarious.
After our interviews, we headed to the Kootenai Falls, at the suggestion of the elementary principal. He told us we'd love it, and he was right. It is the canyon that the River Wild final scenes were shot in, and it didn't disappoint. Here's a picture of Erin and one of me:





The pictures don't do the place justice, but they can give you an idea.
Shortly after these two pics were taken, I took a mis-step and sprained my ankle. I've never sprained my ankle before, and goddammit, it hurt. Not only that, but we were out on the cliffs of the falls, so I basically had to crawl out of there to the path, then hop-hobble through the forest and back to the car. It was probably 1/2 mile, but it seemed like much farther. It wasn't pleasant, as you can see from this picture Erin took of me on the steps of the bridge we had to cross to get back over the traintracks to the car:



So we did make it back o the van, and by the time we got there, my foot was swollen pretty bad:



In the next town, Libby, Erin ran in to get some frozen peas and an Ace bandage. I managed to keep my foot wrapped and elevated for the next 4 hours as we drove back to Missoula, via Kallispell.



Anyway, for the rest of the trip I hobbled around on a cane, including when we interviewed in Helena the next day (the human resources director was sympathetic). Thursday we packed up and headed south, staying in Salt Lake that night and getting home Friday.
Nick came home yesterday (after 24 hours of flight and plane changes) and we have just been taking it easy in preparation for getting back to school tomorrow.
So that's what we've been up to. Hopefully we'll have job offers within a few weeks, though Helena said hiring could stretch on into mid to late May. We're just playing it by ear at the moment, not counting our chickens before they hatch, but hoping none the less that they hatch soon (and somewhere in Montana).

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

snailing your latte

That's right. You've all got it coming.

IN the mean time, watch this:

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

If you live in Texas

and give a shit about the education of your children, please read this blog:

http://skepchick.org/blog/?p=6476re

and take a few minutes to actually do something political by contacting a school board member. What's about to happen there is of momentous importance.

Friday, March 13, 2009

ARGHH! Ohmygod.. oh my god... wait, oh, ok... it's just birds

I really thought that Rock of Love Bus and Tool Academy were about as far down as we could sink in our pop culture, but I was wrong wrong wrong.

Behold, Hot girls in Scary Places on E! Entertainment network... No, I am not making this up.

What really scares me is to think about what could possibly suck more, because sooner or later (probably sooner) somebody's going to figure it out and put it on television.

And they're "competing" for $10,000. Jesus.

Monday, March 09, 2009

It's the little things

When I take the time to notice, I realize I enjoy and am amazed by lots of stuff.
For example, I received a mass-email yesterday, the gist of which I'll repeat here:

It is physically impossible to rotate your left ankle in a clock-wise motion while simultaneously tracing the number "6" in the air with your left index finger.

Friggin' Dang! Give it a try.

The brain is a neat thing. Or how about this:
Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at an Elingsh uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer
in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, olny taht the frist and
lsat ltteres are at the rghit pcleas. The rset can be a toatl mses
and you can sitll raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae we do
not raed ervey lteter by ilstef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

How does our brain do that? It makes me want to learn more about language acquisition and brain function.

Little anomalies like these that go against what we would intellectually take for granted help to keep me on my toes and interested in things. Though trivial, the innumerable small surprises I come across in my daily life help to keep me excited about the mysteries I have yet to uncover. They remind me that no matter how old I get, I'll never know everything, and that's comforting.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Midnight rambling

I had strep throat this week.  It sucked, because I also just sent out progress reports and my little 5th graders have gone crazy, and the resulting drop in grades has left me with several parent conferences that need attending to.  And it's the rare parent who asks "what can I do to help my kid get their shit together," instead of saying "you need to be doing more to help them be successful."  I have to admit that I do actually have many parents who are supportive and who I just love. But the few who inevitably go into hysterics and start talking about how much they spend, and blah blah blah, really test my patience.  I am NOT very diplomatic when I'm sick.  In fact, I get kind of bitchy, and have little patience for emotional loonies, especially when the simple truth is that I take incredibly good care of their kids and if they'd put a little effort into actually parenting their children instead of trying to make them happy all the time, the world would literally change.

Did I mention that the filter between my brain and my mouth doesn't work well when I am sick?

I am about to start back to school for my doctorate on Monday.  I took a semester off because of my health issues, but I am as ready as I'll ever be to get back at it.

Nick made his HS swimteam, and his coach loves him.  He's leaps and bounds ahead of the other freshmen, and he likes his teammates. I think the exercise is making him feel better too, which is great.  He's a really good swimmer, and I'm really happy for him.

Erin is hopelessly addicted to Civ IV.  Seriously, she played it for over 5 hours today.  She gets all snitty when you try to talk to her while she's playing.  She's as bad about Civ as I was about poker at my worst.  Someone should do an intervention.

We just finished watching Rome again, and if you've never seen it, you should; it's awesome.

Our kittens have doubled in size, and are too cute.  There are a few pics at the bottom of the post.

Gran Torino is a great movie.  Clint is The Man.

I hit 20 year sober two weeks ago.  I'll be 38 two weeks from now.

No one I hung out with in HS or in college is on Facebook.  I keep trying to find something I like about Facebook, but I can't.  Like the movie History of Violence, Facebook is a stupid piece of crap, and I am right about this despite  the 99 percent of you who think Facebook (and History of Violence) is awesome. It's not.  You all have been victims of clever marketing and mob mentality if you believe something so incredibly mediocre and clunky is actually cool. 

I know I'm at least a litttle hypocritical about the Facebook thing because I still occasionally use it, but for me it's kind of like re-trying foods I don't like; every so often I try things again just to confirm that they still   suck.

 And finally, I was watching Armageddon tonight (I can't believe that with 500 plus channels this is what I have to settle with) and there was a character who looked so familiar I had to look him up because I thought he looks just like Hurley from Lost.  It turns out it's not him, but check out how much alike they look!

And here are the kittens.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Fifteen

Nick turns 15 today.
Fif-teen!
We're taking him out to the Shark Reef at Mandalay Bay, then one of his fav restaurants, Bucca Di Beppo, for dinner, followed by getting comfy on the couch and watching last night's episode of Heroes.
Fifteen. Jesus.
Life starts out so slow, like you'll never grow old, and the next thing you know it's racing by like telephone poles from the window of a train.
I'm kind of dumbstruck at the moment, but happy... as well as excited for Nick's youth and the possibilities for his future.
Happy birthday Boy!@

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Maybe She read my Blog?








About an hour after my last post, Erin noticed that the cat had her kittens. It's funny, because we set up three possible nesting sights for her in our 10 x 12 spare room; one in the cleaned out closet, one in a specially constructed box, and one in a converted cat-carrier... and she decided that she must have her kittens in my best (and most expensive) suitcase, which I bought for my trip to Switzerland a few summers ago. Normally, I'd never spend so much money on something functional I could get at Target for around $30, but this is truly the best suitcase out there, especially for the kind of travel I was doing (and hope to do again).
Anyway, it was balanced haphazardly on top of some old computer gear in the corner near the bookcase, as we had cleared out the closet, expecting the kitty to have her babies in there, like a normal cat. I don't know what we were thinking.
Friggin' cats...