last day

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It's the last day of summer vacation, and again this year Callum and I followed our annual tradition of a late-season boat ride.   We first did this five summers ago, on Neel's first day of work at his present job, and we've done it every year since.  And should you ask:  no he was not terribly disappointed to not be with us.  Neel + boats = barfy. 

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This was the boat we took last year.  We went with friends on that trip and again this year, but instead of the more sedate Flipper you see here, we took the Rocket-tour of the coast line. 

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Past the resort area...

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to the quieter, Northern beaches where we usually park our towels and chairs.  Here we stumbled on some dolphin-y friends.

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Up to a requisite coastal lighthouse (or two) before heading out to sea.  It was a rocking fast and fun ride, and I'm always reminded of how much fun it is to play at being tourist in our own town.  I have to admit to being just the tiniest bit smug when I hear people talking about heading home in a day or two.  School may start tomorrow, but this ocean is always here for us.

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donations now being accepted

Callum, who has spent a quantity of time at work with me this week (what with opening faculty meetings and school starting and all), suggests that I need a Wii for my office.  I can't disagree.  Proposals including flat screen tvs will also be considered.

I know I haven't been around much (see above sentence about opening faculty meetings and school starting), and now Callum and I both have ear infections (!), but I'm guessing things will even out pretty soon.  Two worlds colliding, this end of summer vacation time.  It makes me woozy.

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for Ama...

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When my mom was here, we were stunned to find an amazing deal on some roasters at Williams Sonoma.  This one, which is bigger than 9X13, was only $29.99, down from something like $135.  My mom got a smaller one, and hers was only $24.99.

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I put it into action right away, with our favorite macaroni and cheese.  Neel, of course, ate the leftovers without telling me.

Also...
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After she left, we put some new plants in our front porch planters.  We've had trouble with these planters this year.  I think we've killed three different things this spring and summer, but I have high hopes for the sweet potato vines.  These vines are all over this area and I love them.  Such a bright, almost neon green.   I really like they way they pop against the purple door and gray house.  These are babies, but the guy at the garden center said they'd trail like crazy, down the steps through the yard and across the street.

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My mom hadn't seen them before, and their shocking chartreuse-ness is her favorite color, so I said I'd send pictures.  Are we all caught up now?

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how many martini shakers does one family need?


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Seven, perhaps?  One for every day of the week?

I know that I talked only briefly about my recent palm reading.  You know, it was fun, blah, blah, blah.  But sometimes you get told some things, and you need awhile to sit with the idea to really get to know it and its place in your life.  For example:  three boys.  I'm still working my way around that one.

So here's what Erin said:  You like having a lot of things around you.  You didn't have much when you were younger, so it's reassuring.  And I nodded, (sagely, I'm sure,) accepting one part of what she said, but dismissing the rest.  Because she's right.  I do like having my things around me.  I've been thinking a lot about abundance lately.  In fact, a post about abundance has been kicking around in my mind since last winter when I wanted to knit dozens of scarves, a scarf for every need.  I wanted a wall full of scarves that I could go to and pick from based on any present whim.  An abundance of scarves.

I know this about me.  I know it.  Nothing pleases me more than rows of gleaming glasses and stemware.  Fabric to choose from, yarn to choose from, I want it all.  I want our wine cabinet to be fully stocked (it never is).  Six dinner napkins isn't enough, we need twelve on hand.  I feel this way about everything from dinner ware to aprons to deodorant.   Every year we look at the wood pile and I announce, "We'll need to order wood this year."  And Neel says, "Oh no, we have plenty."  But it looks so bare...There's something so satisfying about a fully stocked woodpile.   Surely we need more.  Still, every year we have plenty. 

I know this about me.  This little character flaw of mine.  I'm so...needy.  I've always just thought it was me, my nature, who I was.  I didn't relate it to anything other than messy, excessive me.  Until Erin and my palm.  The part of what she said that I dismissed, quite obviously, was that about not having much as a child.  Ridiculous!  This palm reading stuff is silly hocus pocus.  Sure she gets parts right, but I can't expect everything to be right on target.  Because I had a golden childhood.  I never wanted for anything.  Christmas and birthdays were orgies of love and gift giving.  I had committed parents, generous grandparents, and I never felt a lack of love or things. 

Still, Erin's comment niggled away at me.  The tiniest of pebbles in my shoe.  The kind that you shake out, but never see.  Shoe back on, another step and there it is again.  But then.  Then.  A small, but significant memory took roost.  It slid across my mind, flimstripped across the backs of my eyes, and I thought, "Okay. that's it.  Now I get it."  I don't know how old I was.  Junior high or high school, maybe.  I remember summer.  And the blue of the big rag rug my mom had bought at Pier One spread across the living room floor.  We had some people over for dinner, and I must have had a friend too.  I don't know how many people there were, but there weren't enough dining room chairs for us at the table.  My friend and I sat in the living room.  I think I said something about not wanting to eat with the grownups, but I was embarrassed. Later, back at Pier One, as my parents debated new dining room chairs, I asked how many were we planning on getting.  Four.  I was dismayed.  Thinking, we still can't all sit at the table.   And then somewhere among the paper umbrellas and inexpensive dishes, I realized, oh but we're adding four.  There will be enough!  How many more little moments were there like that?  Little events that had nothing to do with anything?  How many little things comprised to create this need in me?

The thing is, all this stuff, this abundance, weighs on me.  Warring, in equal measure, is my need for reassurance in things with my need for reassurance in simplicity.  Honestly, though?  I want rid of it.  Ultimately in my disordered mind, simplicity wins out.  I have beautiful things.  Lovely things.  My family, who knows me well and loves me much, gives me wonderful things.  The bowl from Neel, the vase from my dad, the lotus candle holders from my mom.  All heavy with meaning, tipped in sentimentality... they are wonderful things.  I make room for it all.  Shoving other wonderful things aside for new wonderful things.  I want to call a halt.  But can I get rid of those extra dishes?  Can I tell my loved ones, "Don't buy that thing that looks perfect for me."?  Can say goodbye to books, and sheets, and dishes that have meant so much to me, buoyed me when I felt small, defined me?  I don't know yet.  I can start with minding what I bring in.  The getting rid of part might be a bit trickier.

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It's going to take some work. Even yesterday, when Callum and I were playing paddle ball, I found myself thinking, "We should get another set.  They're only $13.  And that way the three of us could play together or we'd have extras."

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time out

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My mom and a head cold arrived on the same day, so I think I'm going to listen to what the universe is telling me and take a break for a bit. (Although on the bright side, this arrived yesterday as well.  I buy it every month, so why not subscribe?  Of course, whenever I subscribe to a magazine the content goes downhill precipitously, so I'll apologize now for that eventuality.  Hope I don't ruin it for all of us.)

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I also hope I get some room on the sofa.

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it's all good

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Callum and I went to the farmer's market today. Poor kid.  He's not allowed to play with his friends, but he can help his mother shop! 

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We've been going irregularly this summer (damn that camp!).  Our local farmer's market is expanding and has moved into a new, indoor location.  I was a bit worried at first.  It felt clear that they were just getting started, and admittedly I was used to farmer's markets in San Diego which stretched on for blocks. Heck, before that, when we lived in Pennsylvania, we were walking distance from this market.  I wouldn't say that my standards were super high, necessarily, just that I was hopeful that this would grow into more than a few half-full bins and some buckets of flowers.

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It felt much better in there today.  Bustling with people and full of produce. 

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We didn't buy any flowers, but we got lots of amazing local produce.  Tomatoes, squash (yellow, zucchini, and patty pan), corn, snap beans and blackberries.  We came home and ate the blackberries immediately.  I am trying hard to live a more sustainable life.  Already we recycle more than twice as much as we throw away in trash, we're pricing rain barrels, and I'm working on ways to be more sustainable in our food as well.  My friend Shoshana does this better for her family than anyone I know.  She's made an incredible commitment to eating as much local meat and produce as she can, seeking out resources with a tenacity that impresses me.  I'm not sure I can give it as much of a go as she has, but we're trying to be more intentional in our actions around here.  I'm trying to manage our grocery shopping better (conflicting reports tell me to shop more often or less often...any thoughts?) We've done better with our wee container garden of herbs this summer, and yard-man Neel is already thinking of ways to grow some actual produce next year.  So I keep trying.

It's all good.

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We came home and made a big salad with a lot of our goodies.  It's meant to be lunches for the weekend, but I'm not sure it'll make it that long.

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Farmer's Market Israeli Couscous Salad

Saute' a chopped onion in some olive oil until golden brown.  Add a bag of Israeli Couscous and toast until brown.  Add two cups vegetable broth and simmer 8-10 minutes until liquid is absorbed.

Slice one zucchini and one yellow squash and brush with olive oil. Using grill pan or outdoor grill...you guessed it, lightly grill the squash rounds.  Add chopped tomatoes, basil leaves, more olive oil and some sea salt.  Endeavor to prevent yourself or your eight-year-old son from picking away at the bowl before you can eat it for lunch.


Except for the basil which came from a pot on my back porch (and the couscous, if you must...okay and the sea salt and olive oil), all the ingredients of this salad were purchased today.  I thought about adding some feta and still might, but honestly, I didn't expect it to taste so good on its own.  Something about toasting the couscous and then cooking it in broth really expanded the flavors.  I only added the olive oil to make it combine a bit.

Like I said, it's all good.

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back to life

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We're all slung low around here.   Alfie left yesterday to face what turned out to be a miserable ride home.  Thea and Lucy got in a scuffle, and now Thea is miserable and limping.  This morning Callum's pink eye returned with a vengeance.  What is up with that?

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On Alfie's last night we went to dinner on the water.  We've lived near the ocean for over ten years now, on both the east coast and the west.  Sometimes I can't believe my luck.  Night's like this make me most grateful to be living here. 

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We had a view of an osprey nest from the table...

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and gin and tonics and martinis on the table.

All my peeps (human and canine) seem to need my attention now, so I'll catch you kids later.

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cooking camp: where Take Home Chef meets Survivor

Yeah.  So I didn't take any pictures.  Cooking Camp made for an interesting week.  Our non-cooking Camp Director set the theme for the week (a different type of cooking each day: stove, crock pot, solar oven, microwave and oven) and abandoned us to go on vacation.  Of all things.  We cooked in the faculty lounge of our school, and let me offer this tidbit of advice:  don't assume that just because there is a stove, oven, refrigerator and microwave in the faculty lounge there are also pots and pans and knives and vegetable peelers and spoons.  Don't assume. 

On the first day we were meant to do the stove top cooking.  First days are hard and chaotic anyway, and I thought this would be a good way to ease us in.  Stove top meant steamed veggies, spaghetti, and good lord, I can't even remember what else.  Oh, did I mention that Callum developed pink eye over the weekend and couldn't even go to camp on Monday?  Yeah, that too.  Anyway.  Spaghetti and steamed veggies...seems simple enough, right?  When I get to the kitchen there is one sauce pan, and two knives.  No cutting board, no colander, no veggie peeler...not much of anything.  And none of the kids brought snacks, I guess since we'd be cooking them and all (the snacks, not the kids).  I ended up cooking three boxes of spaghetti, one box at a time (my lone saucepan was very small) and pulling the cooked noodles out with a ladle.  I steamed green beans in a roasting pan.  I put a little water in the bottom and steamed them on a burner.  Had to clear that out pretty sharpish because we needed something to cook the pasta sauce in.

It worked, but every single day was more of the same.  Trying to figure out what the hell to do with no supplies while a large group of six to twelve year olds said, "Can I cut that? Do I get a turn?" and "But I don't like macaroni and cheese." over and over again.

I'm beat.  My in laws came in for a night on Friday night.  They were due in at eight, and Callum and I were at the grocery store getting some stuff to make an easy dinner when they called at five saying they were out in front of my house.  "Where are you?"  So I came home, sat for three minutes and...wait for it...started cooking dinner!

Yeah, I'm beat.  And my dad is here.  Give me a bit to pull myself together.

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there's good news, and there's...not so good news

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Well, the painting is coming apace.  This is a technique I've used in the dining room before (like, uh, last time).  The paints are called "Brilliant Metals and are by Valspar.  We got them at Lowe's.  The process consists of a base coat and then a pearlized top coat.  I can't remember the name of the green we used, but it was beautiful.  A deep hunterish green, with a touch of shimmer.  I loved the color, but it was too dark for this small interior room.  And well, really, from the very beginning, I wanted the room to be blue.  I must have asked for advice and then took it when I shouldn't have.

The color we're using now is called Aqua Impressions.  Because the green was so dark, we had to do a coat of Kilz.  The base coat is called Seaglass.  It's a milky white with the barest hint of green or blue.  Kind of like sea glass.  The top coat, the Aqua Impression is this fantastic pearlized blue.  Robin's Egg with shimmer. The good news is that I just love the color...love it.  The room is already feeling bigger and brighter.  It's just what I wanted last time.  The bad news, as I'm sitting here is that it's clear I will need another coat.  The top coat is very translucent-y.  Thin and hard to paint.  The effect is watery in a lot of places, but splotchy in others.  It doesn't help that we have incredibly thickly plastered walls.  Hard to paint.  So, another coat tomorrow and phase one of the dining room is finished.

Phase two will involve a new wall sconce, new chandelier (and of course the one I want is $380), and possibly, possibly one wall of wallpaper.  Ugh.  I don't like thinking about that one.

So last night I joined some gals from the 'hood at a local hangout and we had our palms read.  How fun is that?  Erin was a blast and so...I don't know how to say it.  Better than well-spoken.  (This reminds me of a tee shirt that Callum's second grade teacher would sometimes wear:  Some people have a way with words./Others not have way. God that cracks me up.)  Erin knew just how to say something that made perfect sense.  I know, I know, that's "well-spoken," but trust me, it was better than that.  And man, she nailed us.  All of us.  Six women.  Six beer-drinking women, right Jean?  We wished we'd had a tape recorder, and I keep thinking of things she said.  One came to me this morning:  (Mom, I guarantee you'll laugh out loud at this one.) other people's taste (good or bad) doesn't really bother me.  On the surface this sounds improbable.  Impossible, really.  NOT ME.  But she went on to say (And remember how well spoken she is, better than me.  I'm mangling this.) that I have my taste and confidence in it, so I can just appreciate that the stuff other people like is different from what I like.  No problem.  And, you know, she's right.  It didn't used to be true for me, but it's more so now.  Not completely, but more so.  I think I do have a better appreciation, just of other people around me.  One of my New Year's resolutions was to be less absolute in my judgements.  Maybe that's true.  But the palm reading was awesome.  I'm seriously going to invite her to my next dinner party.

And hey, you know what else is fun?  It's my dad's birthday.  Happy Birthday Alfie!

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the fourth

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Hi there!  (Waving madly.)  Happy Independence Day everybody!  I took a little break there, didn't I?  Today I'm celebrating my liberation from the trials that are known as...SUMMER CAMP.  There, I've said it.  I've been a camp counselor this week.  If you know me at all, you'll know how much of a reach that particular task has been for me. Little kids and I...let's just say that we're not such a good match.  I kind of still can't believe I'm doing it, but Callum's teacher is the director of the camp and she promised me all sorts of things like IPODS and FLAT SCREEN TVS.  No really, she's done so much not just for my son, but for me as well that I'd do just about anything for her.  Including hang out with a bunch of four year olds.  Such a sight is so improbable that we even had one of our preschool teachers stop in the classroom where I was working and beam at me disbelievingly.  And it went pretty well (It's just so tiring to spend so much time doing something that feels so awkward, and well, tiring.) right up until yesterday afternoon when some little punk called me a "jerk," and I thought, "That's it, time for the weekend."

We never tend to make big plans for the Fourth, no flag themed cupcakes or bottle rockets.  We'll probably just head over to the beach tonight for some fireworks.  I may have said it before, but my friend Marianne introduced us to this tradition, and it's absolutely my favorite way to spend this holiday.  We may hook up with some friends, and maybe not.  I'm trying really hard to release some things and part of that is not to be so militant in my need to have things planned...every minute.  As much as standing in a room of hollering four year olds, that is an awkward and not so comfortable thing for me.  Can I celebrate independence from the restless wanderings of my own brain?  Not sure yet. 

But I'm glad it's a Friday and that we have the weekend stretching before us.  I hope it's a mix of time with family and time with friends (I have several people in my life who I haven't really seen and just hung out with in entirely too long.).  We'll work in the yard and watch some tennis and play some tennis knit some and maybe sew some and maybe, maybe finally start painting the dining r room.  Probably, at some point we'll eat some food.

Oh, and I want a flag.  Why do I always decide stuff like that on July 3rd?  We're not real flag wavers in my family, although I agree with Neel that the American flag is one of the prettiest around, and I'd never dreamed I'd ever want to hang one of my own.  But I do like the idea of hanging our flag on our most significantly patriotic of holidays.  Do you think I could get one of these delivered today?

Have a great weekend everybody.

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sunday evening

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I love this angle in my house.  Looking from our kitchen/family room through the dining room and into the living room.  I'm not sure why these angles appeal to me so much.  It's as if my life unfolds to you, room by room out the window through to the front yard.  I photograph them often.  This picture was taken Sunday evening in golden twilight as we await a thunder storm.  These three rooms look really nice right now.  I cleaned the crap out of them this weekend.

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See?

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All of our surfaces were looking a little like this.  I vacuumed rugs and cushions and dusted everything.  This is the dustiest house I have ever lived in.  I no sooner dust every surface in sight then I find a gray film on everything.  Fruuuuuustrating.   There is seriously no getting ahead of it.   The island looks great now, but it's too dark to photograph it for you. 

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I even wanted to mop.  I couldn't find our bucket anywhere.  What cruel twist of irony is that?  To actually want to mop and not have a bucket.  I  finally dumped out one of the bins Callum stores his Legos in only to find that our mop was busted too.  I did it anyway, so desperate was I.

I have a lot I'm thinking about my house right now.  An overwhelming need for order.  Heather Armstrong, over at dooce wrote a great post about coming home from vacation and wanting to reorder her life.  I'm not going as far as the 21-day cleanse, but I always feel that way after coming home from vacation.  Wanting to tend to things better than my normal sorry self can manage to.  So I got a little start this weekend, and it is very settling to see smooth and empty surfaces.

The wind has started to pick up out those big front windows.  Maybe we'll get a storm yet.

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sometimes I'm clever


IMG_9036 Yesterday was our first real foray to the beach for the summer.  We've been a time or two this spring, but the real, regular beach-going with friends started yesterday. It seemed a near-thing at the start of the day.  There are still big fires raging south of us and depending on how the wind blows (literally), we have a lot of smoke in the area.  Yesterday morning was the worst.  Even inside the house it smelled smoky.  Still, by non the wind had shifted and we were off.

IMG_9039We stake a claim on our little slice of beach, crafting a landing pad out of towels, chairs, flip flops and juice boxes.  A couple of us remarked that there's always a learning curve at the start of the summer.   What toys and snacks we need to pack and take.  Before we left, I spent too much time digging in the shed for my chair and looking for my beach cover up.  Fortunately I remembered to pop a couple of water bottles in the freezer because I didn't even bring a cooler.  I always envy the snacks that everyone else brings. 

IMG_9040 It wasn't long before I was remembering all the things we need to take. Chips (salt and vinegar are hands down the best beach chips) and Twizzlers are necessities.  Callum will need Gatorade, and although I love to have an Izze or two packed, I can make do with water.  I remembered that we have a soft-sided cooler somewhere, and then I remembered that we always need a snack and drink for the car ride home too.  After just another trip or two, we'll have a beach bag by the door and shovels, boogie boards, towels and snacks ready to go at a moments' notice!

IMG_9041 I was so happy just to be there.  No humidity and a gentle breeze, I was content just to sit and let the conversations swirl around me...I'm sure the celebratory Hurricanes that Marianne brought (Thanks, Marianne!) had something to do with that supreme feeling of contentment...soaking up the sun and the smell of the sea and the laughter.

IMG_9042 We ended up with eleven kids in all, and our only girl held her own quite well!  Every so often one of us would lift her head and do a quick count, and at one point someone commented, "Callum never emerges from the water, does he?"  That's summer for you.  For us, at least.

Oh, but sometimes I'm clever!  We made a late trip yesterday (usually we're unpacked, toes in the sand, by ten) because Shoshana's kids had swim lessons, and as we were headed home late in the day, I dreaded thinking about what to make for dinner.  Then I remembered, I already made dinner!  I used the extra time in the morning to make us a whopping big Israeli couscous salad.  Israeli couscous: my new favorite grain.  I pretty much winged it.  Roasted some asparagus in olive oil and garlic (I think I'd steam it next time.), and popped open a bag of frozen roasted corn from Trader Joe's (arduous work, that).  Mixed that with the couscous, some feta and a quick dressing of olive oil and pear-infused balsamic vinegar.

IMG_9046 I topped it with some broiled (because for poor Neel, "Our grill is dead to me." at present) chicken sausage, and it was the perfect dinner after a day with the sand and the sun.  I see more of these (the beach and the salads) in our future.

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tennis, anyone?

IMG_8993 Even before we got the Wii and Callum became a pro at tennis, Neel had been talking about teaching him to play.  We both have played off and on in our distant past (I calculated on Sunday that it had been 25 years since I'd last played tennis.  YIKES.), but this was a pastime that followed neither of us into adulthood.

Neel was talking about it so much that Callum and I decided to get him a racket for Father's Day.  And really, for this to work, we had to get Callum a racket too.  Happy Father's Day, Callum!  And suddenly, tennis is back in our lives.

IMG_8995 It's been a long time.  When I was really young, younger than Callum is now, we lived in a great old house across the street from the small liberal arts college that my parents had attended and where they met. That college campus was a big, big part of my life when we lived in that house.  All sorts of memories have come flooding back as I write this.  I'm sure I'll start exploring them on this blog at some point.  Anyhoo... tennis.  Right directly across the street from our house was the entrance to the college and the college tennis courts.  Mom and Dad, you'll have to help me out here, but my first memory of being on a tennis court is of riding my trike around as my parents played.  We did this a lot.  Lots of Saturdays, I think.  And I may have whapped the ball a time or two.  The image in my mind is of old, cracked courts and ginormous magnolia trees with lots of dropped leaves.  I think, on one side of the courts, you had to go down a hill to get in.  Am I right?  Those courts aren't there anymore.

We moved, and moved again, and I was a teenager and there were courts nearby again.  Around that time I was also going to camp, and every summer I signed up for tennis as one of my classes.  Again, beat up courts surrounded by trees always dropping their leaves around the edges.  My main memories of tennis at camp are how bloody hot it was and this one camp counselor who made the mistake of calling me, "Watch" one day when he needed to know what time it was.  Of course I developed a HUGE crush on him (I was twelve, people, give me a break.) and we got to be great friends.  But again, I digress.  I didn't really think I learned much at those tennis sessions, but I learned on Sunday that some of it "took."

IMG_9000 So here's the really cool part.  The house that we live in now is several blocks away from a local university campus.  We're not really as connected to this campus as I was to the one I grew up near, but we get down there enough.  Bike rides, usually.  Someday football.  But now, there's tennis.  So this school recently opened a multi-million dollar indoor/outdoor tennis facility, and man, it's a doozy.  We thought that the outdoor courts were free to the public, but that was too much like history repeating itself.  Still, for a mere $10 an hour, you could get a court, indoors or out.  Indoors:  you know, air conditioning.  Not bloody hot.

IMG_9016The goal was to introduce Callum to tennis, and we did that.  But I was surprised at how much fun Neel and I had.  My backhand is still (oddly enough) better than my forehand, and I'm clearly tilting my racket, causing some serious pop-ups.  I never had a serve before, but Sunday, I did. And by "having a serve", I mean "throw the ball up, hitting it with the racket and getting it across the net."  Go figure.  Neel's skill is what he remembered, and he did a great job guiding Callum through his first attempts.  And Callum, as with everything he tries along these lines, picked it up quickly.  He amazes me.

IMG_9008So here we are.  Tennis.  Looking for a chance to go back.  After my arm stops killing me.

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yep, still here

The last two weeks of school are nothing to mess around with, no lie.  As my Grandma Charlotte would say, "man o' day."  My head is swirling.  It's not helping that typepad is screwing with my compose screen.  I have theme changes I want to make and pictures to post, but they've switched things around and I'm too pooped to mess with it.  Next week, I keep thinking, next week.  Although it certainly isn't helping my blogging that I come home from a yoga class that kicks my butt to eat a malted milk brownie with pistachio ice cream instead of sitting down at the computer.  That doesn't help at all.

So we're winding down to summer vacay, and we're all ready.  I'm ready to trade my dress pants for flip flops and Callum's ready to switch to swim trunks for the next ten weeks.  We don't have any trips planned, and all I want to do is cook and write and tend to my house and my boy and sit on the beach.  I'm working on a school year wrap-up post (For Callum, not me.  I have my own self-evaluation to write for work, but I don't think you guys need to read that!), and after that it's summer.  Summer at school, summer in my house, and summer in the Blue Rain Room...I can't wait.

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catch-up

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Thursday: (08/30).  How to survive a golf tournament.

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Friday: (09/30): Girls weekend.  Snacks and drinks.

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Saturday: (10/30): Breakfast thanks to Kim.

Sunday = a day of rest.

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Monday: (11/30): Party favor.

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I have to take a brief break from all these photos and wax rhapsodic about my weekend.  My friend Lisa is so generous, in many ways really, but one spectacular way is in the use of her parents' beach house.  She offers it up twice yearly for girls' weekends, in the spring and the fall, and this past weekend was our weekend.  I don't always manage to make it, but man, this year, come hell or high water I wanted to be there.

I won't share the few photos I took because, well, you know...what happens at girls' weekend stays...yadda, yadda, yadda.  But let me just say there was amazing food (even for the vegetarian!), plenty of drinks, a contraband dip in a pool, what was that?  Oh, never mind.  Didn't happen.  There were beer fairies, movies, a gorgeous storm that I watched track along the coast from north to south and a perfect beach day.  I slept better than I have in months and even missed the sunrise (that almost never happens).  It was the setting, for sure, but more than that it was the company.  Thank you my dears, for rejuvenating me.

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(07/30) the "so sue me edition"

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Okay so I left my camera at work over the weekend and yesterday too.  Damnit!  So many missed picture opportunities.  You can't imagine.  This is our "Phoebe Lamp."  Named after our first dog, Sweet Pheebs who is no longer with us.  It kind of looks like Violet now too.  I won't tell you the story of how we acquired this lamp.  It's not a big deal, but I come off looking so selfish that I can't stand it, and I really don't want that perception about me out there.  I'm sure you guys like me just the way I am.  The not-selfish me.

On another note, I'm totally intrigued by what Heather wrote over at dooce about blogging and that crazy Kathy Lee.  Go check it out.

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