Sunday, November 30, 2014

And That Was Our Weekend....

   

We were invited by some of our favorite people in the universe to celebrate Thanksgiving in Virginia this year. We decided to make the trip and to take the kids to Christmas Town at Busch Gardens to kick off the holiday season. The trip up was pretty easy. We didn't run into any traffic on I-95, which was really strange for the day before Thanksgiving. The kids were at their usual level of horribleness, they weren't UNUSUALLY horrible, so that was good. Just the usual arguing that the other is looking at them, they weren't sharing the chips....we tuned them out.

We had a really nice Thanksgiving day with family. The food was delicious, the kids played with their cousins, we got to visit with everyone. It was a great day. On Black Friday, we headed to Busch Gardens in Williamsburg. It was cold as hell but we were bundled up. I could not find my coat ANYWHERE before we left so I was in long johns, a sweater, and a North Face jacket and gloves, so it was fine.

The park was amazing. It was like Christmas threw up. There were lights and trees and wreaths everywhere. There was Christmas music blasting through the speakers throughout the park. We rode rides, we watched shows, we drank hot chocolate and had a nice time. Until dinner.

I bought all-you-can-eat buffet tickets where they were showing the most popular show at the park. I had to purchase an adult ticket for my 10 year old. The adult tickets were $39 and the kid tickets were under 20, but I figured that she could eat a few plates. She's a big kid. So we get there, and the place was huge. It was full of people. Off to the side was the buffet and there was a ton of food. Salad, soup, chili, brats, ham, turkey, fresh sliced prime rib, vegetables, potatoes, chicken nuggets, cobbler, cookies, red velvet cake, chocolate fudge cake, a variety of sodas and drinks.... We got our plates together and my 8 year old was loving it. She wanted to try everything. My 10 year old, who had been pleasant and was having a great time up until this point scowled. "I'm not hungry."

I didn't understand. We had lunch 4.5 hours prior and she hadn't eaten anything since then. There was food that she  liked. "I just want to sit down." We had reserved front row seats in the middle of the restaurant. She sat down and pouted. "Is something wrong? Do you feel sick? Do you want a drink at least?" She laid her head down. "No. Leave me alone. I'm tired." I tried to encourage her to eat something and I told her if she chose not to eat that I wasn't buying her anything else. She looked at me defiantly and said, "That's fine." Then the show started. There were life sized gingerbread men dancing around us, there were tap dancers in shiny green fur-trimmed outfits, there was a large Christmas tree that descended from the 20 foot ceiling and my daughter sat with her head in her hand, looking bored as she ate NOT.ONE.BITE of the $39 dinner that I had purchased for her. This is how I felt on the inside:

                                         

This is becoming our lives now. Her mood swings are just the worst. One moment she is totally fine and the next she is a raging lunatic. She must get that from her mother. Seriously though, I don't know if we are going to survive this. It's horrible.

So we are sitting there and I heard the voice of one of my friends in my head (okay, I didn't actually HEAR it in my head. I'm a little nuts, but I'm not crazy). She used to talk a lot about grace and how it is undeserved favor and instead of getting angry I told myself over and over again: Just have grace with her, just have grace with her, just have grace with her. Your sweet daughter is inside of her. She doesn't really want to act this way, she has a hard time controlling her mood swings, just have grace right now. That's what I did. I stopped being mad and upset and I watched the show. I can only control myself. I cannot force feed my 10 year old daughter and I cannot make her have a happy attitude. I left her alone and I enjoyed my dinner and made sure we ate enough food to account for the fact that I paid for a dinner that wasn't going to be used.

Oddly enough, she was fine a short time afterwards. She said she liked the show. She didn't look like she enjoyed it but that must have been a front. It was getting dark now and we walked through the park admiring the lights and decorations, stopping only periodically by the heaters to warm our cold cheeks. We went to the candy store and got some goodies and then we rode the train to the front of the park. There were Clydesdale horses with green and red plaid blankets and carriages filled with presents and fake snow that fell gently over us. It was a very magical time.

Even though it was late, almost 8 o'clock, we decided we would make the 6 hour drive home. We loaded up the car and my husband jacked up the heater, so we could thaw out. I was getting warm so I decided to take off my jacket. The zipper was broken and I could not zip it down. I tried to get my kids to do it, they couldn't get it. I was started to get freaked out. I was entombed by this North Face jacket and I could not get it off. I was feeling claustrophobic in it. I needed it off NOW. So I did what any rational grown woman would do, I began to cry and scream out, "GET IT OFF OF ME. THIS SWEATER IS A STRAIGHT JACKET. I AM TRAPPED IN HERE." Everyone in the car began to laugh but it was not funny. I felt like this damn jacket was going to eat me alive. I was feeling very irrational about it.

My husband started screaming. "JUST RIP IT OFF. RIP THE ZIPPER." He knows me well enough to recognize the sheer panic in my voice. I tried. I took both hands and pulled as hard as I could. But alas, I am not Hulk Hogan.
                                

I was able to stretch the collar enough to get my head through it. I was frantically trying to pull it off but the rest of my clothes were coming with it. "GET IT OFF OF ME." I finally wiggled myself out of the North Face Jacket. Then I was okay. I took a deep breath. My family looked at me like I nuts. "What? That jacket was a tomb."

The rest of the trip was uneventful. We got home at 3 am and crawled into bed and enjoyed a blissful sleep. Then we woke on Saturday to deck the halls and get the Christmas season started.

Stay tuned, later I will tell you about how I lit my oven on fire and why I had to google, "Will my kids die if they eat wax paper?"







Saturday, November 22, 2014

The Charade is Up

                      
Where the heck have I been? I find that I am not really less busy. I just fill my days with different things. The kids have had many school events and we have 3 birthday parties to attend today. I feel like I've spent my week buying birthday gifts for other people's kids. I spend more money on other people's children than my own.

Then there are Christmas preparations which are in full swing. I got my Christmas cards in this week. Absolutely NO thought went into them at all. I just picked any random picture that had my whole family in it. A picture from Sea World. We are in bathing suits and my husband is wearing a Batman shirt and looks like he just smelled a fart. I did choose an aqua blue background so it could have a "beachy" Christmas feel. It's fine. I am the Queen of Good Enough, not the Queen of Perfect.

All the gifts have been purchased for the girls. I always do my Christmas shopping online, so it was quick and easy. My youngest daughter wanted a massage chair this year. I have no idea why but she has been talking about it for months. I purchased a massage mat that can fit to any seat. Those massage CHAIRS are expensive. I am not a baller. My oldest daughter asked for a sewing machine. She hand sews all kinds of amazing things and she want to make clothes and purses and not spend days hand-sewing them. I got her a gift card to Hancocks so she can get fabric and embellishments. I am going to make her make me some curtains. They will get books. My little one wanted a Minecraft construction book and my oldest Hunger Games. They got clothes and roller blades. The freaking UPS man dropped off ALL of my gifts at 5 pm EVERY TIME. It was so annoying. Hello, UPS man, my kids believe in Santa so can you drop the sh*t off while they are at school?

Except they don't believe in Santa. At least not all of them, I was having lunch with my husband earlier this week and he told my that our oldest daughter disclosed to him that she doesn't believe in Santa anymore. I shed a tear when he told me that. She hadn't mentioned anything to me. She was probably afraid I would cry. I decided to talk to her about it when I picked her up from school and it was just the two of us.

She got in the car and I turned to her and told her I wanted to talk to her about something. She got all freaked out. "What did I do?" Calm down Miss Paranoia...... "Nothing, dad told me you don't believe in Santa anymore." She shrugged, "Yeah." "Why not?" She got ready to break my heart. "Well, last year we watched a movie at school about the legend of Santa Claus and then I was on Pinterest looking at Christmas stuff and they had things on there about how to get your kid to believe in Santa and I kind of put 2 and 2 together. Plus, I know it must be you and dad because I don't always get EVERYTHING I ask for and if Santa was real, he would get it for me." Bad Mom Award. I admitted it to her but swore her to secrecy. "Don't you EVER tell your sister. Let her believe in the magic of Santa for a little while longer." She agreed. "I also know you guys aren't the tooth fairy anymore because I found our teeth."

Yes, I am a creepy tooth collector. I don't have them all but I do have their first ones. My grandmother died when I was 5 years old, but I remember one day that she showed me that she had a small jewelry box in her dresser that was full children's teeth. I liked to go in there and shake the box of teeth, I liked the sound of them clinking together. It was like teeth maracas. So you can't really blame me, my creepy tooth collecting is hereditary.

Again, I admitted that we are the tooth fairy. She was excited with herself. "I knew it!" I was visibly sad. "What's wrong,mom?"  "It's just sad that you don't believe anymore." She tried to make me feel better, "Well, I still believe in pirates and mermaids and the Illuminati." BWHAHAHA. She is a conspiracy theorist now, apparently.

The next day I picked her up and she turned to me, "Mom, are you and dad the Easter Bunny too?"
I didn't even respond. I just lowered my head in shame.
                        
"I knew it! How did you get the big rabbit prints on the floor?" I told her about how I made mud and painted them on every Easter eve. She laughed, "That's cool. I'll do that for my kids too."

I knew this day would come but it is sad. Being a kid is so fun and magical. She is growing up and that's hard. I know I'm just a few years away from having to wake my children up on Christmas morning, Maybe 5 years from now? I can see my husband and I sitting in front of the tree with the presents at 9 am on Christmas morning, debating if we should wake up our ungrateful teenagers. Uggh.

At least I have a few years left with my little one believing. We'll try to make it count. When it ends for her, I might need therapy. I mean, I need therapy now - I just will need more of it then. :)

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Happy Birthday!

                                    
My hubby's 32nd birthday is tomorrow. I am still in denial that we are in our 30's. I don't know when that happened. I always tell him he's an old man. Of course, I don't really think that but in my head we are both still teenagers and so to the teenage girl in my head, he really is an old man.

This will be the 15th birthday we've celebrated together, except for 19. On his 18th birthday we went out to eat at Wendy's on Main Street in Millville and he was talking excitedly about going to Phila to a BT concert that night and how he was going to get his grey WaWa apron that weekend and was going to learn to slice lunch meat. He was finally an adult- he could buy cigarettes, lottery tickets and dirty magazines. He could vote. He could join the military. He was entering a whole new world.

His 19th birthday is the only one we didn't get to spend together. He was away in training in the ARMY then. I was watching TV that evening and the phone rang. My mother answered it and came into the living room. I can see her now, standing in the doorway with a smile on her face as told me he was on the phone. There was such a sense of relief and I leaned against the kitchen wall and played with the phone cord as he told me about training and life at Fort Jackson and about how life would be different when he came home the following month and how he wanted to marry me. My heart skipped a beat. His voice sounded so strange to me, I hadn't heard it in 2 months. It was a short call, they only allowed a few minutes. I wished him a happy birthday and hung up the phone. I was euphoric in the days that followed that birthday phone call. The sound of his voice sustained me and was a ray of sunshine in the grey world that had become my existence in his absence.

We spent his 20th birthday in Oklahoma. We were newlyweds and we went out for every meal that day and I begrudgingly went to watch Harry Potter with him. I was happy and we were together.

We were in New Jersey for his 21st birthday and his cousin took him out to show him a good time. I worked the 3rd shift at WaWa that night and the two of them came in to get sandwiches when the bar closed. My husband stumbled in drunk, like one should be on their 21st birthday. He came to the counter and kissed me. "I was drinking some crazy chicken." His cousin laughed, 'He means, Wild Turkey." I still tease him about that.

I found out I was pregnant just a few days after that. I also don't remember anymore birthdays. I remember 30 for him, but none of them in between. After the kids came, life was a blur. We probably went out to dinner and I'm sure I purchased him necessities instead of fun things. Underwear and new socks and a beard trimmer. After 21, he wasn't a kid anymore. He was a man. We purchased our first home, he started working for the Department of Defense that year, he became a father. Our days of spontaneity and carefree days were over.

I will probably forget 32. He'll go to work. He wanted to go to dinner at China Buffet. I don't think he really wants to go to China Buffet, but he knows that the girls LOVE China Buffet so I am pretty sure he picked it so they would be happy. He is so hard to shop for because he just buys what he wants so I got him some craft brew refill kit because he brews at home. Welcome to 32 - go to work, here's some Chinese food - make yourself some beer. Poor guy, we do the best that we can.

He might be an old man, but inside there is still the boy who was excited to get his grey apron. I hope I still feel that way when we are 80 and pooping our pants together. That birthday is going to be HOT. I'm going to put on something sensual for that birthday.
                                                          
                                                           
I am a good wife, and I figured I'd give him something to look forward to. I mean, 80 will be here before we know it. :)

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Mom's Taxi Service

                               

It'd been almost a month since I became a full time mom again and I have not been as relaxed as I thought. There are a lot of things that I neglected for a long time and I am slowly beginning to catch up. I scrubbed my baseboards, and my laundry pile no longer exists. The house is clean every day. I feel like I am on vacation kind of. It will take a while for things to settle in. I spend most of my days shuttling children here and there. I have become an unpaid chauffeur.

I wake up at 5, make lunches and breakfast and we are out the door by 7. Then I drop the youngest at the elementary school, then drive to the middle school to drop off the oldest. Then back home by 8. Leave at 1:30, pick up the youngest then drive to the middle school to pick up the oldest. The bad part about the afternoons is that there is an hour difference between when my youngest and oldest child get out of school. I thought this is a great time for my youngest daughter to do her math homework and get in her 1/2 hour of reading. I can make my grocery list, play candy crush, nap. No. It didn't go like that. A few weeks ago, I had it. My daughter did her math homework but instead of reading decided she would just annoy me for 40 minutes. She rolled down the window and hung out of it. "Mom, I think I can climb onto the roof. Can I climb onto the roof?" Why? "No, you cannot climb on the roof." She whined for 5 minutes about not being able to climb on the roof. Then she threw her body on top of mine and started playing with my hair. Then she passed gas. On me. Not in my direction, literally on me. I had enough.

My 5th grader got into the car and I announced, "You are both taking the bus home." They freaked out, the bus was going to be a problem. My oldest daughter convinced me to let her go home with the next door neighbors. That seemed reasonable. I just needed to avoid being in the car with my 8 year old for longer than 15 minutes. This seemed like a good solution. Well, it lasted 10 days.

On Monday my daughter told me she wanted me to pick her up. My 8 year old looked at me with big eyes. "We can do it, mom. I will be good. I promise." Okay, we'll try again. Monday, I picked up my youngest and we drive to the middle school. She was good. She pulled out her math homework and began to do it quietly. She got stuck on question 3. "Mom, I don't understand. Can you help me with this?" I looked at the question and began to give her instruction. "No, mom. We have to make an organizational list." "We are going to get there, just listen..." I continued to give her instruction to help solve the problem. She didn't even let me finish when all hell broke loose. I could see it build up in her.
"I TOLD YOU I HAD TO MAKE AN ORGANIZATIONAL LIST! YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO DO ANYTHING!!!!" She slammed her folder down and threw her pencil against the dash board. "I AM GOING TO FAIL AT MATH BECAUSE OF YOU!!!!" Then she began to sob. She has a 95 in math, by the way. I was done with her stressing out about the homework. I said nothing to her. "DO YOU UNDERSTAND MOM!?!?" I didn't even look at her. "I am not going to talk to you right now, until you calm down." She sobbed some more. "Why are you so mean to me?" Someone.kill.me. 

On Tuesdays, I don't have to wait with her because she has chorus practice. On those days, I pick up my daughter at the middle school and then we pick up my youngest. Yesterday, I picked up my daughter and I asked her about her day. She told me about how everything went and then she asked, "Mom, can I walk home to Z's house from now on? She needs someone to walk with her." "No, that doesn't make sense. I would be happy to drive her home since she lives near the school. Do you want me to call her dad and ask?" She rolled her eyes. "No." Then I remembered something. "Wait a minute, she has a 13 year old brother that goes to school here too. Can't they just walk home together?" She shrugged. "I don't know." I was feeling skeptical about this. Something wasn't fitting together. "I don't know what plans you have, but the answer is No. You cannot walk home unsupervised." She was annoyed at me and crossed her arms and pouted. "Just take me home." "We have to get your sister." She looked at me meanly. "No, take me home first and then go get her." Excuse me? "She needs to be picked up in 5 minutes, so no." That's when the whining started, "But my ankle hurts." "Well, it's a good thing you don't have to get out of the car." She sighed and gave me another dirty look.

I ignored her. I am not dealing with it. Then, my favorite Rusted Root song came on. I turned it up slightly and started humming along. My daughter turned the volume down to 8. I turned it back to 15. She turned it back to 8. So I left it there and started dancing. Bobbing my head, and shaking my shoulders. She gave me the death stare. 

"Stop.Dancing. NOW!" I like how my kids think they can tell me what to do. I am fair, and I am a negotiator. I said, "I'll make a deal with you. We can keep it at 8 with me dancing, or at 15 with no dancing." She turned the volume back to 15, annoyed. "I hate you. You are the worst." Right back at ya, grumpy pants. Geez.

This morning wasn't much better. We were getting ready to leave and it was 7 o'clock and her shoes weren't on and her teeth weren't brushed. The rest of us were ready to walk out the door. "Why aren't you ready?" Do you know what she said to me? "I didn't know what time we were leaving." We have left the house every morning at the same time for the past 5 years. You can tell time. What a load of crap. So I tell her to get done what she needs to get done - QUICKLY. "I'll just have dad take me." No. "You're dad works hard. You will not inconvenience him with making him have to make another stop before work this morning. Get it together." She yelled something at me and went to get her shoes. I waited for her in the car and she got in and slammed the door. She pouted and said not a word the entire ride to school. I pulled up and turned around, "I love you no matter what and I hope you have a great day." She gave me this face:
Then she left the car without saying a word to me. Not even a fist bump. I see how it is.

After she left the dog jumped in the front seat. The Dog Days came on and I laughed and said, "They wrote this song about you, Summer." She looked at me happily and wagged her tail. I scratched behind her ears. "You are the only female in the house that likes me." True story.

                                            

Friday, November 7, 2014

Mixing it Up

                                               
My husband called me last week in the middle of the day and was like, "So, one of my co-workers invited us to this singles mixer next Thursday so see if your dad can watch the kids." "Ummm....I don't know if you remember this, but we're not single." I knew this friend was starting a social club and he organized the event and needed more people to come to fill it up, so I said okay.

Then, I find out a few days later that we are not only going to go to this mixer but we have to pretend that we are single people. I was intrigued by this and a little skeptical. "This better not be one of those parties where you put your car keys in a fish bowl. I saw The Ice Storm, and I know it won't end well." He laughed. "We are pretending to be single for a few hours. Not be swingers." I am a God fearing woman and I'm not into any weirdo things.

I am often teased by my family members about being a traditional. straight laced person. My sisters call me a prude. My brother in law told me a few weeks ago that I was "vanilla" and "square." You know, "but not in a bad way." Whatever. I told him he was square for using the word square.

So, I decided I would go to the singles mixer and embrace it. I am not vanilla, at all. If I was going to be a single person for the night, I was going to need a new persona. I was going to be Samantha, a 27 year old Nurse Practitioner. A hot 27 year old nurse practitioner. Of course, there was nothing in my closet that Samantha would wear. So I went shopping. I picked out 10 dresses that were absolutely ridiculous. Dresses that I would never, ever in a million years wear. I am a knee-length dress kind of girl. The first one had cut outs on the side and I looked like a cylinder of dough being popped open.
                                          
I tried on a few more and then I tried on a little black number that was very short in the back and mesh at the top. It was very skanktastic. It was REALLY tight at the top. I stood in front of the mirror and then realized that something was wrong. One of the girls was in the right place but the other one looked like it was hanging at belly button level. I tried to get my arm down this dress so I could rearrange myself and I almost got trapped in it. Then I felt sad that I am so stretched and saggy that I had to physically take my body and put the parts back to where they were supposed to be originally. That's a problem. I am officially at Humpty Dumpty status. Once everything was in place, I knew that was it. I found some skanky ankle boots to complete the skank ensemble. It was Samantha time.

My husband got home and we got ready to go. There was just one last thing. Our rings. I never, ever, ever take off my wedding ring. I need to have it cleaned. If you cultured my ring you would probably find E. Coli and small pox. My fingers are so fat that I used Crisco to get them off. My finger is deformed where my wedding ring is.

No, you can't tell I wear a ring on my left hand at all. Haha. After the rings were off and the skank outfit was on, we headed out the door.

On the way, we were laughing so hard. We were practicing pick up lines. Pathetic. My husband got a $50 gift card and he flashed it and was like, "Baby, you can have whatever you like....on this $50 gift card." Yeah, that's hawt. Keep talking. He really knows how to impress the chicks. 

We finally got to the bar downtown and we walked in separately.  There was a private loft for the event and you had to check in. "What is your name?" "Samantha." The lady scrawled Samantha on a name tag and I stuck it on my dress and hoped it stayed there and not find it's way near my belly button as the night wore on. 

I was officially Samantha and I was fierce. I was having a little too much fun. We mingled and flirted. Which was funny because it was mostly people in their early to mid 20s. We were the oldest people there. I talked to this young man who was 26 and and was he was like, "Yeah, I can't drink every night like I used to. Now it's only 1 or 2 nights a week." I commiserated. "I know what you mean, I've really being trying to cut down on my partying too this year." This guy reminded me of one of my little brother's childhood friends. I wanted to find a nice girl for him. One of my husband's co-workers who was working the event was telling me about how his wife was about to have a baby and I was like, "I'm sorry. I hear that kids are horrible. I don't ever want any." Samantha hates kids. haha.


My husband and I worked the room and would exchange flirty glances with each other. At one point he sent me over a margarita. I introduced myself to him. I held out my hand and he shook it. "I'm Samantha. It's nice to meet you. Thanks for the drink." He smiled, "You're welcome. It's nice to meet you." That's when things got out of control. I licked the salt off the rim of my glass in a way that should be illegal. I could not help it. Samantha is a fast woman. We sat across from each other and made small talk like we were getting to know each other. Then, I began eating the appetizers that were in front of us in a very over-the-top and seductive manner. My husband was horrified and embarrassed. 
                                  Ben Wyatt Gross animated GIF
He gave me a look that said, If you don't stop fellating that egg roll in public, I may murder you.

It's his fault. It was the margarita. I RARELY drink. So, one drink just does me in. The tequila hit me hard. I walked past him and whispered, "I think you are trying to get me drunk so I'll go home with you tonight." He laughed.

I started to blow our cover because I kept trying to kiss him. "We're supposed to be single." "Yes, but we are a success story of the night. We found each other at the mixer." By 9:20 pm, I was ready to go home. The tequila had worn off. People said, "Bye, Samantha. Nice to meet you," as we walked out which made me laugh in my head.

We left together and as we walked back, he remarked that he felt bad for all the single people that were going home alone that night. I laughed. "Ummm, they are 24. They don't care. They probably feel bad for you. You have to do the in-and-out with the same woman for the next 45 years, and you already have 13 years behind you. You go to Chuck E Cheese birthday parties at 10:30 am. The most excitement you've had in the past 6 months is going to a mixer and pretending to be single and picking up your wife whose boobs don't even stay in place anymore." We both could not contain ourselves. It was so funny. We are sad.

On the ride home he asked if I thought the kids would still be up when we got home. I told him yes, that he wasted his drink buying on the wrong woman. The kids are always awake. They are always around.

I was right. When we walked through the door, the kids were still up and my 8 year old was crying about a toe injury. We went upstairs and I taped it up, still in my stupid skank boots.

I took off Samatha's dress and slipped into my Jaclyn Smith Kmart pajamas and put my wedding ring back on. I was back to my "square" world. I missed it. It was how it should be. I crawled into bed with him and curled up and rested my head on his shoulder. Like I have so many times before. He is home to me. I am safe there and beautiful. I don't care if we are vanilla - we aren't boring and we have fun. At least we're vanilla together.

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Middle School Adventures

                                     
Last Tuesday was a special day for my daughter, so I decided I would surprise her with her favorite lunch at school. I went to Moes and got her a burrito, chips and queso, soda and all kind of yummy, unhealthy treats. I walked in and headed to the cafeteria. I am still not down with the middle school protocol. I would have lunch with both kids once a semester at the elementary school, but I haven't been to have lunch at the middle school. It's not a thing that you do when your kids get to that age.

On a side note, I never remembered parents coming to school to have lunch with their kids when I was in school. NEVER. Is it a new thing? A southern thing?

Anyway, I played out a few scenarios of how this would go in my head. She would be embarrassed and shun me, she would be shy about it and give me a wave and take the food, or she would be excited to see me. The third scenario didn't seem likely so I tried not to get my hopes up.

I stood in the corner and waited for a few minutes. I came at the end of 8th grade lunch. Whoa. Those are huge kids. I was a little afraid. I stared at the floor and felt awkward and out of place. Basically, how I felt the whole time I actually was in 8th grade. haha. Then they got up and left and it was 5th grade lunch time. I was trying to be incognito. I saw my daughter walk in and her teacher leaned in and pointed out to her that I was there. She looked up at me with big eyes and shouted, "Mom" and then she ran over and hugged me. In front of groups of her peers. A lingering hug. I was very excited about it. Being a mom - I'm winning at it.

I asked if she wanted me to stay and she said, "Yes!" I was happy. I asked her teacher if we could sit at a special table and she was like, "Come sit with me and my friends." This was going to be an adventure. She led me to her table and I sat at the end. We unpacked our Moes and the kids started to fill in. It was interesting because all the girls sat on one side of the table and all the boys sat on the opposite side. I leaned into my daughter and whispered, "Do they make you do that?" She shook her head. "No." That's weird. I observed some more. The boy in front of me ate his food in silence, while leaning his head on his hand. He looked really sad. I leaned in again, "Does that kid ever smile? Is he sad or something?" She shrugged, " He is always that way." Well, okay. Then this other kid was talking about Spanish class. "But what I really want is to learn German." He motioned to the kid next to him, "Because this guy reminds me of Adolf Hilter." The kid looked up. A tiny, little blue eyed child. I leaned into my daughter again, "Why did he say that kid reminds him of Hilter?" "Because he wants to take over the world." "How do you know that?" She whispered back, "Because he always talks about how he wants to take over the world." Fair enough. I was very entertained. Get these kids a TV show. I began to pack up the trash and the security officer came up to me and told me he thought I was a 5th grader for a minute. Yes, it's my anti-aging cream. I'm going for 11. I thought 11 might be a good look for me. Maybe it was my One Direction T-shirt. I laughed and then hugged my daughter and went on my merry way.

Alas, she was back to her normal self this week. It has been cold as hell this week. Yesterday there was frost on the ground. I heated up the car before we headed to school. I pulled out our coats and scarves. It was 40 degrees. That's like sub zero temps down here in the deep south. The girls bundled up and off we went. I dropped my youngest off first. She walked in looking so cute with her little pea coat, scarf and hat. As we drove to the middle school, my oldest daughter began to remove her scarf and coat. "What are you doing? You have to get out of the car in a few minutes and will have to put all that back on." "No, I don't." "Ummm....yes you do. It's freezing outside." She shrugged. "It's not that cold. I have a sweater." She didn't have a sweater. She had a cotton zip up hoodie. Not her fleece Columbia jacket or wool sweater. A wanna-be tee shirt that just happens to have sleeves. We had an argument about it. Then I said, "I bet all the other kids will be wearing coats." I pulled up behind the line of cars and watched the kids get out of the cars. I was going to show her. I saw not one coat. Not one. I did see a kid in shorts and another in flip flops. I saw a few sweatshirts. Not a scarf, not a hat. I was like:

                   meme_jackie-chan-wtf     
I there some tween/teen conspiracy about coats and dressing weather appropriately? Do they just like to be cold? Do their raging hormones act like a personal internal heater? I didn't understand. I was confused. My daughter gave me a look that said, "I win." I watched her walk up to the school shivering. It made me crazy.

My mother is reading this with a smug look on her face right now, because I remember this fight. I never wanted to wear my coat. I used to walk home from school, in New Jersey. In snow. I was 80 pounds, in a short skirt and heels with a 50 pound book bag on my back, not wearing a coat. Shaking like a chihuahua that just got out of a bath. I'd be like, I'm not cold. Wearing coats - Uncool since 1994. I wish I could go back in time and talk to myself. I'd say. "Listen up! First of all, put on some pants before you show your hoo-ha to the neighborhood. Have some self-respect for God's sake. Secondly, maybe the heels aren't a good idea. You are walking home in ice. Trust me, it's not going to be sexy when you are 19 in a podiatrists office getting cortizone shots in between your toes because you caused nerve damage in your feet. Also, what's with the book bag? Stop killing yourself with the homework. You aren't going to go to Harvard. C's get degrees. Eat a hamburger once in a while, you are too thin. Oh, and wear a coat, because believe it or not, you are going to have a daughter one day who will refuse to wear a coat and scarf and watching her shiver in the cold will kill your soul. Wear a coat so your adult-mom self won't feel like a hypocrite." That's what I would say. I don't think my tween self would listen to my adult self though. She would go home and weep while listening to a Tori Amos cassette and write angst-y poems about how grown ups don't "understand." They say you get it back 3 times. I'm in for it and this is just the beginning.