A Cake, A Guest and A List

Happy Friday, everyone!

I am knee-deep in preparations for this Sunday, which is both Easter and my son’s fourth birthday.  For this combination of  events, I will be hosting 30 people at my house.  In full disclosure, this stresses me out and makes me an unlikeable, certifiable maniac for the other poor souls who live with me here in Fordeville. 

Adding to my stress is the seemingly minor request made by the birthday boy.  Ever attentive to specifics, he has asked for not just a dinosaur cake, but a green stegosaurus cake with red plates on its back.  Righto.  Good thing I happen to have that exact configuration handy. 

As if. 

I can cook — but I’m not what I’d call a stellar baker or cake decorator.  So, amidst the various other preparations for Sunday, I’ll be somewhere between laughing at myself and throwing a cake pan against the wall within the next 48 hours.  My money is on the latter. 

I can’t promise any photos of the final product, but let me take a moment to share two photos of what my cake will not remotely resemble.  I will also go through this exercise with my son tomorrow, just to manage his expectations.

Cake I Can’t Make #1:  This is way out of my league on so many levels.  Cole is a lucky boy to have someone create this for him.  Cole does not live here. {photo:  www.cakecentral.com}

 

Cake I Can’t Make #2:  A tad more realistic but still — repeat after me — not going to happen.  See that priceless look of joy on this child’s face?  How sweet.  If you get a final cake photo from me, it will likely include a look on my son’s face of utter confusion and resentment because his cake looks like a chihuahua.  Or a generic orb.  {photo:  www.themeparty.com}

 

This might be a good segue to tell you about my guest post today over at Theta Mom, where I discuss my leap from corporate minion to stay at home mom.  It occurs to me that, had I made this transition years ago, I may not be in this specific state of panic over said stegosaurus cake.  Anyway.  I’m really grateful to have contributed this guest post — and if you’ve been around for a while, you know I think so highly of the Theta Mom community.  So, please, check it out.

And I can’t leave you for the weekend without updating you on the intense town pool wait list scenario.  Thanks to everyone for all of the support during this trying time (and also for the additional conniving suggestions on how to climb the list — you guys are a crafty bunch).  I’m pleased to report that I did not have to resort to many of my proposed, borderline unethical tactics to secure a spot.  It appears that enough people died, went bankrupt, moved away or suffered from abject social alienation to relinquish their memberships to my advantage.  Score.

Here’s how the big news went down.

My husband showed up in the family room waving an envelope in his hands the other night.  I was on glass number two or three of red wine after a long day of chasing down the stegosaurus cake pan.  The envelope, with its return address from the town’s Recreation Office, produced total anxiety; I swear, we both felt like it was a college admissions flashback.

Me:  “It’s so soon.  I don’t know if that’s good or bad.  I’m thinking good, especially after the Caddyshack Baby Ruth story I told at the pre-school bake sale to scare them off.  I had a prime audience.”

Him:  “Yeah, but the envelope is not fat.  Remember with college admissions, the fatter the envelope, the better.”

Me:  “Crap.  You might be right.  But do colleges even send letters by mail now?  It’s probably all electronic.  Did you know there’s a writing section on the SATs and now and the scoring system is different?”

Him:  “What are you talking about?”

Me:  “Why couldn’t they have the writing section when I was in high school?  I would have fared so much better.  My whole life could have been different.”

Him:  “How many glasses of wine did you have?  Open the fucking envelope.”

And then.

I love that they are so aware of the bullshit tension they’ve created, they actually positioned the letter to open exactly as I photographed it above — leading with a big, dorky Congratulations.  Like I passed some character screen (we all know that would have been dicey at best) or a written exam. 

But whatever.  I’m in.  I’m #251 no more.

Let the summer begin!  As soon as I figure out how to make this stegosaurus cake.

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A Tale of Two Sixth Graders

If we’re lucky, we have a few truly good friends we cherish for life.  You know those friends — the ones you can tell anything to, the ones you don’t have to see/speak with all the time to pick right back up where you left off.

One of my best friends is S, someone I met in sixth grade.  To this day, we feel we’d win any game show challenge in the category of “Name a Great How-Our-Friendship-Began Story.”  I’ve always wanted to write it down and, so, for her birthday, I decided to finally document it.

Like I said, it was sixth grade.  You may recall those years as I do — awkward and fashion-challenged.  Especially in NJ in the mid-1980s.  My look of choice was the Aspiring Preppy:  shoulder pads, big argyle sweaters with two to three stacked polo shirts underneath (collars pointed sky-high, naturally).  Benetton, Esprit, Polo.  You get the idea. 

{Disclaimer:  My taste has since evolved.}

It is the first day of school and our English teacher gives us an assignment:  Pair up with the person sitting next to you and interview each other.  Find out a few interesting things about your interviewee and then present to the class. 

OK.  I turn to my left and there is a very nice, very chipper girl.   She is the polar opposite of me.  She has short, kind of spiky hair, whereas mine is in a French braid.  She’s wearing a long denim trench coat over her really colorful shirt and black pants.  But I’m staring at her shoes.  Her silver, checkered Chuck Taylors.  My penny loafers suddenly feel really dull.  Her notebook is covered with things like Worship Idol (as in, Billy), Public Image Ltd and little anarchy symbols.  She is far cooler than I could ever hope to be and she doesn’t even appear to be trying.  Meanwhile, like most sixth graders, I’m trying.  Hard.

But she is lovely from the start — not at all intimidating and not at all condescending toward my tragic argyle look.

We get down to the business of the assignment.  She asks how I spend my free time and I tell her I take ballet and tap lessons.  She tells me she wants to take archery.  God, she is cool.  Archery.

She asks me about my favorite music.  Why, Olivia Newton-John, of course.  Much to her credit, she doesn’t blink.  She tells me she likes The Sex Pistols.  I am at a total loss, and I tell her that I don’t think I can say that to the class.

But I do.  I tell the class all about my new friend S and I know instantly that she is unlike anyone I’ve ever met.

We begin to talk between classes in the hall, pass notes, etc. — all the things that sixth grade girls do.  I invite her over to my house because neither of us has begun our social studies project — a sign of procrastination solidarity that, unbeknownst to us at the time, would prove to last decades. 

This single evening of social studies perhaps cemented our friendship forever.  She arrives hours late (a harbinger of many events to come), with massive ambitions for a simple project.  Whereas my mother (“Oh, who’s your new friend?  Those are very interesting sneakers…”) and I had maybe mustered together some poster board and markers, S came equipped with a grand idea to make a planet by encasing a basketball in homemade paper mache and baking it so that we could then paint it to scale.  I reminded her that this wasn’t for any significant grade — no need to do anything major — but her ideas were big and, after all, it was only 8:30pm, she said.  She was a night owl at age 12 (actually, it turns out, from birth).  So I guess I’d be missing this week’s episode of “Family Ties,” then?  Yes, she said, as she handed me a mix tape to help make the project more fun.

A mix tape!  And what a mix it was — all kinds of things I had never heard.  This was no Olivia Newton-John.  I felt instantly cool telling my mom that we were listening to The Dead Kennedy’s (“The what?!”). 

But she, too,  liked S instantly, and has ever since.

The thing was — S wasn’t trying to corrupt me.  I wasn’t her pet project or anything like that.  She was really just being herself — and was probably the only sixth grader who could honestly do so — and she was opening my eyes to a million other things.  And  that is how it has been ever since.  She arrives late, thinks big and charms you to pieces.  And you learn something new every time.

We remained fast friends in high school, through the era of Depeche Mode and The Smiths (I told you my taste evolved) and “The Young Ones” on MTV (remember them?).  She never had just one crowd, but was instead that unique person who could befriend anyone in those high school hallways.  We snuck into the city with our group of friends many nights to hear music, find bars and just take it all in.  And by “it,” I of course mean the requisite amount of underage alcohol consumption that any dive bar in the East Village would allow.

In college, she went on to study art history in a very liberal school with like-minded souls.  My college was only 90 minutes away, so we saw each other pretty often.  We studied abroad the same semester — she went to Florence, and I went to Madrid.  We visited each other in our respective cities for some European adventures.  We met up in Prague as well, for which she was a full day late, pre-cell phone era.  But thanks to a pinned up note at the local American Express travel office, we managed to find each other.

When she got her first apartment in Manhattan on East 4th Street, I visited her often.  The tiny stall shower was beside the kitchen sink.  I moved to the city shortly afterwards, and we each grew up into progressively bigger and better apartments over the years.  She always had the next interesting book, magazine article, exhibit, film or band to talk about — and I was always five steps behind, eager to listen.

She moved away from New York briefly and then came back home.  And when her dad died a few years ago, I watched her pull together the most gorgeous impromptu tribute along the banks of the Hudson River at sunset, in a way that only she could do. 

I’m in the suburbs now and she’s in Brooklyn.  Our lives are different, and we see each other a few times a year.  It’s never as often as I’d like.  But it’s always a treat and it’s never even a stitch of strain to pick back up and resume talking as if it happened every day.

Of all the people in my life, S may have taught me more than anyone else.  She is the rarest gem of a person. 

So, Happy Birthday, my dear friend.  And thanks for talking to me that day in sixth grade, despite my bad sweater and awful taste in music.  I still think it’s one of the greatest “how we became friends” stories out there.

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February Festivities

Love it or hate it, you’re probably aware that Valentine’s Day is tomorrow.  If you’re “supposed” to know and you forgot — well, you’re welcome.  Glad you dodged that bullet.  It’s a low-key event here in Fordeville.  P and I were trying to go out for a casual, sort-of-Valentine’s dinner tonight but were thwarted by the lack o’babysitter blues.  So we hung out with our pint-sized valentines and prepared some treats.

I have more fun up my sleeve for the kids tomorrow, but today seemed like a better day to celebrate since we’re all home together.  Like I said, a mellow holiday for us.  And that was more than enough. 

Because, really, who wants something like this?

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Look, if you buy me a necklace that contains an engraved paragraph with this sort of nonsense, I will leave you forever.  On the spot.  Even if I have spent four hours cooking whatever is on that stove.  Yes, even if we have two children together.

And, while we’re at it — can we just look at my other favorite Kay ad, just for kicks? 

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Every kiss begins with give.me.a.fucking.break.  Is this not begging to be a SNL skit?  The actors in this spot have probably not only fired their agents by now, but may be serving life sentences for gutting them to pieces.  Unless they were exonerated on the basis of a “Humiliation Too Great To Bear” defense.  Ditto all Jared Jewelry commercial actors.

By the way, if you google “Every kiss begins with Kay,” you’ll be amused by the level and reach of viral hatred for this ad campaign — complete with its own Facebook page and spoof videos. 

But I digress.  Back to celebratory thoughts.

Did you know that tomorrow is also a day of other esteemed commemorations?  Seems odd to compete with the Hallmark hugeness of St. Valentine, but allow me to list them for you in case you care to seek alternative celebration causes.

National Ferris Wheel Day.  OK — I’m not clear if this is intended to mark the anniversary of its creation, or to encourage all people worldwide go out and board this ride.  The latter seems ill-planned, given that it’s winter and all. Unless this was a holiday of southern hemisphere origins.  In any case, I’ll opt out.  I’m terrified of ferris wheels.  They are so open and vertigo-inducing.  And they remind me of an episode of “Emergency One” (remember that show from the 70s?) when a ferris wheel got stuck, a boy fell, rescues ensued.  Gah.

National Organ Donor Day.  This is no joke.  I won’t be preachy — you can all make your own personal decisions and we’ll leave it that.

Clean Out Your Computer Day.  This is a great idea.  I am more than a little guilty of digital hoarding and my devices could all use a good purge.  Maybe I don’t need checklists dating back to our apartment move in 2004.  Or address labels for holiday cards in 2008.  And I could move even more photos onto a back up drive or external site.  Like this one.

An innocent enough photo of my husband at a lovely dinner while we vacationed in Italy a few years ago.  It was all so other-wordly.  Until you look at the scenery “behind” him.  This guy nearly ruined my carpaccio.  But we were always tempted to repurpose this photo as a greeting card or something. What do you think?

And you guys thought February was dull!  See, there’s lots of fun to be had.  And it’s all just a warm up for the raging parties of President’s Day (I have no corresponding cookie decor) and also winter break (aka, The Week the Kids Climb Up the Walls).  

But the spring clothes are in the stores, the Easter catalogs are arriving in the mail.  Spring is certainly not yet in the air, but its advertising claws are starting to get the band going. 

Here’s to hoping.

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The Next Big Thing

After an almost two-week break from work and school, we are back to real life over in Fordeville.  And it sucks.

I don’t think I have Seasonal Mood Disorder or anything that severe, but this first week back to work after the holidays is really a downer.

No more grazing in the kitchen at all hours for Christmas treats and that occasional mid-afternoon glass of wine.  No more pajamas until 10:00 (or later).  No more disregarding my Blackberry, as its red light now blinks with increasing frequency and impatience (“Stop eating Christmas leftovers and answer me!”).  No more bad daytime TV (and, wow, is it bad).  No more Starbucks holiday cups (sniff).

But, on the bright side:  No more holiday madness.  No more blizzard, yet.  And no more leftover ham.  I’m hammed out, big time.  Ham, be gone.

I always have my eye on the next big (or even medium) thing to look forward to.  For us, it’s a warm weather getaway — our first vacation with all four of us.  We are getting our planning finalized and hope to hit that “Book it” button this week.  So, if all goes well, I will be blogging from a beach in early March.  You know, because one always has a free hand or two when supervising toddlers near bodies of water.  While they throw sand and spill my beachy, umbrella-laden vacation cocktails.

Perhaps I’ll call in a guest blogger while I handle the water-side supervision.

Hm.  All this beach talk is making me think about buying a bathing suit and now I’m feeling slightly traumatized (see “ham leftovers,” “wine” and “holiday grazing”).  But, other than that, let’s get it booked.

What about you guys?  What’s your next big (or medium) thing?

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Off to a Good Start

For the first Fordeville breakfast of 2011, we done good.  Two words: Monkey Bread. 

(For foodie blogs and multi-course New Year’s Day brunch ideas, see Google.) 

Anyway, this is Year Two in what I am determined to make an ongoing and gooey New Year’s Day tradition (you know, for the kids…).  I don’t normally bake up a diabetic trigger cake for breakfast, so we’ll put this under the special and rare occasion category.  It’s also not bad for a hangover. I don’t happen to have one this year but, you know, it’s always good to be prepared for such a predicament on New Year’s Day.

Monkey bread is super easy. And super good for you (I’m absolutely lying). If you’ve never participated in the corruption of crescent rolls like this, you’re missing out (no lie).

Even if it does look kind of like a human brain. 

And, yeah, that’s a rubber wine stopper left over from last night in the back of the photo.  And an Elmo book.  Add in the monkey bread and we’ve got the trifecta of domesticated bliss.

So, if you haven’t gone on a diet for 2011, here’s the recipe.

  • Pre-heat oven to 350.
  • Spray a bundt pan with Pam (Am I the only one who has that Big Fat Greek Wedding moment whenever a bundt pan is introduced into conversation?).
  • Mix in a large ziploc bag:  1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon cinnamon.
  • In a small saucepan, stir together over low flame:  1 stick butter (told you it was good for you),  1 cup brown sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla.
  • Cut in quarters:  Four cans of refrigerated biscuits.
  • Place the cut biscuit pieces in the ziploc bag and shake with sugar and cinnamon until fully blended.  This is the part the kids love.  Just make sure that bag is sealed.  (Aside: I’m told that raisins or nuts can be added to the bag but it’s not my thing.  I try to sneak in semi-sweet chocolate chips sometimes for that extra non-healthy punch, but P protests.  Just saying, worth thinking about.)
  • Arrange cut biscuits in the bundt pan.
  • Heat butter, sugar and vanilla until just bubbling.  Pour over biscuits.  Bake 30 minutes.  When done invert immediately onto raised sided dish.
  • Go jogging.  Far and fast.
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Raise a Glass

As you all prepare for your fun New Year’s Eve festivities, I thought I might share the recipe for our favorite house drink, the espresso martini — a Fordeville specialty and party staple. 

Skeptical?  Yes, we’ve heard the protests and snickering before.  I’ll cut to the chase and tell you why you should try one:

  • You don’t have to be a martini person to enjoy it (but you do have to like coffee).
  • No, it’s not a chick drink.  We don’t make them all froufy with Baileys.  Keep reading.
  • It mixes two of my favorite vices:  very potent caffeine and very potent alcohol.
  • You don’t get all sleepy after a few cocktails.  Au contraire.  Way contraire.
  • No, it’s still not a chick drink.  Have one and then come back to me.

Back in 2004, while on vacation in St. Martin, we had a bartender serve these up and they were sublime. Since then, we’ve been on a quest to replicate his exact blend.  It’s easy to screw up — trust me, we’ve seen it done plenty of bad ways. P, ever the perfectionist, has spent a fair amount of time over the years tweaking the recipe to get it just right, during which time he has converted many family members and friends into believers (I’m looking at you, Markus).  So, in the spirit of holiday sharing, here you go.

Fordeville Espresso Martinis

First, wet your martini glass and put it in the freezer for a few minutes to chill it.  Then, combine in a shaker:

  • 2 oz very strong coffee or espresso
  • 1 oz espresso vodka
  • 1/2 oz Kahlua
  • 1 oz vanilla vodka

Shake with ice.  Serve very cold.  Yield:  1 drink.  Don’t operate any heavy machinery.

OK, now I want one, but I’ll wait a few hours.  Enjoy, and Happy 2011!

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Auld Lang Syne

“What does this song mean? My whole life, I don’t know what this song means. I mean, ‘Should old acquaintance be forgot?’ Does that mean that we should forget old acquaintances, or does it mean if we happened to forget them, we should remember them, which is not possible because we already forgot?” — When Harry Met Sally

2010, I don’t want to part with you.  You were good to me, and I am so grateful.  With you, I saw all of this happen:

  • We moved out of the city and became suburbanites.  Although P claims I left claw marks at the Lincoln Tunnel when leaving my city life, I couldn’t be happier in our house.  This also meant my return to driving a car — fellow motorists of NJ, sorry about that.
  • Our daughter went from sweet little infant to crazy, climbing, mind-of-her-own toddler who is (in a genetically inexplicable turn of events) obsessed with shoes and bags.  And cute as hell every step of the way.
  • Our son rolled with the change of moving homes and two new schools.  His imagination exploded and I love to hear his stories unfold every day.  He also mastered potty training (OK, so it took almost all of 2010 and cut years from my life, but in the end, we got there).  And, in a trend that I expect I’ll continue to report in upcoming years, he continues to be obsessed with trains.
  • Fordeville came to life in this very space.  A very big development for me, even if only four or so people read it (thanks, Mom, and three random car buffs who came here accidentally after googling “De Ville” and promptly left).
  • And, most importantly, our loved ones are healthy, our friends are dear to us, we are both employed and life is good.

Did bad things happen?  Sure.  Dramas, change and general chaos reared their ugly heads a fair amount but I can’t complain.  Really, I can’t.  And although my grandmother passed away this year, we were grateful for the long and healthy life she had.  Grateful for getting to see her that last day.  And grateful that she did not suffer.

So, 2011, I see you peering around the corner.  And I won’t lie to you — I am hesitant.  I don’t like change.  And, in a freakish but entirely true admission, I don’t like odd-numbered years and am especially afraid of prime numbers.  I prefer my numbers even — from passcodes to roulette picks, you’ll rarely find an odd, and certainly not a prime, number from me.  I can’t explain it but please know that 12 months of 2011 is freaking me out a bit. 

Anyway, filed under “things I cannot change,” I will have to embrace 2011 soon enough, or at least cordially shake its hand until we get to know each other a bit better and see what’s in store.  I resolve not to list any formal resolutions but here are a few things I’m thinking about tackling to make 2011 a good year.

  • Be greener.  I can’t promise any homegrown compost or swear to a minimalist lifestyle but I will say goodbye to plastic bags forever, be more conscious of consumption and think about other easy and meaningful ways to stop being an eco-terrorist (yes, that means the end of my beloved 1.5 liter Poland Springs bottle habit).
  • More tech stuff, please.  This was the year of the Facebook, the FourSquare and the Fordeville for me (the tweet was 2009), as well as the loss of my Apple virginity via iPhone and, now, iPad.  Pretty good progress.  But let’s see what’s next (Tumblr, I’m looking at you) or how to make these things work together better.  Or how to wed my gadgets into better “make life easier” co-existence.  Because this seems stupid.  
  • Be less digital  — sometimesWhatchoo talkin about WillisYou just said to amp it up next year.  Yes, but I’ve got to step away from the online life when I’m with my kids.  That whole balance thing — never was my strong suit.  Being more present for them is something I can’t imagine regretting someday, even if I do miss your awesome tweet, email or Facebook post in the meantime.
  • On a related note, I will slow the fuck down (also, see “clean up my language” under past failed resolutions).  This year was 500 mph.  Every day.  The breathing room was little to none.  And though I’ve always thought that I thrive this way, maybe I don’t.  Because the sad truth is that I am missing things that are right under my nose.  And not just paying a bill on time because I can’t find it (again).  I mean the real stuff that life is made of.  Note to self in 2011:  Stop missing it.
  • A return to current movies, books and music — ones that don’t revolve around toddlers. Enough said.
  • Cook more.  By “cook,” I mean the use of the big appliance on the bottom, not the one with all the buttons and the rotating dish on the top.  I know how, trust me — I just, well, went 500 mph too often. 
  • Oh yeah, and get in better shape.  I’m not out to lose a bunch of weight but just be a more fit person.  Make the time for it regularly instead of that ad hoc run. (Running for the train in heels doesn’t count anymore.)

So, 2011, that’s what I’m thinking.  I hope you have good plans for me too. Let’s try to get along for the next year because, prime number fear or not, we’re stuck with each other for a bit. 

How about you guys?  Anything you want to unofficially resolve to do?  Don’t worry, I won’t hold you to it.

Happy New Year to you and yours.

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Transitions and Distractions

I have always found it difficult to transition out of big events. Or even just weekends.  I get the Sunday night blues pretty easily and find that first day back to the office after Labor Day to be such a sad marker to end the summer.  So you can imagine what the end of Christmas does to me.  Yes, even after all the craziness, planning and exhaustion, I do love the season and it’s hard for me to let it go. Well, this year I had two sizeable distractions to redirect my mind from boxing, gift receipts and clean up. 

First was the Great Fordeville Vomitfest of Dec 26. I’ll spare you the gruesome details — I think you get it (but remember the pie-eating contest scene in “Stand By Me”?) — and suffice it to say that my husband and son were hit hard and fast.  There was much laundry and Lysol involved.  I ‘m not yet ready to declare victory that the baby and I were spared but here’s to hoping. I felt like a Death Row inmate waiting for my day in the chamber to come.

And then there was the blizzard, or as the Twitterati called it, Snowpocolypse. I think we have just over two feet of snow here. But I enjoy this stuff. I get all sucked into the ongoing Storm Watch news coverage and just love how peaceful and pretty it is. But, then again, I’m not at an airport, going into labor or seeking out emergency dental work. I’m just home cleaning up after the puke aftermath, decontaminating with the zeal and care of a HazMat team. My poor husband, who emerged from 20 hours in bed to find we had moved to the Polar Ice Cap, is now recovered and, I suspect, missing our days in the city when we were not responsible for any snow clearance.   Does anyone have a snowblower we can borrow?

So with all of the unexpected activity of the last 36 hours, I didn’t get a chance to be sad that Christmas is over, though I have sought solace in the presence of massive leftovers.  But it was a great day, and my first large-scale family dinner went pretty well overall. The top things I learned (I realize these don’t apply to everyone):

–Getting dinner on the table always takes longer than you think.  Always.
–Load ’em up on appetizers (see dinner timing warning, above).
–A lot of planning ahead goes a long way.  I sound 80 but whatever.  It really helped to have a plan.
–This falls into the camp of highly obvious and probably just my problem, but you need more than one pie server.  Why do I own only one ? It’s unclear.  I love pie. And people love to bring pie.  My bad.
–Above all, and listen carefully here: Never, ever believe someone who says that he’s not sick, but he just ate something bad. Especially if that person has you over to his house on Christmas Eve.  Because, really, that person has a highly contagious stomach virus that will ultimately take out seven of his own relatives just 24 hours later.  Yeah, I’m a little bitter.

But enough about post-holiday vomit.  Back to the merriment recap.  Here are some photos of the big day.

I wish I had a better shot of the Christmas Eve luminaries that lit our entire street.  It was gorgeous.  A long-standing tradition in the neighborhood but it was our first year here, so we were stunned by the end result.

The kids all dressed up and ready to party — or tear open gifts.  And con endless amounts of junk food out of our relatives.

I thought I could pull off “retro/sparkly” with this centerpiece idea but it ended up looking a little tacky/cheapo instead.  After a few cocktails on Christmas, I think I described it as Martha Stewart hitting the crack pipe and unloading a CVS discount aisle into vases.  Oh well, I tried.

I’m not a girly girl but I do love a fancy holiday dress on my daughter.  And this one I adored.  She was twirling around in it all night and I really had a few moments when I knew I never wanted to forget how she looked this Christmas at 17 months old and loving life.

After hours of adoring his new Thomas the Train tent, my son passed out and said goodnight to Christmas right there.  Too cute.

The puking men bounced back, ate food and began the formidable task of shoveling.  Notice the height of the snow next to my 3 year-old.

And I’ll leave you with this — because nothing says blizzard like a baby stuffed into a sumo-like snowsuit and deposited atop a large drift.

Now, back to the business of shoveling, transitioning out of 2010 — and finishing the Christmas leftovers.

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On the 8th Day of Christmas

I’m not a horrible procrastinator but I do cut things pretty close (yes, there’s a difference) — there just isn’t much room for error or regrouping.  I have lists upon lists, divided into sub-lists, and that keep me on track.  If something unexpected goes awry, though, the wheels can quickly fall off the wagon.

And so comes the tale of  how a certain home furnishings company almost pushed me over the edge of holiday sanity yesterday.

We’re hosting 20 people for Christmas dinner.  I’ve never done this before — we always lived in an apartment in Manhattan and simply didn’t have the space.  So while I was excited to have my hostessing debut this year, I hadn’t planned on a massive work deadline basically killing any and all Christmas productivity last week.  I’m behind, let’s say.  But that’s OK — I keep adjusting my lists to put us back on track.

So it was yesterday morning when I said to P that our new area rug for the dining room should be arriving any day/minute.  After months of back-order waiting, it was to have shipped on December 13.  P raised a suspicious eyebrow and thought maybe it was a good idea to check on the shipping status of said rug.   I was sure it was just on the slower end of arrivals due to holiday shipping volumes.  We still had four business days to receive it.  That’s an eternity in Fordeville Productivity Time (as the race to purge the basement continues, almost approaching reality show levels of entertainment).

You can see where this is going.

Let me back up a minute.  You know when you find the *perfect* item for your home and you’re just dying to get it in place?  That’s how I felt about this rug.  I loved it.  I knew it was going to look fabulous.  Silly but true.  And we needed it, not only for acoustic purposes (hardwood floors + 2 toddlers = hearing loss) but also to finish off the dining room where 20 people will be sitting on Saturday for Christmas Dinner. 

Again, you can see where this is going.

I called the company around lunch time yesterday, order number in hand.  A very nice, if not overly mellow, woman named Marilyn typed it in.  Awkward pause.  Then, a far too casual and sort of disbelieving:  “Oh, wow, look at this.  Nobody called you?”

Blood pressure rising.

I assured Marilyn, whom I was quickly starting to dislike, that nobody had called me.  It was at that point that she said this:  “Looks like that rug won’t be shipping until May 30.”

Excuse me? 

I was pretty good, I must say — maybe because I was experiencing denial, as I saw no room in my sub-lists for “purchase new area rug for dining room that you will like just as much and have it arrive by Christmas.”  No dice.  Surely Marilyn was wrong.

Nope.  May 2011 it is.  She felt a little bad, but not at all approaching the level of “let me do something to make this up to you” that I needed in that moment.  Marilyn, you sort of suck.  And I think you are on too many meds because you have a dulled sense of compassion and urgency.  You are also oblivious and  numb to my impending freak out session — which I will try very hard not to take out on you.  But I think I hate you because I have nowhere else to direct my anger right now.

Now I am thinking irrationally.  I know nothing about rug-making but, let me assure you, this was not some custom-loomed Persian magnificence that I ordered.  It was a nice area rug from a large American home furnishings company that sends a catalog to each of you on a regular basis.  I also know nothing of the production chain process in retail.  But somehow my line of questioning toward Marilyn took this turn:

“Well, I’m confused.  Why May?  How can it take that long?” (Mentally,  I added: “Is someone flying to the Far East and hand weaving these — a person who won’t start doing so until, say, mid-March?”) 

Crickets.  Sorry, Marilyn, I know you can’t answer these questions.  It’s not your job to trace my almost-rug’s origins and production path.

I try begging.  Maybe there is just one rug left somewhere they could send to me?  Just because I can’t find time to buy another.  Come on.

Uh, no.  May 2011.

Fine.  At this point I muttered something about  her company ruining Christmas.  She said, distantly, “Oh.  I’m sorry.”

Look, I know I’m being dramatic.  I don’t *need* the rug.  This is not what Christmas is about.  I get it.  Before you tell me to have some perspective and think about, say, Rwanda, I assure you, I am well-aware of how stupid my disappointment is.  I’m pretty sure that my 20 guests won’t walk in and demand to know why I don’t have a dining room rug.  But I’m Type A and I like things how I like them.  And I don’t like adding to my well-crafted lists unexpectedly — especially on December 21.

And clearly Marilyn’s place of employment became the cathartic outlet for my holiday stress.  We all have one.

I gently suggest the following to my nemesis Marilyn:  “How about this?  How about if I find another rug of yours that I like, in stock, you send it to me overnight with no shipping charge.”

Marilyn thought that was a fine idea.  How novel.  Maybe she can use that sometime in the future, being in customer service and all.

In the end, it wasn’t about the rug.  I get that.  We all have our holiday breaking points and anything can set them off.  And I know if left myself just a little more breathing room, a little more leeway for things to not go smoothly all the time, this stuff wouldn’t get to me.

Anyway, I resolved not to spend too much time fixing the whole situation.  It just wasn’t an option if I wanted to have food on the table Saturday and stocking stuffers for my kids.  I took 30 minutes, scoured the Internet and found an almost-identical rug — in stock at a location near our house (read: no crazy overnight shipping).  And, at half price (thanks, Santa — or karma)! 

P is picking it up today, and I will think of Marilyn not-so-fondly as I walk over it and inevitably spill all kinds of things on it this Christmas.

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Santa’s Sandwich

{Photo courtesy NYC Food Guy}

I was thinking about Christmas traditions.  This, of course, brings my mind to cookies (it’s easy for me to bridge quickly from any given topic to baked goods). Did you all leave milk and cookies for Santa as a kid?

We didn’t.  In our house, we were raised to leave Santa an Italian hero on Christmas Eve.  Seriously.

If you’ve never had a real Italian hero, well — that’s a whole other discussion for another day (and you have my sympathy, by the way).  But my mom used to make them a lot when we were kids, mainly because my father loved them.  She piled up the meats, the cheese, some shredded lettuce, oil and vinegar.  Amazing.

So how stupid were my sisters and I not to put the pieces together?  It’s like a basic 2nd grade workbook problem:

  • Dad loves Italian heroes. 
  • Santa loves Italian heroes. 
  • Dad and Santa were under the same roof Christmas Eve. 
  • Therefore, Santa must be…
  • (Come on, girls, you can figure this out)

Nope, we were clueless.

Maybe my parents billed it that Santa couldn’t run on cookies all night and needed a real meal (or sandwich) at some point in his travels.  Maybe it was about food for the reindeer.  But, if I’m really honest with myself, I don’t think they had to sell it at all.  I think we just believed them because leaving that Italian hero on Christmas Eve was what we always did.

 And that’s what I like about tradition — you don’t question it because it’s just the way it’s done your family.  It’s not until we’re older that we compare notes with the real world and realize that our way might have been wonderfully different, a little quirky, pretty naive or — in some cases — just a bit off kilter (see Competitive Post-Thanksgiving Gaming).

But I like the story of Santa’s sandwich and, as my kids grow up, I wonder what variations we’ll bring into our own Christmas traditions — and whether I should buy some sopressata, cheese and a 6-foot roll this week.

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