Archive for August, 2010

Summer, thanks for stopping by.

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

It’s just about time to wrap things up, Summer. I’m not really one of those people who talks about how fast or slow you’ve been going — the truth is,  I think you moved along at just the right clip.

My mudroom has bead-board wainscoting — is that the right word? — that runs to higher than 5’4″ (I know because it’s over my head) that is topped off by a small ledge. This ledge is the perfect perch for bottles and tubes of sunscreen. I begin buying sunscreen in the spring — as soon as I see it, really, which often means (in NJ) around Spring Break time for those who are planning to decamp to Panama City — and I can mark summer days passing by as the number of bottles dwindle. Currently there are only about 4 useful bottles on the ledge. The bottles start out all pristine and shiny, marked with our name, and by the time September rolls around they are sticky, tacky, smudged and clogged with sand or some unrecognizable ick. The ones that are residing on the ledge at this moment are candidates to make it through to Christmas — waiting for that random sunny fall day that might find redheaded me on a soccer field sideline, tempting fate.

Our swimming pool will also be closed during the first week of September, and the sound of falling water will cease. When we built the pool a couple of years ago, I wanted one of the pool returns (where the water comes back after running through the filter) to be a waterfall down one of the pools walls. The pool is built into a hill, so there’s a 4 foot wall that provides a somewhat dramatic “sheer descent” waterfall. The pool filter runs 7a to 5:30p, so from the deck areas of the house (and of course the pool deck itself) there is a steady splash from the waterfall. The joke is on me — I thought it would be restful to be sitting by the pool while the wee ones were at camp, reading and sipping iced tea.…but the reality is that this never happened this summer and even if it did, the waterfall sound is so loud and constant as to get on my last nerve. When it finally shuts off at 5:30, it is like someone’s turned off Mother Nature’s noise machine. Ahhh, quiet.

Before 7a one day a week, the quiet is broken by Luis, the guy who comes to cut our lawn. He will often sit in his clean fire-engine red pickup truck at the end of our driveway beginning at 6:45, waiting for the big hand to get to the 12. When it does, he fires up the lawnmower. Morning has broken. I can’t say I mind at all — there is nothing as lovely as the smell of freshly cut grass, nor as hilarious as the two (or three) dogs attempting to play with Luis while he drives the mower.

Once, a couple of years ago, our landscaping grew out of control when we encouraged a mysterious vine to take over the boxwood hedges in front of the house. Turns out we were cultivating our very own pumpkin patch — but we didn’t know it at the time. In retrospect it seems clear that a stray seed from the previous fall’s jack o’ lantern landed in the mulch and decided it was as good a place as any to lay down roots. There were no signs of pumpkins until much later in the fall, but for the whole summer we watched as small fuzzy leaves grew into enormous prickly ones, as skinny tendrils of vine — which started out as so cute wrapped around the porch railing — grew to be thick tentacles of determined plant, destined to choke everything in its path.Summer was very kind to that pumpkin vine — it really thrived — and it was a great lesson for the kids about what makes things grow, what’s a weed and even if it’s not a weed, how it can become a nuisance. We only got one pumpkin out of that vine — about as big as a cantaloupe. Lot of bluster for not a lot of follow-through.

For sure you know Summer’s stay at my house is over when the kids start making grand plans for (speaking of bluster and shoddy follow-through).…Halloween. I tried to institute a Family Law that we were prohibited from discussing Halloween before September 1, but I have a family of scofflaws and such rules are never followed. Seems, in fact, that Family Halloween Planning begins earlier and earlier. Yes, there are the costume catalogs that begin to arrive by August, but truly this crowd has been announcing their costumes, then changing their minds, then announcing new costumes (lather, rinse, repeat) multiple times before enough catalogs have even arrived so they each can have one. Those department store window dressers have nothing on my children. Christmas in October? Ha. October in June. How can I tell Summer’s done? The half-dozen Lillian Vernon (et al.) catalogs that are missing covers, wedged in the couch, left on the bathroom floor, and, oh yes, being fought over as if they might contain the Secrets of the Universe.

So thanks, Summer, it was great to spend time with you. I have to ask you to get your stuff out of the guest room as quickly as possible — we need the space for the latex masks and polyester wigs that will be arriving just after Labor Day. Watch Luis and his mower on the way out.

This post was sparked by a Mama Kat’s Writer’s Workshop prompt:
“What five images paint a picture of summer to you?
Put those five images together in a piece of writing.”

Want to participate?
Click here:
Mama's Losin' It

If you need to sing out, sing out.

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

I love love love music. I love to sing all the time — in the shower, in the car, around the house. I like to dance around my kitchen too — and sometimes in places like the Target parking lot or, most recently to the horror of my 10-year-old son, the light bulb aisle of Home Depot. (I challenge you to hear “4 Minutes” with Madge and JT over a store sound system and not start to sing and bust a move. I just put it on now while I’m writing this and I can’t sit still. Excuse me for a moment.)

Ahem. Food shopping is particularly delightful because my local store’s playlist — or satellite channel — is fabulous. I used to wear my iPod but in addition to looking anti-social (which I am, but no need to be quite so blatant about it), I realized that the store’s music was as good as any I had ruining my hearing. The only downside? Those annoying “Shoppers, check out our fresh bread over in the bakery” –type of announcements that interrupt classics like Dionne Warwick’s Do You Know the Way to San Jose?.

My college roommates used to express amazement (and now my new roommates, er, children do too) that I knew the words to so many random and usually obscure songs. I happily admit I can’t recall what happened for the four years of college, or high school before that, but put on Delta Dawn’s Knock Three Times on the radio and I’ll give you every syllable. Probably with hand gestures, too.

The one caveat to all this — which drives my children insane, and the Husband too I think — is that my musical tastes are very varied, but I tend to enjoy the 70’s and 60’s XM channels above all other 175 options. 80’s? Really? I’ll give you Escape (The Pina Colada Song) because that says 70’s to me, no matter what iTunes says, but Juice Newton? No thanks. Hair bands? Ick. (I prefer hair, à la Andy Gibb or his 3 brothers.) 90’s? Uh, let’s see: graduating, getting married, having two kids. Gin Blossoms? Ok, but the Divinyls? Not so much. Bring on the 70’s — a time of no seatbelts, plaid pants and long car rides with Mom’s music (and no DVDs). It pleases me to no end that recently when I’d Really Love to See You Tonight (1976, England Dan & John Ford Coley) came on, my 11 year old joined in and sang with me. That, my friends, is my legacy. (One of them, at least.)

I listen to Imus in the Morning on WABC in NY (or watch him on Fox Business) every day. For a while now, he’s asked his guests (about 3 each morning) to provide him with a list of their 5 favorite songs. (Imus then ridicules [or not] the list, and often plays the songs as bumpers throughout the morning of the guest’s appearance.) Bruce’s “Born to Run” has been on more than one list…but there haven’t been that many repeated songs.  (Visit the Imus website for recent Top 5 lists.) This got me to thinking: could I pick 5 favorite songs — and then have them presented to the world? I don’t know that I could just hand over a list of titles — I’d have to put them in context. That day’s top 5 would depend on a million little things and maybe some big things too.

Not that you asked, but here are the tunes that have me singing in the shower, and the car, and dancing in public places (Target parking lots, anyone?). I choose these today in honor of the fact that Husband and I are off to Key West later today for a long weekend (and the children will hang with Grandma!):

»Loving You is Easy (S. McLachlan)
This is her newest. Voice like an angel.
»That’s How Strong My Love Is (A Keys)
Goofy bridal headpiece/necklace aside, this is a lovely song.
»If I Had a Million Dollars (Barenaked Ladies)
Is there a song that’s more fun? And I own a green coat, and it’s not cruel.
»You’re My Home (B Joel)
Possibly the most beautiful love song ever.
»Let’s Get It Started (Black Eyed Peas)
We’ll be singing this over the Keys causeway. Or possibly at EWR airport as we go thru security for the Miami flight.
»Unglamorous (L McKenna)
For every mother who ever stood in the kitchen at the end of a long day and was grateful that she hadn’t lost her mind and that she still loved her husband and family.
»I Like the Way You Move (Outkast)
Another one for the Mustang convertible as we head to the Keys. I won’t sing it thru security as they might get annoyed and subject me to more searches than I need.
»You Are (L Richie)
Gotta throw this in for the Husband — LR is his favorite.  I’m hardpressed to tell you why.
»We Weren’t Crazy (J Gracin)
We’ve been together a long time, Husband and me. Although we may be crazy, we are still crazily happy.
» Lucky as Me (P Vassar)
See above. And love me some Phil V — great singer –songwriter.
»Joy to the World (Three Dog Night)
Do you think I could get a TSA agent to sing along with me?
»Margaritaville (J Buffet)
I’ll have one for you, people.

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