Wednesday, April 29, 2009

jen the hen is twenty sev-en


Happy Birthday to Jen the Hen, the best roomie around! What would I have done without this girl in college, not to mention the years following? Bosom buddies from day one, we took long runs/walks up and around the temple in the mornings for the three years we lived together, talking about everything and anything and nothing at all. She's the best listener, loyal to the core, and has an infectious laugh. She's gorgeous (check out that wedding photo!) can write a research paper faster than anyone I know, falls asleep anywhere, and has two cute boys in her life -- Ty and little Thatcher. We can pick up where we left off every time she visits and I love our chats on the phone in between. I love her dearly. Happy 27th plus one day, Henry Higgins!

"Our poor eyes. Shield us from the terror!"

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Happy Birthday, Birdie!


I wish everyone in the world had a Katie. If everyone in the world had a Katie in their life, they would have the ultimate example of selflessness. A model mother. A perfect friend. If everyone in the world had a Katie, they would always have someone to call, no matter the hour or the instance. If everyone in the world had a Katie their bookshelves would be lined with the most thoughtful Books of Remembrance. Their desk drawers would be replete with kind notes of encouragement. Their journal would hold secret notes written months (sometimes years) in advance to find once they've reached that page. And, all the lines in between would not be short on adventures. I've been lucky enough to have a Katie in my life for most of my life, and not just any Katie, this Katie. Oh, how much better life is when you've got Katie!

Happy 27th Kates!

MP1. Mrs. Lake. Notes in the bathroom. Violin. Jack's Orchestra: First Chair. Prank calls. Necklaces in white boxes. Read-a-thons. Emigration. Marker-fight sleepover. Theme Song. Clearly Canadian. Mr. Leopard: Lord of the Condrat Dance. Jasper. Sleeping on the Tramp. Anne of Green Gables. Molls. Millie the Dog. Umbros. Stake Zoo Day, just for the photo booth. Red Folders. "Katie, make the balloons smaller!" Road shows. Credit parties. Dr. Fermata, please hold. Judith M. Rich. House Sitter. Snowcat. Murphy Brown. Back Room Paper. So So and Hello. Classic Skating. Glitz. Fishies. Cowboy Grub. The Rally. Katie-Nana. Saturn of Salt Lake this is Sharon. S.W.A.B. The back room paper. 1106. 1928. Bedroom A of 161. Apartment 17. Fat-free McFlurries. Graham crackers and frosting. "Martha wants my body," HB. Mardi Gras (we want the beads back). Loves of a Lifetime. Running errands. Judi's Diner. Home Improvement. Babysitting the ungests. Boy-Girl Parties. Livin the wild life in Cougar Country. Use of Horn. Mrs. Folias, but what did we learn? Gregory's. Handwriting practice. Bob the Fish. Paper Bags. Paper mache pigs. Powell. St. George Marathon. Bird's Don't. Boy Scouts of America. "Ambrosia" for your lips. ELP. The Mahi game in the Burb. Mrs. White: Science s_cks. T.A. for Rose and Ann. Mr. Miller. The Burpettes. Post-its. Alta after New Years Stomp. Monday Night Shake Night at the Malt Shoppe. Wellington Street. Write it in your Franklin. A Different Kind of Company, A Different Kind of Car. ___ in the cornfield is our activity. Tennis matches. Round your age up a year. 4 Year Flames. Tolbert's Halloween bonfire. "Calm down, calm down. Everybody calm down!" Billie tipped it over, ooh! The Beav. Chubby sticks. Biker Babes (once). Red Jetta. The Maxima. Shops at Riverwoods. Hot tub crack. Walks with Weber. Walks in Country Club. Walks with E and G. EFY - joi in the jerknee. Antz. Shants. Homecomen-i-g. Senior Assasination. EHS parking lot shaving cream fight: Agnes the car. Family Biography, unabridged. Robyn Todd. The Big I. And We Danced Anyway. Huck Finn paper. Appliance Posse. Acappella Tour: Splash Mountain Incident. Waking up with a Gomez. Shalom and good morning. Park City. Ma. Faxes from our Dad's offices. Katie for the Ladies. Main Street Pizza and Noodle. SophOmore Days. The Pants. I'm with Birdie. Red toenails. Last Wave 2000. Two milkshakes. Too many M's. Meishing. Tar tar tar. ACK.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Sunday, April 19, 2009

What's Up, Doc?

It's Sunday. Which means tomorrow is Monday and the next day is Tuesday. You follow? If not, I suggest you see a doctor. Tuesday was the day I was to leave the 4th floor of a building on 25th Street in Manhattan after spending five glorious days with K, all about the town.

Instead, I'll be here, where Spring can't make up its mind, no matter the day.

Speaking of doctors, let me tell you about one I met recently, and why. For about six months now I've had a pain in my hip. It comes and goes with various levels of activity, which I will outline as follows: Sitting typing on my laptop, activity Level 1. Walking to the Park with Steph and Mare, Level 2. Snow shoeing, Level 3. And so on and so forth. (For some reason the pain seems to be worse when I wake up in the morning, so I guess in a backwards way, sleep is Level 4. Unless I dream I'm an acrobat, you've got me on this one.) My roommates have probably heard me complain about this the most. Side note: I don't recommend spending countless evening hour(s) looking up various ailments on WebMD when you and your roommates slash significant others slash peeps are in want of an activity. While highly entertaining, it leads to some scary self-diagnoses and some creepy, creepy videos on YouTube. (The good news: they have found a cure for the Tree Man.)

Two weeks ago, the pain was quite bad. I grabbed my laptop and consulted the MD on the Web. By process of elimination (and a few silent prayers they won't make my life into a YouTube video) I had a verdict. Just to be safe, I decided to get a second opinion. Instead of waiting to get into my normal MD (as in an actual doctor, not the cyber kind) which could have taken days, I decided to take a faster route. I had deduced (having just graduated with a bona fide certificate of completion from the Cyber School of Medicine) that a simple x ray would confirm my hip hunches one way or another. Nothing too serious. Six months is indeed a long time to suffer. And a long time to come up with possibilities. In the (way) back of my mind I thought maybe, just maybe it was something serious. But, most likely I figured I no longer have my 16 year-old Sarah Jessica Parker "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" win-the-dance-competition-and-the-boy's-heart body no mo'.

In walks the doc, white coat, chart in hand, totally 2-legit, right? Her wavy red hair was parted down the middle and held in a low ponytail with a scrunchie (still holding onto the SJP Glory Days herself, perhaps.) She had on socks with birks, very Woodstock-meets-the-early 90's. "So, you've got a pain in your hip, huh? Why do you think that is?" This should have been my first clue. While I believe a good doctor asks lots of questions, I also believe a good doctor has the answers, or at least takes a stab at them. She didn't. "Well, that's why I'm here," I said, resisting the urge to add a "Doi!" onto the end of that sentence.

Moments later, I limped down the hall with the x ray technician. She looked all but thrilled she's decided to look at pictures of bones every day for the rest of her life. It also (lucky me) happened to be the last day Noah Wyle would ever be on Primetime TV, so she was bound to be blue times two. "Ok," she said from outside the room, adding up the cost of all 12 seasons of ER on amazon.com in her head. "Hold your breath. 1, 2, 3. And...breathe." She led me back to the room to wait for Doc Birkenstock.

In all my waiting, I wasn't quite prepared for what followed. In walks the doc-in-socks. She sits down on the stool and tells me that I'm flat out wrong on my self-diagnosis. This I could take. The next part, not so much. "Well, we didn't find bursitis." Then, with a bedside manner as if I was in line at Subway and she had the unfortunate task of telling me they're out of yellow peppers she adds, "We found a tumor." She might as well have shouted, "Next," and scooted me out the door. If the roles had been reversed, if I had to equate things in her terms and on her sensitivity level, I could have told her she was at a Joan Baez concert and she left the beer in her VW bus. It seemed about that important. "So," I said, begging for more information, "How big's this thing...the size of a golf ball, or what?" "Yup." She nodded in a "Yeah. Sure. Golf ball. Sounds good." way. "Takes up about half your hip bone." So not only have they run out of yellow peppers, but they have run out of them at Subways across the Wasatch Front. I wanted to shout back, "Oh, yeah? Well, the beer's gone, too and there won't be any for the rest of Woodstock. What's up now, Doc?!" Not winning any awards for her bedside manner, she said, "Tumors aren't really our specialty, so I'll set up an appointment for a CT scan tomorrow. That way you can get a better look at this thing." She called it a "thing," as in "it-ain't-no." Never mind the large mass taking over your hip. She stood up off the stool and strode out.

* * *

Long story short, or long story long*, and to avoid a barrage of questions, I'll add that this Doc wasn't exactly right. We're not sure who to blame. Perhaps the x ray tech started her Series Finale ER Mourning Party a little too early that day and had drowned herself in her own tears, making the x ray unclear. There was a total misdiagnosis. I can obviously (and, more importantly, gratefully) laugh about this now, but it was a stressful week as I thought I had a golf ball-size tumor on my hip for eight days. I'll finish the rest of the story and bring everyone up to speed soon. As for now, know that it's not a tumor, and I wasn't that far off the mark on my self-diagnosis.

*Shout out to one of my fave John Krasinski You Tube videos. Search "John Krasinski car breaks down," if you're interested. (Well worth the 6 minutes and 56 seconds, especially to when he does his Boston car mechanic accent). While you're at it, look up "Thing" on Web MD and see what pops up.

before and after

I don't know what's worse, killing a spider by myself, or the 30 minutes that follow, when I'm convinced it's been reincarnated. Every 30 seconds I think I feel it crawling up my leg.

Friday, April 17, 2009

happy weekend


on a bit of a blogging hiatus. or, considering one. haven't been much in the writing mood. too much to do and a warm weekend on the way.

a monday picnic in the park was the perfect way to begin a crazy work week. we packed sandwiches and fresh fruit and walked a few blocks to eat at the top of the hill. sitting in that spot uncovered memories of days spent doing the same: summer afternoons on the pond with aunt b, sister and i pushing the pedals of paddle boats. the glory days cheering the tennis team onto victory. an airport diversion a few years ago with suz, complete with a full park tour and a shady tree to shelter us while we laughed and ate chocolate-covered strawberries from down the street.

i'm thinking this weekend i'll need much more of the same. i'll pull out the shades and celebrate the sun.
happy weekend.

{image source unknown}

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

these are a few

I adore little notebooks. I have a shelf-full. Mostly for listing. Sketching. Jotting. Note-taking. Here's a list (among lots) I've been working on since February. It's the most recent "Favorite Things" of many among such notebooks. I add to it every few days.

007. toast
031. being with my cousins
052. lamplight
061. dancing close
085. sleeping in your own bed after you've been away for a while
143. when steph says, "peace, love, and chicken grease!"
190. exploring other people's bookshelves
212. swinging on the gate at the cabin
237. bread bowls and tomato soup with levi
266. pulling my hair up at the end of the day
268. all green lights
300. swively stools
358. when someone helps me get my luggage out of the overhead bin
369. apricot jam
380. kate spade green
395. spray startch
403. market street with mom & dad
413. seeing my friends as moms
419. free mobile-to-mobile
422. long lunches
431. hammocks
452. snow angels
467. paddle boats at liberty park

Friday, April 10, 2009

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

99


I told nearly everyone I came in contact with today that today is my Grandmother's 99th birthday. Isn't that something? She grows ever-more remarkable. What a full, rich life. I love her dearly and feel so blessed to be among her posterity. When we spoke on the phone this afternoon Grandma said some of the great-grandchildren (who call her Grandma Great) had just been to shower her with cards which now line the mantle in the front room. We'll celebrate with all the cousins on Saturday. Happy Birthday, Grandma!

Happy Birthday Dad


This wise guy's one year older (wiser, too!) I'm a lucky girl to have such a Dad. One who tells the best bedtime stories about llamas and boys named Pedro. A Dad who sings with the MoTab, and whistles while he works. A Dad who'll go on long walks or galumphing through the pasture at the cabin. He likes good music and good literature. He'll let you have the last piece of chocolate cake. He leaves good luck notes before soccer games and draws silly pictures for me to find when I get home from dates. He's nick-named Bumlett and has a brother called Magoo. He speaks German and Japanese. He corrects English papers and writes crazy poems and has the most perfect handwriting. He's a Dad who stays up late to help with Algebra homework. He does "the lizard" and sings "Mrs. Goldfarb." He likes public transportation, college football, fresh fruit shakes, and the mountains. He knows everything about anything and is patient and kind. He taught me to ride a bike and drive a stick-shift. He's a Dad who has favorite trees in the city (I have favorite houses) and teaches me about nature and the nature of things. He gives good advice and the best underdogs and has literally given a stranger the coat off his back. I love his stories about Germany, the army days with Paul, and life on Cherry Lane. He was smart enough to snag my Mom. He never asks for much and makes everyone laugh. He's a Dad who likes bad puns and good ice cream. He carves excellent jack-o-lanterns. He wears bow ties, makes excellent crepes and the best homemade popcorn. He's trustworthy. Loyal. Honest and true. I'd take him anywhere. He makes me want to try harder at all sorts of things and life in general is much better with my Dad!