Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Photobucket

Mom, today I learned that when Evelyn excitedly shows me things she finds in gas stations, I have a much better reaction to something like this...


Photobucket

Than I do when she brings me something like this.

(Sometimes...when two people really love Rice Krispies Treats...)

Monday, February 4, 2013

That's just jacked up.

Photobucket

Mom, today I learned that not only do I have a spare tire where it's supposed to be, but that it actually has air in it!


Photobucket

I may or may not have also learned my jack is in the garage...

(Much thanks to the Utah Highway Patrol that got me out of what could have been so much worse when I lost my tire on the interstate. Holy thanks. So much thanks. That thankful woman? She is me.)

Friday, January 25, 2013

Photobucket

Mom, today I learned that when your local Fox affiliate comes to interview you about keeping kids home from school due to weather...


Photobucket

And the reporter asks to get some shots of kids in normal, day off activities...


Photobucket

Normal activities are suddenly much more refined.

(Note: My kids DO play chess sometimes. They just play Wii games a lot more often. Don't judge. You'd yank out the encyclopedias and the chemistry set. You know you would.)

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Photobucket

Mom, today I learned how fast the kids can clear out one side of the garage.


Photobucket

And how fast we can clear one side of driveway.


Photobucket

I learned how thankful you can be for a car that doesn't drive.


Photobucket

And for a snow plow that DOES!


Photobucket

I learned that after one driveway, you still have enough energy to take an outside picture with your helper.


Photobucket

After the neighbor's driveway, your helpers have to wait until the icicles in your hair have thawed.

Photobucket

Which reminds me...Mom, today I learned I need a coat with a HOOD!






Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Photo © 2010 J. Ronald Lee


Why must I inform you that I am not a lobotomized frog? I don't even look like a frog (most days), and I hardly seem lobotomized (with enough caffeine).

Dear readers, it's because I'm a Mormon.

You've seen those commercials, yes? "I'm a skydiving, homeschooling, interior decorator...and I'm a Mormon!"  "I'm a bull fighting, jewelry making, lead singer of a punk band...and I'm a Mormon!"

So, I guess this is my ad.  I'm a blogging, humor-writing, non-lobotomized, non-frog human woman...and I'm a Mormon!

If you're not a Mormon, you're probably very confused. Let me explain.

Mormons, like Jesus, have a great love for the parable, the metaphor, the object lesson. If you're teaching a lesson or giving a talk in the Mormon church, you're practically honor bound to use one, and if you're like most of us, you're not so great at coming up with your own. No, if you're like most of us, you rely on one of the time-tested, much-used (sometimes abused), well-known, someone-stick-a-fork-in-my-eye-it's-THIS-ONE-AGAIN object lesson favorites.

And the favorite of all favorites involves a frog, a pot of water, and the incremental application of heat. This isn't a metaphor exclusive to Mormondom by any means, but it is much beloved by the LDS people. I'm not sure why. Maybe there's a green Jello/frog eye salad/potluck dinner connection. (We're big on those too.)

As an illustration of the way we can be induced to sin if the process is gradual, teachers and speakers say that a frog dropped into a pot of boiling water will immediately jump out, whereas a frog placed in a pot of cold water that is gradually heated will acclimate to the new temperatures until it is eventually boiled alive. You can believe it. It's science.

Except it's not.

Well, not entirely. There were scientists and frogs involved, but the frogs that didn't jump out of the water were also conveniently lacking in brains...of any sort...because the scientists had removed them.

You can see how the learner's connection to the object lesson breaks down when you learn the truth. If the devil wants me to sin, all he has to do is introduce the idea gradually.  And dig my brains out with a spoon or other implement. I hate when that happens.

Because I know I'm not a lobotomized frog, I declare this object lesson to be officially out of service.

Mormons, this is a Code Red, Level 4 Object Lesson Alert! OBJECT LESSON DOWN! OBJECT LESSON DOWN! REPLACE IMMEDIATELY! I repeat: REPLACE IMMEDIATELY!

I suggest testing birds in pots of milk. Or gradually replacing my chocolate with anything else. Wait. Don't do that one. People would get hurt.

Now that I'm thinking about it, there are some other object lessons I heard in church that also never worked for me.

- The Camel and the Tent: Along the same lines as the frog story, this one involves the acceptance of sin by degree. A traveler in the desert and his camel are overtaken by a sandstorm. Traveler hides in a tent, and the camel asks if he can just stick his nose in through the tent door so he can breathe. Little by the little, the traveler accepts more requests from the camel until the camel has taken over the entire tent and the traveler is on the outside (apparently dying in the storm).

Lovely story, but it always left me with more questions than anything. What are the laws of the region regarding the ethical treatment of camels? Can anyone just buy a camel and not ensure its safety against a sandstorm? Where is the camel's tent? And what's so wrong with letting a camel breathe? I like to breathe, don't you? How is this traveler not prepared for the eventuality of a sandstorm to the point that his means of transportation is about to be killed? Is he a total noob or what? How will the traveler get to where he needs to go after the sandstorm without his trusty talking camel?

Also, holy Bedouin! A talking camel!

- Stray Cats and Impure Thoughts:  I heard this one only recently, so I'm not sure if it's made the "tried and true" category yet. (If it was spoken in an LDS church meeting...and it was...you can bet it's on its way.) Impure thoughts are like stray cats. Of course, you wouldn't feed a stray cat that came into your yard because you know to feed it would be to encourage it to stay and encourage others to follow. The same is true for impure thoughts. If you feed them (cat food or tuna or something), they will stay and probably more will come.

As a cat lover with a personal rule to only own cats who would otherwise be homeless, they lost me pretty much immediately.  Stray cats are MY cats! You want my cats to die?! That is an impure thought. Stop feeding it right now!

- Dog Poop Brownies:  A plate of beautiful brownies is displayed for the class. Members are asked if they'd each like a brownie. Before eating them, the teacher reveals that just a teaspoon of dog poop was added to the brownie batter before they were baked. It's such a small amount. You probably won't even taste it. It's central to the plot and she's an Oscar-winning actress and...wait... Anyway, no one wants a brownie anymore, and the lesson is that listening to or viewing media that is almost perfect except for those two bad words or that one bad scene is like eating a brownie with just a little dog poop in it.

So, this one works as an analogy, I guess. It's just been done to death and I want it to actually die already. Kill it, Mormons. Kill it with the Spirit of God like a fire is burning. Brownies and dog poop should never, ever be used in the same sentence, unless that sentence is, "I pretended all of these brownies had dog poop in them, and now all those kids won't eat them. More brownies for me!"

Even then, no. 

Look away, Amanda. Just...look away.

Photobucket

Mom, today I learned what happens when you forget to put out your recycling for most of December...and then Christmas happens.


Photobucket

And New Year's Eve.

(Thanks to Amanda and Scott Larsen of RecycleMe Utah for putting up with our recycling forgetting selves...sometimes literally sending their children into our house to drag our bins out of our kitchen or garage for us. I don't know if they want all their other customers to know they do this for us, lest everyone wait until a blond 12 year old is on their doorstep. Let's just say we're going to be much better about the recycling this year and leave it at that. Either that or I'll make lots of treats to send over as penance.)

(Richard's addendum: If you see me with my junk, and you think that I'm a punk, look away, baby, look away.)

Thursday, January 3, 2013

He just needs the right motivation.


Photobucket

Mom, today I learned that organization skills are not lost on my son.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

A Very Merry Un-New Year to YOU!

All over Facebook, the blogosphere, and on message boards I frequent, my friends are making and sharing their New Year's Resolutions. It's a wonderful, inspirational season of self improvement.

And I'm having none of it.

None. Of. It.

I could cite the usual reasons someone forgoes the yearly goal setting ritual.

- No one keeps them anyway.
- They're the same resolutions I've made for 20 years.
- Everyone else is doing it, and I want to pretend I'm unique by being exactly like all the other people NOT doing it.
- I'm lazy and I know it.

But those aren't the reasons this year. Fact is, I have a really good resolution track record. I'm not particularly lazy. I don't really care if it's the in or out thing to do. 

I don't want to make any resolutions because I had a long, hard, sometimes excruciatingly stressful 2012 and you know what? We made it. We survived. We thrived. We kicked 2012's giant ugly butt.  (And I know from giant butts. I own a mirror.)

You don't look at a new year and say, "How can I be better?" when you just showed the last one who was boss. When prime athletes win a championship and someone asks them what they're going to do next, they don't say, "I'm going to run a marathon!" or "I'm going to climb Mount Everest!" No. They say, "I'm going to DISNEYLAND!" because they're smart enough to know they earned a well-deserved break.

I have no desire to go to Disneyland, but I'm taking a break from the resolving and the improving, at least of the purposeful variety.

Some people might respond to a post like this with the old adage, "You're either moving forward or backward. There's no standing still."  These are people who have never heard of momentum. Buddy, I just circumnavigated the earth three times while you were taking a leisurely stroll to your mailbox. I couldn't stop moving forward now if I tried.

Because someone in my readership NEEDS to hear me resolve to do something, I present for your perusal (not your approval, because...2012) my 2013 Un-New Year's list of 13 Un-Resolutions.

1. Burn my tongue at least twice a month.

2. Profile Netflix as an Awesome Product whenever they have what I'm looking for. Profile it as a Stupid Product when they don't.

3. Say what I *really* think on Facebook. Then like my own posts. Then drink hot cocoa with a cheer whenever I'm unfriended.

4. Compose an unfriend drinking song to go with the hot cocoa mentioned above.

5. Watch everything I'm already watching but at a higher volume. On the lawn.


6. Quit shopping at Wal Mart on principle...except when I can't help it.


7. Email bomb Wal Mart corporate with complaints as penance for weak moments.


8. Go to Disneyland unless I can't.


9. Pretend I'm in Disneyland until I get sued.


10. Glue stuff to other stuff. Hijinks!


11. Steal Aaron's "Keep Out! Don't Enter!" sign from his door and put it on mine. Laugh at myself for thinking it might work.


12. Stay up too late. Sleep in too long. Lather, rinse, repeat.


13. Kick 2013's butt like the ninja I am.