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December, 2008

  1. for auld lang syne

    December 31, 2008 by Louise

    It’s New Years’ Eve! And apparently we are going to receive 40 cm (16? inches) of snow tonight/tomorrow. Our plans? We are staying home, drinking ginger ale, and watching TV. Tomorrow we are supposed to go over to my parents’ to partake in the turkey (Mom never cooks turkey on Christmas Day – only on New Years’) but with the storm… yeah, it might be another day. I made Rob park the car down the street in the hotel parking lot. Weird, I know, but this way if there’s a ton of snow, the hotel plows out their parking lot so we’ll be able to get out if we need to. Hopefully that made sense because I’m not re-writing it.

    Anyway. This will more than likely be my last blog post of 2008. Nothing exciting, no huge news. 2008 was a hard year, and maybe 2009 won’t be as hard. Or maybe it will be, in different ways. Who knows? I’m just excited at the possibilities.

    I hope that the year brings to you everything that you need.


  2. Update

    December 30, 2008 by Louise

    I found the cheese. It was in the freezer. Nobody knows why.
    Poor little freezer cheese.


  3. UUUUUUUGH

    by Louise

    So I am taking Clomid. Clomid helps me to ovulate. That’s a good thing. Another thing that Clomid does, which I don’t enjoy as much as I enjoy the ovulation? Is give me motherfucking hot flashes. They happen all night long. I’m sweaty and gross and it’s January and this should not be happening to me for at least another 8 years.

    Rob is a normal human being so he doesn’t like it when I turn the heat off and open all the windows. That being said, he is very cute when his teeth chatter.

    MY NECK IS SWEATY.

    I JUST HAD TO SHARE.

    Jesus, pharmaceuticals. Can’t we all just get along?


  4. Foodie

    December 29, 2008 by Louise

    So, you know how some people who are addicted to, say, smoking, but have quit, have some kind of placebo, like chewing gum or lollipops or something?
    I’m the same way. I don’t want to eat right now, so I am posting a recipe. (more…)


  5. Don’t go chasing waterfalls…

    by Louise

    My left eye has been twitching for three, maybe four days now. Not all the time, and not hugely, but enough to bug me. They say that this happens when you’re tired – but I’m really not.
    Maybe I just have a secret urge to become a female R&B singer?
    (more…)


  6. *panic*

    December 28, 2008 by Louise

    Only one week left of vacation! I’m not sure if I have enough time left to get all the vegging in that I had planned on.

    Found my inhaler. It was in the car. Where I looked like, 9 times. Now I’m wondring where the havarti we bought yesterday might be. I unpacked the groceries, and it wasn’t anywhere to be found. If it’s still in the car, I’ll be annoyed. If it’s back at the store, I’ll be even more annoyed, because I hate when that happens. Somewhere out there my cheese is languishing.


  7. Save. Me.

    December 27, 2008 by Louise

    I just spent some time on the phone with a friend and while she is a great, fantastic friend, she’s one of those who will talk and talk and talk with no hope for anyone else getting a word in edgewise, plus she doesn’t really talk about… anything. It was like discussing car insurance quotes for three hours. It’s weird, because this only happens on the phone – when we’re just hanging out in person everything’s great. Unfortunately we live far apart now so we pretty much only ever talk on the phone.

    I also can’t find my inhaler but I’m fairly sure I didn’t leave it at my parents’ yesterday. So where could it be??? It’s a mystery for the ages.


  8. No offense to any Californians who might be reading this

    by Louise

    I used to be up on all the new music and all into the indie people and such. But for the last… how many years? I’m like “No! I only want to hear Simon and Garfunkel and Gordon Lightfoot and don’t you dare try to make me listen to anything new!”. Rob has become my introducer of new musics into my life. Occasionally he forces me out of my ABBA rut (yes, I admit it!) and makes me listen to some cool tunes. To wit (and please remember that this is a fan-made video so any images of Gwen Stefani aren’t authorized):

    See them on their big bright screen
    tan and blonde and seventeen
    Eating nonfood keeps them mean
    but they’re young forever
    If they must grow up
    they marry dukes and earls
    I hate California girls

    They ain’t broke, so they put on airs,
    the faux folk sans derrieres
    They breathe coke and they have affairs
    with each passing rock star
    They come on like squares
    then get off like squirrels
    I hate California girls

    Looking down their perfect noses
    at me and my kind
    do they think we won’t
    well, never mind

    Laughing through their perfect teeth
    at everyone I know
    do they think we won’t
    get up and go?

    So
    I have planned my grand attacks
    I will stand behind their backs
    with my brand-new battle ax
    Then will they taste my wrath
    They will hear me say
    as the pavement whirls
    “I hate California girls…”


  9. $20 x 26 x 1000 = $520 000 (or, why I am not a math teacher)

    by Louise

    Rob’s gift from me this year was a new computer.

    What’s that you say? Louise how can you just up and purchase a new computer? Well, that’s kind of the thing – I didn’t. Well, I did, but not really. Work this year offered teachers the chance to purchase new home computers, and they’d pay for it, and take a certain amount off our paychecks each month. So, I’ll be losing $20/paycheck (I think?) for the next 1000 years, but we have a computer that actually works and doesn’t bluescreen every four seconds. It’s also got um… more memory? and a fancy screen? Rob has been messing with it like crazy for the past few days – first installing Linux, then Windows, then Apple stuff. And the computer takes it all. I don’t know why that’s so exciting to him (my only Apple memory is when my sister had this Commodore 64 thing and the screen was our TV and she had a cassette tape drive thing. I could make the computer write “Louise is awesome!” all over the screen. That is what I know about Apple products), but it is. I feel kind of bad because aside from that (which he knew he was getting), I got him absolutely nothing – so he didn’t really have any surprises on Christmas morning. But at the same time… yeah, I think he didn’t mind having no surprises.


  10. Happy Merry

    by Louise

    In the past, oh, 10 or so years, Christmases for me have been rather stressful. Not that they haven’t been wonderful – just stressful. Not the shopping, not the cooking or the day itself – more the coordinating. Although my family is relatively small (including Rob and I, my sister and her family, my brother and his, and my parents, there are 12 of us), it could all get very complicated. My parents, of course, want everyone together for a gift exchange and Christmas dinner and just to all be together as a family. My mother has insisted for years that it *has* to be on Christmas Day – which I can understand, but I don’t think she realizes how difficult this can be for some people to arrange. Rob and I are fairly easy, because we don’t have kids (although still, sometimes we feel like people think the same way – “They don’t have kids, they can do whatever we want whenever we say”). My sister and her kids (who are all above 14 now that my niece has had her birthday on Christmas day) have to figure out and coordinate with my sis’ ex-husband and that side of the family. Most years the kids go to him for Christmas Eve and come back to my sister on Christmas morning, but this year things have changed a little. My brother has two little guys, 5 and 3, and a wife with a huge extended family who also want to see them all on Christmas Day. So… yeah. Something had to be done.

    This year, starting in about November, we started preparing Mom for the fact that we wouldn’t all be going to her house on Christmas Day. We couched it that my brother didn’t want to have to drag his kids out of their house just as they had finished opening their presents. Plus, my father was working Christmas Eve until about 5 am Christmas Day, so he wouldn’t be very festive on the day anyway – he’d be asleep. Mom wasn’t super happy with this at first, but she came to realize that it made more sense. Instead, my brother and his family went traveling around to visit the other side of their family for Christmas Eve (they left home at 8 am and got home past 8 pm! My SIL has a *huge* family). Rob and I finished (okay did all of) our Christmas shopping on the 24th, then went to Mass (Rob’s not sure he should ever enter a church again – he got burned by candle wax and the soloist couldn’t hit the high notes and there was a new priest who just wasn’t very charismatic), came home and slept in, opened gifts, and basked in the glow of our Christmas tree (okay so we didn’t really put up a tree – just the tiny fake one that I have for my classroom, about 12 inches) and Christmas cards (including the one from our co-operators agent – nothing like a card that says “Happy Holidays… and while we’re at it, do you want to beef up your term life insurance?”). We ate turkey and lazed around the house and looked outside but didn’t go outside and it was glorious.

    And then yesterday around 10 am we loaded up our car with gifts, picked up my sister and her kids (hooray van!) and headed to my parents’. And it was glorious there, too. My two youngest nephews were the “elves” and handed out gifts (well, most of the gifts were for them anyway). And it was very cute. Everything they opened was “I LOVE THIS! I HAVE WANTED THIS MY WHOLE LIFE!”. We stayed for lunch and supper, which is something that has never happened before – because no one felt like they had to leave and celebrate anywhere else.

    I think the best moment of the whole day was when Mom opened her gift from all of us (all three kids/spouses plus our dad went in on it because we all wanted to get it for her because we all knew she’d love it). We were a military family. Through the years, my parents have moved around countless times. In those moves, so much of our stuff has been damaged by movers, or being in storage and water getting on it, or whatever. The thing that has most bothered my mom is the loss of about ten albums’ worth of photos, spanning from before she even met my father to sometime in my childhood. She did, however, manage to save all the negatives and slides. SO! What we got her was a slide-to-photos scanner thing something like this. You put your negatives in it, and it scans them in and makes them into digital photos. And it works really, really really well.
    I have a photo of mom opening it, which she has forbidden me from ever posting on the Internet, because she was practically jumping up and down and says she looks crazy. But she was so, so happy with that gift that it will be very hard to beat in future years. Prepare to see photos from the 1960s posted here, when Mom starts sending them to all and sundry.