Sunday, December 31, 2006

Year Endings...

The dryer died a few days before Christmas, and I learned something. While it is possible to pioneer it for a week, and hang EVERYTHING - in these modern times, clothes aren't designed for that. Josie's cotton turtlenecks don't fit as nicely, and the longer, stretched out sleeves hang in her food and get dirtier. Steve's underwear doesn't feel nice and soft and snug when he puts it on. Socks, after being hung to dry, still end up looking rather shrivelled. And towels? I like fluffy towels, some parts of me more than others. Toddlers do not like crunchy towels either.



And so, the old dryer is on the porch (just remembered to call special pick up - back in a minute!). I doubt I'll be writing "Fud in Heer" on the shiny new one. Not after I had to FIGHT with two store managers over how helpful the store's employees should be, which in the end, garnered me free delivery. Besides, it's NEW - not the one that came with the house when we bought it five years ago, already almost ten years old. It took me ages to get over the fact that my underwear would be dried where other guys' underwear had been dried. But, hey - bonus points if you can tell me where the "Fud" joke came from! Then I'll know you're the right sort.


Christmas? It was lovely. I had to cut a few corners, such as really truly making clove-studded kumquats. I used commercial wrap instead of hand-painting and stamping Kraft paper. But then, since I didn't receive any gifts wrapped in hand-painted or stamped Kraft paper, I'm guessing that nobody really cared.

We realized, in our more relaxed holiday period, that toddlers aren't quite ready to dress themselves, and that we will continue to provide limited choices.


Christmas itself? Wonderful in so many ways. A few days before, we visited my family in Buffalo and got in some last minute shopping, mainly in the way of cheap liquor - a must for gatherings.

Which might explain why we found these so funny:


They were dubbed "Dong-nuts", and they came with chocolate for dipping. Our dear friend, who works for the schmanciest of places visits and brings lovely things like heart-shaped pumpkin flans...


...assured us these are also served at the fancy place, and while they were delicious, they were made better by their also being hilariously phallic and our being puerile and buzzed.

We also received many, many gifts of food, and most were pleasing to the toddler.


At least, the eyes were. We have a legion of eyeless gingerbread men stashed in various places around the house - I'm still finding them. Personally, I was most fond of the handmade chocolate-covered salted caramel candies our dear chef friend brought; though I also managed to make most 0f a box of Godiva chocolate bars, a lasagna, artisan cheese, more cookies, and various wines and liquors disappear.

The one thing I did not eat much of was this:


This cake, this bitter, cold, mean and gruesome disappointment of a cake. My mother, who watches the cooking channel whenever she's not watching the Poker channel, rarely cooks anything she sees (just as she never plays poker - her nickels go into the slots and on the ponies) was inspired, as she often is, before she decides it' just easier to make the stuff she always makes and gets plenty of compliments for anyway. But, this cake recipe was just tempting enough. She called me a week before Christmas, I found the recipe online (which took some sleuthing, as I've never heard of Chef Paula Deen and so I spelled it wrong, and then her shows recipe's are sorted by date, and my mom doesn't remember which day she saw it, and she even forgot to tell me it was coconut at first, just that it was Paula's son's favourite cake and she didn't remember the boy's name), and she transcribed it with the intent of making it for our Christmas Eve visit. I was looking forward to it, because really - go look at the recipe, see the butter and coconut milk and sour cream and salivate along with me. Oh! And also, look at the picture. And read the instructions. Now look at the image above again. Notice anything? It's not supposed to be a sheet cake!

In my mother's typical style, she looked at the recipe, and made a few executive decisions. Such as, who needs coconut milk? And, layers are too much work! Sour cream would require a trip to the store that's about two-hundred feet away! Why make frosting when I have a can laying around?! For that matter, why make it from scratch when I can use a mix? And so, instead of having a flavourful filling soaking through layers of fluffy cake, topped in creamy frosting bursting with coconut flavour - we got basically an angel-food sheet cake with canned frosting covered in three inches of dry coconut. It wasn't the same thing, and she can't make me believe that.

You see - it happens all the time. I'll get my taste buds geared up for something she cooks that I actually like when she's promised to make it - then find she's changed it somehow in the name of convenience. There was the year (during the period when I was a lacto-ovo vegetarian!) that she decided to follow some tips for healthy eating from some ladies' magazine and add only chicken soup broth to mashed potatoes instead of milk and butter. (SACRILEGE!) Or, when she decided canned yams with maple syrup were an adequate substitute for her baked yams with brown sugar, pineapple, butter and cream (THE HORROR!) And so, grateful for my meds, I can now laugh at these cruel substitutions, and chalk up the coconut cake debacle to the "yet again" column.

After they left for their hotel on Christmas Eve, the best part of the party started. Josephine heard the strains of "Jingle Bell Rock" and shouted "EVERYBODY DANCE!", and so we did.


As we say, the best part of Christmas Eve is having fun with the family we choose.

Christmas Day with a toddler? It's a trip. Santa very wisely decided to stay up until 2 am to assemble and display everything. Unscrewing and replacing the panels on battery compartments (after stealing batteries from various remotes) and releasing the Dr. Barbie the Vet hostage from her various wires and hair stitched to plastic strips in her molded cell took ages. There is no way the toddler would have tolerated it.


The hits? The highly enjoyable Ice Age DVD (which is buying me time to type right now). The $36 horse, which walks and neighs then falls over and kicks its legs and neighs - that was the one thing that she asked Santa for - and the one thing I didn't plan to actually buy. Then I found myself making a special trip to the store on the 24th, because, well, because, well, because. And I tried not to resent that I paid full price for it, because the alternative was paying $17 at Walmart. It's nice to think I have a few shreds of pride left. Other good things? We all love the Buddha board. The Gel Gems were great. Were, in that when they aren't in the bath they are dusty and cat hairs and crumbs stick to them because she can't ONLY play with them on a window, because she is a toddler. When they aren't dusty and crumby, they're slimy from the bath, where the small dots and pieces of the dolphin's tails that she's pulled apart clog the drain. But, they do keep her amused. Fun and cleanliness are only opinions, right?

Other fun Christmas toys were surprisingly simple - a box of wooden ladybugs from my boss at Winkel. Not a bad infestation, just one that's rather surprising at times. This is typical:


And we often opened the TV cabinet to find this:



But it's still startling to sit down to the dinner table and see this:


For Steve? The best daddy of all of the daddies that ever were daddies? The one who plays with dolls and plastic horsies and sustains endless games of "Let's Play What's Your Name"?


A better-than that eunich Ken guy, for him to play dolls with Josie. Ladies and Gentlemen, this is Johnny Cash (When not in use, displayed next to our Frederica Tomas linocut print). Also, books and books and books. And expensive magazines, which can be as good as books. And some art prints, and guy things like sweaters and socks. Okay, so maybe the vintage ceramic hand sculpture was something I wanted to give him more than he wanted to receive. Okay, so maybe I wanted it for myself and used him as excuse to buy it. He had his fun with it...


and now it looks nice with our stuff.

What else for me? Books and books and books. So. Much. Reading. A year's worth if I consider that I get to read Steve's too. And the time to read them, since he's been home. I've had luxurious afternoons curled up under the down comforter on the sofa, pouring over words and inspiration. If there's one thing people seem to know how to choose for me, it's books. And the calendar of my dreams, and stinky bath stuff. And food. And the pea coat of my dreams (which, like my last pea coat, will endure for fifteen years until it hangs from my shoulders in shreds: an excellent cost-per-wearing ratio!).

And a silly hat. I received a gift certificate from a friend for Nathalie-Roze & Co., in an amount that made me giddy to spend. I can't believe I chose a pink one - but it does have a skull on it, so it is perfect and I am happy with it. I feel so sassy in my new coat and hat, I can't stand myself.



But all of that, in no way compares to the best gift ever. The prodigal came home. I was too sad, too ashamed and embarrassed to admit this, but...this happened a while ago.

I know, again. (Hangs head in shame.)

But this time, it was different. Josephine had a wild tantrum on the way home from the drop-in that day. It was awful - she was a screaming, flailing, melting, rigid, hot, angry, crazy person, and I struggled with her all the way home. I had to carry her most of the way. Except, that as the unwillingly carried, she often threw herself about so much I had to sometimes let her lay there and scream. The attempt to just hold her and wait it out at in the hallway at the drop-in had already gone on for twenty minutes. And hallways? The acoustics.

So at some point, Baby Rat fell out of the bag. And I cared, but because of that rotten behaviour - a purely manipulative tantrum - a lesson was needed. Once she calmed down at home (fifteen minutes after our arrival) we traced our steps backward, and found nothing. I made the poster, and when Steve got home from work, he put up a few with Josie in tow. I went online, and found that finding another baby mouse meant an overseas order. It was considered, but we decided to let it sink in, that those kinds of tantrums are harmful in ways she might not think of. It hurt us more than it did her...I mean, it was Baby Rat!

But on Christmas day, Steve got a mysterious phone call, and left for a bit. When he returned:


Baby Rat - a little worse for the wear. He's um...an amputee, with some damage to his ears and throat. He's filthy. A neighbourhood dog found him...in with a pile of things kept where some homeless guys sleep in the park.

So while we cringed while he got hugs...

And yuck...kisses...



Everyone was glad to see Baby Rat at home.


Now I still have to repair him, and wash him, now that we have something to dry him in.







But wait...you ask, "What about Boo Boo?"

B: "Yeah, what about Boo Boo."

Oh, worry not. Boo Boo stars in the next post - the one about our New Year celebrations. Wasn't this enough?

Monday, December 18, 2006

Shameless.


Last night, Josephine asked to help me string the freshwater pearls I'd purchased in order to make a necklace for my mother as a Christmas gift -- and was able to do it. Do you have a pearl necklace? Go and look at how small those holes are. Now. Fine - if you're not about to, just imagine a pinhole. Now imagine threading a wire-wrapped thread through it. And you're not even three. In a feat of remarkable dexterity, and with more speed and using fingers far more nimble than mine, she managed to complete about a third of the necklace.

Now, of course that's going to make the gift even more special for her grandmother.

But, what is going to make the necklace not just special, but well, legendary in the family history, was that while she was helping me, she was naked and we have pictures.


A toddler's belly is a wondrous thing.

Friday, December 15, 2006

What Would We Ever Do Without Her?

Last night, we dashed around the corner to buy our tree, mainly so Josie and I would have something to do this afternoon.


Steve had to carry her, mainly because well, why walk? Her new BFF, Clarice, came along.



Josie and Clarice helpded carry it home - for about a block, by gingerly holding the tiniest bit of one branch. Then it was time to be carried again.


You would think from this picture the tree is large and full and lush and that maybe I needed the help. But no - I always get the Charlie Brown tree. This little 5 foot beauty (Steve refers to it as "the Stick") was carried home by me, with one hand, rather casually. The red Dogwood branches I bought weighed more, and after making a fresh cut on the tree trunk, now they are even longer than the tree. But it's a sweet little tree, and today it looks beautiful with lights and ornaments. In fact, I would argue that you would need some of those two foot gaps between branches to really show off the larger ornaments. And well, um, the fewer the needles, the less you get poked, right? And, well, being a rather small (or as Steve would say, stingy) tree, it only took two strands of lights and about half of our ornaments. So, it's only mid-morning, and we're done. And that's counting in the periodic work stoppages to wipe a certain snotty nose and to have hug breaks after coughing fits.



So, Josephine has had a little bit of a cold, and it's not so much the coughing and snot that bothers me - it's the stink eye from people when I'm committing some kind of heinous parenting crime...like taking her grocery shopping with me (gasp). As much as I'd love to completely contain the tot and her illness, if tree-decorating is only going to take half an hour, the day has to be filled somehow, and things still need to get done. Besides, she's starting to get whiny and snarky with me again, which tells me she's getting better.

Further evidence of her improving health follows:


One of those things that makes me laugh, and breaks my heart at the same time.

It was about two years ago that Steve and I had a conversation about pistachios. I often buy them for Steve, who likes the activity and challenge of eating them as much as the taste. I don't often indulge, because the reward to work involved ratio is less than equal, and not in favour of the reward. Steve was complaining that our pistachios weren't properly salty, and seemed soggy and off somehow. We couldn't figure out why. Was it the humidifier? Should I invest in the Loblaws brand rather than the Bulk Barn selection?

Then, one day, the mystery was solved. I returned to the room suddenly, and caught our dog, Beauty, with her paws up on the table, licking the salt off the top layer of pistachios in the bowl. It seems her modus operandi was to lick the top layer, wait for Steve to eat them, and then sneak back to lick the next layer of salt. For ages he'd been eating dog-licked nuts. Mystery solved! Since Beauty died, he's never regarded salty pistachios without some sadness.


It was with great pleasure that recently he discovered his pistachios were bland and moist again.

It seems our house is not a home without a pistachio-licker.


(Caught in the act!)

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Christmess Cards

Last Summer, at an Estate Sale in Buffalo, I found some vintage linocut blocks, and thought they'd be perfect for making Christmas cards. I figured Josephine would be able to help me with the craft, and that even if the cards weren't perfect, they'd be beautiful.

Then, because we're certainly busy enough around here and toddlers can sometimes be just the tiniest bit impatient, instead of cutting out cards from heavy duty kraft paper and making the cards and envelopes by hand, I decided to just buy cards. And instead of going to the art supply shop for high-quality linen cards, I just grabbed some blanks from the department store. It is really hard to care what paper your cards are made from when you're busy scanning the aisles so that things that have the potential to cause meltdowns can be avoided.



And instead of using a brayer and the proper inks in multiple colours and many stampings, I just grabbed the red fingerpaint out of the nearest drawer. There is something to be said for washable paints when toddlers are involved.




And my "helperer" "helpeded me a lots!"







True to form, toddlers just want to get all freeform and smear paint around. So I had to kind of forget about fancy cards made from sixty-year old linocut blocks with some pretty awesome retro prints.


Instead, many of our friends will be getting Rorschach tests. And they are beautiful. Some will be unlucky enough to get cards that worked out rather well.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

This Will Surprise Exactly Nobody.

Josephine loves snowmen as much as she loves reindeer. They are all called Frosty, just as all reindeer are called either Rudolph or Clarice. She was immediately enamored of this one when I unpacked it with the Christmas decorations. I made it when I was in Kindergarden, and I'm always glad to see it every Christmas. I don't like it enough to live with it year round, though. The miracle of glazes and little kids though, was such that I didn't know how very hideous purple, green and blue would look to my grown-up eyes.

But they are beautiful to Josephine, which is something I also couldn't know would happen.



I had forgotten, until she asked "What are those ABCs?" that for a very long period in my life, I went by one name, with an exclamation point.



Just like, Cher. Or Beyonce. Or Madonna. But with that little bit of extra flair.

Marla!

That was me, back then. It made me smile to find this little reminder of how I was - and to be able to post about it now.

Blogging - it's like putting an exclamation point after my grown-up name.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Sweet, Sweet Sugarland

Decorating gingerbread houses is a great way to spend the afternoon with a toddler. And I just typed that without snickering. Really.


Even if it starts with said toddler drinking the ingredients.


And eating the ingredients, which was expected. I would have thought something was wrong with her if she didn't.



So said toddler ended up with more candy on and in the belly than on the house.


And the helping hands had sharp and raggedy little fingernails that could have been cleaner (but look - she still has knuckle dimples. I'd rather nibble on those than on candy!)


And helping became more about dripping the royal icing on the wooden spoon handle, and not so much about actually helping...

And the very bright and inventive Josephine took the idea of sugar "snow" and ran with it. Literally. And threw it. Which, actually was a rather cool idea. I found paintbrushes and we used water to wet the candies so it would stick.


The end result was pleasing, mainly because she at one point buggered off to run shrieking in circles around the dining room table until she was ragged and panting. While she did that I could happily make the roof look like a lovely, colour-coordinated candy patchwork quilt (mmmm...candy patchwork quilt)



Now it can sit around and get dusty until Christmas. Steve and I don't actually like this stuff - and after today's experiment, she's certainly not getting so much candy around here again.



I do like the gummy shrubbery though. (mmm...gummy shrubbery)

(Hears toddler footsteps crunching on sprinkles on the kitchen floor...also some wet smacking noises...sounds of chair scraping the floor and fumbling...small hard somethings hit the floor...sighs, looks at the vacuum AGAIN... and hits publish post)

I Don't Know What He Did...


...and I'm not allowed to move him.

More Reindeer Than You Can Shake A Stick At.

So, I'm going to use this opportunity to let you know, that if you should happen to have a reindeer-mad toddler, and yet another interminable day of Holiday Season 2006 ends with the treat of a tantrum before what could be a rather decent eight o'clock bedtime (with the season finale of ANTM on tonight!) if she doesn't get to watch the Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer DVD that buys 47 minutes of peace every day, and you think you can just type in "Rudolph Reindeer" on YouTube and find a little something to pacify her -- beware.



Because you might end up finding this:




Which is pretty darn funny, if you're not taking the time to explain it to a toddler. Furthermore, I've always thought the ending of Rudolph is just awful. The bird who swims? The elf in the sleigh, picks it up, is about to offer it an umbrella, and then reconsiders, pitching it over the side where it probably plummets to its death. I also just kind of caught today (only the 37th viewing) that during the "We're a Couple of Misfits" song, Herbie makes a snowman that looks like the boss elf, and punches it in the nose.



And this - which is also kind of amusing - in an I just about peed myself laughing kind of way. Once, and then I was over it.





There are many, many, many videos of people singing the song. Many, many many - from warbling toddlers to weird Germans. If you play this one for your child, prepare for "Who are those ladies?" "Why are they singing like that?""Why does she have boots on her hands?" and fiftyhundred other questions that will follow. I just spent my time wondering if the chick on the right was going to reveal something she hadn't intended to with that short skirt.





You do NOT EVER want to have to explain this one to your kid.





I'm assuming he's really using his hands. If so, what an amazing talent. Not one many care to cultivate, mind you. But I can see where it could come in handy, perhaps in the checkout lane when the toddler wants candy.






Well, DUH. Of course there are so many gay references in Rudolph. Doesn't everyone know that "DENTIST" is a euphemism for "homosexual"?






Hahahaha! Watch Kathy Lee nearly get taken out at 41 seconds! This one is rather toddler-safe, if you don't mind explaining who Regis, the Trumpster, and Frank Gifford are.





This one is actually beautiful, in a trippy, weren't 'shrooms kind of cool when we were teens way - and then, well, it's like the description:

Maui artists build a gigantic anatomically correct Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer and take it on a rampage through the little north shore town of Paia. The music coming out of the big blinker is none other than Mele Kalikimaka (Merry Christmas) by Cyril Pahunui, a true Hawaiian classic and a cynical Santa scoffs when he finds out that the north pole melted.

Except that Santa scoffing nearly made me pee my pants in terror. I'd rather show her the mob one.





The Latvian Boychoir. Watch for those who MUST sway. First, I didn't even know there was such a thing as the Latvian Boychoir. But, because I adore Sunday morning church paid-programming mainly to watch those who cannot stop themselves from moving to and fro as they sing because they are so transported, this is like choir porn for me. I can't wait until Josie is in school programmes, for that very reason. There will be swayers.




A Japanese string quartet. They're so sweet and lovely, and they play with stuffed monsters on stage. And they're disgustingly talented, except I do kind of hate when people play music with way too many runs and frills and superfluous shit.





Are you still here? Great! The best, most wonderful one of all is next!

This is exactly the kind of awesomely craptastic thing I'd love to do myself. BRAVO!:




Nsync (Did I spell that right?) Don't they have enough money to suppress stuff like this? And has anyone confirmed exactly how many of those guys are "dentists"?




Santa's crib. I thought there'd be more Ho jokes.





So, if you want something fast, and easy, and toddler safe - there's this:

It's just that nobody should have to watch that for the sake of peace in the house. The HORROR! MY EYES! MY EARS!

Monday, December 11, 2006