you're sweet, i'm proud of you, and i've loved you since we met. 13 years ago. but cheers to us on 6 official ones! and i'm excited about the new adventure we're getting ready to be on--thank you for bringing it to us.
and ps: you look cool and relaxed in this picture. i can't wait to see that on your face again.
i love you,
jada
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Friday, June 22, 2007
like, totally, you know
Last night I kicked it like a rockette out on the deck with my sweet gal allen. After 4 and 1/2 of my diatribes and a bottle of wine, I could hear my vocabulary dissolving into a late 80s abyss of annoying fillers, meant only in the moment to demonstrate the earnest truth of the point I was making.
So, I'm like totally sorry, AR--I was like so excited to hang with you, you know? It was like a really cool way to spend an evening and I just really like your like...your vibe.
And I totally love you.
So, I'm like totally sorry, AR--I was like so excited to hang with you, you know? It was like a really cool way to spend an evening and I just really like your like...your vibe.
And I totally love you.
Friday, June 15, 2007
lighthouse
I want to clarify my previous post, in case my message, in being published, appeared to be mixed.
I adore, admire, believe, and revere my parents. They are the two most fine and true people I know, and the relationship we've developed since I moved back here from college is what I hope to be the real beginning of a long, long and fruitful one. They, for me, are a paired beacon of sweet, of funny, of open mindedness, and unconditional support.
And for the public record, I'm lucky to have been born to them.
And they didn't even pay my tuition, buy me a car, keep my children, give me gas money, or provide any other countless, thankless act of love and kindness that is being a parent to say so. That's how truly really special to me they are.
I love you,
j
I adore, admire, believe, and revere my parents. They are the two most fine and true people I know, and the relationship we've developed since I moved back here from college is what I hope to be the real beginning of a long, long and fruitful one. They, for me, are a paired beacon of sweet, of funny, of open mindedness, and unconditional support.
And for the public record, I'm lucky to have been born to them.
And they didn't even pay my tuition, buy me a car, keep my children, give me gas money, or provide any other countless, thankless act of love and kindness that is being a parent to say so. That's how truly really special to me they are.
I love you,
j
Thursday, June 14, 2007
table for four, please
When you're a kid you often lament your parents' demand that you be home by dinner time. And if your table experience was anything like mine, dinner was a yummy but very eclectic conglomerate of starches and ground beef, complemented by your father's jokes about constipation.
I look fondly on those times because they were as real as a family can get--all of us within 3 feet of each other, legs akimbo, licking our fingers and laughing at my brother.
But it is only recently that i TRULY appreciate what eating at the table can do for a family. There's just something about that spotlight that turns people onto being open and really funny.
Our baby H loves to eat, a trait easily identified in her family tree, um--mommy's side, so for her, the dinner table is like a mecca to which she would travel thousands of tireless miles on her chubby square feet for the pure enjoyment. She likes to go around the table saying everyone's name, then identifying what's on her own plate, which usually contains some form or fashion of her favorite word and savory treat--cheese. And in this picture, you ask? That would be of the parmasean persuasion.
And then, luckily for me and my fam, our eldest has inherited her pawpaw's talent for espousing mildly inappropriate butt humor at the table. Insert your own favorite butt joke punchline here:
And all of it--the intimacy, my husband never complaining about my barely decent cooking, and the kids, being sweet and funny and happy to be with us--it's a habit i want to keep up, and it's a show i'd pay good money for.
I look fondly on those times because they were as real as a family can get--all of us within 3 feet of each other, legs akimbo, licking our fingers and laughing at my brother.
But it is only recently that i TRULY appreciate what eating at the table can do for a family. There's just something about that spotlight that turns people onto being open and really funny.
Our baby H loves to eat, a trait easily identified in her family tree, um--mommy's side, so for her, the dinner table is like a mecca to which she would travel thousands of tireless miles on her chubby square feet for the pure enjoyment. She likes to go around the table saying everyone's name, then identifying what's on her own plate, which usually contains some form or fashion of her favorite word and savory treat--cheese. And in this picture, you ask? That would be of the parmasean persuasion.
And then, luckily for me and my fam, our eldest has inherited her pawpaw's talent for espousing mildly inappropriate butt humor at the table. Insert your own favorite butt joke punchline here:
And all of it--the intimacy, my husband never complaining about my barely decent cooking, and the kids, being sweet and funny and happy to be with us--it's a habit i want to keep up, and it's a show i'd pay good money for.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
one hundred things that move me (1st half)
the raw, awakening pain of natural childbirth
the fear and joy of raising sisters without having one
being the only sister
max
just the four of us
watching the girls play in the yard
camping out
magnolia trees
people who surprise me
meteor showers
hair cuts
tanned feet
old pictures
an ice cold beer
jokesters
jersey knit sheets
going somewhere i've never been
tirelessly dissecting the oddities of family
um...dancing when i'm by myself
my very first girlfriends
outdoor markets
inconvenient truths
powerful ladies
transcendentalist literature
sleeping children
reunions
watching my friends become mothers
my mama georgie
nicknames
the dooce
discovery HD
collages
learning something i never knew from one of my students
the gi-normous mystery of space
firm handshakes
casting a line
playing kickball
cousins
the iMac
splenda
my new ability to confront people when necessary
chacos
emo (i miss you;)
warm wind
baths
bone dry humor
giggle-inspired toots
support (all things implied)
hearing a song that should be on the soundtrack of my life
realizing that 100% of the time, people's feet, in shape, size, and toe structure, somehow reflect personality (yep--talking to you)
the fear and joy of raising sisters without having one
being the only sister
max
just the four of us
watching the girls play in the yard
camping out
magnolia trees
people who surprise me
meteor showers
hair cuts
tanned feet
old pictures
an ice cold beer
jokesters
jersey knit sheets
going somewhere i've never been
tirelessly dissecting the oddities of family
um...dancing when i'm by myself
my very first girlfriends
outdoor markets
inconvenient truths
powerful ladies
transcendentalist literature
sleeping children
reunions
watching my friends become mothers
my mama georgie
nicknames
the dooce
discovery HD
collages
learning something i never knew from one of my students
the gi-normous mystery of space
firm handshakes
casting a line
playing kickball
cousins
the iMac
splenda
my new ability to confront people when necessary
chacos
emo (i miss you;)
warm wind
baths
bone dry humor
giggle-inspired toots
support (all things implied)
hearing a song that should be on the soundtrack of my life
realizing that 100% of the time, people's feet, in shape, size, and toe structure, somehow reflect personality (yep--talking to you)
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