September’s Thirsty Third Thursday

Yesterday was the last Thirsty Third Thursday (TTT) of 2009 for Shannon, the oldest of the three younger humans we parented. She’ll be leaving for her around-the-world journey in less than two weeks. Yikes! The closer it gets, the more real it is starting to feel.

Anyway… since she’ll be away for a while (a year!) we decided last night should be special. Not only did we let Shannon pick the place, we let her invite two guest revelers, too.

The place was none other than Helen’s Garden, a cute little restaurant in Baltimore’s Canton neighborhood. That’s my absolute favorite TTT venue.

Helen’s has a very nice happy hour. You’ll especially like it if you are a wine drinker. They have half-price appetizers from 5:00-7:00 PM and half-price wine all day until 8:00 PM. Any glass of wine on the wine list is included, which is cool because you get to sample all sorts of wine that you may not take a chance on otherwise. They’ve got great food, too. And an awesome bartender, named Tim. He’s this nice, wholesome, down-to-earth guy (not one iota of bartender sleaziness) who is very good with wine recommendations and takes fabulous care of us when we’re there.

The guest revelers were Shannon’s very good friend, Laura, and Laura’s baby, Ruby.

Shannon has known and talked about Laura for years. I’m so glad to have finally met her. She’s an absolute delight. Amy and I decided she could be one of our TTT stand-ins while Shannon is away. We haven’t told her that yet, but I’m sure she’ll be happy to oblige.



Ruby was a big hit. She is just under six months old, and was very well-behaved.

Tim, the bartender, was nice enough to snap this photo for us.

Here are some other random images from the evening…



The Art of Glaring

Every now and then, I’ll see or read something that triggers a totally tangential thought. The other day, I saw a post from my favorite Daddy blogger, Jon (aka Daddy Scratches), that got me thinking about glares.

Not photo glares, stare glares. I won’t reproduce my entire train of thought for you, I’ll just say that it led me to Googling “woman glare” and “man glare.” It was entertaining and sort of enlightening. Only “sort of” because it pretty much confirmed what I already knew. Women are much better at glaring than men. I’m not being sexist, here. It’s a fact. Women employ and interpret body language much better than men.

Here’s an example of Hillary Clinton glaring at Obama.

This kid is supposed to be glaring. To me, she just looks possessed.

Here’s a good teacher glare.

Now this woman has glaring down pat.

Men just aren’t as good glarers. Here’s a man who actually has a pretty good glare (he’s probably a transvestite).

Not only are they not as good at it, they don’t really know a glare when they see it. Take this picture as an example. Undoubtedly it was a man who called that a glare. That’s so not a glare. That’s an “oh God you are stupid” (aka “you’re such a man”) look. A man probably dubbed this a glare, too.

Even my Meg can glare.

Here’s a chick with a lot to learn about glaring.

You know, little girls can be some of the best glarers. Check out the glare on this little girl. , which, by the way, is the image that got me thinking of glares in the first place.

When cute little girls like this have mastered the glare, it’s usually because they have smart-ass parents who entertain themselves by intentionally driving kids crazy. Hubby fits the tormentor bill quite well. (I am completely innocent, of course, and would not think of intentionally harassing an impressionable young child.) Which brings me to the best (worst?) glarer I know.

Now, I love our youngest daughter to death. And I really don’t mean this in a negative way. But, if I’m keeping things real here, I have to say… the girl can GLARE. She perfected glaring years ago. Now that I am older and the glares are not directed at me (until she reads this post), I can reflect on her talents. But when she was a teenager and I was a young, naiive STEPmonster… oh man. It was bad.

One look could drive me crazy. Two could push me over the edge. And three? Hubby would periodically find me cowering in the basement/on the deck/in the bedroom/in the garage (more than once) with a half-empty beer bottle or two in front of me and a smoldering cigarette in each hand. He’d say, “Honey, what’s wrong?” I’m sure “I hate the way she glares at us” was one of my complaints.

He’d always be baffled and say, “What do you mean, the way she glares at us?”

OH. MY. GOD.

He meant well, I know. But he’s a man. He just couldn’t recognize a glare.

As my friend Kathy would say, it’s a primal thing. Women know how to glare and men know how to fear the glare. It’s that simple.

If Amy’s hubby, TJ, read my blog, I’m sure he’d agree. Just not publicly. He lives with her after all.

Fortunately, Amy and I survived her teenagerhood and have grown beyond the glaring stage. Now we actually love each other (well, she used to love me) and enjoy each other’s company. She only glares at me when I take too many pictures, make fun of her for getting up, down, north and south confused and/or take pictures of her at inopportune times.

The funny thing is, I knew I had to have at least one picture of her glaring. And here it is. She’s the one in the green sweater. But this is a mild glare. You’ll have to trust me on that one.

Even my super-sweet MIL is sort of glaring in this picture (they are eating!).

Seriously, look at that “light-hearted” glare. Just imagine if she were really pissed or still trying to intimidate me.

On a positive note, those adorable grandchildren of mine are very well-behaved (though Gaige does tend to make lots of weird faces). Amy is by far the best Mom I know. Although the Mom glare is one of the tools in her arsenal, she smiles now more than anything. In fact, she smiles a lot. Because she just loves being a Mom.

Even though having three kids makes her life crazy at times, she LOVES being a Mom. She hardly ever complains and, if she does, she does it in a joking way because she knows one day she too will look back and laugh at some of the stuff her kids did.

Kind of like I am doing now. One day, 20 years from now, she’ll be able to share kid horror stories, too. Quite a few will feature Brianna, who may only be in third grade, but is a very smart, crafty little girl. She’s always thinking. Plotting. Sort of like another little girl I remember.

That was years ago, though. Now Amy is this beautiful, smart, funny, all-around-awesome young woman. She really is such a good Mom.

She’s got a great sense of humor, too. So, even if I hadn’t done all this unintentional kissing-up at the end of this post, she would’ve found it funny.

Eventually.

Now, I imagine she looks sort of like this.


PS – In all fairness, while Amy is a super Mom, she doesn’t get all the credit. My son-in-law, TJ, is a great Dad, too. Even if he doesn’t know how to glare.

Guess Who Came Back Bearing Gifts?

Eric’s back from his trip West. He flew to Seattle, Washington in order to ride along with a friend who was driving to Anaheim, California and back for a video gamers convention. This friend, who he met on-line, is slightly older than Eric. He’s also married, but has no kids.

I’ll admit, the first thing I thought when Eric explained the trip to me was, PEDOPHILE!

I mean, why else would a married man who plays video games (aka computer games) want my little boy to drive thousands of miles with him? I told Eric what I thought. He assured me that he knew the guy pretty well (as well as you can know an on-line friend) and that he was big enough to take care of himself.

He had a point. He is, after all, almost 20. And, like 6 feet tall. Oh yeah, he probably weighs at least 250 pounds. Besides, married men playing video games isn’t as unusual as it once was.

Anyway… Eric’s back. And he brought gifts. This is where I’d post a picture of myself smiling, if I had one handy. But I don’t. So, you’ll just have to see the gifts and imagine me sitting here grinning.

Actually, while you’re imagining the grin, try to picture my shaky fingers on the keyboard. The result of drinking an entire pot of Seattle’s Best Vanilla Bean coffee.

Yum.

Okay, I didn’t drink a whole pot. Just a mug and a half. But I have a very large mug. It’s as big as my face.

He brought back some Hazelnut coffee, too. Just like I’d ordered. So they weren’t really gifts. But he did bring back a surprise bottle of wine.

Are you thinking what I thought for a millisecond? (Great, he’s traveling with a pedophile “friend” who buys him wine, too.)

Actually, I thought the wine was a nice touch. It’s to thank me for my navigation. Which is kind of a neat idea since I apparently navigated them right past the Eagle Castle Winery in Paso Robles, California. The wine is a nice 2006 Trinity (a blend of merlot, cabernet sauvingnon and syrah).

The more I think about it, the more I think I should add a picture of me, with my coffee mug, grinning. So here ya go…

I told you it was big. I even said, “As big as my face.”

The coffee was fabulous, by the way. I’ll fill you in later on the wine, which I plan to share with some visiting friends next week.

How MOMstar Knew

A couple of folks have asked how the MOMstar Navigation service knew which would be the best part of the coast to see. After all, as the post said, it’s a big coast.

Here’s what the one company official willing to provide input told us. “It’s based a lot on personal experience coupled with good mapping skills. The latter is key, but both are important.”

The same official said, “If you’ve ever visited a place after your mother has visited that same place, you’ll know, without a doubt, which spots you should see.”

Why Big Sur? Two words sum it up nicely… dramatic scenery. Here are a couple of pics from when Hubby and I visited back in 2003.

As an aside… Hubby took all of these pics with his old Sony Mavica digital camera. I was still using film.

Big Sur is a region of the central California coast. It’s where the Santa Lucia Mountains rise sharply out of the Pacific Ocean. Any time you have mountains rising sharply, especially near water, you have beautiful scenery.

Have a few minutes to kill? Watch this nice little video I found at Flickr. It has sound, too. A very catchy little tune I’ll probably be humming all day…

Remote Vacation Navigation

Let’s say you are 19 (almost 20). You’re with a friend, driving from Seattle to Anaheim and back. The trip down was hurried. For the trip back, you have a little bit of time to spare. You’ve been told you should drop by Yosemite National Park. Yet, the whole time you’ve been planning this trip, you and your friend have talked about seeing the California coast.

But California has a big coast. You’re 100 miles inland at a chain hotel off of I-5. How do you decide where on the coast to go and how to get there?

You dial the All-new MOMstar Navigation support system. Thanks to the wonders of cellular telephones and high-speed Internet in remote places like West Virginia, you call Mom and she’ll tell you what part of the coast she considers a must-see. She can tell you how to get there from your current location AND how long it should take to get where you are going.

The call goes something like this…

“Hi, Mom.” (Operators like to be called Mom.)

“Hi, son!” (It is company policy to treat customers as if they really are family.)

“I don’t think we have time to see Yosemite while we’re in California. We both really want to see the coast.”

“Where are you now, son?”

“Kettleman City.”

“Okay, let me do some figuring and I’ll call you back.”

Several minutes go by, giving you just enough time to use the bathroom, flip through about 37 cable stations, and tell your friend not to worry, “Mom” always comes through. Then the phone rings.

“Okay, son, here’s what you do. Head slightly south and over to the coast on SR-41. That will bring you to Highway 1. Turn right and head north. That will take you through Big Sur and past Monterey. Then you can go into San Francisco and drive across the Golden Gate bridge. Will that work?”

You ask Mom to hold while you consult your friend. Seconds later, you say, “That’ll be cool. Thanks, Mom.”

She gives you turn-by-turn directions, telling you that, once you hit Highway 101, to follow it through the city of San Francisco to the Golden Gate bridge. Just before you hang up, you think you hear a man in the background, who oddly enough sounds just like Dad, say, “They’ll get lost in San Francisco.”

All is well, until several hours later when driving through San Francisco, you miss a turn and end up off course. So you call Mom again.

“That’s okay, Son. Highway 101 isn’t such an easy-to-follow highway once in the city,” she assures you. She asks where you are and gets you back on course. Not only that, minutes later she calls back and asks, “Did you cross the bridge yet?”

“We’re working on it,” you tell her, kind of annoyed that she called back so soon. How could you even have gotten to the bridge that quickly?

“Okay, as soon as you do, get off at the second exit for a quick stop at the Marin Headlands. You’ll get a great view of the bridge and San Francisco from there.”

She’s been right so far, so you follow her advice. And you’re rewarded with the ultimate San Francisco vista.


You call back.

“We made it, Mom.”

“Good,” she replies. “So, is it safe for me to go to bed now?”

“Yes, thank you,” you say, since the call center is on the East Coast and it’s after 10:00 PM there.

Right before signing off, you remember to throw in, “I love you, Mom.”

“I love you, too, son,” she replies.

Just like the reviews you’d read told you, overall, using MOMstar is a good experience. A little touchy-feely, perhaps, and even a bit hokey. But it sure is convenient. And you did get to see a great view.

Oh, Enough Already

I’m not whining again. I am just stating a fact. It is WAY too hot here.

Some might say it’s just the dog days of summer. I’m not buying that, though. I have dogs, remember. Even they think it is way too (insert your own expletive) hot!

Seriously. It was like 80 degrees this morning with about 500% humidity. The definition of sultry. The air was so thick you could cut it with a knife.

Come on Fall!

The cartoon used in today’s post was created by James Pendergrast. I have to give credit where credit is due, right?

Know what yesterday was? Thirsty Third Thursday. Amy and I met up with Shannon at her place in the city (Baltimore) for some yummy, fruity margaritas followed by a trip to Brewer’s Art. On a nice, Fall day, it would have been a pleasant walk. Nevertheless, it was nice. I think I have a new food to obsess over… Rosemary Garlic Fries. I ate a cheeseburger, too, which was one of the best I’d had in a long time. But the fries were to die for. Hand-cut into shoestrings (think julienned, but slightly bigger), deep-fried in canola oil, seasoned with rosemary garlic salt and served with a side of mayo. YUM.

I wish I’d had my camera. I’ll take it with me for September’s TTT for sure. It’s the last time Shannon will be with us for a while. Something I’d rather not think about right now. So…

Wanna know what the air outside looks like right now? Check out this pic.

Enough already, for this heat and this blog post. A girl has to earn a living you know.