Friday, June 29, 2007

BookWormsRus - book club: The Last Girls by Lee Smith ~ Discussion

Post your thoughts about the book in the comments here. Below are the discussion questions found at the end of the book, post your thoughts in the comments below each question. You don't have to have actually read the book to participate, most of the topics use the book as a jumping off point for interesting topics.

Question # 1

Harriet dubs the four women on the river cruise "the last girls." What does she mean by this name? How is The Last Girls an appropriate title for the novel?

Question # 2

Author Lee Smith writes The Last Girls in the third person, but devotes chapters to different, alternating points of view. What affect does this shifting narrative viewpoint have on the story? How does Smith make each narrative voice a distinctive and unique one?

Question # 3

What do the four "last girls" have in common? How has each changed since her first trip down the river? Is there one character here that forms the emotional center of the book? If so, who is it, and why?

Question # 4

How does the riverboat cruise compare with the first trip that the girls took down the river? How does Mr. Gaines, the professor that inspires the raft trip, affect them-both academically and on a personal level? What expectations do the women have on each trip? How do the two voyages each constitute a rite of passage?

Question # 7

The novel features excerpts of Baby's poetry and Anna's romance novels. What does the inclusion of this writing add to your understanding of both these characters? Why don't you see passages by Courtney, Catherine and Harriet? What do you imagine that their writing would be like?

Question # 8

Harriet, Catherine, Anna, Courtney and Baby each come from very different family backgrounds. In which ways do their families shape the girls' personalities? Who is more apt to rebel against her family, and who strives to make them proud? By your estimation, who is the closest at achieving a happy medium between the two?

Question # 9

The women go on the river cruise in order to dispose of Baby's ashes. How does each of the women remember Baby? What does Baby represent to each of the four "last girls?" How do they express any emotion about Baby's death?

Question # 22

Why do you think that Pete is attracted to Harriet? What about her is appealing to others around her, both male and female? Do you think that Harriet is persuaded to stay in New Orleans with him by the end of the novel? Why or why not?

Question # 31

The novel's last pages provide an account of the others who went on the rafting trip. How do these women figure into the friendship between the four girls on the cruise and Baby? In which ways are the blurbs a typical "where are they now"? How are they unconventional in form, style and tone? Why do you think Lee Smith uses them to close the book?

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Revolution Health Online Health Fair

Shawna James from Gluten-Free Girl is a fabulous resource for all things gluten-free. My little one is gluten-free and since so many of my blogging friends are as well I wanted to pass along some important resources. I just got through listening to a fascinating discussion partnering gluten-free bloggers with the experts in order to facilitate giving people who blog about eating gluten-free the power of knowledge. The participants in the discussion are as follows.

Alice Bast founder of National Foundation for Celiac Awareness

Sponsored by Revolution Health

Dr. Anthony DiMarino - Jefferson University Hospital director of division of Gastronentoerology and Hepatology at Thomas Jefferson University and Hospital.

Allergy Girl from Allergic Girl

Dianne from A Gluten-Free Journey

Rachel from Rachel's Recipe Box

Elwoodcity from Gluten-Free Gastro-Gnome

Gina Clowes from Allergy Moms

Gastro Girl from Gastrol Girl: All Things Digestive

This was a fascinating discussion and you can listen to it here. Even a girl like me who thinks she knows all thing Celiac learned a thing or two. Second important fact, Revolution Health is holding an online health fair featuring links to various not for profit health websites. If you go to this site and click on the links to the various health sites the Revolution Health people will donate money to those charities. You may learn something, but you will definitely help some wonderful organizations like my beloved National Foundations for Celiac Awareness raise some money.

There are literally millions of people in the US who have Celiac Disease but just don't know it. If you are not feeling well, why not stop by Celiac.com and get some information to find out if you might be a Celiac too.

Crazy Daisy

Our cat. The short version is we have had her for more than seven years. She lived with us in Italy, Japan, nd now Mississippi. She is a rescued street cat but has been living as a pampered indoor princess for the last 7 years. Now that we are in a neighborhood where it is safe for her to venture outdoors, we occasionally let her come outside with us. She usually stays very close to me.

While my parents were visiting she ran out the front door one day. I let her go. I thought she might enjoy a little adventure, and I thought she would stay right there close to the front door, as she does everyday when she comes outside with me. But, she did not, she in fact stayed out all night. Jeff and I were outdoors way past dark, bare feet and flashlight traipsing through the forest, being frightened by the sounds of animals rustling through. I don't know how we are going to survive the Appalachian trail, and I know I need to start wearing shoes outside. But...

She came home and has not been outside since. Tuesday night Jeff came home from work and by and by he asked, "Where is Daisy". No one knew, things happened and we forgot. Wednesday morning when I got up, I fed Daisy first thing as always. Usually she is rubbing against my legs meowing at a high volume, tripping me, and absolutely insisting to be fed immediately. She is actually fed before Lily and before coffee. As I have been trained I went to feed the cat and as I was pouring the food I noticed, Hey where is Daisy? No Daisy.

As you read, yesterday I was out of the house running around looking for room 212, I think I might have actually been in Area 52 or one of her sisters. We got home and had to fix lunch and do chores and cook dinner, it all melted together. After awhile I thought about Daisy again and I did a search for her. I searched in the house, I search outdoors, no Daisy. Jeff came home, we had dinner.

At dinner Jeff tells me that cats go off to die. They know when it is there time and they just go off. I was very upset by this remark. I decided to go door to door with Daisy's picture to see if any of our neighbors have seen here. While she does have a micro chip she doesn't have a collar or our phone number on her person(catson). Dead, can you believe he said that to me. And Jeff is the one in the family who actually likes Daisy. I scoop her box, I feed her, I take her to the vet and stay up all night shampooing the fleas from the kennel off of her, but Jeff is the one who loves her. I really don't care for cats you know.

Later in the evening Jeff notices our dog Pixie is staring at the coat closet in our entry way. Jeff opens the door to the closet and there is Daisy. She had been in the coat closet. Which is very close to the living room, in fact we have such an open floor plan that had she meowed or scratched the door I would have heard her from anywhere in the house. She gets herself caught in closets all the time and she lets me know when she is ready to come out, the cat is loud. But, not this time. She sat in the closet for more than a day, without a peep. She also has a sneeze. I am glad she wasn't outside, in the heat, with the fleas and all the animals who run loose in my neighborhood, but in the closet. I have to say that I am worried about that cat. Jeff thinks we should take her to the vet?

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Momsense



Today we had to go up to the base for me to register for my proctored exam. For those of you unfamiliar with proctored exams, my college, the University of Maryland University College requires that I take my final exam with someone who is certified to administer such exam I guess to ensure that I do not cheat. All my course work except the final is conducted via the Internet. I have a lot of stuff I read, a lot of course work and projects, I even have group projects and class discussions. I love learning in this environment, going to the classroom is more fun, meeting new people-making fun of the professor etc. But this way I learn more, I am a hands on learner, so reading the book and doing the work, having discussions it works for me.

I first got directions to the Education center on the base. Jeff was busy but he got me the directions which he told to me over the phone while I was driving. Luckily Mandy was with me and she wrote it all down. So, either it was given wrong or written down wrong but we couldn't find the building we needed.

We did find the Thrift store which I have been looking for. This is where one goes to join the Base Spouses club, which I did, I also bought Lily a toy school bus, and Mandy two books and me one book all for a dollar. I asked everyone in the building I could find for better directions to the education center. I found out that the name of the building had changed, that was helpful. Still no one really knew the name of the street. So we got back in our little black car in the middle of summer in Mississippi and drove around some more. We finally found the building we needed. Whoo - hoo.

We walked around this building for about an hour, it was a maze of dark hallways and steel doors. Round and round, up and down we searched for room 212. I couldn't even find a person to ask. I walked past 100's of offices and not a person in the halls. I was a bit intimidated to poke my head into a room, might be a top secret location. Not.

Jeff finally returns my call, I tell him his directions suck that I found the building but I am somehow lost inside. I ask him for the phone number or some sympathy. Just then I saw a guy, he was buying a coke out of a machine. Right in the middle of my conversation with Jeff I asked the guy for directions. He told me the secret to finding room 212, you have to go down that hall, about halfway, turn left, go down that hall until you find the double door, go through the double door that says on it, keep this door closed at all times, turn right, go to the end of that hall and through more double door, turn immediately right and through the single metal door this takes you to the other section, then you go up the stairs, through the double doors, take the fourth left, to the end of the hall, right and it is the second door on the left. I am not lying! Well now that I know how to get there we found the education office.

I almost hugged the lady at the education office, until she told me that the proctored exams are not there, but at the library. You would be proud to know I found my car, drove around for 15 minutes and found Jeff's work. We went in, used the restroom, said hello, and then went just down the street to the library.

Loved the library. Nicest people I have ever met, we checked out many books, registered for the exam, and were on our way. Lily fell and skinned her knee, fell asleep in the car on the way home, but otherwise an uneventful day.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

BookWormsRus - book club

I haven't been feeling well lately and have procrastinated my homework until today, the day it is due. Fun. Guess I know how I will be spending my day. Why oh why do I always do this to myself?

I am looking forward to our book discussion. Since the end of June is fast approaching, I have decided to make this weekend our book discussion weekend. I will post the questions on my blog on Friday morning and leave it out there for our discussion through the weekend. There will be a section for general discussion of the book and then I will post all the questions from the back of the book. There were 31 questions and they were quite hard, I feel like I have to re-read the book to answer all those questions. I must be getting old, as I didn't retain all those details from reading. If you are like me, no worries, this book club is for fun not to stress you out.

Whether you love it or hate it, The Last Girls did bring up many wonderful topics to be discussed. Things like:

Rebellion against your mom, does not wanting to turn into your mother influence a lot of who you are?

What about the rules of society things like looking nice, having nice things, being viewed as put together by others, how important is this to you?

Really, how many of your decisions are based on what others will think of you? Do you live your life based on what you like and don't like, follow your passions, or are you just rebelling against mom or trying to impress the neighbors?

And being a successful woman, having a career, does that really mean you are unable to have healthy fulfilling relationships with your children and husband?

By becoming women as opposed to being girls did we give up something? What? Are we better off as women, leading happier more fulfilled lives than the girls of yesteryear?

These are some of the things that ran through my head while reading this book. Not really the substance of the 31 questions, but I will try to work in my thoughts into the answers I give. If you have thoughts on these topics I hope you will join the discussion, irregardless of whether you actually read the book. Friday, Saturday, Sunday. I look forward to all your thoughts.



To the best of my addled recollection we had three people volunteer to host the book club. Laura Capello, Lorelei, and Angel showed interest in hosting in that order anyone else? So the tentative schedule for hosting the book club would be:
July - Laura
August - Lorelei
September - Angel
October - Marsha
November - Laura
December - Lorelei
January - Angel
February - Marsha
etc.
unless one of you changes your mind or someone else wants a crack at it. I am still taking suggestions August's book, I will put up a poll here on Friday so we have plenty of time to aquire the book. There are no rules, hosting is done in any way you wish. You can even host it entirely through email, I will send out an email to everyone so you all have all the email addresses of all the participants. Please comment or email me if you wish to have your email included on the book club email list.

Now off to my homework. I am learning about how to program with Oracle. My dream is to be able to create an online database of gluten-free recipes. I am hoping to use the skills I am aquiring in school to learn enough to make this a reality. There are litterally thousands of gluten-free bloggers out there. Everyone is posting fabulous recipes wouldn't it be nice to be able to have all those recipes organized? To be able to click on the things you are allergic to, like eggs, wheat, gluten, corn and then search for say cookies, and get a list of all the recipes published by gluten-free food bloggers - a list of links to their blogs, to the exact page where that particular recipe is located. We all have dreams, and this one is mine. Do you have an invention that you wish you had time to invent? This gluten-free recipe index is my dream invention, what is yours?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Toes

I weeded my garden last night in bare feet. Now I have what feels like hundreds of bites on, around, under all my toes. It is a nightmare. It tickles, itches and hurts all at the same time.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Rockin' Girl Blogger

Sari from The Geek Inside has tagged me with the Rockin' Girl Blogger Award. Now I get to pass it along to five Rockin' Girl Bloggers. Girls Rule.

In no particular order:

  1. Capello at No Appropriate Behavior and at Laura Capello's Gluten-free Recipes is one of my oldest and dearest blogging buddies. She has two sweet little boys one a bit older and one a bit younger than Lily, and she is having to cook gluten-free just like me. There are recipes and crafts, Laura is very crafty. There are swaps and thriftstore finds. Laura is an awesome writer, edgy and funny. And every blog title come from the lyrics of a song, at the end of the month she links to each and every one of those songs and leaves those links on her sidebar.


  2. Patrice from makingpeace lives in my beloved California. Patrice takes the loveliest pictures and makes the loveliest graphics. Her home and crafts are wonderful as well. She is a stay at home mom and is home schooling and trying to exist on the planet with the least amount of impact on the earth. You have to stop by to see what I mean, but the makingpeace blog is a lovely little stop I make everyday that always gives me peace.


  3. Angel from Skillett's World is a real life friend and a fantastic writer. Angle tells it like it is, no holds barred. I love that about her. Angel is like me, having put off college and a career to be a young mom. Only now Angel has her degree and is working her way up the coporate ladder, which turns out to be a bit of a challenge later in life.


  4. Kim from Wheaties2BK is an Air Force wife with a young son about Lily's age. Kim also has chosen to be a stay at home mom for the time being. She is a school teacher and struggles with the loss of money and all that is encompassed by giving up work to be home with the little ones. Kim puts all that energy into photo challenges, fixing up their house, cake decoratation and some great trips. I like to be connected with other real women who make choices regarding how we raise our kids and whether or not we work or stay at home. Great writing and photos.


  5. Lorelei from Musings is a new blogging buddy. I have enjoyed getting to know Lorelei who is also a college student late in life, a book club member and avid reader. Lorelei's life is full of adventure and she is great about blogging everyday. I am enjoying getting to know her and look forward to reading her blog every morning.


  6. Gen from Not So New Mom on the Blog is from South Africa. I can't believe how similar her life is to mine. Sometimes I forget that she is not in America, except that it is winter there now. She is a delightful woman full of stories about her boys, and life as a mom in South Africa.


Sorry, I know that was six I can't count.

"If you get tagged, grab the pretty badge up top (because you deserve it!) and then list five women bloggers who are TOTALLY ROCKIN’."

Thursday, June 21, 2007

quilt

When I was a little girl my grandmother made me a quilt. I slept under that quilt until I got married at the age of 31. I still have it all wrapped up and preserved, the quilt is very close to my heart. As a young girl I would go and stay with my grandma for weekends every once in awhile. She taught me to crochet, sew, knit, make homemade pasta, garden, etc. The only thing that I can remember is how to crochet. I mentioned to my grandma on a phone conversation that I had recently taken a quilting class. Grandma used to teach quilting classes. I was very excited to be learning something that makes me feel close to my grandma. She is so smart and crafty. So grandma sent to me in the mail all the things necessary to make a quilt for Lily just like the one I had as a little girl. It is a quilt with embroidered little girls. Anyways I will post pictures of it if I think about it. I am very excited to be starting this project but also very nervous.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Pampered Chef

I just got invited to a Pampered Chef party on my block. My first social engagement in Mississippi. I need new shoes.

Terror in a sippy cup

I have been following the story of Monica Emmerson who was supposedly harrased by security over a sippy cup full of water Reagan National Airport on June 11th.

MSNBC
ABC News
Parent Dish
you get the idea, I am sure there are more.

Mandy and I moved to Italy in the winter of 2000 shortly after marrying Jeff. We traveled all over Europe and Africa. We moved to Japan in the winter of 2002 and we did a fair amount of travel throughout Japan, we went to China, Jeff went to Vietnam, we came back to the US several times including once to Hawaii. We have traveled on ships, planes, trains, buses, taxis and even driven ourselves around all these foreign lands. Lily was born in the summer of 2003 and has been drug along with us since her birth. In all these travels I have never broken a single law or security rule. I plan my trip and what I will take, what I will carry, when I will feed my children, around the security and customs of the places I am going. I even have a kid who is allergic to everything and still I am able to arrange for her to eat and drink in foreign countries without breaking any laws. I am offended that this mother feels she does not have to follow the rules, because her kid is thirsty.

How long does it really take to go through a security check point? Why is it that the security people do not allow sippy cups full of water onto airplanes in the first place and why are the security people focusing on toddlers instead of Arab men? We all know that the terrorists are Arab men so why is everybody picking on this poor woman anyways? This is the real reason I am so upset by this story.

While we were living and traveling overseas before Sept. 11, 2001 we were shocked by how much more security there was in every other country in the world as compared to the US. Jeff and I used to speculate that something would have to happen in America for the security to be increased and even then we weren't sure Americans would be willing to give up convenience for security. I am pretty sure everyone who ever traveled to another country wondered this same thing. Terrorism has been happening all over the world, trains, planes and automobiles have always been targets. So what does this all have to do with a sippy cup with a little bit of tap water...

One time we were visiting Egypt and our tour guide Sammy was apologizing to us for the incipience of all the security measures. He was especially apologetic to Mandy who was ten at the time and me. He told us how badly he and the male security people feel about having to search women and children. He told us about how there have been terrorist attacks against tourists and how the majority of the Egyptian economy is based on tourism. How if people were too scared to come to Egypt to see all the ancient temples and pyramids that there country would starve. So they have spent years and all of their combined intelligence keeping the tourists of Egypt safe. At first they didn't search the women and children. Mostly out of respect, because it is very much against their culture to search a woman. But, then the terrorist started using women and children. There were women and children who were coerced and some who were convinced. The government felt like they had killed those poor women and children. By allowing an opening for the terrorist by not searching women and children they made those women and children an easy target for the terrorists.

Many credible media sources have explained this to the American people many times. It makes me upset that so many seemingly credible media sources take this story of a woman who breaks the law and sensationalizes this story for ratings and doesn't do any homework or research, they just assume that the security people are assholes on a power trip to detain a poor woman and her toddler for a little bit of water in a sippy cup. By making sure that everyone is searched, even the little old ladies, even the screaming toddler, the government is making sure this people are not targeted by the terrorists as the hole in our system. We have men and women dying for our country and I don't think it is too much to ask to empty the sippy cup before you go through the security check point. Is it?

Monday, June 18, 2007

I fought the Kudzu and the Kudzu won

About a year ago our book club was reading The gods in Alabama and I asked everyone what in the world is Kudzu. My friend Laura pointed me over to wikipedia. Now, I have some first hand experience with the stuff.

For father's day, in addition to presents, three lovely home cooked meals, home made sweet tea, and lots of sweetness; I mowed the lawn for Jeff. Mandy helped. My back yard is more like a attempted to be tamed forest than a lawn. The vegetation growing in our back yard is all cut to the size of grass, and we mow it like grass, but there are all kinds of things growing back there. All kinds of bugs too. The kudzu grows up the fence and all over the place like wild fire. It is hard to get down, especially when you decide to attack the lawn in the mid afternoon instead of the morning when it is cool.

We also have a lot of sand and loose dirt between patches of vegetation. Which means that the process of mowing kicks up quite a bit of dust. I came in the house for covered with sweat and dirt, just covered. Several blisters too. I hope Jeff enjoyed laying around watching TV and playing on my computer all day.

After I finished the lawn Jeff went for a bike ride with Amanda, imagine what the neighbors must think of him. Me mowing, then him out on a bike ride. We have so much work to do on our yard. It is good exercise!

Friday, June 15, 2007

BookWormsRus - book club

How about this idea?

When you finish the book...


  • Read the list of questions at the end of the book

  • *Kim, if you have sent off the book and need a copy of the questions, I will find them for you.


  • Send me an email: marshamlow@yahoo.com

    • tell me you are done and ready for the discussion

    • send me your answers to any or all of the questions that have inspired you to answer



  • When everyone is done, I will post the book club discussion



  • Every question that has been answered by someone will be posted on a separate post, so we can discuss questions separately. I will post the answers that were emailed to me and open the discussion of the topic to everyone, whether you have read the book or not.



  • Please feel free to say that you have read the book but want to wait for the discussion to answer or speak up about any of the questions. If none of the questions at the end of the book speak to you initially maybe the discussions will speak to you. Or maybe just reading what others think, without answering a single question, that is also fine.




Does that make any sense? Or does someone else have another idea? I am bossy but flexible. Any other suggestions for the August book?

Party Girl

I have been trying to come up with the words for the post for awhile. Don't seem to have enough hours in the day to come up with thoughtful words. So here I am going to try to express myself off the cuff and most likely I will end up sounding like a big idiot. The thing is I am really interested in having the conversation with all of my blogging buddies, to wrap my mind around what you smart people think.

When I found out that Paris Hilton was going to have to go to jail, I have to admit I thought it was great. She has come to epitomize all the things that bug me about America, the entitlement, the celeb worship, the rich getting richer while the poor get poorer, the newsworthiness of Paris VS politics. It all really bugs me and taking her down a peg or two seemed like a great idea. Now I am not so sure. She is a young woman. Is she personally responsible for all the ails of America?

When I was that age if someone wanted to pay me 100k to go to a party, I know I would have taken the money gladly. And I am so grateful that all my thoughts and mistakes from my twenties have not been put out there for the whole world to laugh about. Yikes would I be embarrassed. Who wouldn't be?

Everyday on TV I see a lot of men, gleefully cheering about the suffering of Paris, and it is really making me feel icky. It is like the beheading of Marie Antoinette. What do you all think? Is she a scapegoat for a all the things wrong with America? Or is she an evil bitch who deserves what she gets?



Book Club
We are waiting on a couple of people, including me, to have our discussion about Last Girls. At the end of Last Girls there are many discussion questions right there in the book.

Do we want to discuss all the questions? I kinda do, but I love discussions and I understand that might be too much.

Or do we want to each of us pick our favorite question or two?

Are there any volunteers on hosting the July book club discussion of The Memory Keeper's Daughter? I am happy to continue hosting the book club here, but perfectly happy to pass the duties around.

I want to nominate the next Harry Potter book for our August read, it comes out at the end of July. Are there any other suggestions for the August book?

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Obsession

Lily's first obsession was blocks. We used to play blocks all day long. We have several sets of blocks. The old fashioned wood blocks with squares, rectangles, triangles, cylinders, etc. She would stack, sort and build castles. Sometimes she would line them all up across the floor. So I started to buy all different types of blocks as this was her love. We have many different types of Lego's and deploys, we have the Lincoln logs, and some weird Japanese blocks. For months and months all Lily would play with was her blocks. Pretty much all day, except for outside time.

Eventually her love of blocks declined. To this day she still loves to play with block, but not in an obsessive all I can think of is blocks kind of way. Next was her puzzle obsession. Puzzles all day long. She got really good at the puzzles too. Right before we moved she was doing 100 piece puzzles all on her own, all day long. She had about 10 of them and she would go through the puzzles and then start again. Sometimes she would do her smaller ones, 25 or 50 piece, but mostly it was the hard ones. How sweet, she would sit quietly at the table and do one puzzle after another. Of course, she preferred to have me sit there and "help" her. I was not allowed to actually touch the pieces, but my moral support was somehow necessary.

After we moved, her love of puzzles dissipated. Now she does them occasionally, like the blocks. Since we have moved there really haven't been any obsessions. She has been playing with all her toys, different things everyday. Until a couple of days ago. Now we have a new obsession, numbers. Lily and I have been learning to count for probably over a year. I bring it up now and then. She counts to 100. For the longest time the way she counted to 100 was weird. She was a bit confused, she thought that 30 was the same as 13, and 40 was the same as 14, etc. So counting she would say twenty-nine, thirteen, thirteen-one, thirteen-two, thirteen-three, etc. What to do.

When Mandy was little I was also very young. I was obsessed with correcting her. I would actually argue with the child until she understood the "right way". About everything, I felt the need to show her the right way. That didn't work out so well. With Lily I try to pick my battles. I ask myself, is it really important to correct her? She is three, what difference does it make if she counts WRONG? One time I had a nightmare where she couldn't graduate from high school because couldn't count to 100 correctly. Still, I didn't correct her. I just let her count any way she wanted and then gave her a big hug and told her great job. It was actually killing me. I kept hoping Mandy wouldn't hear her count, cause Mandy would correct her. I don't know where she gets that (?).

So I came up with this plan to show Lily how to count correctly without telling her she was wrong, without correcting her. This was about 6 months ago, back in Japan. I couldn't find any flash cards that show numbers up to 100 so I bought some of those magnet numbers. I would sit on the floor with her and we would count to 100 with the magnet numbers, making each number one at a time form 1 until 100. She enjoyed this about once, and then she would take the numbers away from me and play with them her way. Which was lining them all up by color, or sometimes in numeric order.

Next I tried writing the numbers on paper, from 1-100 in little rows and columns. I am thinking here that if she sees the 13 and 30, 14 and 40, 15 and 50, 16 and 60... are different that she will stop counting WRONG. I do realize that I am crazy as hell, but at least I am not correcting her. I am still letting her count to 100 any way she wants, I can just imagine my parent teacher conference, Lily can't count correctly... The writing the numbers did not hold Lily's attention. She wanted to write the numbers, even separate papers did not work, she would take the crayon out of my hand.

Next plan. I showed Lily how to type on Mommy's computer, now officially known as Lily's computer. I sat beside her and put spaces between the numbers and returns at the end of a group of ten. We did this for about a week before she was interested enough to get all the way to 100. Once she typed all the numbers from 1-100, she was hooked. She loved it so much that now all she wants to do, all day, everyday, is play numbers. At first she would get some of them back wards or forget the order a bit, but it didn't take long for her to become and expert typer. She hasn't figured out the space bar or the return key, she likes for me to sit next to her hour after hour while she types all the numbers from 1-100. We have to do it in black, and in red, and in blue, and in pink. She has finally figured out how to count correctly out loud from 1-100 no more thirteen-one, etc. But, my punishment for manipulating her to count correctly is all the hours I have had to sit next to her on the computer hitting that damn space bar. Hopefully today she will get the space bar concept. Maybe she is faking just so I will play with her?

When she is not on the computer she is counting out loud, she counts and counts. If something interrupts her counting, well we have to start again and again. No way am I telling her about 101, 102 etc.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Eyes

When I was nine, I think it was nine, but let's face it I was nine so who knows if I was really nine or if I was say 8 or 10. I was practicing casting a fishing line in the backyard with my brother. We had a weight but no hook on the line. The weight got caught in the grass. While we were trying to get it out of the grass, a big tug caused it to fly through the air and smack me right in my eyeball. I have not been able to see out of that eye well since. First there was time in the hospital to get it to heel. Then, when a cataract formed, more time in the hospital to get it removed. At that time, eye surgery wasn't what it is today, that was almost 30 years ago, unless it was when I was 8 and then it really was 30 years ago. I tried wearing a contact lens in the eye to correct the vision. But over time, my brain turned off that eye and it went lazy. I can technically see out of the eye, just can't focus. If I think about it I can see the double vision, but usually I don't think about it.

Almost everyone makes really rude comments about my lazy eye. I put it out of my mind, but it seems like everyone has something to say. As I get older people have become less inclined to speak these things to my face. When I look at myself in the mirror or in a photo I don't see the bad eye, I guess my mind ignores the bad eye like it ignores that faint double vision. Over the years, since I have become an adult and eye surgery has made some incredible advancements I have always been to poor to even think about it. Then married to Jeff, we lived overseas and did not have access to those surgeries. Most of my eye doctors have told me that there really isn't anything that can be done anyways.

In Mississippi, if you need corrective lenses to drive, you have to bring a note from your eye doctor in order to get your driver's license. Because we are living in Mississippi because of the military we are not required to get a Mississippi driver's license or become official Mississippi residents. I have decided to get the license, and Mandy is getting one, and I think Jeff is too. So we went today to the eye doctor to get our certification to drive. Lily was an angel. I had to explain the whole thing to the doctor, bla, bla, bla. So I asked if I could get my eye straightened, if I could get it completely fixed, if there is anything that can be done to help a poor blind girl.

At first it was the same old song and dance, brain synapses no longer functioning, nothing can be done. But, after he examined me he said, hmmm, I can see pretty good out of the eye if I want to, maybe... So I got a referral to a specialist. I am so scared to even think about it. Probably I will get my hopes dashed again, but still I might be able to get it fixed. or at least straightened.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

The War At Our Home

Cat and dog came home from kennel with fleas. Can't seem to shake them. Was up all night night before last trying to kill them all. Was not successful. Last night I tried to sleep and worry about it in the morning. Could not sleep with the thought of fleas in my house. Even though I have been up all night for now three or maybe four nights in a row. Who is counting, so confused.

Friday - we drove all night long, got home Saturday Morning at 6 AM, slept until noon.

Saturday - Pets came home around five, slept through the night not knowing we were being attacked by fleas.

Sunday - discovered pets were itchy, checked and found fleas around 9 PM, stayed up until 2 trying to get rid of fleas. Washed pets with special soap, three times each. Used tweezers, used drops, put pets in cages. Washed all blankets, pet bedding, vacuumed every inch of house. Went to bed at 2AM. Lily peed her bed at 4AM. Hasn't done this in 6 months or more. What is up with that? Got her a bath and put her in bed with me. She cried and cried. Got up and made her bed, put her in her bed and went back to sleep. Got up at 9AM, Lily was sleeping on the couch instead of her bed.

Monday - pets appear to be free from fleas. Spend the day rather grumpy. Have headache and put off homework which is due tomorrow. Put Lily to bed and notice that the animials are again itching. Check and discover fleas. Go to bed anyways. UP all night worried about fleas. Get up at 4AM to do homework, blog instead.

I really have no idea what to do here. I really don't know if I can treat the animals with any more chemicals without killing them. I guess I need to bug bomb the house, but then what about all the bugs on the animals? I guess the drops make the bugs on the animals unable to reproduce, so maybe if we bomb the house we can hope the fleas on the animals die and never make any babies? Plus, it is about 100 degrees outside, so I have no idea what to do with myself and the animals when I bomb the house. Plus I hate putting chemicals in my house. But, I guess I hate fleas more. Maybe I will move.

I really hate that kennel.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Home Again

We decided we had had enough of our vacation and came home a little early. Glad to be home, too. I love my little home.

Jeff was upset that of all the hundreds of vacation pictures I took, that I did not include his favorite on my blog. I think he thinks this is his blog and I am the secretary.

Jeff and I intend to hike the Appalachian trail, which is more than 2000 miles, from beginning to end, straight through, once we get all our kids out of the house. While we were driving through the mountains of Virginia we saw a sign for the trail and we hopped out of the car to take this photo. Jeff was so excited. Since Lily is only three we have 15 years to go before we go on this hike. I am hoping I can get in shape before then. I am thinking if I don't, get in shape by then, I will really get in shape hiking for 6 straight months all day everyday.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Washington, D.C.

We spent the day in D.C. today. I didn't take all of the great advise y'all gave me, instead we spent four hours walking around taking pictures of monuments. Here are a few of the pictures. It was a really beautiful day and we all had a great time. Even little Miss Lily. Tomorrow we are spending the morning with Jeff's sister and then we are off to Tennessee for the weekend. Jeff has always wanted to see the Smokey Mountains. Did I tell you that we spent most of our time in Roanoke, driving around looking at the Appalachian mountains? Now off to the Smokies. They all look alike to me. Maybe I will be able to get some homework done.

I am on page 104 of the book, you are right there aren't chapters. I agree that it is hard to get into at first. Hang in there.


















Swimming in the Water

While in Roanoke, our hotel had a lovely pool. Everyday, all day, Lily would ask to go swimming in the water. And we did, go swimming in the water, with Miss Lily. We had a blast with Jeff's family and in his hometown. They are all just like Jeff. Sorry no, slinky bikini photos of me, maybe next time.







PS How is The Last Girls going for everyone? I am on chapter 4 I think. Trying to read as much as I can. So far I like the book very much. I am always excited to get the chance to pick it up again. What about y'all?

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

on the road again

We are about half way through our road trip. All is well. more later.