Tag: new jersey mom bloggers

  • Who Knew Flashcards Could Be Soooo Funny?!?

    50 nifty and very funny states

    The 50 nifty, funny states.

    With all the technology available at their fingertips (even our school district started going paperless, two years ago) it is sort of refreshing to see my kids revert to using low-tech, old school study tools.

    For example:  making up their own vocabulary flashcards.

    What's so funny about vocabulary, or flashcards, you ask?!?  Absolutely nothing, I say.  Unless, I am helping my youngest study for a BIG test on naming the capitals of all 50 states, using flashcards she made up with special keywords (in parentheses) to help her remember and then acts all surprised when I start laughing…real hard…which made it EVEN funnier.

    Okay, fine, I'll show you.  This is some of what comes to the mind, when identifying the capital city of each state, to my 11 year-old:

    • Arkansas: (Arken saw a _______) little rock and it was good.
    • California:  (Sock sack) don't remember the reasoning behind this one and I sort of don't want to, either.
    • Georgia:  (Real housewives) SNORT!!!
    • Kansas:  (Peek at toes) clearly, they're a bunch of toe-peek-ahs, her Jersey is showing.
    • Michigan:  (I like to sing) lan'sakes, so do I 🙂
    • Minnesota:  (Holy) sort of like St. Nicholas, only not.
    • New Mexico:  (Christmas) speaking of Santa, must be his favorite vacation spot.
    • Ohio:  (Found America) still up for debate, but we'll go with it.
    • New Hampshire:  (Another word for wire) took me a while to figure this one out, shuddup.
    • North Carolina:  (Really?)  yes, raleigh.
    • Virginia:  (Bill Gates) he is rich…mon…duh.

    Aaaaaand, the one that made me laugh-snort:

    • Alaska:  (I know) enough said!

    [sound of crickets, chirping]

    Clearly, I have the sense of humor of an 11 year-old and who knew people in Alaska speak so funny?!?

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

    New and improved:  with a fan page on Facebook and everything!

  • A Clean House Is a Sign of a Cluttered Mind

    Always There

    Artwork currently displayed in our library (a.k.a. bathroom)

    If I had to describe our house to you, in one word, and focusing on the positive, rather than ALL of the other annoying stuff that accumulates, when blessed, as a homeowner <—– that last part was for my husband, Garth (not his real name) —–> who sometimes needs help looking past all that other annoying stuff, bless his hardworking and very squishy heart.

    Sooooo, what were we talking about?

    [blows bangs out of eyes, stares at yet another big old water stain, on the ceiling above the dryer, don't ask]

    Oh yeah.  Focusing on the positive.  Right.  So, I would most likely agree with what other folks have described as some sort of super power for creating:  cozy.

    [glances at laundry, closes eyes]

    Clutter, on the other hand, is my kryptonite.

    I was raised in an even smaller house:  6 rooms (including the bathroom) so, we learned to be very creative when hiding stuff; especially, whenever friends and family would come over for a visit.

    Of course, unlike me or my children, my mother was MUCH better at remembering where she put stuff.  So, after 20 years of raising 4 kids and killer dust bunnies, spring cleaning has become quite the adventure.

    Every year, I find stuff like:

    • Family photos dating back to about 20 years — you know, the ones I've been meaning to put into that scrapbook I started, 20 years ago.
    • School pictures I meant to mail out to family — so THAT'S where they went!
    • A couple of years worth of report cards — before our schools went paperless (cue choir of angels, singing)!
    • OH LOOK!!!  One of my husband's Christmas presents — shhhhhh, I put it away for Father's Day (SCORE!!!) don't tell him, okay?!?
    • Pairless shoes, socks and a couple of bras — don't ask!
    • Petrified, sometimes unidentifiable, food — see previous bullet.
    • Stuff that looks like it may or may not have been alive, at one time.
    • What the?!?  Never mind.  I don't EVEN want to know.

    It's at this point, I begin to feel weak and imagine myself as an unwilling participant in some sort of twisted scavenger hunt.

    [pausing to allow those with younger kids and/or childless individuals to click away…QUICKLY…while you can]

    WAIT!!!  All is not lost.  There are times when I happen upon a real gem — like a poem, gifted to me by my teenage son:

    No matter what happens you are always there,
    You make us dinner,
    You clean our clothes,
    You help us with homework,
    You are always there,
    No matter what happens we can trust you to help,
    When you try and cover up pain we see it,
    You do not realize how much you mean to us,
    Please know that we will love you forever,
    You are an amazing Mother
    And you will always be there.

    I hung it in our bathroom…I mean, our library…because, I sometimes also need help looking past all that other annoying stuff that accumulates, when blessed, as a parent.

    Aaaaand, it happens to hide the hair dye…I mistakenly splashed ALL over the wall…really, really well…too. 

    Because, I am multi-functional like that.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

    New and improved with a fan page on Facebook and everything!

  • Social Media for Good: Blood, Sweat & Brinner!

    Heather blood type = A for AwesomeI started blogging back in 2003 and, thinking back on it now, there weren’t many people in my real life who knew or understood why in the heck I would even consider sharing personal stories, “on the internet”.

    Flash-forward 10 years:  nearly everyone I know is “on the internet” (including my own father, hey Apu!) doing pretty much the same thing — connecting with each other and sharing information through social media channels like Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest — not to mention, sharing stuff about their kids.

    My kids have grown accustomed to hearing me go on…and on…and on…really, I could go on…fuh-evuh…about using their social media powers for good.

    Aaaaaand, then my middle girl (she’s 17) tells me her classmates are organizing an evening blood drive at a local community church over spring break and, well, how cool would it be if we help serve the folks donating blood breakfast for dinner (or brinner)?!?

    (more…)

  • Some of Them Are Revisiting Their Childhood, Already?

    Hope revisiting her childhood

    She insisted on going "back to childhood" because, you know, it was sooooooo long ago (snort!)

    The kids are on their spring break from school, which is sort of funny considering it snowed, this week and, well, now that they're older (me too, dammit!) let's just say I'm sort of cursing myself for ever having uttered the word:  staycation.

    Excuse me while I start shaking my virtual cane, but spring break used to be SO MUCH easier…when they were way younger.

    Give me clear skies, a full tank of gas, an empty playground and we could go for hours without even one mention of So-and-So's family ski weekend or What's-his-Face vacationing in Disney…again.

    "Where are we going?"

    Yesterday, we were reminded…once again…that the sky is actually more blue-ish than gray-ish.

    "I don't know, we'll see."

    After I fill the car up with gas, of course.

    "You guys go ahead, without me."

    Long story, short (seriously, with teenagers, a person could go on and on, you're welcome!) my 19 yo got called into work (earlier than scheduled) and if you have teens (most especially, teen girls) or have ever had to wait on one of them (see previous parenthesis), then you know:  going out in public takes a bit of an effort and my 17 yo was just not feeling it. 

    Aaaaaaand then, like a cement block to the head, it hit me:  our days, of spending any length of time together as a family, are truly numbered.

    My heart may or may not have squished, just a little.

    "Okay, so where do YOU guys want to go?"

    I watched my 14 yo and 11 yo look at each other through the rear view mirror and I knew, right then and there, they were pretty much onto me.

    "How about the battlefield?"

    Where other families escape to warmer climates on spring break, my kids enjoy revisiting areas known for their history of colonial skirmishes…here in Jersey…where it's still sort of cold, in March.

    "Mom, STOP!!!!!"

    Aaaaaand, scaring me half-to-death.

    I used to worry about my kids climbing too high, now I can't help but feel as if my youngest has grown out of her shoes…way too fast. 

    Glen and I are frickin' cold

    "Smile, it's frickin' cold out here, already!" she said through clenched teeth.

    On the other hand, the fact that my son still allows me to be seen with him, out in public and everything, and then share it on Instagram…priceless.


    Monopoly World of Warcraft style

    It was left up to a vote:  World of Warcraft or Dr. Who edition of Monopoly (raises hand) I lost 🙁

    Aaaaaand, then there are those rare nights, when we can ALL sit for hours and be happy to be able to just laugh with each other; usually at my expense, but I'm okay with it.

    I'll just keep on shaking my virtual cane…like a boss 🙂

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House 

  • Sleeping Quadruple in a Sofa Bed

    CONFESSION:  I have this thing about sleeping, in the dark.  I know, considering humans are not generally classified as being nocturnal, sucks for me, right?!?

    It's like my internal clock crossed wires (or something) because, at the end of the day, no matter how physically tired or mentally exhausted I may be (and let me tell you, raising 3 teens and my youngest a teen by default, I totally be!) as soon as the light goes out…[sound of a pin, dropping]…my senses automatically kick into…HOLY CRAP!!!!…WHAT THE HECK WAS THAT?!?

    No, my husband is NOT very happy about it.

    In fact, we adopted our first cat (a few months after we were married) because Garth (not his real name) was leaving on a business trip for several days; thinking that a pet would, at the very least, keep me company and, well, he was a very affectionate cat.

    Still, old ghosts can be REAL hard to kill (right?!?) and we were both a little surprised to find that it worked:  along with the butcher knife I accidentally left under my husband's pillow, which he discovered on his first night back.

    Thankfully, with his hand (not his head) and by its handle.  True story.

    [sound of crickets, chirping]

    Aaaaaanywaaaaay, I've been traveling out-of-state and staying in a two-bedroom condo, with two separate floors, for a few nights:  which, in my mind, is tantamount to broadcasting fresh meat to every zombie within earshot.

    The first night, I slept in the living room:  without bothering to open the sleeper sofa, because jumping off and out is…you know…THAT much quicker.

    The second night, I opened the sleeper sofa:  because I actually didn't really realize it opened, until now…don't judge.

    By the third night, I was absolutely exhausted:  because sleeper sofas can be super-uncomfortable (especially, when you are up all night, with a bad back and stacking cushions high enough to be able to watch The Golden Girls marathon on television) and keeping an ear out for zombies is hard work…YO!!!

    Sleepover

    From left to right: my sorry ass, Corine, Carol and Jen

    Last night:  lucky for me, I also happened to be traveling with 3 very good friends who did NOT think twice about babysitting my sorry ass AND calling it a pajama party…instead.

    With friends like this, who needs a butcher knife?!?

    ©2003 – 2013 This Full House

    P.S.  Did YOU know that Blanche got married?!?  

    P.P.S.  Never mind.

  • Parenting Tip #45,371,381: Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff – Shove a Slushy Snowball Down Someone’s Shirt, Instead!

    My husband, Garth (not his real name) is really good at not panicking, especially dealing with an emergency situation; when, considering I took to Twitter when my middle girl's butt exploded, clearly I am not.

    On the other hand, I have made it my life's mission to NOT sweat the small stuff AND have consistently failed said mission (it was more like a guideline, anyway, really) for the last…ummmm, let's see…how old IS my oldest kid, again?!?

    Aaaaanyway, point being (and I really do have one, promise) Garth (not his real name) and I have taken to handling this whole…parenting teens is hard, YO!…by tag-teaming each other, sort of like professional wrestlers would…during a no holds barred steel cage death match.

    Blindfolded, with one arm tied behind our backs and buck-naked.

    Like, the other night, when my youngest asked for help with an essay and then kept insisting on either disagreeing with or fighting me on ANY and ALL help that was being offered.

    My husband walked in through the front door just in time to hear me holler, "Then, why BOTHER asking ME for help?!?"

    [ding-ding-ding]

    He rolled up his sleeves, loosened his tie and pushed me…every so gently, yet firmly…you know…out of the way.

    "I got this!" 

    Or, whenever Contradictory Boy shows up (a.k.a. our 14 year-old son's alter ego) and clashes with the gravitational forces on my husband's forehead, causing a massive facial implosion and one gosh-darned scary-looking unibrow.

    [ding-ding-ding]

    "Sooooooo, how DOES one go about creating a character in World of Warcraft?"

    We ARE the King and Queen of Distraction (a.k.a. SziSzi of Pandaria) and, well, whatever works, right?!? 

    Saturn Sucks

    So, this is happening (RIGHT NOW!) and, well, the groundhog lied…the little jerk!

    Long story, short (you're welcome!) I've been driving our oldest to and from work (she's saving for a car, we live in Jersey, enough said!) sometimes even on the days when I don't need to use the car (see last parenthesis) unless it snows.

    "You don't want to transfer your fear onto her, do you?"

    Now that we have a kid driving (and ANOTHER one driving, this spring) the panic that sets in goes way beyond the fact that I don't do snow and, well, Eastern-European-types aren't very good at keeping a straight face; we pretty much suck at poker, too.

    "Noooooo, but don't expect me to stop worrying…DAMMIT…and ANOTHER thing…"

    [ding-ding-ding]

    Aaaaand, that's when he shoved a slushy snowball down the front of my pajamas.

    "WTF, dude?!?!?!?!?"

    Although, it worked long enough for me to stand there and forget just what in the heck we were talking about, I am STILL a little confused by his tactics.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

  • Girl Scout Cookies Are Evil, We Must Eat Them!

    My husband, Garth (not his real name) and I went food shopping, together (I know, don't be jealous!) and it was a really big one (that's what SHE said)!

    So, after quickly scanning the sales receipt, to make sure we didn't accidentally purchase another child, or something, we were all, like…oh yeah…THAT'S why we haven't been to Disney (yet!) and I suddenly heard someone holler the 3 most scariest words in parenting.

    Girl scout cookies.

    Long story, short (we can only hope, right?!?) I broke up with girl scouts a few years ago and, well, it was a really difficult time for me.  

    Each of my girls enjoyed their run with the girl scouts (my middle girl lasting the longest at 9 years) and I actually looked forward to each of their troop meetings (sort of) as a reason to get together with OTHER moms, at least once every month.

    Selling girl scout cookies, not so much.

    I used to dread cookie time, but not as much as the leaders and I'm pretty sure we STILL have a couple of boxes (or twenty) left, out in the garage, too.  

    So, we walked by…REAL FAST…and then it hit me…the G.U.I.L.T…like walking into a revolving door…the wrong way…aaaaaaand, please tell me I am NOT the only one who's done that!

    Seriously, as an ex-troop mom, I know how hard these ladies work.  

    My husband, Garth (not his real name) must have felt it, too (after 20+ years of marriage, you sort of start sharing the same brain, it's sort of weird, really!) he shoved some money into my hand and told me he'd meet me at the car.

    "So, how much ARE they?"

    All of the girls manning (girling?) the table hollered out "FOUR BUCKS!" at the same time, making me jump and swallow my gum.

    [cough-cough-cough]

    "But, if you buy 5 boxes, you can enter a drawing for a grand prize!!!"

    Dammit.

    "Ohhhhhh, HEY YOU!"

    Yep, I knew the troop leader.  My youngest was supposed to be in her Daisy troop in kindergarten, but she didn't know any of the girls, so I asked Hope be moved into another troop of pre-school friends and, well, moms have a weird way of remembering this sort of stuff.

    Then I remembered:  she also happened to be Hope's class mom, pretty much all through elementary school, I think.

    "I'll take 5 boxes, please!"

    Even longer story, shorter (seriously, I know you're busy and everything!) I am a BIG believer in karma and, well, suffice it to say that my husband and I could really use a little cosmic intervention, right about now.

    "Don't forget to fill out your entry form."

    Fine, so while filling out the entry form, I casually asked about the grand prize…hoping that maybe it would a trip to Disney, or something…it COULD happen.

    [one beat, two beats]

    "5 cases of cookies!!!!"

    Stupid girl scout cookies, dumbass Karma.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

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  • Winter Photo Walk, Pre-Naptime Moments Edition

    Raising older kids, folks sometimes ask me about stuff I miss the most about their being…you know…not so little, anymore.  That's easy.  Naptime!!!

    Frozen clothes line

    Aaaaaand, those precious pre-naptime moments, when I would take them to the park, or drag them out into our backyard (2 out of 4 STILL hate bugs, me too) and just watch, as they race each other from tree to tree (protip for parents of younger kids:  best distraction tactic ever, works EVERY blessed time!) with little or no fear of their running into a sharp corner…or a wall.


    IMG_20130209_083010

    Now, it's me they have to worry about (or the dog, because he too forgets to slow down and look, before turning too quickly, sometimes)  and dang if I couldn't use a REAL good nap, right about now.


    IMG_20130209_141347

    Aaaaaanyway, now that they are older (not me, I'm still 19, in my head, anyways) the kids have their own agendas (none of which include me) and, well, snowy weekends were made for pre-naptime activity, yes?

    "No one will go outside and make a snowman with me."

    [insert sad face, extending lower lip, over upper lip, here]

    My youngest, on the other hand, would insist that no one never, ever…NEVER…wants to do anything, with her…EVER!

    "I will!"

    Judging by the skepticism, written all over her face (protip:  I don't think pre-teens EVER get rid of "the look" until AFTER they have kids) she probably did NOT mean me.

    IMG_20130209_141336
    See, it's written all over her face:  seriously, Mom???  YOU???  The woman who would not even be able to bend down (or stand up) without having to take a nap, afterwards?!?

    Winter photo walk 1
    Fiiiiiiiine, maybe I can't build a snowman worth a lick (stupid sciatica, dumbass herniated discs) however, we CAN go on an awesome wintertime photo walk and catch a few gosh-darned-mighty-fine-pre-naptime moments of our own.

    Winter photo walk 2
    Aaaaaaaand, guess what THIS weekend's project is going to be…g'head, I'll wait…unless it snows again and then, well, I call naptime!!!  Who's with me?!?

    [sound of crickets, chirping]

    Dumbass-delinquent drain pipe, stupid-ignorant ice.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

  • Ice, Ice, #Nemo

    We heard it was coming, a few days after experiencing our first earthquake and it was supposedly to be one of the biggest storms to hit Jersey in recent memory:  Hurricane Irene blew in late Summer of 2011, which suddenly sounds like a really long time ago.

    Aaaaand, then Superstorm Sandy hit the east coast last October, nearly knocking us back into the stone ages, changing the face of New Jersey, forever.

    So, yeah, I was a little nervous when tracking our first major winter storm since even before the hurricanes hit, especially one named after a cheeky fish.

    IMG_20130209_081120
    Nemo was much kinder to us than our neighbors in North Jersey, but I'm pretty sure that friends and family in New England are STILL digging their way out.

    IMG_20130209_082717
    I spent the first few hours of Saturday morning, peering out our front door, willing the snow to melt, hoping that it would thaw out in time for me to take my oldest daughter to work.

    IMG_20130209_083001
    You see, I don't do snow, or at least I don't drive in it very well.  I had a pretty bad car wreck the first year I started to drive (YES, they had rubber wheels back then, be quiet, child!) and, well, I can still hear the CRUNCH in my ears, as my car was being rear-ended and my forehead hit the steering wheel.

    I woke up in the hospital to find out that…YES!…apparently, a person can so sprain their esophagus. 

    "Do you want me to drive, Mom?"

    My oldest is super-soft spoken (no, she does NOT get it from me!) but, I still jumped as if my daughter was talking into a bullhorn and nearly swallowed my coffee mug.

    "No, I would much rather you call in sick."

    Yeah, great role model…I know…and I realize that she has been driving for over a year now and will need to practice driving in snow, sometime, just not nearly a foot and on her first attempt.


    IMG_20130209_082730
    Good thing she wasn't scheduled to work at the hospital until midday, it took all morning for my son to chip away at the ice and snow that Nemo dumped all over our car (another advantage to having older kids, free labor!) and only now do I realize the irony:  the daughter of the world's clumsiest and most accident-prone woman WOULD work in a hospital.

    "C'mon Mom, you're just making yourself more nervous, you'll be fine."

    Aaaaaaad, that very fine line between parent and child (trust me, it's there) was blurred, once again, by my inability to shake stuff off and get over myself, already.




    IMG_20130209_082745

    "Besides, you're the one who taught me how to drive…remember?"

    Yes, yes I did and she's a gosh-darned good driver (in spite of it) so I guess there is still a little hope for me, yet.

    "Hang on a second, I'll grab my coat."

    Besides, the last time I attempted to drive in weather like this, I abandoned my car in the school parking lot and walked home, with all four kids in tow, while snow continued to fall…sideways…and I didn't have a coat.

    But, NOT this day.  

    "Thanks Mom, I'm proud of you!"

    Tell you the truth, having made it there in one piece AND without embedding my fingers into the steering wheel, permanently, I was pretty gosh-darned proud of myself, too.

    "I'll see you after my shift!"

    Nope, but I didn't bother to tell her that her father would be picking her up, later that night, and I really shouldn't have to explain why…this LATE in the game…now, do I?!?

    Stupid ice, dumbass Nemo.

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

  • Out of the Picture

    This is a post that I have written AND deleted many, many times and for very different reasons, mostly because it is not a very nice story and, honestly, unlike our house (IRL) I do prefer to keep my blogging world as light (and airy) as possible.

    Also, it is not my story to tell (not all of it, anyway) and, although very few childhood images remain as clear in my mind, some memories are best left forgotten, right?!?

    Truth be told, I was more concerned with my children inheriting the same self-perpetuating fear that I've had to live with for the last 40+ years:  questioning myself, over and over again, whether or not there was anything I could have done or said to prevent it from happening to me, this is the legacy of domestic violence.

    In other words, what they don't know can't hurt them…and won't, if I have anything to do with it…DAMMIT! 

    Mama, Kerestzmama and Anyu

    Nagy Mama, Aunt Theresa and my Mom (standing) c. 1956

    Then I recently came across this picture of women I have loved and admired all my life.  I pinned it to the bulletin board, right above my desk.  I adore and cherish this picture on so many levels, but most of all because they are all smiling.

    Also, there is a reason why it seems slightly off-center:  I had cut out the image of my grandfather, long ago.

    Still, I felt a wave of nausea and had to fight to keep from getting sick.

    I did not invite my grandfather to my wedding and he's never met my children.  In fact, the man has been dead (figuratively and literally) to my (and my aunt's) family for years now, but I was suprised how just the simple thought of him could STILL hold such power over me.

    I turned the picture over in my hand, found writing on the back (it was grandmother's) and then I cursed myself for not translating it first.

    What I could make out:  it was taken in the small village where they lived, right before the Hungarian Revolution broke out, and judging by my mother's and aunt's age (at the time) probably right before they immigrated to the U.S.

    Without my grandfather.  Yes, my grandmother left her husband behind, on purpose.

    Back-story:  he followed them here, lying about their separation to a social worker, who gave him the address of their foster family, so that he could reunite with his wife and children.

    This is the part of the story that is not ALL mine to tell:  suffice it to say, he was the type of man to hide food from his starving children. True story. 

    I can tell you:  my earliest memory is of him, hitting my grandmother hard enough to knock her into the next room…right in front of me.

    Thinking on it some more, I probably should have asked my mother's permission, before cutting his image from the picture, but deep down inside I know she most likely would agree:  my heart was in the right place; we are ALL in a much better place.

    If only I could cut away the pain he's caused our family, just as easily — most especially, now that both my grandmother and aunt have passed.

    On the other hand, my children's memories of their grandfather ARE very, very different; they WILL be better wives, husbands, mothers and fathers in spite of it.  

    I win!

    © 2003 – 2013 This Full House

    Are you a victim of domestic violence?  Call or text the National Domestic Violance Hotline:  Peer Advocates are available for assistance and support 24/7. Text “loveis” to 77054 or call 1-866-331-9474 or 1-866-331-8453 TTY or chat live online.