Tag: parenting

  • You See, This is EXACTLY Why I Love Reading Other People’s Blogs!

    Let the Sunshine In

    It's been a rough couple of days/weeks/months here at This Full House of sticky socks and crunchy feet. 

    Without going into too much detail (you're welcome!) for fear of boring you to the point where you experience permanent decrease in vision, or your head explodes (I know, too late, stay with me here, just a little longer, okay?) it's just the typical drama that goes along with living in close quarters, in the wintertime and raising kids, who are old enough to, you know, talk back.

    Which, in the long term, is a good thing, seeing as my children will most definitely display brilliant moments of absolute resilience or, at the very least, be able to hold their own in a conversation.

    Me, not so much.

    I'm just too gosh-darned tired to argue and, may the parenting gods on high forgive me, but, I sort of like it when I hear other seemingly rational and somewhat more educated people, you know, complain about their kids.

    Inevitably, the guilt sets in, hard, and typically in the darkest of moments — like, hearing when a family in one of our schools suddenly loses a child — and, well, I just can't imagine living without either one of mine.

    Until, the next time my oldest is running late, my son leaves his jacket behind, or my youngest interrupts a conversation, while my husband, Garth (not his real name) and I try to convince my middle girl that parents are NOT, you know, as dumb as we seem (which is most days, btw) well, every day, it's something, right?

    [sound of crickets chirping]

    So, there I was, just sitting here, at my desk, minding my own business (sort of) reading other people's blogs (hence, last parenthesis) when the most amazingly fantastical thing happened.

    The sun came out.

    Then, suddenly…um…uh…funny, I sort of forgot what the heck was bothering me in the first place.

    Aaaaand, well, I just love that, you know?

    Happy Love Thursday!

    UPDATED TO ADD:  Due to a sports-related emergency (Gatorade blew up in son's gym bag) he found his jacket in the front office, today (YAY!) but, seems to have misplaced one of his wrestling shoes (Ummmmm) bet you didn't know they cost an arm (possibly a leg, even) or, that there was such a thing as wrestling shoes, either, right?!?

    © 2003 – 2011 This Full House

  • Wordless Wednesday:
    Aaaand So It Begins
    To Look a LOT Like Christmas!

    Heather Sporting Christmas Ornament Earrings
    The countdown (27 days until Heather's 15th birthday) officially begins…NOW!!!

    Taken with my cell phone.  Imagine what I could do with a REAL camera?  Yeah, I'm looking at you, Garth (not his real name!)

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    © 2003 – 2010 This Full House Blog / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Parenting Tip #3,103,817:
    Some Folks Will Like Your Kids,
    Even Better Than You.
    If You’re Lucky!

    Candle
    My kids are lucky.  I know that.  My parents have taken GREAT delight in spoiling their grandchildren (i.e. allow them stuff that mom and dad, you know, don't, because we've obviously forgotten the definition of fun!)

    My in-laws?  Well, they still seem to enjoy our company.  Especially, when my kids are around.  Yes, they probably like them way better than me, too.

    It's okay.  I'm down with it.  Can't say as I blame them, either.

    "Can we light a candle for Keresztmama?"

    So, when my youngest asked to place the candle jar at the end of our driveway, so that my aunt could see it, even from way up in heaven, I truly believed that she would.

    "Of course!"

    My aunt would send them handmade birthday cards, which, with her bum right hand and one good eye, must have taken hours to draw, in colored pencil, no less.

    "Look, there she is!"

    Still, I couldn't help but feel a little startled (okay, A LOT!) when my 11 year-old son pointed out a new star in the night sky, thinking that my aunt was, you know, standing right behind us, seeing as I was raised by a bunch of Hungarians and, why yes, we ARE a superstitious lot!

    "I think you're right!"

    But, I'm not quite sure if my aunt was very happy with me.

    "You think she misses us, yet?"

    You see, I promised that I would take the kids down to see her (they live about 90 minutes away) but, that was months ago and, even though we talked on the phone, just last week, well, you know.

    "Yes, just as much as we miss her!"

    Then, I thought back to our last conversation.  She heard about my upcoming procedure (probably, from my mother) and called to set my mind at ease.

    "You've always been a fast healer."

    The woman, who slowly suffered and lost parts of her body to the bitch that is diabetes, for the last 35 years, was giving me comfort.

    "You're on my mind, always."

    Still, why does someone have to get sick, or die, for us to take inventory of our own lives?

    You know, like in deciding what we should have, or could have done, more or less.

    "How do you know?"

    I watched my 9 year-old daughter's breath chill and then eerily turn into a plume of phantom smoke.

    "How do I know, what?"

    Because, I'm observant like that.

    "If she misses us, or not."

    I looked deep into her brown-black eyes and thought, my gosh, how could she not?

    "She had a picture of you guys, right by her bed."

    It was actually taped on the small fridge where my cousin kept my aunt's water, orange juice, tubes of cake icing (to ward off the nasty effects of insulin shock) and, of course, her insulin.

    "She adored your kids, you know that, right?"

    My uncle pointed at a snapshot taken when my parents treated us to lunch on Valentine's Day and, well, now I'm really glad that the waitress insisted that, you know, I get in the shot, too.

    "I'm going to draw her a picture."

    I followed my youngest back into the house, watched her go through the craft drawer and, for the eleventy-hundredth time, my heart squished, a little (okay, A LOT!)

    "This will help her remember how much WE loved her!"

    I mean, really, putting that MUCH faith, in a few strokes of crayon and magic marker, who wouldn't love that, right?

    [one beat, two beats]

    "Me too, move over!"

    You know, just in case.

    Stopdiabetes

    © 2010 This Full House Blog / TFH Gone Shopping

  • Nearly Wordless Wednesday:
    The Dance

    Theresa 1964
    My mother's baby sister, Aunt Theresa (holding me) her friend (holding my brother) my dad, my mom and Nagy Mama late spring, 1964.

    Theresa Sassy'nit Up on the Dance Floor! 04/30/52 – 11/02/10

    My Aunt Theresa sass'nit up on the dance floor (with me) on my wedding day (August 25, 1990) whose last wish was to be buried in the same awesomely sassy dress, tomorrow. 

    Until we meet again…save me a dance, my sweet and awesomely sassy Keresztmama (Godmother, in Hungarian) you will be missed, never forgotten and forever loved for ALL your sassyness and more!!! 

    Forever yours, Sziszike.

    Friggin' Diabetes.

    Stopdiabetes

    © 2010 This Full House Blog / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Wordless Wednesday:
    A-Maize-ing

    Hopey Corn Maze 2010 No, you are most certainly NOT almost as tall as the corn…DAMMIT?!?

    Taken with my cell phone.  Imagine what I could do with a REAL camera?  Yeah, I'm looking at you, Garth (not his real name!)

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    © 2010 This Full House Blog / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • If You Give a 14 Year-Old PlayDoh

    Playdoh

    Nope, you are NEVER too old for PlayDoh! 

    BONUS points if you can, uh, guess which 14 yo is, you know, mine?

    LINKY LOVE BYTES:

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    Wordless Wednesday on 5 Minutes for Mom

    Tag,
    you're it:  

    © 2010 This
    Full House Blog
    / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Don’t Knock Knock It, If you Haven’t Washed and Dried It!

    Glen's Grand Poetry
    Kids.  They WILL say the funniest things and, more often than not, parents ARE their main source of entertainment.

    Knock knock.  Who's there?  Repeat.  Repeat who?  Who. Who. Who. Who. Who. Who. Who.

    Aaaaand, well, you get it, right?

    Knock knock.  Who's there?  Kanga.  Kanga Who?  No.  Kanga ROO!

    Oh, we pretend laugh (or, not) and act like, you know, we've never, EVER heard that one, before.

    Knock knock.  Who's there?  Cows.  Cows who?  No.  Cows go MOO!

    [heavy sigh]

    Glen's Pic of TFH Happiness is…your family.  They're the people you love.

    Then, they learn how to write and, well, all that pretend laughing you did seems to have paid off.

    Until, you turn to the page.

    Glen's Xbox Happiness is…an Xbox.

    Doesn't matter that in 2006 (when my son wrote this entry into his 1st grade book binding project) we did NOT even have an Xbox.

    Glen's Playdates Happiness is…friends.  I like to have play dates with them.

    Or, that we don't have any machetes (not in the house, anyway) or, swords [looks closer] okay, but it's a PRETEND light saber!

    [heavy sigh]

    Either way, a teacher once told me (please, don't ask me which one; we're talking approx. 80 parent teacher conferences, over here):

    I'll believe half of what your child tells me about you, if you believe half
    of what your child says about me.

    Until, my son (he's in 6th grade, now) showed me his homework – write a set of directions; it could be how to get to your house, of a recipe, or how to play a video game – and guess which one he picked?  Go ahead.  I'll wait.


    This Full House the Game.

    This Full House (the game) Directions:  You have my mom and you must walk around picking up clothes to put in the laundry.  While the clock is ticking down you must put more and more clothes in to add on time.  If time runs out you lose!

    At least, he got this one right and, well, his penmanship has improved, considerably, don'tcha think?

    [sound of crickets chirping]

    So, um, anyone heard any good knock knock jokes, lately?

    [blows bangs out of eyes]

    'Cawse, next week is back-to-school night (4 of them, to be exact) and I got nothin'!

    © 2010 This
    Full House Blog
    / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Bringing the Dumb

    Ihavedumb

    Would you believe, I was a REAL "Boy, she has it ALL together" type mom?  Once.  YES, I WAS, DAMMIT!   You wouldn't know it now [blows bangs out of eyes] but, I even used to bake my kids homemade birthday cakes.

    "That was the doctor's office."

    Now, they consider themselves very lucky if I remember their birthdays…at all.

    "She says we are WAY over due on our well visits."

    I was supposed to take them in August.  It's STILL September, right?

    "Fine."

    So, I added, "call pediatrician," to the monstrosity that is my to-do list; nevermind, try to find an empty space on the calendar.

    What?  Yours, too?

    [shakes head]

    Aaaand, it's only September, right?

    "I left you a note on your laptop."

    Now, I have to write stuff on 2 calendars and then punch it into my cell phone, just in case, you know, I forget to look at the calendar.

    "And I sent you a text." 

    10 years from now, however, my children will undoubtedly remember their mother as being a discombobulated mess.

    "Thank you."

    What they fail to see, however (along with the wet towels left to ferment along the bathroom hallway) is, in my discombobulatedness (yes, it's a word!) I have played an important role in teaching them good organizational skills.

    "Um…where is my cell phone?"

    Aaaand, keeping them motivated in practicing those skills.

    "It's probably in your car, Mommy."

    Probably.  Since, I spend most of the time, sitting in it, or driving it (mostly, sitting) especially, this time of year.

    "I left you a note…too…bye…LOVE YOU!"

    My 9 year-old, being the youngest of 4, is also advanced proficient in self-preservation and, after almost 10 years (or more, I forget) of fighting our way in and out of carpool lanes (i.e. they ARE the devil) the kid's got the stop, drop and ROLL thing down to a science!

    "I love…"

    Too late.  She was out of the car and passed the bus lane.  3 seconds more and I could have saved the kid a couple hundred bucks worth of therapy.

    "She NEVER could say I love you!" 

    [heavy sigh]

    Then, I found her note.

    Love Note

    Aaaand, well, you know.  Yes, my brain is mush.  But, I kind of, sort of, love the fact that my kids leave me little love notes…just like the ones I used to send…in their lunch bags.

    Until, I read the second one.

    Love Note 2
    Apparently, she really, really, really, really, really, really wants to be able to use the gift card…she got for her birthday…way back…in June.

    It is STILL September, right?

    [shrugs]

    So, along with the fact that the gift card is good until June of 2012 (thankyouverymuch!) I added a little note of my own.

    "I love you too, sweetie and good luck getting your card back!"

    [eyes go wide]

    What?  So, I'm a discombobulated mess (DAMMIT!) but, I am NOT stoo-pid, you know?

    © 2010 This
    Full House Blog
    / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Children of the REAL Jersey Shore
    (Now with MORE zeppoles!)

    Septemberrrr Wake me up when Septemberrrrrr ends!

    I love the beach this time of year.  The fresh, salty air is a bit chillier, which makes the water seem much, much warmer and, well, most of the Bennies (i.e., the cast of the Jersey Shore, mostly, ironically enough) have ALL gone home.

    "When was the last time we were at this beach, again?!?"

    I get it.  I was young, once (shuddup!) and could NOT wait for Friday nights, in the summer, when we'd head down the Parkway to Seaside Heights and/or Wildwood Crest and sneak into bars study the bible, ALL weekend long!

    "I remember, Momma, it was when we showed Dana the ocean!"

    I'd forgotten.  Yeah, it really was the day we introduced my bloggy friend Dana to the oceanshe's from Wisconsin!

    "Has it been THAT long?!?"

    Sadly, my kids have outgrown Jenkinson's Boardwalk.

    Jenkinson's 1999 Glen's 1st trip to the boardwalk — Jenkinson's 1999

    It really is just the right size for little ones; ALL tuckered out by nap time (me, too) and we'd be loooong gone by the time the Jersey Shore night life, you know, woke up. 

    "I thought that ride was SO MUCH bigger!"


    Holly and Heather Jenkinson's 1999
    Then, before you know it, YOUR kids meet the maximum 48 inches to ride and, well, you know, you can't go back.

    "Can we get zeppoles?!?"

    Yesterday, however, was a GREAT day to get out (considering, September also translates to, "school holiday," in Jersey!) and housewife is such an oxymoron, dontchathink?

    Zeppoles
    Mmmmm….the view inside a big bag of zeppoles (pronounced as zep-poh-leez) or, fried dough, drowning in powdered sugar, if you're NOT from Jersey.

    "Noooo, I want funnel cake!!!"

    Funnel Cake
    Mmmmm…of course…(or, auf-cawse, if you're from Jersey) there's ALWAYS room for funnel cake!!!

    "Wanna eat it on the beach?!?"

    Pt. Pleasant Beach
    Bet you did NOT know we had palm trees, or blue skies, here in Jersey, right?  Are they real?  You know, I really don't know.

    "This was really an AWESOME day, Momma!"

    What we DO know is that there's SO MUCH more to Jersey than what some reality t.v. shows would care to admit, sort of.

    "Too bad you ran outta money for the rides!"

    Of course, it most likely will not be the one that my kids remember but, let's NOT go there…just yet…m'kay!?!?

    © 2010 This
    Full House Blog
    / This Full House Gone Shopping

  • Wordless Wednesday:
    Not Listening!

    Not Listening!

    Taken with my cell phone.  Imagine what I could do with a REAL camera?  Yeah, I'm looking at you, Garth (not his real name!)

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    Tag,
    you're it: 
      

    © 2010 This
    Full House Blog
    / This Full House Gone Shopping