Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Bugglescoop: The sun? Free. No dessert? Free.

Dear Jergens Corporation Marketing, Research and Development People:

Recently I purchased from Target your product, Natural Glow "Firming" Daily Moisturizer. I debated for a moment there in the overstocked skincare aisle, vacillating (as I am wont to do) between the myriad options before me. Among the questions complicating my decision:

1) Jergens brand or Target brand? Having recently been burned after discovering my "compare to Crest" Target brand dental floss was actually a reel of seafoam green gardening twine, this was a relatively easy choice.
2) Original formula or "firming"? No contest. It's the end of July, and I'd call in the National Guard if I thought it might help my cause.
3) How dark is too dark? Would "FAIR" show up at all, given my midsummer farmer tan? "DARK" might put me into Donatella territory. I settled on the innocuous-sounding "MEDIUM."

It's been a couple of weeks now since that fateful moment at Target, and I have some concerns. I know what you're thinking: PARABENS. CANCER. IMPENDING LITIGATION. But you can relax. I can't get any of my attorney friends to return my calls. I'm thinking they don't want to associate with me because a) I'm still pale, and b) I'm still squishy.

So that leaves me pondering: is "subtle skin darkening" just industry jargon for "not at all visible to the naked eye"? And while I don't purport to be some kind of cosmeceutical expert, I'm thinking that in order to achieve a "firming" effect, you might want to consider adding something a little more potent. Like maybe some epoxy-based resins.

I had high hopes for your product, Jergens People. Maybe I'm partly to blame, for foolishly believing that a firm, natural glow can be safely guaranteed for $6.99. But mostly I think it's your fault, for testing it out on a bunch of anorexic albinos and calling it a day.

Monday, July 28, 2008

The wait is over!

This is one of those times you'll look back on and marvel, How did I ever eke out an existence before this moment? Before I could sit down in front of a small, glowing monitor, click a button, and view hundreds of photos of somebody else's kids?

That's right, people, Buggleshots is now open for business. You'll notice that in these oh-so-recent photos, there is snow on the ground and my kid has short hair. Those of you who know Buggledaddy are aware of the fact that to him, everything is a photo opportunity. So cut me some slack as I wade through the archives.

This is a members-only site. If you'd like access, please comment or email me (I need your email address) and I'll add you to the list. Unless you're a perv.

Enjoy!

Bugglescoop: You can never be too careful

As you may have read, last week the Bugglehouse was something of a minor cranial trauma ward. I have to admit that as recently as this past weekend, I was still experiencing some tenderness above my left eye - and Buggleboy still has a faint, army-green slash above his.

I just don't have the stamina to constantly worry about my kids being harmed simply while playing in the house or backyard. Who knows - if every stay-at-home mom was able to channel all of the time and energy spent protecting our kids from household hazards maybe we would have cured cancer or averted global warming by now.

Isn't it comforting to know that no matter what challenges this world might fling straight at your noggin, a solution is merely a mouse-click away? God bless the internet.




Behold, dear reader: the Bumper Bonnet, available online at One Step Ahead. I've already placed a rush order for several, in colors and patterns to coordinate with all of the kids' activewear, as well as a couple of pairs of these:



Because a responsible parent should never be caught without Snazzy Baby Knee Pads. Rumor has it that Paris Hilton is coming out with her own line, embellished with Swarovski crystals, to be featured at Kitson.

Once my shipment arrives, provided I'm able to convince Bugglehubby to install that toilet seat lock and the home-wide closed-circuit video monitoring system with webcam capabilities, I'll be available for mani/pedi's followed by lunch at the Ivy - no sitter needed. So ring me up, ladies. Soon I'll be stress-free, ready to plot an end to the global energy crisis over crudites and cosmos.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Sound it out: mah-dur-ay-shun

Tonight as I was cleaning up the kids' dinner by shoveling into my face a portion of the leftovers, some of which had most likely already been partially masticated by Buggleboy, I at last understood the deeply disturbing magnitude of my snacking compulsion. Which, like a vampire during the waxing moon, only emerges when conditions are ideal; i.e., after a hearty serving of antioxidant-rich-fermented-grape beverage.

I am one of those people who simultaneously must, and should never, mix junk food and alcohol.

In reality, I think I am probably quite the lightweight when it comes to booze, particularly when it's ninety degrees out and I've been "exercising." Snacking while imbibing prevents me from, at worst, spinning during tubby time and at best, waking up at three in the morning to chug a liter of Vitamin Water.

My go-to solution to this problem, to Buggledaddy's chagrin, is simply not to keep much junk food around the house. But today at the grocery store they had Cheetos Puffs for two dollars and I caved. They blended so effortlessly into the bounty already shoved onto the kitchen counter between the dirty Tupperware: the remains of a bottle of cabernet sauvignon, polished off during the opening number of The Backyardigans, and the Trader Joe's original hummus and white corn tortilla chips that's been my snacking staple all week.

On tap for the kids' dinner tonight was the leftover chicken and rice with vegetables that I had made last night. Buggleboy was wolfing it down, but Bugglegirl seemed destined for a repeat performance of yesterday, when she ended the meal with a mighty gag and subsequent regurgitation into the bowl a mere three bites in. It's really those moments that make standing in front of a hot oven in July so touching. Last night I wrapped up the bowl "as is," popped it into the fridge, and nuked it for her dining pleasure this evening.

And tonight, she gobbled it up. The difference? The alluring promise of artificially-flavored, chemically-colored, extruded bits of turd-shaped, puffed corn. For every three bites of dinner, I offered up one Cheeto. I, not surprisingly, attacked the bag like I'd spent the summer at fat camp. Which of course is exactly where I'll find myself next year, should I continue this nightly bacchanalia.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Everybody's doing it

I'm happy to report that after approximately one hundred thirty-three million, nine hundred twenty thousand seconds of enslavement to the child-bearing-birthing-nursing-rearing-machine, I have at last seen the light at the end of the tunnel. And it is good.

Over the weekend the Bugglefam trekked out to the beach club despite the misty, overcast weather. Clearly my morning raisin bran had been tinged with PCP, because right before strapping everyone into the car, I shoved a magazine into our LL Bean beach bag. I figured that, at most, I might get to peruse the cover bylines, maybe flip halfway through the first twenty-two pages of advertisements, if Bugglehub was willing to spot me a couple of minutes.

It was so much more than I could ever have imagined.

Bugglehub and I sat, FOR HALF AN HOUR, in our teal canvas beach chairs, facing the kids' play area, peering over our periodicals only periodically to catch a glimpse of Bugglegirl making sand angels and Buggleboy veering dangerously close to the edge of the jungle gym. I daresay we almost forgot we had offspring, but for the dad sitting next to us who felt the need to broadcast this tidbit to his two young boys:

"You know why I was gone for so long?"
"Why, Daddy?"
"I had to make a poop."
"Was it a big brown poop?"
"Yep. It sure was."

Yes, children have emerged from my nether regions. Even so, I really didn't ever need to overhear this conversation. Particularly as I'm attempting to ignore said children.

Monday, July 21, 2008

It's just a flesh wound

Currently the kids and I are sporting coordinating forehead contusions.

I got mine in the middle of the night last week when I got up to go to the bathroom and slammed my head into the granite countertop. You'll either deduce that I'm two feet three inches tall, or that I'm a moron who didn't back up enough toward the toilet before starting to sit down. Trying to avoid the inevitable, hideous bruising, I stumbled to the kitchen for an ice cube. Then I spent the next ten minutes lying in bed giving myself an ice cream headache on top of the already pulsing pain. But the extra distress paid off, since I awoke the next morning with only some slight swelling. I spent the day doing my best Courteney Cox Arquette impression, trying to speak and express all my emotions without moving my sore forehead. All that's left now is a faint, lentil-green bruise.

As is usually the case, Bugglegirl was the unfortunate victim of her three-year-old temper. She was trying to karate kick her bedroom door down during a time-out when Buggledad burst in and inadvertently smacked the edge of the door into her head. Hence the vertical, purple welt above her right eye.

Poor Buggleboy spent Sunday evening at the Bugglecousins' house impaling and bludgeoning himself upon every metal, wood and concrete surface available. The goose egg with a red bruise running parallel to his right eyebrow is merely the worst of the night's boo-boos. He refused to let anyone put ice on it, and now I know why.

The things I do for my children.

Friday, July 18, 2008

BUGGLESCOOP: Erotica for the OCD inclined

Listen up, ladies: this could quite possibly be the most exciting advance in the world of rechargeable, remote-controlled gadgets since the rabbit.






It's the Roomba Discovery robotic vacuum cleaner. My sister got me one on eBay when my vacuum cleaner blew up. It scares the crap out of Buggleboy, who can't resist the Simon-like lights and tones of its various buttons, pressing them in combination until he inadvertently sets the contraption in motion, sending him into a squealing fit.

It scoots around the room like a cockroach on meth, spinning haphazardly and bouncing off the furniture. I've christened it Stevie. I almost can't stand to watch it, yet at the same time, it's strangely hypnotic.

Much like the aforementioned rabbit, vacuuming with Stevie isn't meant to substitute for the real thing. It's more like an in-between, stopgap measure when you just don't have the time and energy: perfect for a quickie.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The SAHM's club goes primetime

I spent the better part of today at a hotel near the airport with four other stay-at-home moms from the Bugglekids' preschool co-op. One of the moms invited us to be her support team for a final, taped audition for a popular game show. She could've told me she was going to be starring in one of those genital herpes commercials and I still would've been stoked to get out of the house.

I didn't have to drive or schedule a babysitter, since my friend arranged to have the preschool open for the day so the kids could play and eat pizza while we tried to catapult her one step closer to fame and fortune. Buggleboy was crying uncontrollably and wailing Mama as I ran out the door. By the time we hit the road I needed a cocktail.

The entire process - from the photos to the peppy introduction speech to the waiting, primping, waiting around and finally, to the audition itself - was strangely exhausting, a surreal amalgamation of a Girl Scout merit badge festival, a job-training seminar and a homecoming pep rally. I don't think I've jumped up and down screaming like that since Madonna was still wearing lace.

Afterward, over a late lunch at Baja Fresh, we started chatting about how stay-at-home moms get a bad rap, like we're all just sitting around in our terry cloth track suits waiting on the cable guy. Maybe. But who else is gonna do it, in between scraping Play-doh from the cushions and scrubbing crayon off the walls? Maybe the idea of another grownup entering the house before it's dark out is actually the most exciting thing since David Beckham donned briefs. Maybe a visit from the homely Terminix guy is the only adult interaction we're going to have ALL DAY.

I spent a lot of time lamenting about how grumpy I've been this summer, and how I should snap out of it because come September, I'm going to have two mornings a week all to myself. And then it's all downhill until college.

I left feeling so inspired by these women who, with little or no outside help, are able to do what I do every day and not complain. At least, not at the professional level.

When the kids and I finally got home, I rallied. I parked them on the couch in front of Madagascar, changed into my grubby clothes and decontaminated the shower, scrubbing away in my starlet eyeliner and teased mom-'do. After that, I prepared this intricate meal, stirring polenta for twenty minutes, reconstituting dried Italian mushrooms and blanching kale, while simultaneously trying to corral a wailing Bugglegirl in the living room so she wouldn't have a chance to sit on Buggleboy. Bugglehubby wasn't stoked when he saw more greens in the pot (Look, honey - there's pancetta!) but it turned out to be surprisingly tasty. Although about halfway through dinner I started to get a little grossed out, as the polenta congealed like oatmeal gone cold.

Oh, the entire afternoon didn't smell like roses. At one point as I was chopping mushrooms, with Buggleboy wrapped around my shins, I started barking orders to Bugglegirl to stay on the couch. In between hysterical sobs, she cried, "Mommy, you need to say that with kindness, Mommy." And she was right. Because this isn't some audition; this is the real deal.

Monday, July 14, 2008

The B-List: YEP, IT'S A BIOHAZARD

I spent a good deal of time this past weekend doing the cleaning that was supposed to happen last week, which was actually the cleaning from the week before, pushed to the limits of reasonable procrastination. Maybe it's the humidity, but lately the most I can seem to manage is to gather up the toys, laundry, paper goods, etc. that accumulate hourly on every available surface. Bugglehubby defines this process of straightening as cleaning, a discrepancy which, back when we employed a housekeeper, used to provoke this exact conversation every other Tuesday at ten p.m.:

"The cleaning lady is coming tomorrow. So I need you to pick up all of your crap."
"That's what a cleaning lady is for."
"But if you don't pick up your junk, she's just going to clean around it."
"Sounds like we're paying her too much."

Anyway, by the time I get all of the straightening done, I'm too tired and demoralized to proceed to actual filth removal. So this weekend I put the Bugglekids on dusting duty, and vacuumed the floors. But I just can't bring myself to tackle the bathrooms. To wit:
  • There is some mysterious reddish ring forming around the drain in my bathroom sink. Every time I wash my hands I can't decide whether to chastise myself for not scrubbing it with Lysol yet, or to push on through to what must only conclude in the discovery of a powerful new antibiotic thriving in there.
  • During tubby time, I have to sit with a flyswatter to whack the kids' hands away from the icky mildew growing where the tub meets the tiled wall. Why do they always have to touch there?
  • I'm sure that if I scraped all of the dried-up purple "soamy foap" and electric-blue-sparkly toothpaste petrified around the basin of Bugglegirl's sink, I might not be so surprised that we have to make a Target run already.
  • After removing Bugglegirl's nasty potty seat, I actually put paper down ON MY OWN TOILET this afternoon. Something I haven't felt compelled to do since the spring quarter in college I spent crashing on one of those foam couch/beds covered in burnt-orange velour, sleeping off a Vicodin buzz.
Call me spoiled, but I'm just not cut out for cleaning toilets. Unidentifiable bits and man-hairs are just not my forte. Don't misunderstand; I'm not a total heathen. All I need is the threat of unexpected company and I'll be in there in a HAZMAT suit with the Clorox channeling my inner OCD in no time flat. Please, just don't drop by until tomorrow.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Wasn't it a cherry tree, Mr. President?

We've lived in our charming 1947 California style stucco hot box for just about five years now. The previous owners crammed four kids into the two original bedrooms and slept in the larger front addition, which keeps an ambient temperature of about 94 degrees during the summer, even though we installed air conditioning last June. Bugglegirl lives there now, the appeal of having the biggest room outweighing the inconvenience of sleeping in a pool of sweat in summer and losing toes to frostbite in winter.

Back when the house was first built, somebody had the bright idea to plant an evergreen magnolia in the front yard so it could shade the garage. Kinda like Nicole Richie, it's beautiful, but otherwise pretty much just respiring. They also planted a California pepper, a haven for bees and a shedder to rival Buggledog, in the far corner of the back yard. So it could cool the cinder block wall back there. Two winters ago, the pepper tree caught a fungus and died. It's still there, sad and barren, one of the many projects relegated to the purgatory of our permanent "to-do" list.

Without a single mature shade tree, we're like the poster house for global warming.

I suppose I should mention the orange tree. The one I'm convinced was planted by the stoner, I mean doctor, who lived here in the eighties. Until the SWAT team raided the place and confiscated all his pot plants. We tend to attribute everything dilapidated around here to the now legendary Dr. Feelgood. Anyway, this orange tree is planted less than two feet from the back of the house. If I close my eyes, I can imagine Dr. Feelgood gazing out at the back yard, glassy-eyed, with a bag of Doritos in one hand and a tiny orange sapling in the other. Too lazy to even make it beyond the concrete patio, he immediately turns to the left and realizes that, if he plants it right outside the bay window, he won't even have to get out of bed to pick a juicy orange right from the tree. He digs a little hole, dumps in his potting mix of Miracle Gro and Maui Wowee, and dreams of the nutritious munchies to come.

When Bugglegirl was an infant, I used to take her out on the back patio for her evening bottle to escape the kiln-like temperatures inside. Sitting on the wooden bench one night, I heard a little rustling in the orange tree. My eyes were drawn to the slightest twitch of a leaf, behind which was a pair of beady rat eyes staring back at me. Suddenly the hollowed-out orange rind that occasionally appeared beneath the tree made perfect sense. I lunged, he scampered. Game on, little fucker.

We trimmed back any branches that touched the roof. We sealed up all the crevices bigger than a quarter. We set traps laced with peanut butter. But still, they came. One night I saw a big fat daddy skip gingerly along the power line from my neighbor's backyard to my roof. The orange tree expressway.

But like all things broken, malfunctioning or merely in need of attention around here, we learned to live with the nuisance. After all, there are at least a few weeks a year when there are no ripe oranges on the tree - plenty of time to lull us into complacency.

This summer, however, we've had a bumper crop. Not sure which has been more prolific - the tree or the rats. For the past month, they've been feasting all night on the choicest fruit, the juice dripping to the patio below, gluing dried up rat turds to the painted concrete. Periodically I've tried, unsuccessfully, to squirt them off with the hose. They seem to come off only when Buggleboy shuffles over there in his bare feet, wincing and whining "Uh-ooo" when the poo pellets adhere to his soles.

So this past Sunday, I stopped pretending to be some laid-back, I-don't-care-if-my-kid-walks-in-rat-crap kind of mom: I sent in Bugglehubby with the clippers.

My first pang of concern came when John McCain's son personally performed the pre-battle flyover.* Ten minutes in, Bugglehubby was dripping with sweat. It was becoming clear that he was hell-bent on waging a campaign of gruesome Shock and Awe. Quickly I washed and pressed the kids' flight suits and brushed up on the lyrics to "America the Beautiful."

By sundown, I was convinced that Bugglehubby might secretly be orchestrating the administration's war on terror through a website that only appears to be ESPN.com.

You be the judge.





It's par for the course, really. Bugglehubby is the reigning Selective Hearing World Champion. Rather than comprehending both "We need to get rid of these rats" and "We need to trim the tree," he distilled the phrases into a tidy "We need to get rid of the tree."

Impeachment hearings are scheduled to begin next Tuesday. Please bring a covered dish of your choice.


*Yeah, he's like a Marine or something. It's called creative license, so save your comments. Actually, comment away. Comment like forty-seven times. SOMEONE.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Wordsmith: DOCK

MID-MORNING, at the ZOO. A MOTHER holds her DAUGHTER up so she can see over the fence in front of the SEA LION POOL:

DAUGHTER
(pointing at the flat wooden structure floating in the middle of the pool)
What's that, Mommy?

MOTHER
It's a dock, honey.

DAUGHTER
A tock?

MOTHER
A dock.

DAUGHTER
A dick?

MOTHER
(laughing)
A dock.

DAUGHTER
A tick?

MOTHER
A dock, honey, DOCK.

DAUGHTER
A tock?

REPEAT until SUNSET.

I have a hunch about this one. It's gonna be the feel-good comedy of the year.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Buggercise: Rose Bowl redux

Shortly after my ridiculous attempt to pilot my Graco tandem monster stroller around the Rose Bowl, I decided to give my friend's double jogger a test drive. Thank God she said I could keep it indefinitely, because reading herein that I am never, ever giving it back might have been awkward.

While quite easy to set up and break down, it is a double stroller after all - a veritable behemoth requiring some exertion to muscle in and out of the back of my 4Runner. Some days when I don't feel like working out, I just lift it in and out of the trunk a couple of times to generate a little sweat. I've finally figured out how to position it properly back there, so it doesn't tip over when I turn or go over bumps. Sorry, Buggledog.

But the extra effort pays off: this baby glides like Dirk Diggler slathered in Crisco.

The first time I took it to the Rose Bowl, I actually started jogging, something the public hasn't seen me do voluntarily since the early Reagan administration. Consequently, about two-thirds of the way around I pulled a groin muscle, which also hasn't happened in ages (poor Bugglehubby). But I pushed through the pain, completing the three mile perimeter in just under six hours, forty-two minutes (including drink breaks and a scenic detour to Baja Fresh).

Workout Stats

Smokin' bod count: Zero, unless you count me in my orange terry cloth peddle pushers at a steady 2.8 mph clip, yo
iPod shuffle quality: High. That Fergie song about her blanket into Lovely Day into California by Tom Petty rounded out by a little Chili Peppers. Enough to transform me into the pop diva princess that lingers within. . .
Fanny pats: Zero, though Buggledog did sniff my outer thigh as we were jogging. Not exactly a Boogie Nights moment, but encouraging just the same.
Sightings: Just friendly night stick guy.
Cravings: None. Realized that if I have enough time to crave something, I'm not working out hard enough.
Excuses/complaints: See above groin injury.

Monday, July 7, 2008

The B-List: LIKE CAMPING, ONLY CROWDED

Since you're reading this, you'll surmise that I survived the Fourth of July weekend at the Grandbuggles' lake house. Better known in my internal dialogue as Place Of 1,000 Ways My Children Might Die, Or Simply Make Me Miserable.

Here's a tally of the most notable happenings:
  • I wore a swimsuit. Not as underwear, which is routine for me at the beach - but without camouflage. And not just any swimsuit, but the one Bugglehubby bought me for our Caribbean vacation (where NO ONE knew me). Apparently my butt has grown since last September. I couldn't manage to tug the thing down over my cheeks without showing cleavage. Isn't that "in," these days?
  • Buggleboy slept soundly in the pack and play. Thoughts of the sleeping situation (four bedrooms for seventeen adults and kids) were giving me high anxiety for days. But he was content as could be, if a bit sweaty. Worried he might discover how to climb out of the playpen, I left only the window at the far end of the room open. I decided that stuffy air was preferable to my child plummeting through the screen onto the pine-needle -blanketed forest floor below.
  • No one was struck by a car as we crossed the street to the lake. Last year my niece was nearly hit. This year her little sister scraped up both knees trying to bolt across. I realized that the drivers who don't stop or even slow down when they see three adults trying to wrangle a wagon, two coolers, four beach bags and six little kids across a windy mountain road with no sidewalks are probably thinking the same thing I'm thinking: What are you, some kind of moron?
  • I only uttered "I'd so much rather be at home right now" two times. After one of which Buggledaddy actually stepped in and removed the screaming child gripping my kneecaps.
  • Bugglegirl slept down at the dock. In a pack and play, without sedatives, surrounded by cousins playing. This is the kid who chased me around the airport from midnight to four-thirty in the morning when we were snowed in. Who hasn't slept in a stroller since she was six months old. Can mountain air be bottled?
  • I drank beer. In the middle of the day. Even though the chances of Buggleboy toppling into the lake were certainly higher for my doing so. Oh, and get this - I had fun. For this I'm mainly crediting my efforts to complain only minimally beforehand. And perhaps the aforementioned mountain air. And naturally the beer.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Heaven help me

I'm approximately five thousand, one hundred sixty seven minutes into the first week of summer vacation from the Bugglekids' twice-a-week preschool co-op. We've already been swimming at the Grandbuggles' pool (124 minutes), frolicked at Shane's Inspiration (97 minutes) and ridden the antique merry-go-round at Griffith Park (6 minutes), trekked out to the beach (302 minutes), picked cherry tomatoes, strawberries and pansies in the back yard (35 minutes) and visited the goats, alligators, sea lions, flamingos, kangaroos and gorillas at the zoo (127 minutes). We've watched four episodes of Sesame Street, two Backyardigans, one Jack's Big Music Show, Finding Nemo, Cars and Madagascar (about 386 minutes).

Accounting for sleep (1,2oo minutes) and meals (270 minutes), that leaves roughly two thousand, six hundred twenty minutes of Wondering What The Hell Are We Going To Do Until September Time. Throughout which we've peppered Stop Screaming At Me Time, Don't Pinch Your Sister Time, The Dog Is Not A Horse Time, I Can't Do This Anymore Time and my personal favorite, I Don't Want To Be Your Mommy Right Now Time.

Yesterday I made a manhattan at 4:47. It would have been more effective if Bugglegirl (who'd been yelling and banging on her bedroom door all afternoon - yes, I lock her in for time-out) hadn't asked repeatedly if she could eat the cherry. And if Buggleboy hadn't wailed in protest for the duration of my phone conversation, prompting me to dip my finger into the cocktail and shove it into his mouth. And yes, that worked. For him, at least; I made the mistake of only having one drink too slowly and by the time I got to the cherry, I was grumpy again.

My dourness was still with me this morning, inspiring Buggledaddy to wish all of us the best of luck on his way out the door. Getting ready for our trip to the zoo, we had surprisingly few moments my kids will later discuss in therapy. And we had great fun brushing the goats at the petting zoo and eating pretzels while the baby gorilla ate her bamboo.

Ah, but it couldn't last. As we approached our car in the parking lot, hungry, tired and sweaty, Bugglegirl bolted ahead. I yelled, clapped my hands furiously and pointed forcefully at an approaching car. Bugglegirl just stood there staring at me, wondering why Mommy was leading an invisible marching band. I ordered her into the car while I tried to break down and wrestle the stroller into the trunk. Soon she was fussing and shouting whiny demands.

"My pretzel!"
"What?"
"I dropped my pretzel."
"Oh well."
"My shoe."
Just then the stroller's tire smudged down the front of my shorts.
"I want water!"
"Oh my God, Bugglegirl!"
"You should say 'Oh my gosh,' Mommy."
"Really? OK, how about this: 'Oh my gosh, you're driving me crazy.'"

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Wordsmith: FIRETRUCK

One of the distant Bugglecousins, age two, has a little friend who loves to "play firef*cks."

New evidence to suggest that the ubiquitous female affinity for firemen may be inborn, rather than learned.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Buggercise: All this - so close to home!

I've been trying to get up early some mornings to go out walking with the dog, before the kids wake up. This is challenging for me, since most nights I'm up late doing absolutely nothing of value, unless you count trying to erase the wire-hanger highlights of the day by vegging out on the leather love seat in the den searching for a tivoed Oprah that doesn't feature the cast of High School Musical or some dude who can blow a bubble around himself. I do love me some mink-lashed Oprah - but only the really meaningful stuff, like Lisa Ling undercover at the Amish puppy mills, or Tom Cruise Tells All From Telluride. Don't tell me you didn't watch.

So recently I ventured up a street I'd only been on once before. It's steep and quiet, with an array of home architecture I'd describe as Brady Bunch meets Clearance Sale At Home Depot. The facade of my favorite house is plastered entirely with twelve-inch-pink-marble flooring tiles. Like all its neighbors, an enormous die cast "Victorian" mailbox blocks the sidewalk out front. Many of them are also gussied up with custom faux finishes.

Beholding the splendor, Stone Temple Pilots on the shuffle, I couldn't help but wonder if this is what happens when Timothy Leary and Christopher Lowell get together over sangria and an eight ball and decide to plan a community.

Approaching the top of the hill, a little out of breath, I spotted a coyote trotting across a vacant lot just a few yards ahead. As he passed, he watched me, watching him. I think we were both eager to get back to our comfortable, modest dens.