ad hoc MOM

Jun2Summer With The Grandparents Circa 2011
Paula

I wrote a post very much like this last summer.  But I can’t help but think that June has changed so much that this one will turn out differently.  My mom and step dad arrived last Saturday.  Since it’s their first time seeing our new house we were very exited for their visit – June especially.  She was proud to show off her new room and the backyard.  Peter and I were just happy they could sleep in their own space (i.e. not on the sofa bed or at the overpriced yet semi-sketchy “b & b” that oddly did NOT serve breakfast that was a few blocks away from our old apartment), have drinks with us in the backyard, and basically not have to take a number to have a shower.  We thought we’d basically show them around town, make a few dinners and generally hang out.  But it’s easy to forget how fast a toddler changes until you see it through the eyes of your own parents.  We don’t get to see our families as much as we’d like, so nearly a year can go by before they see June again.  She couldn’t list off the animals she wanted to see at the zoo quite so clearly a year ago.  Nor was she so specific about the proper cutting and serving of pizza, waffles, and grilled cheese.  She didn’t make elaborate “projects” with glue, scissors and string last summer.  I can’t remember how high she could count then either. . . if at all.  She also HATED sunscreen, and now happily applies “sunscream” several times a day.  Seriously, she’ll happily do your back.  My mom and step dad even got to witness her first sleep over, as a good friend of mine went into labor yesterday and we had her son over night.  They played, ate dinner, took a bath together, watched tv in their jammies and giggled until bedtime.  It was a happy night.  Until my parents were here, I don’t think I realized all of these changes were happening.  I mean, duh, yeah I did – but it’s not everyday you realize your kid learning to navigate the apple tv is a milestone.  I’m sad my parents are leaving. . . mainly because I’ll miss them (and yes, it’s SO much easier having family nearby), but also because it means my girl is growing up so fast.

This grandmother and baby were ready for fun back in 2008.  2011 has been nothing but margaritas, pay per view and visits to the Jersey Shore!

 
May30Things I Need Like A Hole In The Head
Tonya

Things around here at ad hoc MOM have been a little, well, ad hoc. As long as ad hoc stands for crazy and hectic and lots of wine consumption, which I’m almost positive is the exact definition of the word given in the latest Oxford Dictionary.

While I try and make my life (read: my brain) run more efficiently (read: run…just run) I’ve been trying to do things that may help. Such as, buying self-help books (I don’t actually have to read them to get their usefulness though, right? Cuz I don’t have the time for that), cleaning out books, toys, and clothing, and purchasing other items which may help me get more done in a day, like meth. In my search for such products, I‘ve come across a few things that I would buy ONLY if I had a hole in my head. Carrie’s hilarious post this past Friday inspired me to put together a list to help those of you avoid such ridiculous purchases while out for some relaxing retail therapy:

Kim The Talking Clock

Not only does it look like some creepy machine out of a Terry Gilliam movie but it voices the time! Can someone please tell me who needs this thing? What the hell is it going to say that I don’t already know?

- It’s 3:45, you have 15 more minutes of free time before you have to pick up the kid from preschool. Enjoy it while you can, Sucker!

- It’s 4 am and the kid is wide awake! Hahaha! I’m sleeping in, Bitch!

- It’s 8pm and you haven’t gotten shit done today. Also, maybe you could shower this week? Your hygiene is just despicable.

I imagine that if you disregard Kim, she will, of course, kill you in your sleep.

 

Fancy Espadrilles

There was, once upon a time, a me that would totally have worn these and loved it. That me never had to go to the playground and climb up a slide to extract a child who is trying to climb over a bunch of bars made for climbing under. Nor did that me have to run top speed after a wayward 3 year old on a scooter and a sugar high. And I’m pretty sure that me didn’t have to carry that same bruised, crying, now on a downward spiral from the sugar rush child home 15 blocks with the scooter in tow.

But what about date night you ask.

Ah, you crazy young folk, date nights are for relaxation, which means no dressing in anything uncomfortable, it also means not doing anything uncomfortable or taxing or far away or that requires a bathing suit. Screw it, basically, it means a movie with lots of movie candy. Don’t. Forget. The. Damn. Candy!

 

Hip Tube Top and Shorty Shorts


See reason above. As well as, police code 314, which states: Don’t Nobody Nowhere Need to See Any Of What Chu Or What Chu Ain’t Got Goin’ On! Also, I have to point out, that should anyone take me up on what my tube top suggests I would have to kill them, which, of course, would then be a police code 187 with some 314 thrown in, I think I’d get life?

 

Marie Claire Magazine May 2011

There are brief moments where I fool myself into thinking that such a magazine will make me feel better or give me some really helpful life tips. But then I open the cover only to find that it says things like this:

Anal, really? How about a Hotel Room ALONE is the new oral? That would work! I love that right above this “hey, all the cool girls are doin’ it” article there’s a snippet of info about how women want more personal space. Thanks, for the clarity, Marie Claire!

And I must a HUGE thank you to the mag for helping to continue women’s fight for equality with articles that suggest alimony, when paid to husbands by their much higher earning wives, is wrong.

Then, of course, (best for last) there’s the super duper helpful piece interviewing real women (who refuse to give their names) about how to successfully balance motherhood and a career. I really don’t think anything makes me feel better than knowing there are flourishing professional women out there who have to hide away their families and their own identities like they are in Witness Protection in order to get ahead…all this under the heading: …Get Ahead Tips…

I don’t think I have to tell you what orifice I think Marie Claire should shove it…

So, for the moment, I’ve put away the credit card, picked up a more respectable mag like US Weekly and retreated back to this here Interweb.

It feels good to be back.

And, HEY!, check me out over at The Mouthy Housewives where I’m pitching in every now and again (like today!) with some advice! (I’m not sure why they picked me…I think they drink…but I’m soaking it all up until they sober up!)

 
May27Short and Sweet: Clean Your Feet
Carrie

Ok, when I first saw this product on the shelf of my local pharmacy:

…a number of things ran through my mind:

1. Are you serious? That’s totally pathetic!

2. Built in Pumice stone? Hmm…

3. Wait, secures to ANY tub or shower?

4. Clean feet?

5. No bending?

6. I want it.

Think of it as a giant toothbrush for your feet. A toothbrush that you suction to the bottom of your shower. A toothbrush that you better hope nobody sees because then they’ll know what you know: you are a lazy lady with back aches, filthy dirty feet and a compulsive shopping problem.

 

 
May23Mom Without Routine: Brain Without Leash
Carrie

As readers may have noticed in the past few weeks, we at ad hoc MOM have taken a break from routine. For me, the break  hasn’t just been from the blog–it’s been from all of my life’s regularly occurring activities. The month of May has been a crazy one for my family–a kid-less trip to Montreal, my husband’s 40th birthday, lots of family visits, our 7th anniversary, Mother’s Day and soon, our youngest son’s first birthday.

The kids have also been keeping us busier than usual: our oldest is no longer taking a nap (horror!!!) and our youngest is transforming into a thrill-seeking toddler. Their entertainment requirements have spiked, resulting in awkward adult/child dance parties, messy craft projects, lego skyscrapers to nowhere and an unsettling parental policy of appeasement doled out via chocolate milk, cookies, and new trucks. It turns out, we do negotiate with terrorists in our house.

With all of the craziness, I have found myself deviating from my normal day-to-day activities: regular blog posts, freelance assignments, coming into the office space, playdates, cleaning, dinner preparing, showering, keeping up with friends and making sure the house has enough baby soap, baby carrots, bananas, juice boxes, wine, garbage bags, toilet paper and laundry detergent to get through the week. After several weeks of unscheduled chaos,  I find myself feeling adrift, and perhaps (despite the festivities galore), a little sad. I realize that without a routine, I am without sanity.

A routine’s best gift comes in the morning when you wake up and can start the day without any existential panic about your life’s meaning. With a routine in place, you can go about your business on auto-pilot–completing tasks and getting stuff done. In the absence of routine, my mind goes to dark places and my body goes to…Ikea. Lowe’s. Home Depot. The Container Store.

Yes, that’s right. Apparently, when the kids aren’t around and I am avoiding productive work like the plague, my eyes dart about my house looking for projects that will take all day and yield minimal life-improving results. To wit: this past Friday. As soon as the babysitter left with both kids, my brain was besieged by a jumble of home improvement “ideas” courtesy of a mind doped up on HGTV and too much coffee:

Put all of the kids’ artwork in frames, rotate them on a weekly basis, just like Genevieve Gorder said to do on Dear Genevieve. Can’t afford a big piece of artwork? Frame lots of little things in discount frames spray-painted the same color just like that weirdo stubby guy told me to do on Design on a Dime. In the event that I have to sell my house (which we have zero plans of doing in the next 10 years), I better damn well get rid of all that clutter in the basement just like Lisa LaPorta would have me do on Designed to Sell. If my block was featured on Curb Appeal the Block, I’ll be damned if my house is picked by John Gidding and his lackeys for a makeover! I gotta get to the nursery and buy some window boxes STAT!

Take a breath,” the rational part of my brain whispers. “Where are the &*$% are the car keys, Ikea is opening in 15 minutes and all the good parking spots are going to be taken, so you better MOVE IT MOVE IT MOVE IT sister,” the panicked part of my brain screeches.

Thanks to the abandonment of my routines, here’s what I have to show from last week:

1. A net gain of 3 pounds (from eating all of leftover birthday cupcakes.)
2. Three vases of rotting flowers from birthday/mother’s day extravaganzas.
3. My three year old’s favorite new game is called “Iron Man”, since he was allowed to watch anything he could point to on Apple TV. Iron Man Game (™) consists of him getting into an aggressive fighting stance, scrunching up his face in a threatening manner and yelling “Iron Man!” and attacking anyone who comes near him.
4. Six cans of spray paint in Lowe’s bag, placed on kitchen table.
5. Six discount store picture frames shoddily spray painted all different colors, stacked up akimbo in dining room, posing a great threat to anyone who brushes by them.
6. Weird, unpleasant artwork in Ikea purchased frames (which, of course, are already falling apart.)
7. Unwanted baby Gear lined up in front of the house that’s so busted up, nobody will take it. The rain-streaked Free! sign tempts not a soul. The front of my house looks like a garbage dump.
8. Dying window boxes.
9.20 minutes of billed time
10. Zero blog posts.

Sometimes, we all need a break in routine to re-calibrate our brains. But I think it’s important for me to remember how too much of a break from routine is a dangerous place for me to go. So while I am not promising you the world, I submit to you this jumbled up, rambling blog post as my white flag. Deliver me from the chaos of an unorganized day and into the safe arms of an office, a blog and some billable hours. Thanks for waiting.

 
May11We Interrupt Our Regularly Scheduled Programming…
Tonya

Ad Hoc MOM is taking a brief break for about a week. Paula is busy mediating the separation between Arnold The Govenator and Maria Shriver, Carrie has non-stop dance rehearsals for her upcoming audition on Dancing with the Stars and Tonya is trying desperately to look interested as Paula Abdul yammers on incoherently while they meet as the new judges on X Factor.*

*The above may or may not be true and could possibly be a figment of Tonya’s imagination…but, really, it’s probably all true.

 
© 2010 ad hoc MOM. All rights reserved. Powered by WordPress. Designed by Carrie Harvey.
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).