The World According to Jen

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Happy Birthday, Bug!


Bug with Doof

Mmmmm cake


Yesterday was Bug's first birthday. This was quite possibly the fastest year of my life. I'm just waiting for her to sleep through the night.

In honor of her birthday, we had some family and friends over for cake. It was lovely. I think Bug was a bit overwhelmed and a lot overtired, but she did enjoy herself and became quite the ham for the camera.

Her actual birthday brought a trip to the doctor for a check up and shots. She weighs 17 pounds, 1 ounce and is 28.75 inches tall. She's a wee little thing. Her iron level was just fine. And she handled the shots as best she could. Then it was off to the city for dim sum with Uncle Jeff and some errands.

Today, she wasn't feeling well. I think it was probably a reaction to the shots. Poor Bug. Hopefully, she will feel better tomorrow.

I did make it to my knitting class tonight and worked some on the sweater for Bug and some socks (I'm working on the first sock) for me. I'll post pictures when they are done. I'm finally getting used to the double pointed needles. I am knitting the sweater in Lana Grossa Cool Wool 2000 shade 483 and the socks in Nature's Palette by Hand Jive Knits in Lilacs.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Per Your Request


Look Ma, no hands!


Sleepy Bug


Bathtub mowhawk, courtesy of Doof.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

If You're Looking for Trouble

You came to the right place
If you’re looking for trouble
Just look right in my face
I was born standing up
And talking back
My daddy was a green-eyed mountain jack
Because I’m evil, my middle name is misery
Well I’m evil, so don’t you mess around with me


You Are 32% Evil

A bit of evil lurks in your heart, but you hide it well.
In some ways, you are the most dangerous kind of evil.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Hurray for Books

I found this while wandering through knitting blogs and thought it would be fun to try out:

Instructions: Look at the list of books below. Bold the ones you've read, italicize the ones you might read, cross out the ones you won't, underline the ones on your book shelf, and place (parentheses) around the ones you've never even heard of.

The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown
The Catcher in the Rye - J.D. Salinger
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy - Douglas Adams
The Great Gatsby - F.Scott Fitzgerald
To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee (I read about halfway through and got sidetracked)
The Time Traveler's Wife - Audrey Niffenegger
(His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman)
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - J. K. Rowling
Life of Pi - Yann Martel
Animal Farm: A Fairy Story - George Orwell
Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
The Hobbit - J. R. R. Tolkien
(The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time - Mark Haddon)
Lord of the Flies - William Golding
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen (One of my very favorites ever)
1984 - George Orwell
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - J. K. Rowling (My favorite Potter book)
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Try as I might, I just can't get through this one)
Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
(The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini)
The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
Slaughterhouse 5 - Kurt Vonnegut
Angels and Demons - Dan Brown
Fight Club - Chuck Palahniuk
(Neuromancer - William Gibson)
(Cryptonomicon - Neal Stephenson)
(The Secret History - Donna Tartt)
A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - C. S. Lewis
Middlesex - Jeffrey Eugenides
(Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell)
The Lord of the Rings - J. R. R. Tolkien
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
(Good Omens - Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman)
(Atonement - Ian McEwan)
(The Shadow Of The Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon)
The Old Man and the Sea - Ernest Hemingway
The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood (Another of my favorites)
The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath
Dune - Frank Herbert

Since I couldn't figure out how to cross things out, I just left those book titles alone.

Thanks, XT!

You should already know this, but XT is an incredibly fabulous human being. I have known this for years, but she totally went over and above the call of duty (AGAIN -- see very pregnant XT driving to L.A. for my mom's funeral and helping us clean out mom's apartment) when she came over on Saturday and cleaned my house. I had been panicking over getting everything done in time for a bunch of people coming over next weekend to celebrate Bug's First Birthday. So she offered to come over and help.

Oh my god! She scrubbed my kitchen. She introduced us to the Mr. Clean sponge thingy to get black spots off the wall. My kitchen has not been this clean since we moved in. She organized my books. And she made me go through the piles of crap that have accumulated in the mere year since we moved here.

It's so lovely, I could cry. G said he considered sleeping in the kitchen because he was so happy it was so clean.

XT also got us through Bug's first fever and kept me from freaking out. Bug woke up just fine on Sunday with no fever.

AND she arrived with donuts, wine, and cheese. After the cleaning ended, we all went to E&O for corn fritters and some other things. You know the fritters are good when the ahi tartare is one of the "other things." Bug seemed to like the fritters too.

Then we stayed up watching The Princess Bride and eating m&ms.

So XT, thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you.

And G said that if you ever need to take out someone's kneecaps, he will gladly be a Jeff Gillooly for you.

Friday, March 17, 2006

It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year

It's March Madness, baby! All college basketball all the time. Upsets galore. Unfortunately, for purposes of my pool bracket, I picked the wrong ones. Oh well. It was just for fun anyway. Now, what really matters is that my boys from Cal do well.

In other news, thanks for reading while I got all melancholy and such. It's rather cathartic to talk about deep, sad things every so often. But I don't plan to make a habit of it.

Besides, with my smiling, almost one-year-old Bug (oh my god how did that happen?), I can't be too sad. I ordered her birthday cake yesterday -- all chocolate, all the time, with some pink and purple flowers and such. G voted for chocolate frosting because he thought that would be more fun for the pictures of her wearing the cake.

And now, because I have to:

GO BEARS!

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Happy Birthday, Dad.

I started this post months ago and finally decided to finish it today, the day my dad would have turned 64.

When my dad died a little over three years ago, Al helped ease my entry into the club and for that (and many other things) I will be eternally grateful. It wasn't a surprise that it would happen, that's for sure. Dad had had many close calls. A lifetime smoker, he had his first heart attack at age 47. It was the day I was coming home from my first year of college. A buddy of mine had picked me up in Berkeley and we drove down to Northridge. About a block away from home, we, thinking we were so clever, called my mom to say we were almost there. She sounded funny, but I didn't understand why. As we made the last turn to my house, I saw a fire truck and an ambulance and remarked "that's not my house" because there was no way that could be happening there. But it was my house and it did happen there.

He quit smoking for about 9 months before he started up again. Heart attack number 2 was about 2 years later. And heart attack number 3, which led to triple bypass surgery was on Halloween 1993. Again, he stopped smoking for awhile, but started up again. I think once he passed the 2 year mark, he figured he was in the clear and could smoke all he liked. And I guess he did. I don't really know, since I lived at least 400 miles away (I was in Massachusetts for heart attack 3) and it's not like he would give me an accounting every day of what he smoked.

Heart attack number 4 was in December 2001, followed by a diagnosis of congestive heart failure a few months later, at which point he finally gave up smoking for good. It was the right doctor that got him in line. Essentially, the doctor said something along the lines of "do what you want, I don't care. But if you want to be around for your daughter's wedding, you had better give up the smokes." So he did. But it was too late. 2002 saw him hospitalized at least once a month, once to get this fancy, schmancy pacemaker that was to make his heart pump more efficiently. Unfortunately, it was too little too late. He did muster the strength to walk me down the aisle at my wedding. I bought travel insurance for my honeymoon because there was always the chance he would end up back in the hospital at any time. He slowly deteriorated. By October, a trip to the supermarket was too much for him.

It was also in October that my mom was diagnosed with colon cancer. After surgery to remove a chunk of her innards, she went to stay at my aunt's house because my dad was too frail to take care of her. And he was too embarrassed by that fact that he didn't go visit her at all during the week or so she stayed at my aunt's. He also started to lose weight. A lot of weight. His doctor told him to have protein shakes, but to make them with ice cream instead of milk. It didn't work. He was tired all the time and he aged. A lot.

He went into the hospital the first week of December. I had called my mom after a job interview and she told me that she thought this would be his final stay there and that I should head to LA asap. I tied up some ends and jumped in the car, begging the powers that be to not let him die before I got there. That was a Thursday. I remember offering to go out and get him a hot fudge sundae and for the first time ever, my dad, the chocoholic that chocoholics look up to, declined. He wasn't hungry. Since my brother was staying with my mom, I crashed at my aunt's house that night and went straight to the hospital on Friday morning. By this point his heart was working too hard to get blood circulating and it basically didn't get everywhere it needed to go. Essentially, what happens with congestive heart failure is that when the blood doesn't get where it needs to go, it just pools and basically the person drowns in his or her own body. It was clear that he was beginning to not get enough oxygen to his brain and my incredibly smart dad stopped being lucid. He would sort of switch between saying lucid things and gibberish. It was terrifying. My dad's best friend left the hospital in tears telling me how hard it was for him because, while I was losing my dad, he was losing his best friend.

Except for a quick trip to the mall to buy some clothes (since I had gone straight from work), I didn't leave the hospital. I stayed all night, listening to him struggle to breathe and gasp in what sounded like pain. But they assured me that he had sufficient morphine to be comfortable. Gradually, they increased the dosage overnight. His amazing doctor called several times to check on how things were going and to alter the medication. Hospitals are incredibly noisy overnight. You wouldn't think so, but they are what with the nurses going in and out of the rooms to check things and the sound of alarms going off to notify nurses that they need to switch IV bags or some such thing. Dad gasped and struggled for breath all night long. I think I finally fell asleep at around 3.

At 4am, my dad's sister from Michigan called in a panic, wanting to know what was going on. So they woke me to tell her. I don't think I went back to sleep and I was afraid to even take a short walk because I didn't want him to die alone. That's why I stayed over. Gradually the time between painful breaths got longer and longer.

On Saturday morning, my mom came over. Then my cousin and my dad's other sister (who had flown in from New Jersey) arrived. I can't remember if my brother arrived before or after they did. All I know is we were yapping about something and he just died.

I thought I would be writing this as an advisory to smokers about how ugly death from smoking can be. I listened to my Dad gasp for breath. I heard him speak and make no sense and not remember who was there or what he had said to them. I saw him wither away. My formerly 200+ pound father weighed maybe 160 pounds at the end. And the fancy pacemaker, a small rectangular thing about the size of a pack of cigarettes, stuck out from his body, almost as a reminder of how he had gotten this sick in the first place. At the end, he looked like he was in terrible paid, his mouth was open, his eyes were closed, and when he died he turned a horrible shade of yellow. I don't know the exact moment he died, but mom did. All I know is that it got quiet. Scarily quiet. He was wasn't making noise and we stopped talking. We called a nurse and she confirmed he was gone. I was the first one out of the room. I just couldn't be there anymore.

Then we all left. And my cell phone rang. The aunt from Michigan called in a panic. I guess she called every cell phone she could think of and I was the idiot who answered and got to tell her that her baby brother had died. Somehow, I had to be the one to console her. Swell. Not exactly what I had in mind. I honestly have no idea what happened next. I probably called G tell him to come to LA for the funeral and to take care of me.

I guess that's about all I have to say about that. I'll try to be more cheery next time.

Monday, March 13, 2006

Lucky

Why can't this happen to me? Of course, I would vote for Anchor Steam.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

This Makes Me So Mad

I just read this article and it makes me very angry. My mom was one of those people who didn't get tested at 50. She said it was because her insurance company didn't authorize colonoscopies at 50. I think she had a sigmoidoscopy, which said all was ok. When she finally did, it was too late. She had an aggressive form of cancer that didn't respond to any treatment. Age 60 is way too young to die.

And I realize that there are days when I am very angry with her for not fighting for the right test sooner -- maybe they could have prevented things from happening. Maybe they could have caught it earlier and treated it earlier and it wouldn't have spread. Maybe not.

And I am angry at her insurance carrier (and any other insurance carrier) that doesn't specifically and proactively advise every patient to celebrate his or her 50th birthday by getting his or her plumbing snaked. Yes, it's unpleasant, but last time I checked, cancer and dying are much worse.

So please, please, PLEASE do this for me: if you know and love anyone age 50 or over, make them get checked out. And if their insurance carrier is being stingy about it, make them fight for the test. In the long run, the test is much cheaper for the insurance carrier than four types of chemo, repeated MRIs, catscans, and petscans, two surgeries on the abdomen, major reconstructive surgery after the cancer spreads to her leg and breaks her femur, a month in a skilled nursing facility after the surgery, and more drugs than I can ever imagine.

I hadn't planned on getting all soapboxy today. Oh well. Just wait until next week when I discuss the evils of smoking.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Ballpark Food and Other Snacks

We spent Thursday through Saturday in Phoenix for a little bit of Spring Training. Doof had a class with her girl scout troop (and she's not wild about baseball anyway), so she did not join us. We went from the airport to our first game (with a quick stop at our hotel to check in and drop off our luggage). G was in charge of planning our trip and buying our game tickets. Our mission was to go to some parks we hadn't seen before, so our first stop was in Maryvale for a Milwaukee Brewers home game. The parks are small and nice and you can get really great seats for not a lot of money. Here is the view from our seats:




The perk of going to a game there is that they bring their ballpark food from Milwaukee, so the bratwursts were fantastic. And then we got to see the famous sausage race, which was not quite as amusing as we had hoped.

Dinner that evening was at a place called the Salt Cellar and it was terrific. The only downside was that they didn't have highchairs. Who doesn't have highchairs? So we had to hold Bug the entire time, a fact complicated by the fact that G decided to order the cracked crab. Oh well. Seared ahi will always make me happy, so I can't complain.

On Friday, we went to see the Angels play at their park in Tempe. The food wasn't great, but we had a nice time. And the Angels won 10-1. Dinner was at a place called Don & Charlie's, which has an amazing collection of sports, particularly baseball memorabilia. The food was good, but the one thing I will remember most from that meal was the garlic cheese toast. Oh my god! We almost got a second order to go. Bug liked it quite a lot too.

On Saturday, we drove to Surprise to see a Rangers Royals game. Given that we don't care much about either team, we still had a good time, partly because a series of walks and hit batters nearly sent the game to extra innings and partly because of the chocolate ice cream, which led to this:



I had not intended to share my ice cream with her, but she looked so jealous. Besides, I figured the fact that it was cold would freak her out and she wouldn't want any more. I was wrong. She loved it. She's definitely my child.

After the game, it was off to the airport and then home. Yay for home. It was a nice trip, but I think Bug had had enough of being confined, so she was more than happy to spend the rest of the weekend crawling through the living room.

But it was quite a culinary adventure because she got to partake of the following (in no particular order):
Various jarred stage 2 baby food
Mommy milk
Water from a bottle with a sports top
Lettuce with salad dressing
Baked potato with butter
Bread
Zucchini
Garlic cheese toast
Au gratin potatoes
Home fries
Bagel chips (which turned out to be spicy, but she didn't mind)
Rye bread (mommy picked out the seeds)
Chocolate ice cream

She liked everything.