Thursday, March 31, 2011

My Day in Images

When I walked into the office today and saw Katie, my office-mate, working at the lunch table, I knew something was up. Right at that moment I saw our little office...


As it turns out, Jack was the primary guilty party (no surprise there)...


And the Big Green Pigs were his accomplices...


Tristan was not pleased (when she eventually made her way to the west-side)...


And so she silently walked into the kitchen, grabbed the large butcher knife, walked back into our office, and went to town...




What took four hours of lung power and 500 balloons to create was annihilated in 2 short minutes...


But the angry birds won in the end...

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Michael and the Missing Lunch Box

I love stories. I believe there is an art to story-telling, and that any good story can be made great with the right words. I have gotten some feedback on my posts lately from people who like my writing. If you are one of those people, thank you! But I can't take all the credit. Some credit goes to Ms. Cohen and Ms. Urtz who taught me how to write in elementary school, some credit goes to my university's English department and professors who taught me how to perfect my writing (here's a shout-out to Jeff McCarthy and Chris LeCluyse), but most of the credit would have to go to my dad, who taught me how love stories and tell them well. So this post is for my dad, in honor of the oral legacy he will leave.

My dad, like all of his older brothers, enjoys telling stories. However if you know any of them, you know those stories are more like epic narratives than anything else. They would all say that they like to elaborate the "good parts," but let's face it - they exaggerate. And this is no fault of their own; it has been passed through our genes for centuries. Our last name in the original Gaelic literally means "crooked mouth." In other words, all of my ancestors have been factually challenged, or embellishers at the very least (no elaboration here, this is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.).

But growing up, I didn't care; when I was little I couldn't define "exaggerate" let alone spell it. All I knew was that I was mesmerized with my dad's tales and begged to hear them every night. I would jump under the covers, tightly grab my stuffed puppy-dog, and stare wide-eyed up at my daddy, anxiously awaiting the next Michael Story. So, as you curl up in bed tonight (or wake up tomorrow morning, or go about your day for that matter - doesn't really matter what time you read this. I'm just writing it before bed), I want to share with you my favorite Michael Story - one that has impacted both my childhood and adult life (which is another post for another day) and has becoming a running inside-joke in our family. So, without further delay, here is...

Michael and the Missing Lunch Box

When Michael was a little boy, his mother would always pack him lunch on days when the school menu didn't look particularly appetizing. Well, one day when Michael was in first grade, instead of the usual paper lunch sack, Michael got a hand-me-down metal lunch box. It was dull and greenish-gray and missing the thermos, but Michael loved his "new" lunch box and was thrilled to show it off at school.

When he got to school, he hung up his coat in his locker, closed the door, began an excited conversation with his friends, proudly showed off his lunch box, and finally put it in his open locker. The day dragged on and Michael could barely sit still. Lunch time finally came and Michael ran to his locker to get his lunch box. When he opened his locker, his coat was there, but his lunch wasn't. He closed his locker and checked the number. It was the right locker. But where was his lunch? With shock still fresh on his face, he opened his locker again, and checked every nook and cranny and corner as if it had shrunk and hidden itself during the day. But it just wasn't there. Right then, big tears began to roll down his face, his breathing got heavy, and coming to the only possible, rational, and logical explanation, he cried out, "Someone stole my lunch box!!

Tears still careening down his cheek, he ran home. Michael threw open the back door, and explained the horrific trauma to his mom. As any good mother would do, she inquired where he put it when he got to school and if he looked in the right locker. Stifling his tears and chocking back his sobs, little Michael nodded and insisted that someone stole his brand new, shiny lunch box. His mother made him lunch at home and promised to walk him back to school to investigate further. 

When they got there, she looked in Michael's locker, and sure enough, the lunch box wasn't there. But without hesitation, she opened the adjoining locker, and there it was! She pulled the lunch box out of the locker and gave it back to Michael who sheepishly looked down at his feet. With a fond smile, Michael's mother looked down at him and said, "You probably were distracted while talking to your friends in the morning and errantly placed the lunch box in the open locker next to yours. The next time you think someone stole your lunch box, before you come running home in tears blaming someone else, perhaps you should check the locker next to yours." Michael got his lunch box back and learned an important lesson that day: Mothers don't know squat about the deviousness of thieving first-graders! The end. 

This story probably has less elaboration in it than the others (and a lesson that his mother was trying to impart, and my dad failed to learn), but it is one of my favorites. Why? Because the theme of this story has marked my dad's life (and what's even scarier is that it has infiltrated mine too!). To this day, whenever he can't find something he yells, "Someone stole my____!" To which we reply, "Dad, did you check the locker next to yours??" 



I hope you enjoyed the first installment of the Michael Stories, and that it made your bedtime, morning-time, or afternoon-time a little more enjoyable. 


Sunday, March 27, 2011

Why I Need to Send My Smartphone to the Principal's Office

I gave in. I sold out. I moved up. I finally got a (real) smart phone... Or did I?

I tossed aside my Blackberry (I literally tossed it out of sheer joy of something, anything better) and got Verizon's new HTC Thunderbolt today. With lightning-fast speeds and booming surround sound, this 4.3" phone packs quite the punch. I spent all afternoon setting everything up, customizing features, and downloading apps (facebook and foursquare were first). I did a lot of research before buying this phone. This is one of the top phones on the market right now, at least until tomorrow's technology surpasses it, and the Thunderbolt even has the iPhone beat on most polls. So, as Verizon's Valedictorian (the smartest smartphone at the top of the class), I had high expectations of this phone. And all of them were met... all but one.

After playing around and enjoying my new "buddy" myself, I wanted to share my happiness. I went to text a friend only to realize that his number was not under his name. All that was there in his entry was his bright smiling face from his facebook profile picture. I checked another one. No number. Another one, just an email... It seems when my contacts "synced" from my Blackberry, everyone's names transferred, but only those who I did not know through facebook had numbers.

So what is supposed to be the smartest smarty-pants "I get straight A's in all of my AP college classes" phone, failed, EPIC FAILED its first real test. Which is funny, because even the battery, which is rumored to be the worst of any phone ever, actually lasted all day. Go figure...

Well my not-so-little Thunderbolt, you will be spending some time in the principal's office tomorrow. So please study tonight, super-cram study please, so you can pass your re-test tomorrow. Thanks. 

Friday, March 25, 2011

My Dad's Top Ten Lists

My dad loves making "Top Ten" lists. He makes them for everything: books, recipes, movies, why he hates this, why he loves that. The last one he sent me was by far, the best.

A few weeks ago I was flying through my home-town of Denver and foresaw a possibility of giving up my seat on the over-booked flight. Wanting to spend some quality time with my parents, I called them and asked if they would be willing to come pick me up at the airport that night if I gave up my seat (and got $500 in return!). The answer was less than enthusiastic. In fact, it was down-right grumpy. My dad offered to pay me $500 just so he wouldn't have to climb out of his warm bed, forgo his 8pm bedtime, and see his one and only daughter. My step-mom proceeded to yell at him and remind me that they (of course) would do anything for me.

Well, the next morning, I got an email from my dad:


The top ten reasons that make your dad grumpy.
10.    Secular progressives doing anything.
9.        Being taken to a movie, play, opera, church or any place where he has to sit still for over an hour.
8.        The stock market not doing what he wants it to do.
7.        People extolling the virtues of eating broccoli.
6.        When he has to go outside and yell at kids and deer to get off his lawn.
5.        Having a dance partner, such as his wife, who refuses to follow his excellent lead with his fabulous moves.
4.        People reminding him that he is not the center of the universe.
3.        Getting in his truck and discovering that the radio has been changed to the Jesus station. (my dad dislikes that I like to listen to KLOVE - aka the Jesus station -  in all their cars when I drive them)
2.        Pamela telling him, “No, you can’t buy another gun today!”
And the top reason that makes your dad grumpy . . . .
1.    Amie phoning home from Florida, late at night, asking if her dad could leave his warm, comfortable bed and make a special trip out to Denver’s airport in a snowstorm for a surprise visit from his only daughter.


I love my dad, even his grumpy-ness. And especially when his grumpy-ness makes me laugh :)