Author Archives: kristen

Thanks, Publix

I had a variety of errands to do this morning, which is always tiring with two children, and I was feeling very blah in general. So the thought of running into Publix for just a few things was not exciting me. But I did what I had to, and Publix came through. Not only did their superior race car carts delight my children, they played Ingrid Michaelson and Sufjan Stevens in the ten minutes I was there. I really needed to hear “Chicago,” it cheered me up immensely. “you came to take us / all things go, all things go / to recreate us / all things grow, all things grow…”

The Times Have Changed

I really like reading the Your __-Year-Old series every year, because in just the first 20 pages, I am usually convinced that whatever strange new phase I have been worrying about in Kate’s behavior, and calculating future therapy bills that will surely follow, is “developmentally appropriate” and I move on with my life for the next year, at least convinced that she is “normal.” One of the other highlights in these books is the fact that they are over a quarter century old, leading to giggles over the outfits the kids in the photographs are wearing, and some hilarious differences between parenting then and now. In Your Four-Year-Old, the authors assert that most four year olds are ready to run small errands for their parents, as long as they don’t have to cross a major street. Ha! I can’t even leave my two locked in the car for 30 seconds to hit the library drop box without fear of child protective services descending. What a strange and sheltered generation they will be.

Wisdom from Miss Bronte

“Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness is not religion. To attack the first is not to assail the last. To pluck the mask from the face of the Pharisee, is not to lift an impious hand to the Crown of Thorns.

These things and deeds are diametrically opposed: they are as distinct as is vice from virtue. Men too often confound them: they should not be confounded: appearance should not be mistaken for truth; narrow human doctrines, that only tend to elate and magnify a few, should not be substituted for the world-redeeming creed of Christ.” –Charlotte Bronte, from the preface to the second edition of Jane Eyre

Head’s Up for Locals

Reg’s Coffee House will have a special edition tomorrow morning from 7 a.m. to 10:05, then the new 100.5 will launch. I have no idea what the format will be, but we can only hope that leading off with Reg is a good sign, right?

UPDATE: The new station: live 100.5 is “Birmingham’s Modern Music” and according to the News, will be an AAA station (very Reg-like.) Please listen and support this station! Because it’s owned by a big radio conglomerate, ratings matter more than anything else.

A Neighborhood Stroll

I took the girls on a walk tonight after dinner, to let Michael work on his homework (!) and to keep the girls contained and busy so they would not be (a) making a mess or (b) jumping on me. Taking into account their weight and my limitations, I bought a new stroller a few weeks ago to make pushing them around the neighborhood possible, to partake in the goodness of a walkable neighborhood. I have even successfully used it to pick Kate up from a playdate or two so far. We enjoyed talking about flowers and signage and all the city sights to see, chatting with neighbors. We stopped to visit with a friend who was outside. With a measure of curiosity, it is amazing how much we can see in just a few short blocks, and what a huge swatch of people. Somehow walking around always rubs me enough to expose both my sinfulness and how very blessed I am. Our kids continue to delight in the city. After we came home, I saw Kate building skyscrapers behind her nativity to make “baby Jesus’ city.”

Thanksgiving

This week I am thankful for…

5 years of marriage. 3 states, 2 kids, 1 bungalow bought and sold. I am looking forward to plunging into our new adventures, together.

Camille, for calling me Thursday and inviting me to shoot a wedding with her. I am so looking forward to four more weddings this autumn. I have caught the wedding photography bug!

Michael, who sent me to a luxury hotel and spa to have some time of relaxation before the semester starts.

Our new home, which is coming together nicely.

Our church and our friends here in this city who love us and make me feel at home.

Read in July

We moved, so the reading was light.

Looking for Alaska by John Green

I liked this book, I really liked this book, even. Part of its allure for me was its semi-autobigraphical nature, and the fact that as a local, the transparency of its setting was amusing. I really enjoyed the narrator, a great deal. But am not sure that I love this book. I found Alaska obnoxious. I know that she wasn’t perfect, but I didn’t like her as much as the other characters. And I felt like I ought to have. Also, it’s been a while since I’ve been up on the YA scene, I admit. Howe…more I liked this book, I really liked this book, even. Part of its allure for me was its semi-autobigraphical nature, and the fact that as a local, the transparency of its setting was amusing. I really enjoyed the narrator, a great deal. But am not sure that I love this book. I found Alaska obnoxious. I know that she wasn’t perfect, but I didn’t like her as much as the other characters. And I felt like I ought to have. Also, it’s been a while since I’ve been up on the YA scene, I admit. However, the content of this book is probably for high school and above, when one could be reading novels from the broader collection of all of literature, and not just YA. But maybe I am just missing the boat on that one. 7.5/10

The Second Coming by Walker Percy

I loved this novel and couldn’t put it down. The quirky, and yet oddly believable characters, and their fascinating takes on both the extraordinary and mundane happenings of their own lives. It didn’t hurt that the settings were Southern ones, of great familiarity in their own ways. Entertaining and yet deep and thought provoking, I know that more than the Moviegoer, The Second Coming will propel me towards reading the rest of the Percy canon. 9/10

The Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C. S. Lewis
Re-reading these this year… DT has always been one of my favorites in the series. I read the entire thing in the car while my children napped (two or three different sittings.) Somehow, the setting worked. 9/10

Living with Fibromyalgia

One of the hardest things for me about living with fibromyalgia is that the symptoms are more or less invisible to anyone but me, and hard for me to describe briefly or coherently. Maybe that I hurt everywhere, everyday. I wake up with a dull pain in virtually every muscle in my body and more acute pain in 3-6 places. These places will shift and intensify based on triggers throughout the day. Triggers are things like pressure against my body, repetitive motion, standing for too long, anything high-impact… It’s even hard to describe triggers as they are complicated. I doesn’t hurt very much to bend over and pick up one thing, but it hurts worse with each thing I bend over and pick up, until I can’t stand it anymore. There are times I reach that point and push through the pain because I have to do something, but I end up in tears on the floor. Sometimes its worth it. Sometimes it just isn’t. I also get headaches and facial pain very regularly. And no matter how much I sleep, I have a hard time feeling rested.

I am on drugs and they do make a significant difference. But it’s more of a taking the edge off than taking the pain away. Perhaps like the difference between being hit by a delivery van and being hit by an 18 wheeler, you are still hit by a truck either way. One of the things that is most difficult is that even though I have hurt everyday for years, I never get used to the pain.

Talking about it is strange. I don’t want to feel sorry for myself, and most of the time, I don’t. I do get frustrated sometimes, but not everyday or every week. I have a pretty rich life. There are days that I want to stay in the fetal position and try not to cause myself any more pain than I feel at the moment I wake up, but I am just adventurous and extroverted enough to know that I can’t live like that for long.

Tagged

Back in MAY, Dolly tagged me for 7 random things about me. Elizabeth recently tagged me for 6 quirky things about me. Here are some random and/or quirky things about me.

I delivered my second baby in my parents’ bathtub (on purpose.)

I don’t experience thirst. Seriously, I am almost never thirsty. Since I don’t experience thirst, I have to make myself drink. Vitamin Water is a big drink of choice. So much so that my children call it “mama juice.”

I was on nationally-syndicated local TV show called Action News for Kids as a reporter and anchor when I was about 11, and had to quit when we moved away.

On the one hand, I am a foodie, I love good food, I have an italian chef grandma, it’s in my blood. On the other hand, I think fast food is really good *in moderation* I just love all food.. Except for Chef Boyardee. I have never tasted it because my mother and my grandmother finds it abhorrent and never bought it and neither have I. So maybe I love that too, but I’ll never know. There are definitely some things from my vegetarian youth I don’t care for at all. Lima Beans. TVP. Carob. But for the most part, food makes me happy.

If I could have any job in the world (and be a good mother, etc. or maybe before I had kids…) I’d be Mo Rocca. He just gets to do so much fun stuff.

I vomit at least four or five times a year. I don’t know why, I am just prone to throwing up.

I really like making lists. Lists of Bests and 43 things are cool, but nothing beats a good old fashioned list on paper.

If you need blog fodder, consider yourself tagged. That means you, Noah.

Short Rant

Dear Brad and Angelina,

Congratulations on the twins and all of that. It’s great to have a big family. The nannies must be nice. But, how dare you steal my firstborn son’s name*! First, you are going to popularize it, or at least, moreso than it is now. And the percent of the population who doesn’t believe we are naming him for a reformer will think we are naming him that because of you.

Someday Perpetually Misunderstood,
me

*It’s been my firstborn son’s name for at least 14 years. And no, it’s not for the reformer. It’s a very prominent family name.

Still Alive

We have been sleeping in the city since Sunday night, and will close on the old house tomorrow, Lord willing. We are all tired and grumpy and wishing that we were settled, but really excited about our new space. We definitely couldn’t have chosen better. Kate cried when we had to run back to our old house, she was worried that we’d have to stay there. But once that was settled, we had some good visits with our old neighbors. We’ll all miss them, but we are glad to only be 20 miles away.

The City

Since we’ve returned from the beach, our move is more or less imminent, even in the minds of our children. The first time we drove back into the city, I heard behind me Kate exclaim, with a joyous sigh, “the city! We get to live here!” It was the sort of tone children might use when describing Disney World. To our children, the city means living near friends and our church, being in closer proximity to museums and other fun parks and places for adventure. In some ways, we will all miss our idyllic small town street, big yard and sweet bungalow. But we are looking forward to our new home in our new neighborhood, a true urban neighborhood with shops, restaurants and mixed income housing, with a rich and important history. We are blocks away from a research university and hospitals, and within a mile or two of the all of the business district and museums. It is a neighborhood I could see us growing old in. Believing that we needed our time in the bungalow and God used it to grow us and heal us, we are still looking forward to moving to the city, for more reasons than these. The city has drawn us in.