Category Archives: love

We Do This Thing

We do this thing.

I clean like a maniac the day Dave is coming home from a road trip. And when he tells me how great it is to come home to such a clean house (and he does say it every time he comes home where did I find this man?!) and I pretend like I didn’t just do it in a frenzied hour and ohbytheway please don’t open that closet thanks. He pretends to believe that and never opens the closet.

Dave takes the baby and tells me to rest and says he’s not tired no not one bit. I mean yes, he says, I played 3 games in 4 days and traveled for 12 hours to get here…but you need a rest, mama! And I pretend to believe him and say let’s just all rest together.

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Filed under baby, dad, David, family, hockey, love, marriage

Nothing Quite Like

Watching your sister and your daughter read together, falling more in love all the time.

Seeing them ‘play’ together while my sister sleeps through my baby’s finger up her nose. Let’s blame the jet-lag combined with her inheritance of my dad’s ability to sleep deeply under any circumstance.

And realizing their shared affection for (faux)fur stoles.

Watching your sister’s adventurous spirit at the sushi restaurant turn into a battle against vomiting at the table.

Having to cut your sister off at karaoke because she has a little too much enthusiasm for screaming ballads at the top of her voice.

We had an amazing time together this week. Just me, my sister, and my daughter, a really rare chance to be just the three of us. Thanks, Al, for traveling all the way from Norway to Japan and back. We love you.

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Filed under awesome, baby, dancing, Japan, love, sister

Ending The Absence

As the last week of my time in London slows ticks by, I can’t help but focus on the day of my departure, ash cloud willing, and the subsequent reunion with Dave, Falcor and Enid. Many of my friends and readers themselves know the angst of a long-distance relationship and I had our previous experience to draw from to get me through these six weeks. Last time we were long distance, Dave didn’t have a cell phone and Skype didn’t even exist yet. Things were definitely easier this time around.

But along with all the cons of being apart for six weeks, there were some pros, that I should mention in the name of honesty and to make all my moaning of the last month and a half seem less over-dramatic. The pros include:

  • When I am not living with Dave, I can eat toast and yogurt with apples or cereal and a plate of cucumbers for dinner without having to worry about additionally making a proper meal to fill up his bottomless pit.
  • While I have been here in England, Dave was a single parent to two dogs, one of whom is very emtionally needy, and I suspect he finally understands why I actually cancel social engagements to be with them. They can make you feel very guilty, truly.
  • It is very likely I will never, ever have this much, or anywhere near this much, time to myself again, and the same goes for Dave. Missing each other is awful and the distance can be stressful, but it’s funny how easy it is to forget what it was like before we cohabited and agreed to take each other into consideration for every decision. Watch a Star Trek Deep Space Nine marathon just isn’t a reality when I am living with Dave. Watching every.single.game. of playoff hockey has a soundtrack of heavy sighs when Dave has me as a roommate.
  • As annoying it is to say something so cliché, absence does make the heart grow fonder. Our hearts were already pretty fond, but 45 days and nights apart can really make you long for someone.
  • England is beautiful in the spring, London is an amazing city, and I have been lucky to get the chance to explore a bit while being paid to do a job that is actually pretty fun.

By this time next week I will be on the couch cozied up with David and my dogs, unable to even heavy sigh as we watch playoff hockey as I will be so happy just to be back to our little family, ready to be pampered, prepared to make large meals for my hungry husband and give excessive loving to my needy dogs. And I am fine with that.

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Filed under David, dogs, England, homesickness, love, marriage, Uncategorized

Our Roman Holiday

A few days ago, we took advantage of European proximity and budget airlines and flew to Rome for a 48-hour escape from the wintery Norwegian snowscape. It’s amazing what a couple days of room temperature can do for the soul.

I won’t fill this post with the boring in’s and out’s of traveling to Rome, you could Google that in 90 seconds. Here are my basic tips: stay in a B&B, eat gelato after every meal including breakfast, always ask for a pizza slice slightly larger than what you think you can eat, wear comfortable shoes, accept that mental images will be more important than the photos you take since no photo can do such a city justice, and don’t get hit by a car or a motorbike.

What’s more important than going to Rome is simply going. Just going somewhere else. Even if you live in Marquette and go camping in Escanaba, even if you live in Brandon and spend a weekend at the lake. Leave your dogs, your kids, your Blackberry (I know that seems harder than leaving your child, but you can do it) and get away. On your own if you need to, with your love if you can.

It’s fair to say that, given our current lifestyle, Dave and I do get to spend a lot of time together, and it’s great. However, we still have a routine, that can make things a bit ho-hum. There’s practice, work, games, dogs to let out, chores to do. And as the winter months drag on, all of that can get to your head. Even during times of fairer weather, a routine repeating can be a soul-killing thing if you’re not careful.

Getting away reminds us of things we like about each other, and traveling together always brings out the best in our relationship. Seeing new sights, trying new flavors, meeting new people, it’s fun and exciting on the arm of someone you find interesting and hilarious. An adventure, no matter how small, can make love seem lovelier.

So, back in frigid and blizzarding Norway, we feel a bit refreshed. We keep going through our pictures, having a laugh over minor glitches, marvelling over Roman ruins and trying to right our intestines after the wine and cheese situation we just put them through.

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Filed under awesome, cheese, cuisine, David, food, holidays, insanity, love, Norway, Rome, travel, Uncategorized, weather

Julie and Julia and Lane

On a rare night alone in the house, while Dave was playing a game on the other side of Norway, I decided to watch a movie from the list called “Movies That Would Cause Dave To Roll His Eyes.” The lucky winner was “Julie and Julia.”

I wasn’t enthusiastic about watching it, to be honest. Besides the fact that Meryl Streep is a goddess, nothing else really appealed to me based on the preview. I love food, of course, and I’m interested in blogging, naturally, but I’m not really interested in traditional butter/beef/sauce type of cooking and I’m not really into foodie blogs. I just hoped for a light movie to use as background noise to some house cleaning.

I’ll be the first to say it. I. Was. Wrong. If you haven’t seen it, here are the highlights: 

Love, the real kind.  The way the marriages of the two main characters are portrayed was really heart-warming to me. The movie revolves around two strong women who are pursuing their dreams with the support of two strong men who aren’t afraid to support them. But it isn’t all rose petals and butterflies. Julie and Eric have that fight we’ve all had, something like the “Newsflash: the world doesn’t revolve around you, husband/wife!” Julia and Paul struggle together with the issue of infertility. Both couples express love openly, give love physically, stick around through the difficult bits. It’s not that awkward, too perfect, puzzle-piece love that lots of romantic comedies try to sell to us. It’s not that mutual-loathing type of marriage that sitcoms force us to swallow so predictably. There’s a scene in the movie where Julie is blogging about a fight with her husband, realizing that he is wonderful, she is selfish and concludes that she doesn’t deserve him. And I was like “Amen, sister.” Me neither. We’re all selfish, and petty, and hard to live with sometimes. It could probably be said that no one deserves anyone, but we do it anyway, and ain’t it grand? It’s simple, and real, and imperfect, and I believed it.

Sisters, the best thing going. Although it’s only a very minor subplot in the movie, Julia Child’s relationship with her sister was really a highlight for me. When they run towards each other in the train station screaming and making a scene, I nearly shed a tear. Nothing that I know of quite matches the bonds of sisterhood, and the way they missed each other, loved each other, completed each other and made the husbands in the room seem small reminds me of the way I feel around my sister. They were like the very tall 1950′s version of some sassy Clark sisters.

Best friends with pens. Throughout the movie, Julia Child was always writing letters to her best friend Avis. Every time something exciting happened, or when she was stressed, when things were uncertain, she started hammering away on the typewriter to fill Avis in on all the dirt. I related to this feeling completely, not only because I live much too far away from my best friend Jess, but because our relationship is now based heavily on the written word. We write e-mails, short and long, out of joy and out of frustration and there is something really lovely about having the reassuring words of your best friend in print so that you can read them over and over instead of just hearing them once and trying to recall them later. How can best friends be so wise?! When it was revealed in the movie that Avis and Julia became friends through a pen-pal relationship, I started to wonder if this movie was made specifically for me by Nora Ephron. Because in addition to my friends back home, I have made some amazing friends through the internet (yes, the internet, go ahead and judge) and the backbone of our relationship was and is based on connections never made in person. Abby, Caitlin, Emily and Liz write me e-mails, send me e-cards, send me REAL cards, pack up and ship goodies and keep me sane in times of turmoil. I’ve only ever met two of them in person, but I know them better and trust them more than some ‘friends’ I’ve had since kindergarten. The sisterhood of women, facilitated by the internet, brought together some Americans, living abroad, sharing a moan, having a laugh.  And what can be wrong with that?

Passion. Trust me when I tell you how cliché it is to state the following lesson from “Julie and Julia”: You have to follow your passion. BARF, right? I know, it’s such an annoying statement when you aren’t quite sure what the hell your passion is. I like writing, teaching, reading, walking dogs, taking naps…are any of these my passion? Can I cover the rent by doing any of them? Not so far. But the movie makes the point without trying to conceal the hidden meaning. Julie hated her cubicle job. But she had to work. Julia hated the normal activities of an expat housewife. But she was desperate to get out of the house. I can relate to BOTH of those feelings, and yet as the story went, both of these women found a way to live their passion. And they didn’t do it at 18, and it wasn’t as simple as a film formula montage set to 80′s music. It took the whole, entire movie and in the end showed them still working, not quite fulfilled, because who ever is really? There’s a lesson in there somewhere, and it’s not very subtle, I’m sure you can sniff it out.

What do we do now? Eventually I became completely convinced that one of my readers is telling Nora Ephron exactly my weak spots, because near the end of the movie, when both Julia and Paul Child are feeling a bit lost in life, he gets reassigned to Oslo. Whaaaaaaa? Her book isn’t published, his career in foreign service is dwindling, and she asks him “What do we do now?” And he says “Go home.” And she says “Where is home?” And I swear to you I yelled out “I HAVE NO IDEA ANYMORE!” Sigh. We talk about this sometimes, more and more as the years go on, and I can officially tell you we haven’t found our answer yet. Nor did “Julie and Julia” answer that question for me. But if you have a worry, and Meryl Streep voices it, you really do feel validated.

Overall, I give this movie two Saturday afternoon (wait, I think it was a Thursday, but who can tell anymore) thumbs up. Don’t think too much about it, just let Meryl teach you about life while images of butter melting and vegetables stewing make you feel cozy and hungry.

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Filed under blog, cuisine, David, friends, homesickness, hope, housewifery, Jess, love, marriage, movies, Norway, Oslo, sister, technology, Uncategorized

My Parents Weren’t Always A Mom And A Dad

Today marks the 36th anniversary of my parents wedding. Thirty-six years of life lived together. I always view my parents individually as wonderful, but together as truly amazing. They are not the perfect couple, they don’t try to be or pretend to be. They are just themselves, together, in love, every day, working it out. Having fun, puttering around, sitting in the same room silently, staying up all hours talking. As parents they gave us a clear set of boundaries and a stable safe place, but had the amazing restraint and instinct to give us an unusual amount of freedom to make choices, decisions, mistakes, missteps. They let us sort things on our own whenever possible, they let us know they’d help us if we ever asked. But now, as a married woman, I can see that one of the most important lessons that my parents taught me was that I was part of their family, but not the center of it. Although they never verbalized it just this way, my parents showed and told us that their marriage was as important to them as we were. They showed and told us that their own identities were important to them by having their own friends, going on dates together, going out with friends without each other, having passion for their own careers, having and cultivating interests that weren’t shared between them. As sensible as all that sounds, my experiences have shown me that many people don’t give their marriage priority over children at all, don’t bother with individual pursuits, leave neglected private relationships.

But what I really reflect on when I think of my parents on their anniversary is that, when you do the math, it seems to me that they were married *GASP* before I existed. Eight years before I existed to be exact. So, it would seem, they weren’t just giving lip service when conveying to me that their lives didn’t totally revolve around my existence. After I let the idea of my non-existence sink in, I get this image of my parents just as a married couple, not as parents at all. With some crazy sort of matching frizzy long hair, they drove around the country with a camper. Can you picture that?! My mom was probably testing the limits of peyote while my dad tinkered with the mechanics of their rig using only bungee cords, duct tape and his wits. They entertained friends at their house, possibly rivaling parties that Dave and I have hosted, and they didn’t have to get up in the morning to the sounds of little girls screaming. They had arguments without having to worry about traumatizing some impressionable offspring. They had dogs that they could love like children without feeling guilty about how their actual children would feel about it. They spent their savings on…well I have no idea what they were buying (NOT haircuts, I know that much), but the point is my mom probably bought herself a few new things once in a while without feeling totally guilty for not spending it on us. (Mom, I’m nearing 30 years old, you can let that kind of thing go now)

I take the fact that parents used to be regular people as some kind of sign that I should use this time, when we only have dog-children, to work on my own non-parental marriage. Be better. Try harder. Face facts that we have to be each other’s priority first and foremost if we ever expect to keep a miniature human functioning for any reasonable amount of time. M and D, unbeknownst to you, this is the biggest lesson I’ve learned from you so far. I love you. Happy Anniversary.

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Filed under anniversary, dad, love, marriage, mom

Many expats would probably agree that the most harrowing part of living an ocean (or more) away from your family and many of your loved ones is the emotional distance you feel during life’s big moments. When people are celebrating, you feel lonely, isolated and full of regret that you can’t be there in person to share their joy. When people are hurting, you feel lonely, isolated and full of regret that you can’t be there in person to share their burden.

Last week my family lost Ryan, son, cousin, nephew, after he held on as long as he could. Even from here, I can feel the ripples of shock and pain that are passing through our family members, in different ways. My pain is amplified by the fact that I can’t be there, physically, for them and their stress is more because they know how alone it feels to be away from the pack when things have gone wrong. Over phone lines and Skype calls and e-mails we do our best to squeeze each other as hard as we would if we could in person.
I’m lucky to be able to say that I’m from a close extended family. We may not talk every day, get together every month, know the details of each other’s day-to-day. But we hold sacred our familial bond, we keep in touch faithfully, we make each other a priority, we give affection openly. Although it’s not often that we can all be geographically in the same place, we make the most of those occasions every time we get the chance.
We are an emotional group of sensitive but strong people. We get angry. We laugh hysterically. We weep openly. We say ‘I love you’ not just with actions but with words, and we don’t use those words sparingly.
When my cousins, aunts, uncles, parents and sister tell me I was there with them in their hearts when they said goodbye to Ryan together, I know it’s true. But “in their hearts” never feels as safe as in their arms, and on that day it was very hard to be in Norway, or anywhere but Detroit, Michigan.
Almost 10 years ago our family endured the loss of our patriarch, our Papa, a figure who held us all together by virtue of his love of us and, reciprocally, by our need to show him we loved him too. Despite our pain, our grief, our sadness during that time, I feel it’s safe to say I wasn’t the only one who feared that losing Papa would lead to losing each other. That the planets can’t orbit without the Sun. I feared that the loss of him would be the end of “us”, and that only added to the emotional tumult that death always causes.
Ryan, it’s safe to say, is nearly as central a figure in our family as Papa. It’s never good to play favorites, except with Ryan. Anyone can make me cranky, except for Ryan. A family gathering can still feel complete if someone can’t make it, except for Ryan. Like for all my cousins, I would do anything, go anywhere, if Ryan had needed me. But unlike my other cousins, Ryan couldn’t physically do that for me. And from that, through Ryan, we all learned the beauty of difference, the need for perspective. In a family full of talkers, Ryan taught us to show love, joy, pain, and companionship wordlessly. As we grew up and learned to help Aunt Dor and Uncle Tom care for Ryan, we understood the need for patience, the value of taking things slow, the virtue of being flexible in your plans. The importance of family, over all else, under any circumstances. For my aunt and uncle I truly can’t imagine what the loss of him means or feels like. Such a loss, in all our lives, in truly devastating.
So last week, after so much waiting, hoping and fearing, my cousin Derek finally called to tell me that Ryan was gone. At that moment, his was the only voice that I could have heard that could have made me feel any better about something so awful. My cousin, my friend, a big brother who was able to use so few words to say what I already knew was coming but that I needed to hear gently.
In those next moments, I was transported back to the day we lost our Papa. The pain of the loss amplified by the fear of what this change would do to our family dynamic. And it dawned on me that all those fears had never come to be. That our family, in many ways, is closer now than ever. That the idea of Papa is still is in the room at every gathering, for every shot of Ouzo, for every joyful celebration and tearful goodbye. Each time we’re all together, we inevitably turn the topic to Papa, each telling our favorite story, always the same plot, always the same punchline. We use these stories and our shared laughter as comfort, for bonding, to remember. Without even knowing it, Papa taught us one last lesson (to add to the lessons about dry farts, Oprah, the re-use of tea bags and slot machines) that I didn’t realized I’d learned until nearly a decade later.

The last time I saw Ryan, at my cousin Craig’s wedding in October, we were in Pappas celebration mode. Happy, carefree, dancing. Ryan was right there with us, at one point being taken by the groom on a few laps of the dance floor at a speed that made us all a little nervous but had Ryan laughing hysterically. I had flown in from Norway, that flight being the most generous and now cherished birthday present my mom and dad have ever given me, for a quick weekend in order to show my cousin and his new wife how important they are to me. Despite jet-lag and airplane food I couldn’t bear the thought of them being all together without me. And now, knowing that it was the last time I would see Ryan, I realize that my gut was right, that being together despite cost and inconvenience, is never a regret. I got to make him laugh, tell him I love him, kiss his adorable cheek, hold his tiny hand. I will cherish those memories the same way I still remember the last time I saw with Papa and touched his soft white hair, the way I can still picture the pay phone from which I last heard his voice.

Without Ryan, our family will be different. We need to come together now to support my aunt and uncle and eachother in a way that we probably won’t sustain every day for eternity. But we won’t fall apart. We won’t dissipate without our most loved member. We’ll adapt and grow and continue to tell each other ‘I love you’ as long as we have the words to do it. We’ll tell stories about Ryan, our favorites, the best of the best, over and over and then we’ll laugh and cry together, which is so much better than laughing or crying alone.

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Filed under dancing, family, love, Norway

A Frienship With No Bread…Still Has Potatoes

Generally speaking most of you know me as a pretty healthy person. I don’t eat meat. I’ve cut back drastically on dairy. My friend’s mother and, I like to think, my friend Tina Ostwald once told me “the whiter the bread (rice, grain, etc), the sooner you’re dead.” I exercise for pleasure. I exercise for health. I medidtate to try and keep stress levels low-ish and I do crossword puzzles to avoid Ahlzheimer’s. But I do not, and never will, give up certain guilty pleasures. Selections from this list include:

Red Vines. Nacho Cheese Doritos. Powdered donuts. Pizza. Golden Grahams. Chocolate chip cookies. Funfetti cake. Blueberry pancakes.

But since this season began, I’ve been eating drastically less of all of the above mentioned items. Not because they are bad for me, which they are. Not because I’ve gained more willpower, because I haven’t. But simply because the person I’ve spent most of my social (ie: eating) time with is Jenn. And Jenn can’t eat any of these things. Correction: Jenn can eat these things, but they will make her violently ill and increase her chances of further medical issues down the road. It’s a trade-off I guess.

See Jenn has Celiac disease, and you can read more about that here, which is basically an allergy to gluten. Gluten is found in wheat, barley and rye. When you take a minute to think about all that this really includes, the North American mind is staggered. Bread, in all it’s glorious and wonderful forms including an ‘everything’ bagel, is out. Beer, unless you mean the Asian varieties like Sapporo, is out. Beer and pretzels gone from your diet. The ballpark is ruined forever.

As Jenn’s friend and a person with self-imposed dietary restrictions, I decided to take a hands-on and proactive approach to eating with Jenn. And since eating is a prime component of most of my friendships, taking this step was crucial. First of all, if and when it becomes necessary for Jenn to explain her condition to people, they often exclaim things like ‘I’d DIE without bread!’ or ‘Life wouldn’t be worth living without cupcakes!’ I know how they feel, but neither statement is true and both are annoying to someone who both continues living without bread AND considers that life worthwhile without cupcakes. I sympathize with Jenn on this because when people discover that I’m a vegetarian they say similar things, replacing ‘bread’ or ‘cupcakes’ with ‘steak’ or ‘turkey.’

So I looked into it, and discovered some very good news. Nacho Cheese Doritos are out, but Cool Ranch are in! Red Vines and all other licorice are a no-go, but Sour Patch Kids are completely fine! Potatoes, my favorite food of all time in their various forms, are completely and utterly edible. In fact, since becoming pregnant Jenn could have lived on Potato Skins alone! You can make gluten-free (GF) flour for baking, and better yet, you can buy it pre-made! Sure, it’s more expensive than normal flour but maybe that’s a GOOD thing! It really makes you think twice before making a batch of cookies all willy nilly! Use the GF flour as a one-to-one substitute in your recipe and reduce the cooking time slightly. Voile! Anyone could be fooled!

Eating out includes another set of issues. Obviously Italian restaurants, what with the pre-meal bread and the requisite pasta, aren’t ideal. But Jenn is a trooper, and once in a while she’s up for calling the restaurant ahead, bringing her own pasta, and having them make it for her. Sandwich shops are often also kind of a write-off, because while they could wrap the sandwich contents in lettuce ala Atkins diet, that gets old. But Japanese, Chinese and Mexican food, all with acceptable carbs like rice or corn tortillas, always fit the bill. Salads are available anywhere, and Jenn never says boo as long as she can order one. I’ve expanded my palate to include sushi (don’t roll your eyes, more on that later) and a number of Mexican dishes that I would have balked at previously, all because of my desire to spend time eating with my dear friend Jenn.

There are always snags, when I forget that something includes gluten as a elasticity agent or if I assume something is GF just because a similar food also is. But Jenn forgives me, because she has also had to learn the sometimes tricky art of feeding a vegetarian, remembering to look at ingredients closely and realize that chicken stock is not vegetarian and ‘imitation crab’ simply means it’s some other kind of fish instead of crab. Still meat my friends. This year the team had a large group of girls who loved to get together regularly and, you guessed it, eat. For some of them having two vegetarians and one gluten-intolerant diner was a bit overwhelming and made cooking difficult. But we reminded them that a veggie platter meets everyone’s needs, and pizza sans meat works in a pinch because Jenn will provide her own corn tortillas onto which she scrapes all the toppings. Remember? Trooper.

When I drive back to my old friends in a few weeks, my intake of the foods on Jenn’s forbidden list will surely go up. It’s not good for my waistline, but it’s inevitable since I’ll surely be lazier and less consistent without Jenn around. But more than that, I’ll miss the fact that I could buy a GF pack of cookies and use it as an excuse to spend time with my head in the lap of my friend. Yes, she lets me put my head in her lap. And she even pats my hair. As happy as I’ll be to reunite with my much loved and much missed friends from other places, I’d give up all the gluten in the world to be able to bring Jenn and soon-to-be Baby Arturo with me.

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Filed under America, food, friend, love

Day Becomes Night Becomes Day Again

Last weekend we put on our road trip faces and our party pants, and hit up Las Vegas double-date style with our dear friends the Fahsbenders. And while I could fill this blog entry with a predictable, but simultaneously hilarious, play by play of the trip and the events of the weekend, I’d rather take one particular aspect of the trip and expand on it so that you know how I really feel. Because on Saturday night, after a day of activity and an evening spent galavanting, we kept alive through the wee hours and right until dawn. As I lay in my bed watching dawn become morning, wondering when my hangover would start to kick in, I had to smile. Because despite the exhaustion and often accompanying dehydration, there is nothing like the feeling of accomplishment one has when seeing the sunrise after a wonderful night with friends. One of the little triumphs and joys of life is occasionally staying up all night. Here are just some of the reasons why:

1. Judge Not. You know when you get up and at ‘em early, maybe you are on your way to work, drinking your Starbucks, acting all responsible like? And suddenly, approaching you on the sidewalk, comes a rowdy bunch consisting of anywhere from one to twenty-one people. They look as though, possibly 8 to 12 hours ago, they had been dressed up and looking fabulous. Some of the girls are carrying their shoes. The men have ties and/or belts tied around their heads. Mascara is in places it was never meant to be. But these people are laughing, calling out inappropriate things to traffic and taunting passersby. To you, in your dead sober and well-rested state of mind, they may seem menacing. But these people don’t want to hurt anyone, in fact, they want you to ditch work, get a Bloody Mary and find the nearest Denny’s with them.

Staying up all night ensures that you will get on the flipside of that encounter. Once you realize that while you may feel embarrassed for that group of nearly-thirty-years-old hooligans, they feel absolutely no shame at all, you’ll realize that the occasional all-nighter simply humbles you.

2. Find Out Who Your Real Friends Are. Say you start the night out at a pre-party. It’s you, your friends, some of their friends, and a few random stragglers. The night continues, the group size tends to swell to include increasingly random revelers in addition to your posse. After the bar closes, at least half of the crew is usually ready to enjoy some after-party action. But eventually, gradually, people start disappearing. Some call a cab. Some call a questionable love interest to come pick them up. Some people simply pass out where they stand. Others seem to vanish into thin air. By about 4 a.m. those who are left have the potential to pull through the night. Obviously not every night of fun should end by the light of the next day’s dawn. But you’ll know in your heart when it’s one of those times. And those who are left standing with you will be either your closest friends with whom you like to discuss life’s most complicated mysteries after 24 hours of wakefulness, or they will be people you met along the night’s journey who you’ve discovered as a kindred spirit and who must be appreciated as such.

3. Appreciate Breakfast Foods. One of the key ingredients to keeping any group of late night drunkards alive until dawn is food. After the bar it’s pizza and chips and, in all likelihood, a lot of Oreo cookies. But if you are still awake 5 to 7 hours after the bar closed, you’re going to need breakfast. Lucky for you, most breakfast places open around 6am so that people who have ‘jobs’ can eat before they ‘work.’ Eggs and toast with some hashbrowns or pancakes from a diner always sound pretty good for Sunday Brunch. But if you haven’t been asleep since the last time you ate breakfast, your enthusiasm for breakfast foods at dawn will be comparable the lust a tween feels for Edward Cullen. Bon apetit.

4. See The Sunrise. No matter where you are, or what time of year, there’s always something magical in the moment when the sun breaks over the horizon. Obviously, to see the sunrise you could always go to bed at a reasonable hour and then set your alarm for the morning. But there isn’t much fun in that considering that many of us do that every day in order to be at work on time. Seeing the sunrise as you scrape ice off your windshield on your way to your cubicle doesn’t exactly hold the same sense of satisfaction as seeing it rise as you begin your hangover in the arms of your closest friends.

5. The Best Sleep Of Your Life. When night-turned-morning becomes full on daytime, you face an important choice. You stand at the crossroads between either committing to wakefulness until a socially acceptable bedtime OR shutting it down and writing off the day that you have already begun. If you choose the first option, I wish you luck and I suggest you wear sunglasses and drink lots of aspertame laced caffiene. But if you choose the second option, I will warn you that you are about to enter the most deep and cavernous coma that ever existed. Pull the blinds, turn off your ringer and prepare for a 14-hour shut down that could only be rivaled by something medically induced. Congratulations, this is the fruit of your labor.

Home from the after-party, no pool in sight. Why is my bathing suit on?
A belt on his head, he becomes the Karate Kid.

Dave tries to bully people into staying awake past 8a.m.

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Filed under friends, love, pain-for-pleasure, roadtrip

Walking Around, Looking At Stuff

Sometimes, for me at least, it’s easy to get bogged down in the sprawling stripmall-esque nature of Bakersfield. Sometimes the dry, dull colors of the desert, even when the beautiful mountains can be viewed on pollution-free days, are a bit depressing. At least for me and Dave, two people raised in colorful, well-watered grasslands, forests and lakes. Even the river that runs through this town is just a dry bed. But sometimes I think it’s too easy to compare everything to our ideal, homey version of beauty and comfort. And as the sun shines in Bako after the rain came for a few weeks, it’s becoming a little difficult to ignore the natural beauty of this over-developed, oil-field of a town.

Having two dogs who take extreme joy in any kind of walking, especially the kind where they don’t have to wear their leashes, is a great excuse to leave your house and actually get in the proximity of nature as it exists nestled between suburban developments. So, on a Monday afternoon, we took to the riverbed, and got off our Midwestern high horses to admit that even the dry pastels of the desert can be really beautiful in their way. And appreciating greenery is actually somewhat easier here, since anything budding and blossoming is working extremely hard in less than ideal conditions. Any old flower can grow in rich, black soil with rain and lakes and snow melts and rivers flowing regularly. But on the dry, sandy bottom of the Kern River there are yellow, pink and orange flowers looking their most fabulous despite drought conditions. There are shells, empty houses of former water creatures, scattered everywhere in the sand and gray trees that lost their battle with thirst years ago, and even those dusty skeletons take on a certain beauty when it’s a no-work weekday that you can spend walking with your dogs and your David.
And a walk with your boys and your girl, in addition to bringing you closer to nature, can do wonders to lift your spirits. No matter what city we live in, no matter how lucky we are to have friends, a backyard and good Mexican food, we are still far away from home. You get homesick, a bit blue, a bit desperate for familiarity. But all that can wash away, can seem irrelevant, when you’re walking, breathing fresh-ish air, seeing the smiles on the faces of your dogs and solving the world’s problems all in the span of an hour.

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Filed under California, David, dogs, Enid, Falcor, home, homesickness, love, weather