Fridays are our night to eat out, so last night we were getting take out. As an extrovert, this isn’t something I think about. I call, I order, I go on with my life. Introverts, or at least the young one who lives in my house, see this differently, apparently. Talking on the phone strikes terror into her heart. (Our family phone practically melded to my head as a teen because I spent so much time on it. I was talking to people I already knew, but still...how things have changed). As a woman whose favorite thing to make for dinner is reservations, I decided I could not raise a daughter unable to feed herself via the work of others, so last night was the time to learn to talk to strangers on the phone. After a little mom coaching and reassurance that the restaurant worker she was calling was, in fact, not a magical monster who could eat her soul through the phone, she got started on learning to order her dinner using the thing in her hand usually reserved for watching TikTok videos and texting. To sweeten the deal, I let her order from a restaurant that I wasn't in the mood for while I ordered my own dinner from another place. Phone skill tip number one: When you’re nervous, rehearse. So, was she ordering from the right location of the restaurant? Check. Did she know what she wanted to order in advance and what sizes? Check. Does she have mom's credit card ready to give them and know where to find the expiration date and security code? Check. Deep breath. And…dial.
Updates about my kids for friends and family who don't see them a lot and also some random thoughts.
Saturday, August 21, 2021
The Katie Chronicles: No Stranger Danger Edition
Saturday, August 14, 2021
The Katie Chronicles: First Day of High School Edition.
I am happy to report Katie survived her first day of a giant new school. We had talked about how to prepare for the egregiously early time she has to get on her bus -- shower at night, lay out your clothes, etc. -- but that was several days ago. I realized late last night that we hadn't discussed it since, so I didn't get the chance to do the Mom Quality Control Questions: Did you set your alarm, is your backpack ready, etc. Apparently, she had it covered because she went to bed early, got up in plenty of time to get everything done, made a snack, and was ready to go earlier than necessary. She wanted to get to the bus stop early, so we did. Somewhere in heaven, my mother, the school teacher who raised me to believe if you're on time you're late, is smiling. Katie stood there in the blessedly cool darkness of the early, early morning and then off she went.
After
school, we did our usual tradition: I leave work early and we get ice cream and
discuss the day. Katie decided she wanted to get ice cream from the store
instead of going to the local shops, clearly a ploy to stretch ice cream over
several days, not just the one. As an upstanding, right-thinking, pro-ice cream
American, I approve. (As a side note, Ben and Jerry's has a new (?) flavor that
is yummo...Cannoli). Here's the report: There are 3,300 students in her school.
Thankfully the county started a new plan where freshmen were the only students
in the high schools today. (At elementary schools, it's kindergartners only and
at middle schools, only sixth graders). The other students who are not new to
the school are attending online. Tomorrow and Friday, sophomores join the
freshmen and then juniors and seniors join them in person on Monday. It’s a great
way for the newbies to get used to a school without the crush of humanity.
Despite this, Katie said it was already too crowded. Oh boy. She was able to
get to all her classes on time, without getting lost, which was a win because
her schedule takes her to almost opposite ends of the building and to different
floors, all in 5 minute breaks. She liked her classes, with the possible
exception of PE. Y’all…she has to actually *run* in PE class. AND she has to
dress out every day. Rude! The good news is PE is her final class, so no
returning to other classes all sweaty and it only lasts 9 weeks before it
switches to health. She assured me she is passing this PE class so no repeats
for her. (That better be the case with all her classes but that's another story).
I told her PE used to be every day, all year, all the years of school. I also
assured her that I walked to school in tornadoes and snow storms, often killing
grizzly bears with my Trapper Keeper while destroying the ozone with my Aqua
Net hairspray. She said her favorite class is theater and the other classes
were all fine. She said most of her fellow freshmen are "immature"
but she made two new friends -- a big deal for an introvert -- and saw a sweet
friend from elementary school. She couldn't remember their names so my genes
are definitely active in her. She even had a person to eat lunch with.
"Some Dude" is his name, apparently. All in all, a good start.
Everyone knows the saying "happy wife, happy life" -- well,
"happy girl, happy mom" isn't quite as catchy but it is nonetheless
true. Happy school year e'erbody!
The Katie Chronicles: Geographically Challenged Edition
Katie likes to watch The
Great Food Truck Race on the Food Network and we realized that we somehow
missed a season, so we've been catching up on episodes recently. If you don't
know, the show involves seven or so food truck teams who all go to a state, are
given a truck and other accessories, and they compete to see who can sell the
most in a given city, who can make the best dish with a specific ingredient,
and so on. The season we're watching takes place in Alaska, so Katie and I have
been talking about Alaska during the commercial breaks. Last night, the teams
had to go out on boats and fish. Katie was talking about the water and seafood
and she said something to the effect of, "Well, Alaska *is* an island
so..." I looked at her and waited for the punchline. She gave me a
"what?" look.
"Katie...Alaska
isn't an island. It's attached to Canada."
"No,
it's not. It's an island!"
We
went back and forth about this before I googled a map and showed her. Yep,
there it was, attached to the west coast of Canada. She was flabbergasted.
"How
come they always show it as an island when they show a map?" she said.
"Katie,
they don't....oh wait. Is *this* the map you're talking about?"
The
funny part of all this is she's actually been to Alaska. We went on an Alaska
cruise a few years ago (I recommend it) and she *did* see Alaska from the water
with shore excursions, just as on the other cruises we've taken...which were
all to island destinations.
One
of the really fun parts of parenting has been those moments when I get to see
the world through her eyes and I realize that sometimes her view is totally her
own. It was nice to be reminded of that and be able to solve a geographic
mystery. (Mom still knows a few things, emphasis on few.) So, remember, if
anyone asks, Alaska is a peninsula, not an island.
(I am
contractually obligated by my youngest child to say that she blames the cruise
companies. Royal Caribbean, you can expect her lawsuit to arrive directly).
The Katie Chronicles: She's Got the Look Edition
From February 9, 2020
A day or
two ago, Katie and I were hanging out in my room, letting the contractors
finish their work. Katie decided to amuse herself by playing dress up with my
clothes. She used to love clonking around in my heels when she was a toddler so
I said yes in a nostalgic frame of mind. I’ve never been a fashion muse before.
She came up with some interesting pairings and, in true
teenager/celebrity form, she refused to cooperate with the momarazzi but she
did provide a quote: When she came out of the closet in the green, she said, “I
look like a pea who went to private school.” Ladies and gentlemen, in the
spirit of a famous red carpet that is about to be walked in a few hours, I give
you the sartorial stylings of Katie Brown.