Tuesday, August 29, 2006

It's A Small World - Or Is It?




Although there's lots of talk of the Internet shrinking the world and turning it into a global village, how much do we really know about other places and cultures? Along with the aforementioned Crystal, Tu gives us glimpses into worlds unknown to most Americans. The post abouthis vacation at Ha Long Bay, as well as numerous other posts detail everyday life in Vietnam. This picture was taken by Tu and he's graciously given Herding Cats permission to post it.

I love the silk-painting quality of the muted tones, the lone boat floating peacefully on the water, and the rugged mountains in the background. The brightness of the sun reflection against the darkness of the mountain in the foreground add depth to this peaceful landscape scene.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

The Black Belts Among Us

What's the image that comes to mind when you here the words "black belt"? A person, usually male, white and/or Asian? A lone, dedicated soul training high on a mountaintop in China? A person roaming the earth to right an ancient wrong? How about an action movie hero?

In reality, the black belts walk among us daily. They're not only the guys you'd expect to be trained in hand-to-hand combat such as policemen and military personnel. A black belt can be the "computer guy" in your office, your child's teacher or a home-care nurse. A lawyer or the visibly pregnant woman in front of you in the checkout line. Busy moms with toddlers in tow could black belts too. A black belt can be an entreprenuer, the manager at the big box store, and the construction worker that built the store. They're even church ladies. They're the shy kid in school, the math nerd, and the mousy girl in your daughter's class.

Martial arts training attracts a certain type of personality - a type of do-gooder, if you will. Someone with high standards for themselves and others, and someone with a sense of humilty. It's not the looks, occupation or income level that count. It's the person inside and their potential that are important in the martial arts.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

A Beer A Day...


No Beer Was Harmed In The Making Of This Picture

This is my stepbrother and the Blossom. He wanted pictures of himself with Branch and Blossom to appear child-friendly to potential dates!

I am enjoying my new job. I can see there will be lots of things for me to do. It feels great to be back at work, like a breath of fresh air. I even got PAID already, for my work on Saturday. This place rocks. A five-minute walk to and from work, and not one single traffic light!

Friday, August 18, 2006

Welcome to the Blogroll!




Herding Cats would like to welcome the latest additions to the blogroll. Tony is a California dad working in the entertainment industry. Halfmanhalfbeer (what a GREAT blogname!) is a British guy living in Dubai. How come I didn't think of a cool blogname like that?!

And don't the rest of you get your panties or boxers in a knot. The Herding Cats blogroll is in NO particular order. Mostly, it's in the order of whenever I decided to update the code in template.

If you don't check anything else on the "Herding Cats Proudly Endorses..." list, please check out Crystal. Her recent trip to Kenya will change your perspective on the American image of African kids. (Hint: They're not all starving with flies buzzing around their faces). Max's post dated August 2 is open call for poems, stories and pictures by (!) and about cats. These will eventually be published in a book with the proceeds going to a cat-related organization. And speaking of cats, Brandy's got a whole new bunch of kittens. Wil embarks on a cross-country drive to take a job as a writing instructor in Las Vegas, and Don Wood has, amazingly, discovered that he is the center of the universe.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

I Got A Job!



I got a part-time job at the clubhouse here in the development!

The CDD manager often comes to the poolside to say hello to us and Branch and Blossom. She had mentioned there was a vacancy for part-time work in the clubhouse. I applied but then rescinded my application. See, I really like this lady, and I like living here in the development. I also like going to martial arts and the job would have cut into my martial arts time. Additionally, I am unsure of my child care situation next month after Nanny A. leaves. So with all those factors, I did not want to take the position, only to leave in a few weeks. I really like the CDD manager and I want to be able to look her in the eye when I see her, not have to slink away because I pooped out on a job she hired me for.

She came back with a counter-offer that I would work as her assistant for maybe 10 hours a week to start. She would be flexible with my hours due to child care, and I would not have to attend evening meetings that would cut into my martial arts time.

So, last night I appeared before the CDD board for approval for hiring. You all would have been proud of me. I wore the power color, red, and had my handy-dandy notepad folio with me. When the other candidate was asked to descibe herself, I quickly wrote notes on what I would say immediately after her. The other candidate was hired more for the clubhouse end - issuing pool keys, dealing with resident complaints, booking the clubhouse for resident private parties, etc. We were both offered the jobs on the spot. I THEN stayed on for more of the meeting, whereas the other woman left right after she found out she was hired. I thought I should show just a LITTLE interest in the meeting aside from the part that benefited me.

I'm so excited and ready to work again. On the downside, I went to inquire about day care for Branch and Blossom. The local place seems neat and clean enough, but the "class"room is tiny! It doesn't seem much bigger than one of my kid's bedrooms. They only get 30 minutes outdoor time in the morning and another 30 in the afternoon. They also get some time in the large central area for singing, computer work, etc. I just can't imagine them cooped up all day, as much as they love the outdoors. One of my neighbors takes his daughter there. I saw her this morning and she seemed down. She's nearly 3 years old. Perhaps she just didn't feel like being there this morning. I only want my kids to go there on a part-time basis.

I have decided that I really need to work. It's the German in me, I guess. I just wasn't happy being a stay-at-home parent. I realize everyone has a different opinion on this issue. However, I have come to the realization that if I am happier at a job still look out for my children's interests in the meantime, they will be happier also. I am not sure I could handle going back to a 40 hour week right away, so this job is the perfect middle ground. I also want to get back in the work force, and I've read that some places are reluctant to hire women who've been out of the work force a few years raising children. If I have a part-time job, I at least have one foot back in the workforce.

This job is perfect for me - it draws on my computer, accounting and bookkeeping skills, is a 5 minute walk from my house, and is just a few hours a week with the possibility for more. I was very excited last night. The Citizen said "You're like a little kid. Everyone has a job. Even N. (my 14 year old nephew) has a job." I said: "Yes, but I haven't had one for 20 months!"

I start Monday morning at 10 AM.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Garbage Eve



Years before I met the Citizen, I had a long succession of boyfriends, most of whom I spent lots of time with drinking beer. Gee. I really MISS those days! One night, the FBF (Former Boyfriend) and I were sitting around drinking beer. It was December 23rd and we were trying ever so lamely to justify our drinking. Not that it NEEDED any justification. A silly thing like the lack of a valid reason wouldn't deter US in the LEAST! We were PROFESSIONIALS, dammit! Since the morning of December 24 was garbage pickup day, we decided we were drinking in honor of...Garbage Eve.

The term has carried over into my marriage with the Citizen. He'll ask if tomorrow is trash pickup day and I'll answer, "No, that's Thursday. Tomorrow is Garbage Eve."

I can't WAIT to order this book.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Legless Chair and other Thoughts



Big K. is making himself comfortable on my latest acquisition, the legless chair. I saw these in the Target flyer this weekend. They're actually sold as dorm or apartment furniture, however, we spend lots of time on the floor with the Branch and Blossom. Reading bedtime stories last night was a breeze and easy on my back with this new chair. The legless chairs are a hit with the whole family. The cats like to sit on them and the Branch likes to play with them. Unfortunately he likes to try to stand on them also. I think he's part goat!

**

Last night I was thinking alot about my grandmother and her house. When I woke up this morning, I realized it was the 5-year anniversary of her passing. 2001 was a formative year for me. In less than two months, I met the Citizen (who would become my husband), my beloved grandmother passed away, and of course, the life-altering September 11. It was surely the end of my innocence and marked my quite belated entry into adulthood.

I met the Citizen for our first date two days prior to the death of my grandmother. Although I knew the end was near, I elected to take a few hours away from a telephone. I did not have a cellphone at that time. At the time, I lived with my stepbrother and I told him I would just be a few hours, if anything "happened", it would just have to wait. Two days later, I was at work. I remember I was wearing my Bruce Lee t-shirt (because it was Casual Friday) and I got the phone call from my mother, who sounded oddly matter-of-fact and unflustered. I e-mailed the Citizen and I told my supervisor that my grandmother had passed away, and my supervisor kindly asked me if I needed to go home. I informed her I didn't have a car, since my stepbrother had dropped me off that morning. She replied that if I wanted to go home, she would have somebody take me home. However I thought it would be better for me to stay at work to keep myself busy. Three of my co-workers took me to Chick Filet for lunch and kept me busy with idle chit-chat.

I told my stepbrother to be prompt to pick me up. He's a great guy, but promptness isn't his forte. When we got home, he handed me a beer with a sign on it "special bereavcement price, $4.75" and I did have to laugh. While I sipped the beer, he surfed the Internet to find me a cheap flight home for the funeral. Just at that time, the Citizen called. I told him we were looking for flights. Without hesitation, he offered to get me a flight using his frequent flier miles. Mind you, this is after only ONE date (and no, get your mind out of the gutter, I didn't do THAT) and really, he barely knew me. With the hotel phone in one hand and his cellphone in the other, he called USAirways and made a reservation for me on the spot. My problem was solved by someone I barely knew.

The viewing was small. Many of my grandmother's friends and relatives had passed away long before her. It was mostly family, and even my father (her former son-in-law) made the drive by himself to attend the viewing. This was enormously comforting to me. I can't remember when I was ever so glad to see my father. He and my grandmother were close - my father's mother passed away when he was a boy, and his father never remarried.

Also at the viewing, an employee of the funeral home was present. I imagine this was to stave off emotional family feuds, attend to the mourner's questions, etc. My 9-year old nephew saw this man standing to the side with his hands clasped in front of him and said "shouldn't he be serving food?" I suppose my nephew expected a cocktail party, with canapes on a tray! We did go out to eat after the viewing, assuaging my nephew's need for food.

The funeral was the following day. After the service, the funeral home gave the immediate family a few moments alone with the casket prior to loading it into the hearse. I didn't know how to honor a person who had been such a warm, loving influence throughout my entire life up to that point. I kneeled down, then placed my palms and forehead on the floor in the Asian traditional bow. My mother was quite moved by this. I stood up quietly and stood at attention briefly, then backed away for the undertakers to do the rest of their job. The graveside service was small and brief, and the church provided a luncheon in their community hall. Without air conditioning, we were just as eager to see it finish and change back into our shorts and t-shirts.

My grandmother lived in the same house not far from Hershey, PA since my mother was a little girl. Although the house started out along a small-town road, the road later was deemed a state thoroughfare, and becamse heavily travelled. The house seemed huge when I was a child. It had 4 rooms plus a kitchen and bathroom downstairs, and 3 rooms plus a bathroom and former kitchen upstairs. The house was filled with wonderful memories of childhood holidays, backyard barbecues, ice cream, cookies and the love of my grandmother and aunt. My college boyfriend quipped that I had a real Norman Rockwell-style grandmother.

It was almost "over the river and through the woods" to drive to her house for holidays. A stretch of suburban road rolled out into the countryside and through small Pennsylvania towns. Fields lay barren in the winter and in summertime corn grew high as harvest time neared. A right turn put one on the road leading straight to her house, past more farms and tidy homes. It's a drive I still enjoy, to this day. Everyone else in the family takes a new route to my aunt's new house, which is near my grandmother's house. With development in the past several years, the old route that took an hour takes closer to an hour and a half, but I still drive it for the memories.

I miss you, Grandma. I wish you could have met the Citizen, and the Branch and Blossom. You were such an influence on my life and made me the person I am today.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

No Viagara Needed

Spotted on construction equipment:

Sims Crane: We Get It UP!

And the crane was blue and white....