Saturday, June 30, 2007

shameless plugging




Anyone want to check out my husband's myspace? There's some nice songs they just recorded themselves, though not with the drummer - the album master copy should be ready this week then off to the printers'! Very exciting.


And a real launch gig should take place towards the end of the summer/september. Will I be able to bring the baby?



Friday, June 29, 2007

Rembrandt's Woman Bathing

I am sorry, everyone/anyone, I have nothing to say today!

Trying to think of something interesting and just can't.... oh, I know, I'll try and find a pretty picture instead.
My daughter thinks this is a picture of me! Which I find flattering. Though when I pointed it out in the Rembrandt book my father had just given me, his wife piped up 'She has horrible legs!' Hmm. I wrote a poem about that, which I may yet post...

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

powerscourt springs




Alright, for this post I will not complain once. I have such compulsion to moan - well, more like, I'm much more likely to write when I'm miserable about something.


So yesterday I went up to the Powerscourt Springs 'health farm' for the first time. And today I'm home 24 hours later feeling pleasantly clean, sleepy, relaxed and refreshed.


I swam, sat in the jacuzzi, which is possibly my favourite thing to do in the world - were I massively wealthy, my number one luxury would be a huge big (solar powered) hot tub an I would be permanently pruned and unavailable - had a massage, lay around reading, ate a nice dinner, though the wine did not agree with me, even though I tried hard! I wandered down to the 'Tranquility Room' which is a darkened room with relaxing music, a fish tank and leather loungers and blankets - even though it was empty it smelled funny ( I think of someones recent massage oil) so I retreated and tried again today when I was sleepy full of people BREATHING which is not my favourite thing so unfortunately the tranquility room did not live up to its title for me - a nice idea though.


What else? I did a meditation this morning that was very good (we should all be doing this every day) and an aqua aerobics class that was FAB! I remember doing one once long ago and thinking it was for old ladies (I prefer to swim laps with comparative speediness) but heavily pregnant with SPD it was perfect, I haven't moved that much in weeks! It felt great.


Then I had a nice salady lunch with a most delicious baked potato (butter salt pepper -you have to love the simpler things in life). I scared the 40 something pregnant manageress with tales of nasty hospital practice but that's what people get for telling me I'm brave to have a homebirth from now on... and dessert was the most incredibly delicious almond tart with créme anglaise - I must find out how to make both!


So I've read Janet Evanovich's 11th Plum novel, which was fun, and half of Tracy Chevalier's new one with William Blake in - though I'd like it to be more about him, I might have to search out a biography.


And just wait - it all gets better - I talked to my wonderful godmother who recently gave me a birthday cheque that enabled us to get our garden done after 5 years! And I mentioned that perhaps the cleaning fairies would come and do the house while I was away - she rang me later to see if I wanted her to come over with her cleaner/student/friend while I was out and clean the house! And they did! And apparently she only commented on two hideously unhygienic things, the tray under my sink drainer (well, that's how it came) and the juicer I never use which I keep beside the cooker and is therefore covered in layers of grease and dust.


So I've come home to a house that is just spic and span!


And - broadband came!!


So the world is my oyster. Best of all my daughter has had a wonderful time with her and is disgusted that I'm home and he's gone off to practice. Hurray!





Thursday, June 21, 2007

withdrawal sypmyoms

Oh My God!

We're switcing broadband provider to Eirocom - so they cut off my original provider without telling me, then I got a form in the post days later asking for my permission to do so. Apparently the process takes ten days - but they cut you off on the first rather than 9th day???
they don't seem to understand my confusion at their practices - still no sign of the new modem...

The phone has also been out, and I had to pay €75 to fix the washing machine. What next? My pelvis, I fear. I have to go buy a support belt - a physio appointment would take six weeks through the hospital, by which time I'll have had the baby!

Don't they all understand, I want to buy posh nappy bags and blankets and stuff!

Anyway, I miss blogging, gmail, the internet generally, my poor husband is going nuts because he can't check his and bebo (he now has Bruce Springsteen, Bryan Adams, Bellx1 and TheyMightBe Giants as friends!). I think the computer has addictive rays, definitely.

I am knitting more though, and not staying up so late. Thoug hlast night, my lovely daughter called me about 2 and went to the loo - I came out to check on her, and she shouted at me to go away, then I desperately needed a wee, so she got all angry and then started to wail when I went back to bed and shut the door - I was up and down three times, while she alternatingly abused me and then wept because she wanted a hug and a kiss - back to bed, agonising with hips trying to get comfortable, can't breathe with chest cold, got the heart-constriction thing and couldn't get comfortable, tried hypno cd which slowly works, but then I ahd to get up to her twice, she started coughing, gave her cough syrup. Was finally drifting off when she came in about a bad dream and wanted me to sleep with her. I ended up in tears of exhaustion and frustration and had to go downstairs to watch Star Trek Generations til 4 in the morning.

Life is just not quite smooth at the moment. Sleep, money, relationship. Urg.

On the plus side I tidied my bedroom - next hall and de-mould downstairs bathroom, yay.

Hopefully back soon. x

Sunday, June 17, 2007

craptacular



My cousin described the timing of my husband's failed bonus as 'craptacular'. I suppose there's never a good time to miss out on cash, but given that the birth of our baby is presumably going to be no more than a twice in a lifetime event for us, the timing is indeed pretty craptacular.

I think I've fallen in love with this word. It makes so much sense. And if it follows from 'spectacular', then we must be able to have a 'craptacle' as well as a spectacle - though it sounds more like 'receptacle' - which would suggest a container for holding crap rather than a shitty sight... I suppose one could also then wear 'craptacles', which would presumably be the pessimistic opposite of rose tinted spectacles.

God, I love this.

Does anyone want to play Scrabble with me? No-one in my life likes Scrabble, it's so sad...


PS I just noticed that I put the original word in the intro as 'carptacular', which might be exciting to any anglers who happen to be reading... no? Oh, ok.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

waiting

Look what us poor mothers and the poor babies have to go through: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xath6kOf0NE&mode=related&search=

It's hard to get my head around the idea that in a matter of weeks (god willing!) I 'll be giving birth to this baby currently stretching inside me. I think with my first I was excited and nervous and also so not ready for it to happen. now I'm ready in one sense (in the sick of being pregnant sense) though not in the preparing house for new arrival sense. At least the husband dispatched the evil and mysterious smell in the hall, where I plan to erect the birth pool (though that's the wrong word for such a lovely oval inflatable thing as it is) with the help of Vanish carpet cleaner. Then I realised he'd spilled pool water on the place where the binbag I'd placed by the door had leaked old pickle water and bin juice - bleh. Baking powder not an efficient cleaner in that particular case!

I digress. Unpleasantly.

So now I'm feeling very calm and welcoming - I think thanks to the hypnobirthing - any time I tend towards a hint of thinking 'Oh my god, labour, pushing, pain, what if something goes wrong??' a feeling of confident calm sweeps beatifically over me. But it's still odd to imagine that it's going to happen. In some ways I don't quite believe it.

And then what about after? I don't have the same sense of connection to this baby that I had with my daughter - at this stage I knew her already, that she was a girl, that she had an incredibly strong will. This one seems more of a mystery, I suppose because I had the time and space to really pay attention?

So what will my labour turn out to be?

I hope it will be at night.
Calm and quiet, if like the last one that will be fine, it was manageable.
I want the time to get to use the pool!
To avoid pushing and breathe the baby out it would be soooo nice.
I want to feel supported, not alone during the last stage.
I want to avoid tearing at all this time - good management of last stage.
I won't be afraid to expel the placenta this time!

And like last time, I'm looking forward to getting into my bed, with fresh linen, and snuggling with all of us and the baby and having a glass of prosecco (apparently good for breastfeeding! and a slice of cake - not my MIL's flavourless apple tart. Or her, for a few hours after.) And this time the baby goes in a sling, poor thing. No motherinlaw-erly poking of the newborn this time!

Here are some beautiful videos of births: http://www.birthasweknowit.com/trailer.html

wanted - employment


My husband has just been shafted by his work, and not in the good way. Does anyone have a position going for an efficient manager, experienced in retail with a good knowledge of wine (and other alcohol) and grocery.


To be honest I think he'd be a great consultant, he's very good at increasing productivity and introducing sensible time and money saving ideas but sadly he doesn't have he qualifications to actually set himself up as such.


Alternatively, if you're in the music business, he's got a wonderful album to sell...

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

magic spells




My friend once sent me a book of spells - 'Earth Mother Magic' by Judika Illes. Fabulous.


There are lots of relevant things to try in it - some thing s that catch my eye as I flip through -


Malachite attached to the baby's bed encourage sound sleep - I'll be trying that, I'll try anything!


Sweet Sibling Spell - you put a few grains of sugar on the newborn's hand before their siblings meet them and the elder siblings lick the sugar off! This prevents jealousy.


So that sounds nice.


But what I'm really interested in is the Money Magic! (Not monkey magic - remember him? Available on dvd for a surreal laugh!)


There are many money herbs, you can plant a money garden. Or burn alfalfa and scatter the ashes around the property - or carry them in a little bag, to ease financial woes. Walnuts added to the bag will enhance power!


Apparently fenugreek seeds encourage wealth - I knew it was a milk supply booster, but I like the idea that it increases yield generally! You can scatter the seeds discretely around your house, or soak them in your rinse water before cleaning.


Oshun Prosperity incense.

Brown Sugar

Five dried Orange leaves

Orange zest


Pound in a mortar and pestle until roughly pulverised. Place in a cast iron pan and set aflame

Let burn for a minute or so, then smother the flames - it should smoke fairly heavily, allow aroma to fill the room

Offer some pure spring water to Oshun and tell your what you need (Who is Oshun? Anyone?)


You can also make Prosperity Pot pourri, a Money Dream Pillow, Money Magnet Oil, a milk and honey Prosperity bath, a Money Salt Scrub and much more.


But my favourite is the money miracle mantra - everyday you wake up and say 'A money miracle happens to me today'. I'm not sure that it's worked for me, but I suggested it to one girl who had two nice lottery wins (nothing amazing, but enough to cheer her up!) shortly afterwards.


So get chanting, and let me know if you have any results!





Tuesday, June 12, 2007

urg...

How much worse does it get? I am either suffering an allergic reaction (due to being smug about not having hayfever?) or I have a 'summer cold'.

I have much explosive sneezing, a blocked and dripping nose, a tickly throat and itchy eyes. Bleh! I thought I was feeling bad before.

Is it alright to complain when you're 8 months pregnant in 21' weather? Tonight I was attempting to make dinner and was trying to do potatoes at the sink - my bump was leaning into the sink and hurting me while my back was killing me from the bending forward. My feet were hot and aching and I just felt so pathetic, sore and depressed. I expressed this and my husband said nothing, and then I followed up with saying 'how am I going to deal with another four weeks of this?'. My husband's response was to snap in that hard-done by, irritable whiney voice 'Alright, I'll do it'. Which wasn't the point at all.

Why is it so hard for men to extend some comfort or sympathy? It's got to the stage where if I complain, express emotion or God forbid, anger, he gets furiously stressed and angry. I feel like I've been crying for a week. I have been. Yes, we are having financial trouble but it's my financial trouble too. Is his stress a reason to make me into part of his problem, the enemy?

He has always countered my complaints about how he acts with warnings about how bad it could be - all the scummy, alcoholic partners and fathers he has seen in his line of work (selling alcohol, not social work!) But I've never seen that as relevant - I wouldn't be with those men in the first place, why bother comparing. From reading Rollercoaster and talking to various people, I'm coming to the conclusion that my husband's 'niceguy' status is no longer cause for celebration. He's no better than the other good guys out there and I think he may be worse than many of them. Or he just doesn't like me any more. I suppose he might be very different if he was with someone else.

Does anyone else have a marriage that exists without emotional support? What do you do instead? So you just live without it? Is that do-able or realistic? I really never want to put myself or my children through a separation, but sometimes the idea of years of loneliness and lack of closeness stretching out ahead of me terrify me - as a colleague once termed it, 'what an appalling vista'. I wonder if there is a way to get what you need from a relationship, from outside that relationship, if you are still in it, if you see what I mean.

A friend suggested she gets great support from friends she has made recently, but she's a case in point - she is busy with her own family and her own responsibilities and is rarely available for casual socialising, let alone real emotional support. Which is how most adults are these days, we're not teenagers anymore, I can't believe anyone really wants a friend to fetch up in tears on their doorstep at 10 pm on a weeknight looking for succour. People have their own lives to live with partners and children to take care of. It's a closed circle, in my experience. Ideas?

Monday, June 11, 2007

a mixed bag of complaining



Where to start? I'm having a horrible, hormonal few days. When I have marital discord it affects everything - how I treat my daughter, how I cope with little things, and combined with 8 month pregnancy hormones, I just can't cope.

I collected my daughter from school today and she got furious because she wanted more of the cake her friend had had for her birthday, and HIT ME IN THE STOMACH when she couldn't, resulting in me getting cross and shoving her out the door, like some sort of lower class alco-ma. In front of the manager of the Montessori - will I get reported to social services?
Then we went and I hung up curtains I'd washed and dyed in my MIL's machine as my washing machine HAS BROKEN AGAIN despite being fixed in October. €70 call out fee. Then I went through the main street to bring her to her party - traffic mistake, 20 mins instead of 5 - only to find I was in the wrong place, I'd failed to read the invite properly - and not only that, we got there , the fun was over and the kids were finishing their tea, it had started at 2 not 3, and we got there at 3.30. Everyone had wondered where I was ... why do I not have a sign around my neck asking for assistance from the general public? My daughter was quite philosophical about it and sat down to eat someone elses discarded chips and sausage (oh god! the guilt!), but I came v close to bursting into tears. Still, we made the cake and she had a play buy herself afterwards so she didn't seem too bothered. I hope I don't make a habit of this kind of crap, once I have two.
My MIL's sister and nieces are staying , one for her 40th birthday. I thought we were invited to dinner, but it turned out to be 'salad and bits' after they'd had theirs, except they were still eating when we got there. Salad and potatoes... why in the name of god were were excluded from that? So we sat and watched them eat, and I ate a bowl of crisps afterwards, having had no dinner, (and all the nibbles were sausage based) - neither of the girls wanted the nibbles as the birthday girl is weight watching and they were all stuffed with dinner - my MIL who eats herself sick couldn't finish her dinner (ha!) or partake of birthday cake, as she'd had TWO SLICES OF CAKE earlier. In the words of Lois from Malcolm in the Middle, 'WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE??!' I feel vaguely foolish, because the husband brought Champagne and I bought a present, expecting an actual birthday party. Odd.
I seem to have developed SPD, symphysis pubis disorder - when your pelvis begins to separate a little in pregnancy - woohoo. I'm not as bad as many people get - lots end up on crutches and a woman in my Pilates class had previously actually broken her pelvis with it (urghhh) during labour and was warned it could go at any time on her THIRD pregnancy. I heard today she had a 10lb baby and was fine right up til it crowned, when her pelvis separated again - though everyone was amazed she made it that far and it seems to be down to Pilates. She's also out of hospital under our Pilates teacher's care, and up and about!
So far mine just means it hurts when I stand after sitting, and sleeping is really uncomfortable - I really feel it when I get up, I hobble like the old lady in the picture above. STUPID pregnancy related ailments!

Mmmmmm

Copelia Apple and mango juice makes lovely icepops - I bet if you mixed in some yoghurt it'd taste just like Soleros....

Sunday, June 10, 2007

evil burgers!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYyDXH1amic

Ok, just watched this on keynoter's blog and thought I'd spread the word. Damn, I'm so glad I'm a vegetarian!

Saturday, June 9, 2007

oh bugger.

I put the post in the wrong place - there's the important one below, but I don't know how to rearrange it. So I've made my blog messy, and it was so pretty and pink. Grr Arg! So please look below the baby shower one!

Friday, June 8, 2007

lazy me - meantime post


Durn it - cartoon bubble reads 'Oh Wow!! Another cosmetic surgery gift certificate! And a three year supply of prozac!' and the caption reads 'Just another LA baby shower' - just to save you squinting...



Oops, I have a post I want to write but it's a hard one so I haven't done it yet - this is my typical m.o. - if something is difficult, put it off, but don't do anything else in the mean time because you're waiting to do this.






So this is nothing in particular, in the mean time.






I had a lovely baby shower night out on Wednesday - we went to the Market Bar, me and 3 women I met at my ante natal classes with my first daughter - we met up for a year afterwards, petty much once a week - it was initially for post natal yoga, then the yoga finished and we kept the coffee - our ante natal/yoga teacher had suggested that the best thing you can have when you have a new baby is a friend who knows all about it, to whose house you can go, and sit in their kitchen, feed your baby and cry... absolutely great advice.






So another friend came too, a very old friend's fiancee, who bought me the nicest pressie - a Skip Hop diaper pouch 'that turns any bag into a diaper bag!!' which is very cool. Another friend who is getting married is getting me Burt's Bees goodies in the states, mmm, and I also got luscious Lush goods for moi (though my daughter is feeling pretty avaricious about them) and a beautiful orchid. Lovely pressies! I hate to say it, but being the Taurus that I am, I do so love pressies. And my birthday was a wee bit of a let this year...






And the other friend who came out, I felt sorry for as she's neither a mother nor married and I was worried we'd bore her to tears - we do talk about our children a lot - and worst of all she was driving so she couldn't even deaden the dullness with alcohol. And she had a cold! But thank so for always coming through for me, darling!









The reason this is a postworthy event is that I don't have a gang of mates and I'm short on women I even see regularly - a night out has become a major event for me, especially as my husband has worked in an off-licence since I met him, so even in my early 20s he was never around for Fri/Sat nights out, and I turned into an old married lady far too quickly - we've been living together since I was 18....






But it felt so nice - especially because of the pregnancy - to be in a bar! - Drinking beer (albeit non alcoholic beer, hey, who cares)!






I have to do this more often, I think it would make me a nicer person.















Thursday, June 7, 2007

My mother



This is sort of a response to midgetwangler's post about her parents aging. I can so understand the feeling of fear of the parental role reversing. My husband has felt quite responsible for his parents since he was young - I think he started his first job at the age of about 13, bought his mother the electric shower, gas oven etc. whereas I come for an overpriviledged, middle class background which equipped me for nothing but high minded conversation, I think.

My mother died almost 5 years ago, on the 28th of June. The short version of the story is that she got sick a week or so before my wedding, and died a week later, not having been able to attend. It was a horrible, fraught, bewildering, agonising time. She had had breast cancer for 8 years, but being a homoeopath refused to go to hospital with it, and in fairness had 8 years of good, pretty normal health. Few people knew about this, and I followed her wishes and sort of left her to it. She had no interest in being a cancer patient, in being treated as such by family, friends or above all, doctors. She had no idea she would get so sick, so fast, in fact I think she thought her health was improving. I'm sure it's hard for a lot of people to understand, and certainly many have judged her for the way she managed her illness, but she felt, and I think it's true, that if she had gone to hospital she would have been dead three months after getting a proper diagnosis - a combination of fear of the diagnosis itself and of the way she would have been treated. I'm not sure she would have changed that if she could do it all over again.

We had a very close relationship, and after my father started seeing someone else when I was 15, she had few people to lean on. In my first year of college, after I'd moved out, he decided he wanted her to leave, and she moved to another house, in deep shock and grief the whole thing. her life changed a lot, and she didn't really know how to handle it.



I gave her a lot of support, though not really enough, and she in turn was my confident, Friend, homoeopath. She was really my go-to person.

She knew a huge amount about a huge amount of things and had an analytical and searching mind. In many ways she was better at being cerebral than emotional, which could be difficult a times. But we talked almost every day. She spoiled me too, bought me lots of things, treated me on my birthday, helped me out if I needed a little extra money. She was enormously generous, and thoughtful.

A year or so ago, my then vice principal got a call from his own mother saying she was in Aldi and they had that wine he liked, and would he like a case. That reminded me so much of my own mother! I miss being thought of, being in someones mind as special, being considered. I so miss having someone really care about me on my birthday and make an effort to make me happy.

I found it very hard to come to terms with the idea of having a baby without my mother there in her emotional capacity as mother, and as my homoeopath. And yet I somehow managed to get pregnant two months after she had died (yes, why not run the entire gamut of human stressful experience in a couple months: buy a house, get married, lose a parent and get pregnant, all over the course of one summer, why stretch it out?).

It was such a horrible, hard time, and after my daughter was born I felt my grief even more acutely. I have a little wooden hairbrush my mother bought me once, and when I asked her what it was for she said, in an uncharacteristically cutesy voice, 'It's for brushing the soft little hair of a soft little baby, what else?'. She would have loved my daughter so much, and been such a support. I think she would have understood her very well. I hope on some plane she can see her, and can know who and what she is, it seems unbearable to think that she is just completely gone, or separate from this world now.

Four and five years have made such a difference to the whole grief process. This pregnancy is very healing, it's so different to my last - it's planned and managed, I don't have the whole terrible hysteria over where and how to give birth, I have a midwife who is going to look after me in her famously motherly fashion after the birth, so I feel, well, looked after, cared for, safe, I hope. Mothered.

But to come back to my original point, I lost my mother before our roles switched, though to a certain extent I did provide a lot of emotional support for her, especially as she was without a partner. I feel so guilty now, for all the ways in which I was selfish, that I didn't look after her enough. But things are how they are. I suppose we should all take care how we raise our children, perhaps you get back what you created, in your later years!

Perhaps it's easier to not have to undergo that process though, I do wonder about that - I wish for my mother so much now, during my pregnancy, but what if she were here and were sick now, or undergoing chemotherapy, or simply getting infirm? That would be an extra stress and pressure in my life, that many find it so hard to deal with, with all the best will in the world. Obviously I would chose to have her here in almost any capacity other than invalided and sick in a hospital, or whatever, but it might be no easier than not having her at all.

We were both young - she was only 57 when she died, I was 26, which felt pretty young to me. I wasn't ready! But maybe you never are, I don't know. My father's mother is going to be ninety in a couple months - imagine having your mother for that long - but she said yesterday that it breaks her heart to see him squinting to read without his reading glasses, or to see how old her and his brother are getting, greying, or balding or going thick around the middle, with back trouble etc. There's a different angle - do I want to see my daughter grow into an old person? I can't really imagine it yet.

My granny says she wouldn't wish old age on anyone. But it's hard to see dying young as a mercy nevertheless.

It is very hard to be motherless. It leaves a huge gap, a foundering, lost feeling, if I'm being honest. I feel the urge to go out and find myself a mother-substitute. it would be so nice to have parents I could rely on, to feel like there is someone there with answers, and unconditional love. People whose job it is to look after me. I suppose that's a romanticised view, but I'm not trying to be adult with this post. Of course I have a lot of other angles on the whole thing. I'm the mother in my real life, god help my poor daughter. I wonder if I'll ever stop feeling like a freaked out child underneath?

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

coming over all Lynne Truss - ooer

I'm a secondary English teacher and this year have been correcting schoolwork rather than teaching it. Among the multitudes of grammatical and stylistic errors the youth of Eire today delight in, is a tendency, especially among teenage girls, to overuse the exclamation mark.

So, an essay that should be entitles 'A Personal response to the poetry of Sylvia Plath' becomes 'A Personal Response to the Poetry of Sylvia Plath!!'

Or what should be a college going boy's diary entry reads as

'Dear Diary! You won't believe the day I've had!!?? I can't handle my parents any more, I 'm going to kill them!! My dad, is like, such a loser!!!'

Hardened criminals, learned professors, they're all morphed into teen valley girls, or worse still, the exclamation marks crop up in the middle of supposedly academic essays, completely ruining the tone. Are they all on coke? Do they think that much enthusiasm is endearing??"!! Don't they realise it just makes them sound hyper, silly and a little bit crazy?!!!

Oh, I do like to rant about how the youth of today are losing the plot in terms of literacy, but that was not actually the purpose of my post - no - this fear of exclamation mark overuse was actually my glossing over my last couple wondering if I too, might possibly suffer from the same disease? Am I also abusing the exclamation mark? I hope I haven't used a double, or god forbid triple series of them, but they're in there alright. Does this mean my inner bubbly teenager is actually still in there? What should I do with her?

Right, make her babysit....

Monday, June 4, 2007

Can I get back there? Resolutions!

A year after I had my daughter, I got asked to be a bridesmaid for my lovely cousin - in California. This gave me he kick up the as I needed to go to Weight Watchers for the fist time, having been overweight what I've always thought was my whole life (a look back at photos shows me I actually wasn't the fat kid I thought I was, and that the year I moved in with my now husband, at 18, I actually got pretty svelte, but had no weighing scales at the time and managed not to notice! Damn! Then we moved into town the following year into a basement flat in close proximity to Domino's and what's that Oldest Chipper in Dublin Chipper? And we ate whole family sized bars of chocolate all the time, not to mention the Dunkin donuts and sambos I had for lunch daily - god (A bad year, which I never really recovered from).

Anyway, even for my wedding, too scared to go to Weight Watchers, I did the gym, cycling and healthy eating combo and lost about 2 stone, but I still look fat in my wedding photos - but WW (wibbly wobblies as a friend called it) did the trick and I ended up looking pretty damn fabulous for this trip to the States - I just saw a lovely happy photo of myself with great hair, great skin and a lovely smile in San Diego zoo, ironically sitting on a bronze hippo! And it's such a nice photo!

Sadly, after returning from the holiday I lost the drive a bit and slowly slipped back into bad habits. And the summer before last I ran a cookie and cheesecake stall for a couple of months, and that was my undoing!

But this post is meant to be positive, not a list of everything I ever ate in my life - if I did it before I can do it again, right? Sure, it'll be four years and one extra child later. Sure, I won't be in my twenties anymore. But if I did it before, I can do it again. Because it's such a great feeling to look at a photo and not quite recognise yourself - and to really, really love yourself in it. That's what I want achieve. I've eaten enough ice cream during this pregnancy to last me for the next few years (Though I have to admit I succumbed to 33% off in Superquinn tonight, and had some Phish Food meltier than usual and OMG! But that's not the point - I don't need it!) Actually, it's funny, for a while there I had a scary voice in my head urging me to buy ice cream and to make repeated trips to Lidl for creme filled brioche, ice cream and cake. Thank God that part of the pregnancy is over now, it was scary.

So here is my resolution for the next couple years:

find the girl in the photo -

and

Buy the Writers' Yearbook and start sending stuff to Children's book agents in the UK, while summoning up the balls to start practicing illustrations instead of being too scared to try!

Along with being a woman who parents peacefully - I want to find alternatives to shouting at my poor daughter, which I do far too much. And I want my family to start eating five fruitnveg a day before we all get scurvy.

That'll do for one night's resolve.

Anyone else want to share?

Sunday, June 3, 2007

celebrity sighting!


I had a lovely lunch in Avoa Handweavers today, with the husband and daughter. Sadly, with the baby taking up almost all the room I have within, and the roulade I had being so cream-cheesy, I couldn't do it justice. Nice all the same - I would recommend blackberry and raspberry Amé to anyone!

However, this was not the highlight of my meal! As we were eating, my husband pointed out a lost looking Damien Rice on the wander for a seat, with his tray and a sylvan brunette in tow! Curses! If only my daughter hadn't refused to go eat lunch in her Granny's as we had thought she might, we could've had them at our table - as it was they sat down with someone just behind us. If only My husband had his finished album to hand, as opposed to only one rough copy in the car! (He has been playing this for various selected lucky people, who have to sit in the car and listen to the whole thing without speaking til the end - like a sort of sound booth experience). We joked about asking DR if he'd spare 38 minutes to come out to the car and listen to something. We could have toured Wicklow and dropped him back after - what an experience, he could have made a concept album about it!

Sadly my husband and I know well enough that it's not really on to harass celebrities while they're having their lunch on a bank holiday weekend. That you most likely wouldn't get a gig out of it - and yet I can't help feeling we somehow missed an opportunity...

For those of you who are less noble minded here is the gossip - he looked a bit thin and peaky (well it is the Sunday of a BH weekend), it might be pure fancy on my part but I could have sworn he was having the vegetarian nut-loaf (I like to think he would) and the cailín he was with was as you would expect, slight, petite and pretty, with long brown hair and a fetching crochéd floppy beret. I feel guilty saying this, but oh well, it's not that often I see a celebrity and it's not like I took a photo (damn!) or called a trashy mag.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

8 year old ladies

Grr! Lost yesterday's post due to fiddling round with photographs that wouldn't load. Will try again at some point...
it was about being sick of being pregnant and I can't see that improving over the next few weeks!

My daughter had her swimming lesson today, and as she was changing out of her fabulously cute Dora togs (she looks like a forties starlet, hey have a little frill, though they sadly ride up her bum a bit!) a girl getting changed caught my eye, because she was spraying herself with Impulse.

Well do I remember the edifying experience of Impulse (remember - Men Just Can't Help Reacting to It?)- an early teen rite of passage for most of us, I'd say.

But this little girl was maybe 8 or 9. She had on pedal pusher leggings, little white sandals with bows and high heels, which were strangely girlish and grown up at the same time. First she sprayed herself from head to foot with the Impulse, then she had a tube of some sort of moisturiser she rubbed on, the squirted some sort of Dove something or rather in to her long hair, all with this adult self absorption.

SO much product! So few years! It just seemed so jaded somehow - there was no suggestion of practice, like us and the blue eyeshadow, or my daughter and hand cream or nail varnish. She was so serious and un-gleeful about it all. Plus the fact that she's having so many extra years of absorbing chemicals into her little, developing self.

It made me feel sad, and nervous, somehow.

Hopefully I'll have a poem to post, if I can find it - but will have to get back to you on that one...