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Does this mean my trip to IKEA could be tax-deductible?

I’m making another big leap into the world of blogging and have built another website that will allow me to try my hand at something new.

I now have a review blog, where I can seek out cool stuff and great sales, review products and finds and share them with anyone who’s a shopping junkie like me. I’ll be posting whenever I find new sites and products that interest me, in hopes that it will interest you as well.  I have some great contests with prizes coming up and I hope you’ll hang with me as I figure out the best way to launch this new site.

If you’re at all intrigued, I just put up my first post EVER at the new site and it’s a pretty cool discount deal for restaurants.  Check it out, let me know what you think.

Whenever I throw this button up, you can guess that means that I’ve posted something new over there and I’m going to be searching high and low for new opportunities to share with you. Because my Mom would be so proud to know that my happy moment is when I can buy something on sale with a coupon and find out there’s a rebate and they actually owe ME money!  **sigh** Happy days.

***You can also find me over here today, guestposting for the most awesome Mommy Needs Therapy.

This Divorce Brought To You By The Nice People At Charmin

I like to think that my quirks are what make me unique.  I know that my pet peeves leave me teetering on the brink of flat out crazy.

Example.

When I eat something that comes in layers, I must eat them in layer order.  What?  No, I can’t just eat a bite. I have to eat it in some cosmically determined order.  Let that sink in.  Oh, you’ve never seen me eat a Kit Kat or a Big Mac?  Weeeeellll, it’s an experience for sure.  Let’s take the Kit Kat.  I have to take off all the chocolate first, if I can get it to come off in solid little sheets, all the better.  I then eat it one crispy layer at time.  There are 4 bars to the standard package and it can take me 20 minutes to eat them if I’m feeling particularly particular that day.

I can accept that I will have a room full of people hanging out in my nether regions during labor, I can nonchalantly shake off the fact that my baby just heaved a load of hot vomit down into the cups of my bra….I cannot just take a bite of a candy bar.  I have thrown them away before because they broke.

THAT is a quirk.

THIS is a pet peeve.

I have this thing about toilet paper.  It needs to roll towards the front.  I waste extra toilet paper so that I can be the one to change the roll to make sure it goes on the roller correctly.  I have been known to change the toilet paper in other people’s homes…and I like to think that the next time they sit down to answer nature’s call they will be thrilled by their newly arranged toilet paper.  And it will be the BEST. WIPE. EVER. Don’t judge me.

But this morning I was devastated to learn that the love of my life is actually working against me.  My beloved LIKES the toilet paper turned towards the wall.  He hid this character flaw from me for 11 years by using some excuse about the kids not rolling paper all over the bathroom floor, but I can see clearly what’s going on.  He is in my brain, stealing my sanity.

When he finished with his explanation, I looked at him full of calm and peace.

“You do know this means we’re over, right?”

He nodded.

What can I say? We had a good run.  I’ll miss him.

Sleepovers, not just for 8 year olds anymore!

I had my awesome, fantastic, outstanding, rocking good beach getaway with friends this weekend.

We always invite too many, then are disappointed because some can’t make it and it ends up being JUST the right amount of friends.

Being one who is fairly chatty and talkative…SHUT IT! I can hear you laughing!….I have never really had a hard time making casual friends.  I can small talk and chat it up with almost anyone.  But FRIENDS. Real friends. Those friends that you feel like you can call at 3 AM and cry and wail and share vulnerabilities are fewer and farther between.

I have a handful of really amazing friends that I dragged with me into this cancer world we became a part of.  Friends that I know will always hold a piece of my heart, the friends that you don’t have to speak to every day, yet you know the moment you talk, it’ll be as if time slipped away and you were never parted.

When Peyton was diagnosed I lost friends.  It was generally a lessening of contact, until it became glaringly obvious that they didn’t want my phone calls or emails or to have to hear ONE MORE TIME how overwhelmed I was.  I generously give the excuse that perhaps it was just too much for them, they didn’t know what to say and I had to forgive them for not being able to cope emotionally with the burden we had no choice of taking on.  Because you know what? It made me angry!  I was seriously irked that these people who called themselves my friends couldn’t stand by my family and me at our time of greatest need.  It was easy to be angry with them, they were a wonderfully convenient outlet.

Now, months out from that time, it still hurts that those people chose to exclude themselves from our lives.

But God provided the most incredible flood of people into our lives.  People who lived in the periphery of our lives stepped up and loved us.  People who were already friends became family.  Strangers embraced us and were strangers no more. We were blessed, we continue to be blessed every day, by these people who didn’t turn away from the turmoil that our lives became.

I could name names and turn this post into a book about the ways people have changed us through their kindness, love and faith.  But this post is about my “cancer mom friends”.

Yeah. That’s a great name, isn’t it?  The cancer moms.  Our club. It’s an exclusive club that no one wants to join.  We have a handshake and cookies.  It’s the crappiest club I’ve ever been a part of…and I was a member of Key Club AND FBLA.

Although I NEVER conceived that I would be thankful for a group of people with kids who have cancer, moms who spoke of their children in past tense, the tears and pain that would bind us together….I am.

Never to diminish the love and support and encouragement of my friends and family, because without them I would crumble, but there is nothing that compares to another person who GETS it.  IT is wordless and indefinable.  It’s the sharing of a look, a nod of the head, a hug that wraps you in the knowledge that there is understanding here.

My cancer mom friends understand what I can’t explain to someone who hasn’t been there.

When I say things like, “It just felt…so…so…I don’t know.”  They know what that is.

I can try to tell someone what it is to have a child with cancer, what that life feels like. I try hard to tell all of you, because I want you to know.  Yet, I know it’s always a failure.  It is impossible.

Tell someone who hasn’t had a child what labor is really like.

Make someone understand what you feel when you fall in love.

That’s how hard it is to define what it is to have a child diagnosed with cancer.

An explanation would require every word ever created in every language ever discovered and it would still be lacking.

So I hope that helps you understand what it means to me, in the deepest part of my heart, to have a circle of friends who understand my trademark brand of crazy.  Who chose to love me and be my friend at a time when I wasn’t loveable.

We ate.  We talked.  We laughed. Oh, did we laugh!  We stayed up too late.  We played poker badly.  We played Apples to Apples (which is a fabulous game, go get it NOW and wait for the post, because it deserves one all its own).  We talked about our kids, school, husbands, work, plans, hopes, and dreams. We drank everything that wasn’t nailed down a lot. There was chocolate. It was perfect.

I have pictures. I will be sharing them.  Well, some of them, I’ll be selective….to protect the innocent…. because I know there are some people who would CUT ME if I posted a few of those pictures.  * cough Renee cough *

My Weekend Plans

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WHOOO HOOOO!

Itunes Killed the Radio Star

I try not to do the whole “when I was your age” thing on my kids. Because it doesn’t really have any effect on them. And? It makes me feel old. And that? Is not cool.

But today, while driving down the street, pumping music the way only a mom with 3 kids in a minivan can….which is fairly lame…Peyton had a revelation.

The radio sucks.

This epiphany came when I had to tell her that I couldn’t restart a song because it was playing on the radio and not on CD or the IPod.

What?!! My musical needs cannot be met RIGHT.THIS.INSTANT? This will not do.  Heads will roll!

Peyton thinks all music actually COMES from Itunes! She thinks that Itunes is a band.  THE band. And me?  I am the roadie that makes it all possible. One $.99 download at a time.
I’m listening to her pitch a hissy, thinking back to my own music listening childhood.

Let me know if this sounds familiar. Then, I’ll know how old YOU are.

Sitting in front of a radio. With another radio in your hands, but THIS one has a tape cassette recorder.  Waiting to hear the beginning strains of your favorite song come on under the dj’s voice…you SNAP into action, hitting the PLAY and RECORD button at the same time so that you can finallllly have a copy of this song!  Only to discover that you only had enough tape to get through the middle of the first chorus of “Total Eclipse of the Heart”.  Tears. Flip tape over. Wait another 2 hours.