Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Attention Little Reyes Sister gawkers: this gratuitously cute picture is for you.




Lydia received a medal for her participation in her school's reading program yesterday and I got to go the ceremony. That makes me happy. I'm a firm believer in being involved in our children's lives - all part of my plan to raise decent human beings and avoid costly drug rehab down the road. She's an excellent reader, and amazes me when she reads words that I know she's never seen before. What is that? No one is happier than I am that she can read a bit more independently - I've read just about all of the Mary Kate & Ashley mysteries that I care to in one lifetime.

Jenna, in just the last day or two, has gone from her happy, one-word utterances (puppy, ah-gees , galockalette ), to these very long-winded diatribes, complete with hand motions and furrowed brow. I wish to God I knew what she was saying.

I really must go, for I have the Idol elimination to skim through. And prayers to say for Richie Sambora. Seriously, Richie? Wow.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Never Say Goodbye

My Dear Little Reyes Sisters,

A couple of nights ago, mama had the awesome opportunity to go to the Bon Jovi concert - So awesome! Daughtry was the opening act. Lydia, you know Chris Daughtry from American Idol when you were 5. He was the bald, rocker guy.



So for a few magical hours, mama was 17 years old again, magically transported through loud music to Spring Break 1987. For some reason, Grandma Dude sent me and my cousin (the one in Duluth that isn't nice to me anymore) and my friend Jody to Duluth for the week. Now, a couple of things about the trip are hazy in my memory. First, I can't remember why we wanted to go to Duluth, and second, I can't remember why Grandma Dude let us go -- in her car no less. But in any case, we left Monday morning in Grandma Dude's 1984 Mazda 626. (Seriously, what was Grandma Dude left driving all week? She had a FULL-TIME JOB for heaven's sake!) Our destination was Uncle Rick's house, where apparently we had been invited to stay for the week. Joe-Michael lived there and so I imagine he was part of the reason we went in the first place. Joe-Michael was not on spring break that particular week, and instead had to go to school everyday. The big draw for us 3 girls was probably Joe-Michael's leather jacket-wearing, cigarette-smoking, long-haired friends. (Things are becoming clearer now.) I think I ended up with a crush on one of them -- but his name fails me.



We spent the week driving around in Grandma Dude's car, picking up Joe-Michael and his friends mid-day at school, dropping them off at some Dirt-Ball Industrial Arts class that they were enrolled in that took place somewhere off-campus (maybe DAVTI?). I can't look back 21 years later and tell you that anything special or earth-shattering happened that week. (Although to this day, if you ask Grandma Dude, she will tell you that she is convinced that something nefarious involving us and her car occurred while we were gone. I would guess that if pressed, she would say she has imagined everything from a minor traffic violation, all the way up to and including the mid-forest burial of someone's corpse. Go ahead, ask her.) But my point in telling this rather mundane tale is this: I wasn't always perfect as a youngster, but I wasn't all that bad, either. I used to think that as a mother, I had to prevent you from doing everything. For example, if I let my guard down for even one second, and let you make even the tiniest mistake, that automatically meant that when you are 16, we'll have to drag you home from a crack house in the inner city. What I have come to realize, however, is that it might be better if I let you drive around (insert regional city of your choice here - for me it was Duluth) with 9 people in a sub-compact car for a week doing nothing in particular, possibly getting pulled over by the Highway Patrol one afternoon.



What I hope is that we can provide you with enough guidance and boundaries to make you strong, and that you posess enough independent spirit to test those boundaries from time to time, and that in the end, we all come out okay on the other side. Does that make sense? And then one day, you guys will be grown up, with families of your own, and you'll get the chance to go see a concert of someone you really like, and you'll scream, and clap and sing at the top of your lungs and just generally make fools of yourselves. It's going to be great!

Monday, March 17, 2008

Dude, Where's My Grandma?


I've only been at this for a few days, and OY! the guilt about not updating already. Wait til my sister gets wind of this thing. She thought she was adept at pestering me for pictures before...


I'm home today, recuperating from some road repair work done by the world's greatest OB-Gyn on Friday (nuff said.) My mom was kind enough to come down for a day or two to help out with things, and last night pronounced me "Not ready to go back to work yet." So, I thought, I'll take this extra day, deal with the minor, yet very inconvenient complications of my recent prah - seeeeed - yah, and then march back into the office tomorrow, absent note from my mom clutched tightly in my fist, ready to give it all I've got. What's that? I'm 38 years old, why do you ask?


My mom was also kind enough to take LRS #1 (Little Reyes Sister #1) back home with her, leaving peace, quiet, and LRS #2 wandering around hollering "Dude!" as she peeks in every nook & cranny of the house trying to locate grandma. You see, a few months ago, grandma entertained LRS #2 by saying "DOOOODE" in the funniest voice she could muster. This left an impression on LRS #2, whose brain & speech development soaked up this exercise like the little sponge that she is. And now as a result, LRS #2 is using "grandma" or rather "bramma" & "dooode" interchangably.


So I'm off now to continue convalescing. Let me know what you think of the place.


Thursday, March 13, 2008

Hellooooooo Internets!

Ah, the first post. Man, they'll let anyone write stuff on the internet, won't they? Thanks for inviting me to blog, internet. I figure, I've got vast experience reading blogs, surely this qualifies me to actually write one. This will be a place where, in 20 years, our children can hopefully look back and view, in excrutiating detail, the chronicles of their formative years.