Posts Filed Under queen b.

Dear Honey, this is your Mother speaking.

Your father started a game of “Tit for Tat” with me once. Sadly it ended with him having all the crotches cut out of his underwear.

He discovered his dilemma while dressing for work, not enough time to hit the store for a new pair.  Hmmmm???  My bright boy decided to use safety pins to piece a pair back together for the day.  Being a safety conscious sort of fellow he took the extra precaution of using a pliers to squeeze the heads securely shut so there would be no chance of having to explain a puncture wound to his bad boys in the emergency room.  Off to work he went.  “Ha-ha, very funny!” he quipped as he headed out the door.

“Tit” came later in the morning as he bent over to adjust lumbar position on his office chair.  Apparently, a small portion of his scrotum got pinched in the spring portion of the safety pin.  I am told that he screamed like a woman possessed, jumped out of his chair (sending it flying across the room), grabbed his privates (in front of two nurses, one other Doctor and the Hospital Administrator) and ran from the clinic with tears running down his face, in the general direction of the men’s room.

Smart enough to graduate from medical school, but stupid enough to try to play Tit for Tat with Queen B - hah!

When he recovered, your 57 year old father headed to Wal-Mart – “commando” – to buy a cheap package of Fruit of the Looms to get him through the rest of the day.

Then came “Tat”.   Did you know that unwashed underwear have some sort of fabric starch on them when they arrive here from China?  Either did he! Unfortunately your father found that the skin in his private region reacted negatively to this Chinese starch.  Another visit to the Men’s room, and an in-depth self examination followed. He had completely broken out in an itchy, seeping rash by early afternoon.  Convinced that his cut from the morning was now infected with what we like to call the “Chinese starchy terminal testicular infection” he headed to the office of one of his Medical colleagues. Presumably, in the Infectious Disease Department.

Love from your Mother,

Queen B.

posted on October 15, 2011 in queen b.
by Honey B.
with 2 Comments

Dear Mother, this is your Daughter speaking.

Apology? And groveling?! What kind of saintly mother do you think you were, Mother Teresa?

Ok, you know you started this blog advice business, by calling me out on my professions of organic-ness, because I had a freezer full of the totally un-organic Toaster Strudels. Yep, you called me out.

So Mom, I must inform you that prior to the Infamous Bunnies post, I have in fact been holding back on the blog. Because I was under the Other Pact, which is the Mother-Daughter Pact, in which I don’t talk about all the things that happened in my childhood that you don’t want to see in print.

But, the Other Pact is null and void when Tit for Tat has been invoked. Now if you want to play Tit for Tat, remember I learned from the best. ;-)

Love you!

Honey B.

posted on October 5, 2011 in queen b.

Dear Honey, this is your Mother speaking.

Actually this is your Mother not speaking – as in not speaking to you. I know this will come as a shock to you but I have not been speaking to you for over a week! I thought that you would have the courtesy to notice, but you haven’t, so I am now writing to inform you that I am no longer speaking to you. Why? Well let me explain this to you my dear Honey.

Over family life there is a veil of silence that cannot, and/or should not be broken. This veil requires all members of the family to share only touching stories, sweet and cheerful memories, and positive teachable moments from their childhood with anyone to whom you are not related. (Note: This rule also extends to your Grandmothers who at your birth both grew a judgmental bone the size of a large horn right out the top of their heads. Not to worry Honey I am almost completely sure that this will never happen to me.)

{Do the crowns hide the horns?}

This rule is called the Family Confidentiality Pact. The Pact, as I will call it, is put in place to protect the parents from being humiliated with stories of the insane lengths they have had to stoop to in order to raise you up to be the upstanding citizens that you now are. The Pact is also in place to protect you children from being yanked from our cozy little unbalanced home by Social Services when the story of …let’s see, oh yes… The Bunnies become public knowledge. The Pact cannot and/or should not be broken until the Mother and Father, both Grandmothers, any childless Aunts who never liked us, are all in fact dead.

So my dear Honey – There has been a Security Breach in La Familia. This cannot ever happen again. If this does ever happen again I will be forced to steps things up to the dreaded Tit for Tat game. (Note: Let me just say at this point that I have knowledge, Mother knowledge, from your youth, that you probably don’t want shared with the public. Eye witness accounts, pictures, and yes, even video.) Looking forward to your apology, preferably served up with a hefty helping of groveling. Oh how I love the groveling.

Love from your Mother,

Queen B.

posted on October 3, 2011 in parenting, queen b.
by Honey B.
with 9 Comments

Oh Mom, its so cute that you think Happy Hour is the worst parenting thing you’ve ever done. Allow me to take you on a walk down memory lane…

Easter morning, probably sometime in the early 90′s. As is your tradition, you made Easter baskets for us with candy and a present. The farm had rabbit hutches and we had been begging for our own bunnies, so on this lovely Easter morning our baskets held baby bunnies. One for each of us (it was just Apple and I, Ginger wasn’t born yet) and we were thrilled. I named mine Hopkins, Apple named hers Flora. We loved our baby bunnies, played with our baby bunnies, kissed the baby bunnies…our house was positively brimming with baby bunny bliss.

But now its time to go to church…our hair was curled, the matching frou-frou dresses and Easter hats, white socks with lacey edges and white patent Mary Janes…kiss the baby bunnies before you go, they will be waiting for you!

Fast forward to after church. We all tumble out of the car and are so excited to see the baby bunnies, we love the baby bunnies Mom! Dad had gone in the house first, but before we could go inside he said Girls, why don’t you play on the swingset for awhile? And so we did. Dad and Mom went inside, and a few minutes later Dad took a garbage bag to the trash bin, but we didn’t notice that…we were swinging and thinking about our bunnies!

Finally Dad says girls you can come inside, its almost time for lunch. We burst into the house, where are the bunnies, we want to play with the bunnies, we LOVE our bunnies!!

To which you and Dad uttered the words…”What bunnies?

The baby bunnies! Our Easter bunnies, we love our bunnies so much, where are the bunnies?

You and Mom looked at each other quizzically. What are you talking about girls, there aren’t any bunnies?

Oh but Mom yes there were, the bunnies we got for Easter! I remember the bunnies, don’t you remember the bunnies Apple? She remembers the bunnies too Dad!

The infamous Easter of 1988

And then Dad took it one devious step further- did you all DREAM that you got bunnies for Easter?

I paused and looked at Apple. Do you remember the bunnies? Apple started to cry.

But…the bunnies…we had bunnies…didn’t we?

To which you and Dad, said WOW, you all dreamt that you had bunnies! That’s the craziest thing! Well, Easter dinner is almost ready and your grandparents will be here, so go get ready for Easter pictures!

And until I was in my twenties, I thought my sister and I had both dreamt about bunnies. Until I was in my twenties, I just thought our cat Mo was a good mouser. And until I was in my twenties, I didn’t know that you and Dad would rather delude your girls into thinking we had some mind-dream connectedness, for a decade and a half, rather than explain the facts of life, the predator-hunter food chain bunny carnage that happens when you have a cat and baby bunnies.

I rest my case. And RIP Hopkins and Flora.

posted on September 15, 2011 in parenting, queen b.
by Honey B.
with 9 Comments

Honey: “Mom, what was the most awful parenting thing you have ever done that you’ve never admitted until now?”

Dear Honey,

It pains me to admit this, but I did have one bad parenting moment while raising you.  Shocked? I knew you would be.

So, my dear Honey, I will tell all ……if, IF, you promise me one thing.  No sharing this information with anyone I know!  And for goodness sake don’t put it on the blog, those people already think I am a lunatic.  Man privy?  Why don’t you edit these things?

Anyway, here is what happened ……  It had been a long winter on our quiet rural farm in the middle of the godforsaken frozen tundra. January, you can imagine, why do we live here anyway?  You were 9, Apple B. was 5, and Ginger B. was … I don’t know … .somewhere between teething and potty training I think.  Snow so high it prevented our little homeschooling family from going anywhere for weeks.  I was getting a little  - well, edgy.

Out of sheer boredom I had resorted to cleaning out the cupboards. I found a set of two mismatched wine glasses, some plastic cocktail swords, and a set of paper napkins that said “Dinner will be ready when the smoke detector goes off”.  Probably one of your fathers attempts at humor.  I was about to stick them in the Goodwill box when you found them and wanted to play.

“Fine,” I said.  “you and Apple B. climb up on the stools and you can have a cocktail party while I make dinner.”  I put cranberry juice in the wine glasses and called it “wine”. The kitchen island became “the bar”.   And, yes we called this game “Happy Hour”.

I cut up bananas and grapes on a plate and they became hors d’ouerves.  Stabbing them with your little plastic swords kept you two busy for half an hour while I cooked dinner.  Fabulous!  We made it a nightly event!  Every afternoon at about 4:30 or so I would tell my precious little girls to “Belly up to the bar girls, it’s Happy Hour!”  You would eat anything I put in front of you with those swords so the next day I cut up cucumbers and tomatoes,  then carrots and lima beans. {Nice try Mom, I know we didn’t eat the lima beans}  I was going to get Mother of the year for this -  my kids were eating raw veggies and loving it!   I couldn’t wait to share this at the mothers group.  I was a genius …… until your Grandmother, my Mother-in-Law, came to visit.

She had been there for most of the afternoon.  Testing you on reading and math skills while I was out of the room (she never did support the whole homeschooling thing), and checking under the couch for dust bunnies (anyone who spent all their time teaching couldn’t have a clean house).  It got to be about 4:30 and I was heading to the kitchen to start dinner when I heard your sweet voice sing out…… to your very CatholicItalianunhappy that her only son married a Methodist, tea-toddling Grandmother …….”Belly up to the bar Gramma, it’s Happy hour!”

I don’t think there is much else to say.

Love from your Mother,

Queen B.

posted on September 11, 2011 in parenting, queen b.

Look here for Part One and Part Two!

Twenty four hours later we arrived at the hospital– again. And yes, they let me stay even though I was at only three centimeters. “Three centimeters, are you kidding me – THREE!” They assigned us to a room that was the size of a closet somewhere off in Wing Z. I was pretty sure that this was where they left the “no insurance” mothers to labor and deliver on there own. Or, quite possibly, with the help of members of the janitorial staff. I started to cry.

The next twenty four hours were a blur of ice chips and jello. They would come in and check me every few hours and tell me I was going slow, (“Really, really?”) and doing well. But I knew the truth, you were never coming out. I cried some more, and blamed your father.

Just when I thought that all was lost, and I was going to go into Ripley Believe It Or Not as the worlds longest labor, it happened – transition. It was a big contraction, a real winner, and then it didn’t end. It just went right into another, and another, and another. I could barely gather enough breath to scream at your father. “Make it stop! Turn it off! You jack-ass, do something!!!!” He tried giving me ice chips and I backhanded them across the room. He took out the tennis ball to rub my back, and I tore it in two with my teeth. He told me to breathe slowly and I just glared at him. He said later that it was like something out of the movie the Exorcist. When my eyes turned a strange shade of green, and I started hissing through my teeth – off he went for the nurse.

They laid me back on the bed with a few pillows, knees up and spread to check me and to direct the pushing. Grunt, groan, agony. Grunt, groan, agony. Over and over till you finally started moving – just as I felt some forward momentum and possibly crowning the nurse brought in the wheelchair. “WHAT? Are you *%#@- ing kidding me, you want me to get up and get in the chair now?” Yep, that was the plan. Into the chair and then a short ride to the delivery room, where I had to climb into a birthing chair that I had never seen and didn’t know how to use. By the time I was situated the doctor had appeared on the scene with twenty three students, four interns, a half dozen residents, and the homeless guy from the corner. They were three deep in places – it was like a home football game – they needed bleachers.

“This won’t hurt..” Never trust a doctor who says that, it is a lie from the pit of hell. Snip, snip, and I had an episiotomy. Grunting, groaning, and agony for a few minutes and then that devil pulled out the Vacuum Extractor! I guess things were not moving along fast enough for him. It looked like a small plunger attached to a vacuum hose. And yep, you guessed it, they stuck it up my hoo-haa and attached it to your head. Then they started pulling —– Aghhhh —— I screamed. It was like someone was pulling my intestines out with their bare hands. The doctor (sick sadist bastard) was on some sort of power trip and quickly told me “No need for that now (meaning the scream)…” as he pulled again. Completely full to the brim with anger, I gave one final push I birthed you and a hemorrhoid the size and color of a plum.

Your APGAR was eight – and I only had a slight panic attack when I had another contraction to deliver the placenta – “Twins?” The intern that was set to catch it assured me labor was not starting again! Praise God! “Are we done?” I asked as they wrapped you in a blanket and set you in my arms. “All done but the sewing… “ and so it went on for another twenty minutes – stabbing and pulling.

The intern that sewed me up forgot to remove the Vag-pack (a round pack of gauze the size of my fist) , I managed to deliver that the next day through my stitches. That was fun! You nursed like a trooper, pooped on schedule, and three days later we got to go home. And that my darling Honey, is your birth story.

Love from your Mother,

Queen B.

posted on August 30, 2011 in baby, birth, queen b.

Dear Honey,
This is your Mother speaking.

Well that is a dandy little “doo-dad” you have there, the outdoory dog-privy!  What’s not to love about that I tell you?  May I suggest one small accessory? Put a toilet seat on top and call it the “Man-privy”  Maybe we could mass produce them – and sell them – and make pooh-piles of money?? I know I want one! 

I would send your father (Left Brain) out regularly.  I have had it with the way he be-fouls the bathroom and then snickers when I walk in after him.  I could make up little coupons to charge him when I make his favorite dinners…. Burritos? One Man-Privy coupon.  Chili or Cooked Cabbage? That will cost him two Man-privy coupons. 

I am liking this better by the minute. 

 We could even use his truck to deliver the Man-privy sets to women who are to weakened by their husbands flatulence…  We could make a deluxe set with it’s own shovel and matching work gloves…  On Fathers Day we can put a bow on top and a magazine holder on the side……  

Let me know what you think Honey?
Love from your Mother,
Queen B.

posted on August 26, 2011 in queen b., whatever
by Honey B.
with 4 Comments

Dear Honey,

Yes I know Ms. Karma… personally.  I also know Ms. Told-U-So.  We all met at “Mommy-class” before you were born. Mommy class?  You know, where all soon to be Mommies go to learn motherly skills; eyes in the back of our head, ears that can hear vomit before it hits carpet, swearing in code.  Anyway, I digress.  Karma, Told-U-So, and I, discussed their future visits to you.  Told-U-So was planning multiple visits on my behalf.  She has not disappointed me, although I am sure that you are a bit sick of seeing her come down the street.  But Karma, she said that she was going to arrive with less frequency and carry a bigger stick…….. 

……..And so we fast forward to you, twenty nine years later, in the parking lot of the Organic food store.    Walking up to my car window, on your hip is a crabby two year old with red eyes, a runny nose, and her thumb stuck in her mouth.  Yes, in fact you did have some food bi-products stuck to one shoulder, but when Baby G. sneezed and spewed snot all over the other shoulder it was at least balanced.  I loved what you had done with your hair to- that sixty dollar hair cut looked especially nice pulled back and slicked down with … what was it? Grape juice?  Your diaper bag – was that not a blue reusable Wal-Mart bag you were using?  Nice touch.  Can’t wait to see what you do with your own kids. 

Love from your Mother,

Queen B.

posted on August 5, 2011 in queen b.

I always think that I would greatly enjoy being the Keeper of the Karma Stick. You know what I’m talking about, that event or happening that follows a proclamation that is begging to be refuted.

Yesterday I had the privilege of babysitting one of the cutest kids ever. As planned, I was meeting my Mom for lunch with Baby G in tow, at the local food co-op (they have an awesome restaurant/deli) so we drove over. I got G, her diaper bag, her sippy cup, a toy, and my purse and we went over to the door of my Mom’s SUV. She took one look at me and cackled. Why would my so supportive mother cackle at me?

I was wearing the shorts that my sister had told me to never wear in public again, along with a dingy white tshirt that had G’s breakfast goo-ed all over the shoulder. I had (at most) half brushed my hair into a pitiful ponytail, I had no makeup on (violating my own rule, which I have not done since college), and I was carrying the crankiest two year old ever on my hip.

It was one of those moments where I think that Karma is a she, and she’s a mother, and she was laughing her ass of at me yesterday. :-D

posted on August 1, 2011 in queen b., whatever

Part I is here. :-)

So, manned with three breathing techniques and a tennis ball (to have Left-brain rub my back with) your father and I headed into labor likes lambs to slaughter.

Labor started little before 10 pm on a Saturday night. By 10:35 I had bathed, washed and styled my hair, applied full make-up, made the bed with clean sheets, washed up all the dirty dishes, vacuumed, and was sitting on the couch with my labor journal and a stopwatch timing contractions. They call this phase nesting. I really do wish it lasted longer – I think it was the last time we had clean sheets on the bed till you were two.

About Contractions – the first one felt like the many Braxton-Hicks contractions that I had been having for weeks with just a little catch in my side along with it. Hmmm. The next one (half hour later) felt more like a bad burrito cramp and a strong Braxton-Hicks at the same time. Three contractions down, and already they felt like full-fledged, take-your-breath-away, bend-you-over-at-the-waist-gasping gas cramps.

Now you need to know one thing about me at this stage in my life. A gas cramp was the closest thing to true pain that I had ever known. I had never broken a bone, been severely burned, or suffered with a touchy appendix. But, dear friends, I did have gas cramps – and they were horrendous! I had been chronically constipated since my teenage years and I had already suffered through a number of near death experiences on the toilet.

Note: For those of you that don’t know me, you are unaware that as of late, all conversations with me somehow end up discussing my bowels. Yes, and even Honey, at the ripe old age of 29 has the same problem with over-sharing. We call it diarrhea of the mouth. Somehow any visit, in person or by cell, is not complete til one (usually both) of us shares our latest Gastrointestinal Nightmare. We are working on widening our verbal and conversational horizons, but for now, be aware and be warned. So if you have a weak stomach, touch of nausea, or any unusual tightness is your hither regions, just stop here and know that everything comes out fine in the end. For those made of tougher stuff – read on – but remember, you have been warned.

Those were the days of everything “natural”, even if it didn’t work, it had to be “natural”. So wheat bran was the only potential cure available to us chronically constipated types. The other “natural” products that we have now had not been invented then. No Mirilax, no Metamucil, no Citrucel. Life was tough back then. So, when I started suffering with pregnancy back-up, I hit the bran like a woman possessed. If a teaspoon in my orange juice was good, a quarter cup was better. Once a day was for light weights, I was chugging it down morning and night. Unfortunately the Organic Hippie food store that I shopped at didn’t give instructions with the purchase. No mention of the need to drink copious amounts of water on the side of the drum that I scooped my “natural” laxative out of every week. No skull and crossbones, large red warning labels, nothing. The effect was immediate. Weekly, from that day on, I gave birth to a log large enough to house a family of squirrels. My trips to the bathroom were legendary. I would gird myself with a cup of hot tea, damp rag, and a pillow when I made my weekly death march to the bathroom. The tea was to aid movement, I read that somewhere and that seemed feasible. The damp rag was to mop my brow when things started to get tough and I broke out in a sweat. Usually just laying my head on the cool tile of the bathroom wall was sufficient, but unfortunately this bathroom was without that necessary luxury. The pillow was to lay on the edge of the tub in front of me. Just in case I passed out and fell forward, I was trying to prevent loosing all my front teeth on the cast iron monster. The only up side to all of this was that I was pretty sure that I knew what labor and delivery would entail. I knew pain, up close and personal. Just to make sure I found a new mother in my neighbor hood and asked. “So, compared to the very worst bowel movement you have ever had, in your entire life – how bad was it?” She started out with words, “worse”, “way worse”. But that wasn’t good enough for me, I needed a number I told her. “Ten”, she said. OK, ten. I can handle ten times as bad. Chances are she had never suffered as I had in the bathroom so her ten was really probably a four. She was a bit frail looking on a good day, so lets make that a two. And look at those hips, my thighs were wider than her hips. I had great big, baby-making, motherly hips. I could probably cough and send a baby flying into the arms of the attending doctor. I was covered. I could do this. Bring it on.

Our first trip to the hospital was exciting. You hit the door and they whisked you away in a wheel chair, off to the examining room with you. Your father was to stay and fill out paperwork and insurance forms. Our insurance was limited to the good will of the teaching hospital that we were putting ourselves in the hands of. No regular insurance here, you were what’s known as a pre-existing condition. Most of the young medical students in 1981 were men, and most of them had wives that they had managed to get pregnant prior to starting school. About a third of the class, at any one time, was usually expecting a baby. It went on for the full four years, but the first generation was called the “Pre-existing babies”. You Honey,were one of these.

By the time Left-brain had made it to the exam room I was into breathing phase three. Having gone through one and two and found that they were ineffective, all I had left was breathing phase three or pushing. Hmm, lets go with phase three. The nurse who was doing the checking suggested I dial it back a bit, Left-brain said I was going to hyperventilate. But I just kept it up, if breathing could have brought on birth, you would have been out in a flash. The only thing that slowed me down was the news – “…one centimeter dilated – you can take your wife home – it’s going to be awhile.” Ugggghh!

Stay Tuned for Part III!

posted on July 26, 2011 in queen b.