Tomorrow morning, early-squirrely, Mac and I leave to drive to Washington, DC to meet Jimmy who's flying in tomorrow afternoon. Jimmy has to take a class for work, but Mac and I intend to fully enjoy ourselves. His BFF and family are meeting us there and we're stopping in Richmond to pick up Mac's British teacher from this past year to take with us. Neither the BFF and family nor the teacher have been to DC, so we're going to do all the old favorites and not-to-be-missed sites in DC.
Which means we probably will all be tired and cranky after the first day.
Which means that we may or may not stick to the very well-scheduled-out calendar I have come up with for the week.
But we do have White House tickets for Friday so we'll all have to be speaking to each other by then!
For vacation excitement, I am truly thankful.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
7-15-11 - tennis at sea level
This morning I played tennis with my high school friend Dara. "Played tennis" might be a stretch. We hit balls around some, talked a bunch and laughed a lot. It was a great time, and I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED playing at sea level as opposed to 8500 feet, even if I was dripping sweat by the end and was as red-faced as if I'd run a marathon. I could breathe!
For a great time catching up with Dara, I am truly thankful.
For a great time catching up with Dara, I am truly thankful.
Labels:
friends,
New Year's Resolution,
tennis
7-14-11 - why we're really home for a 7-week vacation
I have heard for nearly 11 months how by moving to Bogota, we ripped Mac away from his BFF and from the best place on Earth (that would be Summerville, South Carolina for those of you not from there). And I promised for nearly all of those 11 months that Mac would get to spend all summer back at home. (I really sort of hoped being back here would make him realize that it's not entirely the land of milk and honey, but I don't think I'm succeeding yet - he's having a great time.)
So to fulfill that promise, Mac and I have come back for a total of 7 weeks which we have never ever done before. We're not in South Carolina for the whole time, but we're certainly taking full advantage of our time here to get these boys together. Mac is loving every minute of it.
For teaching our children that continued friendships take some effort but they're always worth it, I am truly thankful.
So to fulfill that promise, Mac and I have come back for a total of 7 weeks which we have never ever done before. We're not in South Carolina for the whole time, but we're certainly taking full advantage of our time here to get these boys together. Mac is loving every minute of it.
For teaching our children that continued friendships take some effort but they're always worth it, I am truly thankful.
Labels:
friends,
Mac,
New Year's Resolution,
Summerville
NYR 7-13-11 - rental cars
Today I picked up the rental car that we'll be using for the next couple weeks.
I, of course, rented a cheap car and refused to be upsold no matter how many times the website told me it would be "just another $22" to get the next grade higher. (Remember that number the Budget guy pulled on Jimmy a few months ago? On the little quick jaunt home that turned into an eternity? Yeah, well the cost of renting that midlife crisis red Mustang still smarts.)
So I rented a Toyota Corolla since that's what I drive at home and am comfortable with it. When I went to the Hertz office, the woman didn't know that I was coming in because apparently she didn't bother to check her computer. She told me that all she had fueled up and clean (and her idea of "clean" is questionable) was a Mazda 5. I asked what that was and she told me it was a mini-minivan. I asked if it costs the same as the Corolla rental and she said "yes" so I was sold.
Now here's why I like rental cars. Nay, love rental cars:
1. There are new buttons and radio controls and cup holders and plugs to be found. I'm a sucker for new buttons and radio controls and cup holders and plugs. We couldn't find the cup holder for the middle row of seats until we read the instruction manual. There was a whole little caddy thing folded up inside the seat that had to be pulled out. Once we got it out, it had cup holders and a storage area. How cool is that?
2. Rental cars are usually new. This particular car is a 2012 model which would make it 9 years older than the Corolla I currently drive. Nine years means it's shinier and smells newer and still has the factory floor mats which aren't stained from spilled soft drinks and mud-caked shoes.
3. A rental car's a short-term investment in a new car that you soon get to turn back in. I love driving this Mazda but maybe in two weeks, I'll be tired of the upholstery because it's too sweaty or I'll find out that I really do want more than 2 plugs in a mini-minivan (because after all there are more than 2 electronic gadgets that could need to be plugged in at any one time).
4. This particular car has 3 rows of seats so if Jimmy, Mac and I get tired of each other on vacation, we could all sit on a different row and have our own space. (Of course, we'd have to leave our luggage behind because with the third row of seats up, there would be no space in the way back for suitcases, but I'm just saying we could do that.)
5. In a rental car, you don't really worry about the pesky things you worry about with your own car. I'm not concerned about what sort of gas mileage this car gets or when the last oil change was. I'm just driving it, knowing that I can turn it back in in 2 weeks and the oil change is somebody else's problem.
I will enjoy the Mazda 5 for the time being, knowing that all too soon I'll be back in my 2003 Corolla with dents and scratches and chips on the windshield and Wal-Mart floor mats and only two plugs.
For my 2-week ride in a Mazda 5, I am truly thankful.
I, of course, rented a cheap car and refused to be upsold no matter how many times the website told me it would be "just another $22" to get the next grade higher. (Remember that number the Budget guy pulled on Jimmy a few months ago? On the little quick jaunt home that turned into an eternity? Yeah, well the cost of renting that midlife crisis red Mustang still smarts.)
So I rented a Toyota Corolla since that's what I drive at home and am comfortable with it. When I went to the Hertz office, the woman didn't know that I was coming in because apparently she didn't bother to check her computer. She told me that all she had fueled up and clean (and her idea of "clean" is questionable) was a Mazda 5. I asked what that was and she told me it was a mini-minivan. I asked if it costs the same as the Corolla rental and she said "yes" so I was sold.
Now here's why I like rental cars. Nay, love rental cars:
1. There are new buttons and radio controls and cup holders and plugs to be found. I'm a sucker for new buttons and radio controls and cup holders and plugs. We couldn't find the cup holder for the middle row of seats until we read the instruction manual. There was a whole little caddy thing folded up inside the seat that had to be pulled out. Once we got it out, it had cup holders and a storage area. How cool is that?
2. Rental cars are usually new. This particular car is a 2012 model which would make it 9 years older than the Corolla I currently drive. Nine years means it's shinier and smells newer and still has the factory floor mats which aren't stained from spilled soft drinks and mud-caked shoes.
3. A rental car's a short-term investment in a new car that you soon get to turn back in. I love driving this Mazda but maybe in two weeks, I'll be tired of the upholstery because it's too sweaty or I'll find out that I really do want more than 2 plugs in a mini-minivan (because after all there are more than 2 electronic gadgets that could need to be plugged in at any one time).
4. This particular car has 3 rows of seats so if Jimmy, Mac and I get tired of each other on vacation, we could all sit on a different row and have our own space. (Of course, we'd have to leave our luggage behind because with the third row of seats up, there would be no space in the way back for suitcases, but I'm just saying we could do that.)
5. In a rental car, you don't really worry about the pesky things you worry about with your own car. I'm not concerned about what sort of gas mileage this car gets or when the last oil change was. I'm just driving it, knowing that I can turn it back in in 2 weeks and the oil change is somebody else's problem.
I will enjoy the Mazda 5 for the time being, knowing that all too soon I'll be back in my 2003 Corolla with dents and scratches and chips on the windshield and Wal-Mart floor mats and only two plugs.
For my 2-week ride in a Mazda 5, I am truly thankful.
Friday, July 15, 2011
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
NYR 7-12-11 -a little visit to the dermatologist
Today I had an appointment at the dermatologist's. I was going for a routine skin cancer checkup but had a specific concern about this little white scaly thing that had been on my lip since our trip to Sao Paulo in April when we spent a week at our favorite beach and where I may or may not have regularly applied the 50 SPF lip balm that I normally use.
That little scaly thing turned out to be a keratosis from sun damage and it was removed by freezing with nitrogen.
O.U.C.H.
The doctor told me a blister would form and then heal up. I informed the doctor before the freezing that I was traveling to Washington, DC on Sunday and asked would it be healed by then. He laughed and said it would look like an awful fever blister by Sunday. Yay for me.
When I suggested that we wait until after Washington and our subsequent trip to the mountains and our subsequent trip to the beach, the doctor said we were doing it today so we could see if we needed to do it again.
I think I have a pretty high pain tolerance, but I have to tell you that this really, really hurt. Like laser surgery was nothing compared to this. Like it better work or else I'll pick the keratosis off with my fingernails to avoid more freezing.
I kind of have an Angelina Jolie bottom lip right now. Well not really, but a girl can pretend right? Now I just wait for the ugly fever blister part to form so it'll fall off and heal up.
(On a related note, I have been studying actinic keratosis on the internet and on The Skin Cancer Foundation's webpage devoted to this diagnosis, some of the photos are provided by my doctor, who was also my father's dermatologist, and who has elevated status at the West household for his extraordinary love and devotion to the dermatological game.)
For great doctors and ridding myself of what could be a pre-cancerous growth, I am most assuredly truly thankful (even if I'm going to have a disgusting lip malfunction when I see my husband on Sunday for the the first time in 3 weeks).
That little scaly thing turned out to be a keratosis from sun damage and it was removed by freezing with nitrogen.
O.U.C.H.
The doctor told me a blister would form and then heal up. I informed the doctor before the freezing that I was traveling to Washington, DC on Sunday and asked would it be healed by then. He laughed and said it would look like an awful fever blister by Sunday. Yay for me.
When I suggested that we wait until after Washington and our subsequent trip to the mountains and our subsequent trip to the beach, the doctor said we were doing it today so we could see if we needed to do it again.
I think I have a pretty high pain tolerance, but I have to tell you that this really, really hurt. Like laser surgery was nothing compared to this. Like it better work or else I'll pick the keratosis off with my fingernails to avoid more freezing.
I kind of have an Angelina Jolie bottom lip right now. Well not really, but a girl can pretend right? Now I just wait for the ugly fever blister part to form so it'll fall off and heal up.
(On a related note, I have been studying actinic keratosis on the internet and on The Skin Cancer Foundation's webpage devoted to this diagnosis, some of the photos are provided by my doctor, who was also my father's dermatologist, and who has elevated status at the West household for his extraordinary love and devotion to the dermatological game.)
For great doctors and ridding myself of what could be a pre-cancerous growth, I am most assuredly truly thankful (even if I'm going to have a disgusting lip malfunction when I see my husband on Sunday for the the first time in 3 weeks).
Labels:
healthy living,
New Year's Resolution
NYR 7-11-11 - Lightning McQueen is back in the house
The first movie that Mac fell in love with was Cars. We saw it in the theater with my mom and dad and bought the dvd as soon as it came out. And watched it over and over and over and over. I cannot stress to you how many times he watched that movie. I remember being on a beach trip to the northeast of Brazil, during which time Mac turned 4 years old, and I distinctly remember that the Cars movie played nonstop. We heard it in the rental house, in the hotel room, in the rental car. Non.stop. It was the soundtrack of our lives for a long while.
Because that movie was so successful, I have no idea why it took them so long to come out with Cars 2, but we happily saw it with my mom today. I felt like we welcomed an old friend back to the family.
For Lightning McQueen and his latest trip around the world, I am truly thankful.
Because that movie was so successful, I have no idea why it took them so long to come out with Cars 2, but we happily saw it with my mom today. I felt like we welcomed an old friend back to the family.
For Lightning McQueen and his latest trip around the world, I am truly thankful.
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