Waiting Rooms

Carol and Bob called tonight to help get a ruling on their disagreement. Carol didn’t want Bob calling everyone while she was in labor. She thought that would mean people (Mom) would want to come visit, and she didn’t want people visiting while she was in labor.

We pointed out that we enjoyed visits during the middle of the night. However, people had to wait in the waiting room, so we would visit them, not them us.

Kathy put her at ease explaining that the nurses will screen according to your wishes. She pointed out that they were even able to screen Michele.

That put the issue to rest.

Best Cashel Report Card Ever?

8:15:06 PM

Nicole D. Cashel

Fall Qtr. 90’91 Pleasantdale Elem.

Teacher: Lindsay 2nd Grade.

A = 92-100

E = Excellent

S = Satisfactory

A – Reading

A – Mathematics

A – English

A – Social Studies

A – Science-Health

A – Spelling

S – Handwriting

S – Physical Education

S – Art

S – Music

E – Listens Well

E – Follows Directions

E – Works Well Alone

E – Completes Work On Time

E – Uses Class Time Wisely

S – Observes School Rules

S – Accepts Authority

S – Is Self Disciplined

S – Respects Materials

S – Works Well With Others

S – Conduct

Additional Honors:

“A” Honor Roll (1 of 9)

Perfect Attendance/Tardy (1 of 3)

Super Speller Award (1 of 8)

Student of the Month (1 of 1)

Total students in class: 22

This may very well be the best report card any Cashel kid ever brought home in the history of the world.

See: Future Link To MCC.

Face Right

11:34:34 PM. You may have noticed that a recent F-Key has been installed. Command+Shift+7 is a time stamp?? +8 is a date stamp. Aren’t computers fun?

Today Kathy and Danny met at Olan Mills to get our photo made for Mom’s wall. We had been instructed to face right because Bob and Carol faced left in their picture, and the two couples would be on opposite sides of Mom and Dad’s photo.

This request threw the photographer. She has her prefabbed ritual that involves facing the left. She had to think everything through reversed. She did good. Didn’t break down and cry. Danny watched the strange ritual from the doorway, clutching his cowboy hat, vest, and shirt. I don’t know what makes him decide to wear or carry his various outfits.

After the photo session, we went home and had a luncheon, since both Kathy and I were in our Sunday best.

My seven month search for blank shrinky-dinks came to an exciting conclusion. Milton Bradley quit offering “creative sheets.” Only tiny K&B Enterprises, Inc. offers blank sheets. Betty was very excited that I found her. I sent off my $13 today. $6 for 20 sheets, $3.50 for “Magic Melt” (an add-on that Betty cross-sold me), and $3.50 for shipping.

Poor Danny. Apparently he put a paper sack over his head just before I came home and went hopping about. The result was a busted lip. He was brave, though, as he ate his Kathy’s Excellent Spaghetti one noodle at a time. Cleaned his plate.

Put an air filter in the Fox. Guess I showed those guys at tune-up clinic who doubted that I could do it myself. Took me an hour, though. Getting those darn clips back on is tough without the right tool.

Bob’s Bloody Nose

9:54:25 PM. Michele called today. She’s feeling better. She’s thinking now would be a good time to go back to school. But first, she’ll try to collect unemployment. And her landlord is tied up in a lawsuit involving the apartments where she lives, so she may not get evicted for a couple of years. There’s always a bright side.

Carol and Bob made it back safely. Cassie was so glad to see Bob that in jumping all over him, she gave him a bloody nose.

Dad called to report that he and Mom had made it back safely. Mom was off at choir practice already.

Turkey Drippings

4:00:57 PM. Enjoying a beautiful, sunny last day of my four day holiday. Took the kids to work this morning to do some jeans-required tasks. Screwed a drawer on a table, moved an office panel, and sat on the floor with Danny testing AA batteries.

Kathy waited tables and got $41 in tips.

Yesterday morning, I went out on a top-secret mission to K-Mart. Used the Toyota because the Fox had a near-death battery. Came home just in time to see Kathy piling the kids and Cassie into the Fox. I figured someone was bleeding, and they were heading for the hospital.

I rolled down my window and shouted, “What’s wrong!”

Kathy was huffing and puffying as she stuffed away. “This stupid dog isn’t staying in the house. She threw up twice big time!”

I was mad. Funny how people get mad when they think something is wrong and then everything’s o.k. Afterall, using the last volt of energy left in that battery, a volt reserved for getting the car to the shop, demands a real emergency.

I took Cassie to Mom and Dad’s. She went into the pen and immediately started barking at the neighbor’s dog. I watched for five minutes. She didn’t even pause to breathe. People started coming out of their houses, so I brought the dog back home. I started to break out in hives of exasperation.

I started wondering why the dog threw up.

Turns out she had eaten dog food soaked in turkey drippings that had been sitting in her bowl from the night before. I didn’t blame her for throwing up the bacteria laden mess.

Later we dropped off the Fox to have it tuned and recharged. Runs great now, but the guy says my fuel injectors and seats leak. Volkswagons do that, he assured me. It would run for a while but eventually it would quit running all together, if I didn’t have them replaced.

I’ll be sure to have those things replaced soon, I told him. (As soon as it quits running.)

Thankful In General

Yesterday was Thanksgiving, a day to get together with family and give thanks for all that we have.

Only, Mom and Dad went to Destin, and Carol and Bob went to Cincinnati. So we had Thanksgiving breakfast here. Grant and Ted came over for eggs, grits, bacon, sausage, coffee cake, and cereal. Nicole was thankful that she made all A’s this quarter. Ted was thankful that he has two job offers, an engineering company in Tampa and the Georgia D.O.T. Grant was thankful that Mom let him use his car to drive up to Rome to celebrate Thanksgiving with Sue and her family. Kathy, Danny, and I were not specifically thankful, but thankful in general.

Then we got ready to go to Grandpa’s house for Thanksgiving dinner. We brought Cassie whom we were dogsitting for Carol and Bob. Tom and Chris were there. After a delicious feast, Tom, Chris, Kathy, and I hung around in Chris’s room as we took turns talking to Gammie in Ft. Lauderdale who has the flu and is about to lose her job, she’s afraid. Michele lends a balance to every holiday, especially for Kathy.

Tom showed Nicole, Danny and me some snapdragons that he had planted eight months ago in the front yard. We pulled off the pods, cracked them open, and collected the tiny black seeds on a paper towel. Danny was fascinated. Tom pointed out what a good deal this was. A new package of seeds would cost 78??, and the paper towel already had ten times the number of seeds you would get in a package. Tom is a sensitive tycoon.

Later, Kathy fell asleep as I watched Woody Allen’s “Crimes and Misdemeanors.” Unlike Arnold Schwartzenagor’s “Predator,” Woody Allen left me thinking. It must be fun to peddle your art for a living.

9:05 am. Have to go help clean up the house for some prospects that are due around noon.

Hypnotize Dad

Kathy and I just finished watching part 1 of Steven King’ “IT.” So we’ll be up for a while…

Today Nicole and Danny invented a new game called “Hypnotize Dad.” They waved pens back and forth in front of my eyes to make me fall asleep. Nicole came up with some ingenious ways to alter my personality. I gave Danny the power to wake me up or make me fall asleep again.

First Nicole said that I would forget all my numbers. Danny woke me up and Nicole started testing me. “Count to 10.”

“Ten,” I said. And she laughed, so of course Danny laughed.

She started holding up her fingers. “How many is this?”

“Fingers,” I said. So they had a lot of fun with that.

“Go to sleep,” said Danny, and my head dropped.

We went through several cycles. Nicole had me forget all of their names and my name. After Danny woke me up, they had a good time introducing me to the family and explaining exactly who I was.

“Your name is Jeb,” Nicole explained.

“My name is Jeb.”

“But we call you Dad,” she added.

“My name is Dad.”

My confusion was wonderfully entertaining. “Go to sleep,” Danny shouted.

Nicole had me forget how to tell time. She tried to have me forget everything I knew and how to do everything. “I remember how to do everything,” mumbling my protest from my hypnotic state. Afterall, there are limits to a dad’s acting abilities.

So she settled for having me forget how to dance. Danny woke me up and Nicole immediately invited me to the dance floor. Sure enough, I couldn’t dance a single step. The kids danced with glee around there danceless father. “Go to sleep,” Danny said again, and I dropped to the floor.

“You forgot how to talk,” Nicole said.

“I forgot how to talk.”

“And you forgot how to listen!” she added without thinking.

“I forgot how to listen.”

“Wake up!” shouted Danny.

“Men Um En Umma Num,” I said. The kids exploaded with laughter as they both tried to talk to me at once, and all that came out of me was nonsense. I was still lying on the floor.

“Go to sleep!” Danny inevitably shouted, always eager to use his power. I pointed to my ears, looking desperately back and forth between Danny and Nicole, speaking nonsense.

Nicole suddenly realized the Catch-22 she had created as Danny continued his go-to-sleep commands. I had a hard time keeping a straight face.

But Nicole is always resourceful, and she began to show me how to go to sleep, forming a pillow with her two hands and lowering her head and closing her eyes.

Technically she should have gotten Danny to do this according to the unspoken rule I had been practicing, but I thought she deserved credit for thinking in a pinch. So I went to sleep.

Relieved she said, “You remember how to listen.”

“I remember how to listen.”

“But you still don’t know how to talk!”

“Wake up!” shouted Danny.

Some of the best games in life can be played anywhere, don’t cost a dime, and ususally involve children. Sometimes they let us big folks play.

No Electrolyte

Yesterday we all went to see “Dick Tracy” together at the new Northeast Plaza Cinema 12. Twelve movies all $1.50 each for all shows. And Danny was free because he is 3 or under.

Kathy had to work at the Marriott today. Danny and I took Nicole to sunday school. We had to roll start the Fox because the battery decided to play dead last week. It’s done that before and come back to life, but it’s been consistantly dead over the past couple of dead. Makes you plan out your trips. Make sure you always park facing down hill.

Went over to Mom and Dad’s. Danny and Dad picked up a lot of pine cones for Kathy’s turkey project. We should be able to make about 30 good size pine cone turkeys. Mom gave me a hair cut. Dad and Danny went to pick up Nicole. They hid outside behind the bushes. That was Danny’s idea. What Dad didn’t know was that Nicole isn’t allowed out. You have to go get her. So after everyone had picked up their kids, Dad figured that hiding behind the bushes wasn’t such a great idea, so they went and got her.

While Nicole and Mom made pumpkin squares, Dad and I went out to take a look at the Fox. Dad noticed that the overflow tube on the top of the battery was disconnected. He then opened up one of the caps and reported that the battery had no water in it. No “electrolyte” according to the manual. So we borrowed some of Mom’s distilled water and filled up each chamber.

The car started.

So Danny, Dad, and I went on a little trip to recharge the battery. We’ll see if this was a long or short term fix, but I bet that would have cost me $200 if I had taken it in.

I thought I had one of those maintenance free batteries.

Sunny and about 60 degrees outside. Most of the trees still have colorful leaves. We’ve had a long show this fall.