Showing posts with label Cathi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cathi. Show all posts

Friday, December 28, 2018

My Birthday


Yesterday was my birthday, and Skip and the trio were determined to make it a fun day. Although I did not give them anything to go on (I don't want/need anything, and I couldn't decide where to eat. :), it was the best day. We relaxed, had a leisurely lunch at Cheesecake Factory, and the girls treated me to a home spa experience.  


Fun fact: Although I politely declined public singing, Skip kept joining in all the singing for other tables, greatly embarrassing Lauren and Grace. 

Although we weren't up for a song, we were definitely up for a piece of celebratory cheesecake.  


Lauren, Grace and George had the spa prepped and ready.  


Lauren checked me in and explained that a relative had planned the whole experience for me. 



There was a snack of fresh berries, sprinkled with sugar. DELICIOUS. 


There were some familiar activities, such as "guess that scenet" (I scored 100) and select your favorite lip balm scent. There was also a foot soak.  




A new feature was Trivia Time, where the trio answered questions about Mom. My favorite was guess mom's "alleged" age. HA! 


I had a wonderful birthday with my family. Thank you for everything! 

Also, thanks to mom and Ralph & Sally for their generous gifts.  



Birthday Spa Visit 2018 from Cathi Lindsey on Vimeo.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Steve Madden Slinky


The Slinky is back!

I mentioned the reboot of the above Steve Madden Slinky back in April. The shoe was available for pre-order at that time, and mine were delivered this week. (Happy dance!)

Y'all, this shoe was a wardrobe stable for me in the 90's.  I had the requisite black pair, as well as a leopard print and metallic grey, although it is possible the latter pairs were knock-offs. I had similarly styled shoes in leather, and those bad boys hugged the foot, making it possible to walk miles and miles. (I once did that in Vegas with the leather pair, and my only twinge of discomfort was a blister where the label rubbed a blister on the bottom of my foot. Otherwise, I could have walked all day in the desert.)

Needless to say, I'm pretty happy to be reunited with this shoe. If you need me, I'll be here, wearing the shoes, listening to No Doubt and watching Friends.


Monday, May 22, 2017

Mother's Day 2017


George came home on the Friday before Mother's Day with a special delivery. He was too impatient to wait for Sunday and thrust his gift in my hands during car pool.

He did a great job with his painting, and our kitchen is a lot more colorful now.



 Mother's Day is always the day after Grace and Lauren's dance recital (update soon), and we usually go out to eat afterward as a family. Although the night is about them (and their choice of restaurant), we kind of combine Mother's Day with that as well.

Therefore, we keep Mother's Day pretty quiet.

George came downstairs first on Sunday morning. Since George was about three, he and I have had a deal. He agrees to dress up for church, any special event and any time I ask/need him to, and he gets to wear basically whatever he likes the rest of the time. So on Mother's Day morning, George came down wearing his blazer just for me. This was just the best ever.


Lauren and Grace, on the other hand, had been busily coordinating everyone's art projects. They had worked on some special art pieces at school, and were able to wait until Sunday for a big reveal.




These are the best job reviews I have ever received. HA!









I had the very best day, complete with a wonderful breakfast, lunch out and a really great afternoon with my four favorite people.  

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Ophthalmology and the City



How do you know you've gotten old? When, as a couple, you begin scheduling medical appointments together.

No, really, you schedule them together to make sure someone actually goes to the appointment (ahem). A fun fact about Skip is that he has better than perfect vision (20/12, I believe?) However, a few decades of heavy computer use and a lifetime of reading have finally caught up with him, and he has been using readers for the past few months. I finally talked him into investing in an actual pair of glasses.

As for me, I am like the Carrie Bradshaw character in SATC I*. The time of borrowing readers is over, and I am having to update my already significant prescription to include compensation for reading up close. I had vehemently refused to do this until I recently saw a photo one of the children had taken, and I am in the background, squinting harshly at my phone to try to make out the words. After some lengthy consultation with Jehoshua (pronounced as Joshua), a hip and helpful optometry assistant, Skip and I have new specs on the way.


*In looking for some footage of one of the borrowed glasses references, I ran across an old promotional clip featuring Patricia Field -- the very best ever. Aren't the clothes the best aspect of the SATC franchise?

Friday, January 2, 2015

My Birthday


 On the 27th, my family treated me to a birthday celebration. Skip procured all of my favorite indulgences (flowers, wine, cheese, cake!), and the trio had my "party" in the dining room, per tradition. I love these guys so much.

Friday, June 13, 2014

On Giving Up Vices

One of my biggest vices throughout adulthood has been the delicious goodness of Diet Coke. Although I kept planning to give it up, assuming that milestone birthdays would be a good time to forgo the beverage, those birthdays - the nasty ones ending in zero - came and went, and I still sought out the silver can.  Never would I have assumed that I would continue to drink soda this far into adulthood.

Finally, after years and years of going back and forth, I focused on some of the more unsavory ingredients... a kind of aversion therapy, if you will. Skip kept referring to my Diet Coke as "liquid death," and he reminded me that President Clinton also had a pesky Diet Coke habit that he ultimately kicked.  Finally, after researching some of the ingredients (granted, I knew they were all bad, but I was trying to really work up some repulsion) and asking myself often, "Do you want to be someone who drinks soda, or do you want to be someone who doesn't drink soda?" I made the call.

Now, let me stop here to say, in the event that you are a soda drinker, that I am definitely not implying that your habit is bad. Friends, I wasn't drinking a single Diet Coke a day. There were at least three and sometimes four - easily. During my 20's, the daily count would have been so high I refused to ever attach a number to it.  My problem was habitual, and it needed to stop.

How bad could it be, you ask? I may have told this story before, and please forgive me if that is so.  I went to a settlement mediation at a law firm five or six years ago. There were several interested parties at the table, and we were making opening statements before breaking up into caucus sessions (to try to reach a settlement agreement before proceeding to trial). Traditionally, it's considered a conciliatory gesture to establish rapport with the opposing party so we always exchange pleasantries while waiting for everyone to assemble. This person, let's call him Joe, had one of those large, insulated, 64 ounce, brightly colored cups sitting on the heavily polished walnut conference table. You know the type of cup, and it definitely stuck out against the overall aesthetic the firm was aiming for. When Joe was offered coffee, he declined, gesturing to his cup that, frankly, no one could have missed.  "Oh, you're a soda drinker, Joe?" Joe was not. In fact, Joe went on to explain that he never touched the stuff because a buddy of his used to drink 10-12 soft drinks per day and that he DIED from doing so. My ears immediately perked up beyond the "politely establish rapport," and I fixed an intent stare on him, willing him to elaborate. I wanted to shout, "WAS IT REGULAR SODA OR DIET SODA??!!"

Anyrate... so I recently decided to give them up. Instead of tapering consumption (as I have done many times in the past), I decided simply to stop drinking them. I believe this is the cold turkey method, and if I offend anyone by using such terminology with such a seemingly minor vice then you have not been around me enough to hear the symphony of sounds produced by my Diet Coke cans opening throughout the day. Having a caffeine-free existence was not part of my plan (I know there are arguments against caffeine, but I am no saint. This is the best I can do.), but I had failed to make arrangements for an alternate caffeine source. At the forty-eight hour mark things were bleak. I mean, I looked awful... my eyes were sunken... there were dark circles... and my pupils were flat... like no one was home, you know? Skip confirmed the state of affairs by stating the obvious: You aren't looking so good.  Before anyone thinks Skip was being unkind, let me assure you he was being exceedingly generous because I looked awful. The word wretched comes to mind, and I may have taken to quoting Otis Redding ("I have nothing to live forrrr... looks like nothing's gonna come my wayyyyy...")  I cracked and quickly drank a DC from the remaining four twelve-packs in the downstairs basement.

My mom was astounded that I would try to give up soda with a refrigerator full of drinks but honestly it made no difference. I would have gone to the end of the earth for that soda. I mean, it's not like I don't know where/how to procure more. There is no doubt that I would have loaded all three children into the car and driven to the store.  But the point with all of that is that I am weak.  No news there. Diet Coke definitely has my number.

I went back to the drawing board and found a caffeine source. Given my beverage weakness, green tea, with its many health benefits, was an obvious choice. Tazo's Zen green tea, "a harmonious blend of green tea with lemongrass and spearmint," is delicious. Now, I'll be honest and say that I initially mocked the product description on the side of the box.

zen

Through the screened front door, zingy lemongrass and spritely spearmint coax contemplative pan-fired green teas to come play. Calmly, lemon verbena opens the door and invites them all to a cup of tea.

I read that aloud to Skip each morning while waiting for the kettle to boil. Then I would work myself into a tangent about what constitutes good advertisement, and then concluded by faux-shouting, "JUST FOR THE TASTE OF IT!" That, of course, being Diet Coke's tried and true tagline for decades. For the first two weeks, I wanted to "pants" whoever wrote the Tazo zen description. (For some reason, I always use the expression "pants" when I mean "atomic wedgy," but I see explaining that has taken this post to an unprecedented level of juvenility. For accuracy, there you have it.)

All of that (above) was occurring in mid-April. Two weeks after starting the soda-free plan things were going remarkably well. I missed it terribly, but by the start of May I had made my peace with green tea and water. However, May is an exceptionally busy month, and I would normally tackle everything with the reliable fuel of multiple DC's throughout the day. Not surprisingly, I cracked again during the second week of May. However, this time I noticed a funny after taste. My Diet Coke tasted a little like cough syrup, and any irrational cravings went away after that. It's simply not something I crave any longer*.

Skip predicts this move will cause Diet Coke sales to plummet and will be the death knell for The CocaCola Company.

I no longer enjoy the "taste of it," but I have contemplative pan-fired green teas over to play each morning.

*As it turns out, the beverage temperature (the colder the better) is what I really crave. Substituting partially frozen water has worked brilliantly. Plus? No one dies from drinking (safe) water.