Guest Blogger: Robin O'Bryant

My mother slid the cornbread dressing into the oven as my sister and I chopped vegetables and stirred pots. The turkey was almost done and we could hear the sounds of football and male conversation drifting in from the den as my Grandaddy, brother, husband and uncle attempted to stay out of the way. My petite and very proper, Southern Baptist grandmother was dressed in her Sunday best and chatting with us as we prepared our Thanksgiving feast.

I took a moment to pause, mentally, and appreciate the beauty of what we were sharing. Three generations of women, gathered around the stove and giving thanks for all the blessing we enjoyed. I became a little teary as I realized that my grandparents were getting older and that one day, this crystal clear moment would fade to a hazy memory.

The channel changed in the next room and now instead of hearing Sports Center, we began overhearing Fox News reporters discussing President Bill Clinton’s recently discovered indiscretion.

“Mmm, it’s just shameful,” Momma said as she stirred the gravy.

My sister and I nodded in agreement as my grandmother said in her very Southern drawl, “I cain’t believe he had oral sex in the Oval Office. What is this world coming to?”

I lost consciousness after that, but awoke certain that this particular Thanksgiving would never fade into the recesses of my mind. And for that, I am thankful.

My friend, Robin, keeps me laughing on a regular basis. Click here to visit her blog, Robin’s Chicks.

holiday blog tour!

Today and tomorrow, my girls Jodi Burrus from The Drunch and Robin O’Bryant from Robin’s Chicks are gracing my blog, sharing their favorite holiday memories. First up: Jodi.

Another Link in the Chain by Jodi Burrus

Paper chains. Whose bright idea was it to make paper chains?

“Take the glue stick out of your hair Will,” I say for at least the tenth time.

 “Mom! Mine won’t stick together!” Jack whines. “I just can’t DO IT!”

 “Babe, remember to put the paper through the last loop before you stick it together. O.k.?”

 “Okaaay,” he reluctantly agrees, and laboriously slides a purple strip of paper through the end of his sticky, lopsided chain. Carefully he presses the ends together, and tries to wiggle his fingers loose. “Hey!!” he whines in surprise. “I’m stuck, Mom!”

 I help separate him from his work, and we both heave a sigh of relief to see the chain is still intact. He holds his work up triumphantly, all 2 feet of it. “Mine’s the longest!” he crows.

 And in an instant, I’m five years old again.

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 “Jodi, stop eating the popcorn,” Mama says for at least the tenth time.

 Still munching, I pick up the next piece and try to slide it over the needle and onto the red string behind. It gets stuck on the kernel.

 “Mom!! It won’t go! I just can’t DO THIS!” I whine.

 “Try to push it through the soft part, baby.”

 Mama takes the kernel off, and reinserts it the right way. Letting me take it from there, she watches as I finally succeed in pushing it down to join the straggly ranks of its mangled and crushed compatriots.

 “Is it long enough yet?” I wonder.

 Mama examines the pitiful length of popcorn chain I present her. “Well…maybe if we join it with Bubba’s it will be ready for the tree.”

 I look over at my brother’s perfect work. He’s been quietly and carefully stringing kernel after kernel the whole time Mama’s been helping me along. And now he has an impressive length of garland to show for it. I glance back at the string I’ve worked so hard to create and contemplate how long it will take me to make it long enough to go around the tree all by itself. We planned to sing carols around the piano when we finished. And isn’t Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer coming on t.v. tonight? Suddenly, the choice is easy.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

“Let’s put ‘em all together!” Jack shouts. “Then we’ll have a MONSTER big chain!” His brothers chorus an agreement as they generally do when Jack has a Great Idea.

 I help everyone link to each other’s work and we all ooh and aah over the wonder of our finished work. I pray it will hold together long enough for them to lose interest.

 “Mom, can we watch our Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer DVD?” Jack asks.

 “No!” Will screams. “Dat scare me!”

 “Snow White scare you, Will,” Tom reminds him. “Not Rudolph.”

 “Oh,” Will says, as his brothers scamper away to find the DVD.

 He reaches up to take my hand and asks hopefully, “You sing Thomas da Train song?”

I scoop him up for a hug and sing the opening theme of his Thomas the Train video as we head off to join his brothers. Old memories and new meet and mingle in my head leaving a warm glow in their wake. It’s Christmas time. And it truly is the most wonderful time of the year.

 Have a wonderful holiday season everyone!

Jodi Burrus is a stay-at-home mom with a writer’s soul. Jodi subsists on Oreos, fountain Mountain Dew (always better than the bottle), and the occasional bowl of Fiber One — she is over thirty, after all. She’s the proud mother of four boys which she cranked out in just over 18 months. First came Jack, then the triplets — Sam, Tom and Will. Be sure to visit Jodi over at The Drunch… it’s like a lunchdate with your girlfriends…minus all the empty calories.

guest blogger: robin o'bryant

We round out the world tour with guest blogger Robin O’Bryant. Robin is my hero– she managed to write a book and keep her wicked sense of humor while staying home with her three daughters. If you love her writing voice as much as I do, please support her on her path to publication by following her blog.

Effin Eggs, by Robin O’bryant

Zeb had to work on Saturday a few weeks back. Because he is the most awesome husband alive (or possibly because he feared for his safety and the safety of his children), he stayed home until around 8:30 so I could sleep late. (Yes, people without children. 8:30 is late.)

I get up, get my coffee, check the email, update the FaceBook status…all of the important things you do first thing in the morning. My four year old, Aubrey, comes over and asks me if I’ll make her pancakes. I told her I would be glad to as soon as I finished up on the computer.

She said, “But Momma, there’s only one effin egg….”

I’m still not really awake. (In case you don’t know me, I prefer not to speak OR be spoken to until about 11:30am, but I have 3 kids under 4, so rarely do I get my way.) I wasn’t sure I heard her correctly….

“WHAT did you say?” I asked her.

“THERE is only ONE EFFIN EGG!, ” she is definitely screaming at me now.

This can not be. Where would she have heard such language?

“Aubrey, what did you say?”

Shaking both of her fists in the air, she screamed at the top of her lungs, “DADDY WAS GOING TO MAKE PANCAKES THIS MORNING, BUT THERE WAS ONLY ONE EFFIN EGG!”

Nice. I called Zeb and asked “Was there only one effin egg?” His deep philosophical response… “oops.” Lovely.

*Disclaimer- She did say “effin” and not the actual “f-bomb”, it’s my silver lining.

You can find my friend, Robin, over at Robin’s Chicks, where she’s ruling the roost, one chick at a time. That concludes the blog tour. Be sure to tip your waitress.

funny rocks

This post courtesy of Guest Blogger, Lori Wescott. Enjoy!

I’m constantly juggling being a wife, a mom, and a writer, while my husband works full time as a pharmacist. Anyone who has tried working from home AND being a mom will tell you that your work always comes last. My husband struggles (aka acts like a baby) over any time that is spent writing, and not with him. This, as you can imagine, leads to many a fine discussion on the matter.

The following is an actual account of a recent conversation between the two of us.

Me: I’m going to do some work for a minute while you watch Luke.

Brantley: (With a smirk AND an eye roll, like a thirteen year old girl) Yeah, ok.

Me: What’s that supposed to mean? Is something funny?

Brantley: No, nothing. Just make sure you buy yourself something nice on your next payday…whenever that is.

He had thrown down the gauntlet. It was on.

Me: Oh, cute. Real cute. You think you’re such a hot shot. You count pills for a living and you can’t even count by fives.

Brantley: I can count to a hundred by threes faster than you could by tens!

Me: You’re not even a real doctor.

I could smell the tears beginning to well up in his eyes. Eureka! I had found his Achilles heel.

Me, again: If I fell out dead on the floor you wouldn’t even know what to do.

Brantley: Sure I would. I’d file an insurance claim and buy a boat.

Me: Man, I wish we had a boat.

Brantley: Me too. We would be such bad asses.

Me: We could call it the S.S. Peesa Schmidt!

Brantley: I thought you wanted to name it the S.S. P.O.S.??

Me: Either one would work.

Brantley: You’re good at naming things.

Me: Thanks. I’m sorry I made fun of your counting method and said I wished you had never been conceived.

Brantley: You didn’t say that.

Me: But I thought it really hard.

And with that, the argument was over. Feeling somewhat victorious, I retired to my office to do “some work,” while Brantley and Luke read stories and played with puzzles. Nothing seems to quench the flames of a fiery argument like a discussion over what to name our non-boat. This may not be a day in the life of a typical freelance writer/stay at home mom, but it’s my little piece of heaven.

Lori Wescott is a former ER nurse turned freelance writer.  She’s seen enough in her career to develop a sick sense of humor and a skewed sense of reality. She hopes her flare for edgy does not offend.  Her goal, after all, is to make you laugh.

Thanks, Lori, you certainly made me laugh. My husband and I (and many of our friends) love to have discussions about our non-boats. You can find Lori over at Loripalooza, Where Funny Rocks.

A note to Jon and Kate plus the rest of us:

 

Today’s post is from guest blogger Jodi Burrus. Remember, we’re on a world tour, ya’ll. She has so many great posts over at her blog The Drunch, I had trouble picking. But this one really spoke to me. Enjoy!

I’m a mom of multiples. And as such, my ears perked up recently when a well-known reality television star attributed her marital woes, at least in part, to the higher incidence of divorce among parents of multiples. Holy Moly! If that were truly the case, then my husband and I were a ticking bomb. Our triplets, Sam, Tom and Will,  came a mere 19 months after the birth of our first son, Jack, creating a shockwave in our well-ordered life. So why is it that divorce courts aren’t cluttered with our tattered hearts as well as those of other parents of twins, triplets or more? I honestly needed to know the answer. To find it, I decided to take a closer look my own married life and see if I couldn’t find a clue that would help me solve this particular mystery.

Before Kids

First, I looked to our marriage before the advent of children. I think we were pretty normal in that we had our fair share of arguments tempered with maybe more than our fair share of laughs. My husband can still spin quite a good yarn about the remote control I shattered when I lobbed it at his head during our first year of marriage. Good thing my aim is so horrible. One thing I do remember as being out of the ordinary: people constantly commented about how sweetly we spoke to one another on the phone.

“How long have you been married?” I remember a co-worker asking. “About 10 years,” I replied. “Geez…you guys are so polite to one another I’d have pegged you as newlyweds!” I beamed for hours afterward; we really felt like newlyweds! And so it was…until the children came.

The First Born

In the year following Jack’s birth, it would be hard for me to say whether things changed or stayed the same between my husband and me because we were completely and totally devoted to our new son. Coming on the heels of years of infertility treatment, Jack was our miracle boy. His every thought, smile, whim, step, gurgle, laugh, or fart was dutifully photographed and downloaded, with copies sent to every friend and relative, regardless of their level of interest. We were so wrapped up in our child that “together-time” consisted of looking away from the baby just long enough to exclaim, “Isn’t he AMAZING!” Within the first year, we decided Jack was so great, we should try for one more just like him.

The Big News

“Do you see the heartbeat?” I asked during my 6 week ultrasound (standard when you conceive using IUI, like me). “Uh-huh,” the nurse responded distractedly, still staring at the display screen as if it were one of those “Magic Eye” pictures at the mall. I waited for her to say something else…and waited…and waited. “Is it twins?” I prodded, forcing a dry croak out of my throat and hoping it passed as a chuckle. I knew she was holding something back. Turning to me, she said flatly, “It’s triplets.” The look on her face told me everything she wouldn’t say, and I felt my heart sink. She turned to gather up her papers without looking at me, assuring the empty hallway that the doctor would be in soon as she bolted out the door. I picked up a worn Reader’s Digest and stared at it for some moments before I realized it was upside down.

So began the next phase of our marriage/parenting journey. Luckily for our family, the triplets were cooperative, allowing themselves to be cooked for 34 weeks. They came home together after only 11 days in the NICU and proceeded to advance along the normal infant developmental curve. That being said, three children still needed to be fed every three to 4 hours all day and night, and my husband was right there beside me despite a grueling work schedule. There was the financial strain of a bigger house, a minivan, a nanny, diapers, wipes, formula, clothes — you name it, they needed it. And forget “free time.” Every moment was accounted for and we still found ourselves scrounging for more.

Post Apocolypse

After the triplets, there was a noticeable change in our relationship. Jason and I were essentially walking zombies, automatically retracing our set nightly routes from bed-to kitchen-to crib-back to kitchen- to bed. Jason had the added hurdle of work thrown in between sets, but once he returned home, he fell right back into line. We lost our collective sense of humor and with it the ability to laugh off those odd moments when the words came out wrong. Also absent was the will to apologize for the inevitable slights that occur between two exhausted people. Not that we intentionally meant to hurt one another, we were just too darn tired to care. There was no overnight ice age, but the emotional temperature was dropping by degrees. I think it would have been easy to go downhill from there: to catalogue the slights, the oversights, every imagined insult and allow them to snowball into grounds for divorce.

Take a happy marriage. Add 4 children, then subtract sleep, money and time… and what do you get? I say you’ve created a recipe for disaster. So why aren’t Jason and I just like the couple on t.v.? Was the reality show solely to blame for the dissolution of their marriage? Did money and power drive a wedge between them? I say no. I think it was something a lot simpler. So simple, you can find it within the pages of one of my children’s favorite books, The Berenstain Bears Forget Their Manners.

In this little morality tale, Mama Berenstain notices the children are fighting more and Papa is not really helping the situation. She enacts the Berenstain Family Politeness Policy, with household chores serving as punishment for infractions. The kids are exaggeratedly polite to start, thinking it will annoy Mama so much that she’ll forget the whole thing, but gradually they forget it’s all a game and settle into simply being thoughtful of one another out of habit. Think of it as the Golden Rule as interpreted by talking bears dressed like the Waltons. Make sense? Try it as it pertains to my husband and me.

When the triplets reached 2 and a half, Jason and I decided to take a weekend trip away with just the two of us. Heresy! It took a full-time nanny and an extremely understanding mother-in-law to pull it off, but we did it. While we were away from our normal routines, we reconnected and had a wonderful 48 hours together before we returned home refreshed and ready to take on the world — or at least 4 little boys. Within 72 hours, we were right back where we started. Discouraging? You better believe it! We both knew we couldn’t continue along this path.

Finally, we sat down and described in excruciating detail what each of us was feeling. The big shocker? We both felt maligned and misused in exactly the same ways. We knew we couldn’t change our situation, but it became apparent that how we reacted to one another within the context of our day to day life was the make or break point. We resolved to treat each other with the courtesy we might normally reserve for friends or acquaintances we wanted to know better — in other words, we promised to roll out our company manners for the most familiar person in our lives.

You know how it felt? AWKWARD!! It felt weird and forced and completely fake to begin with. There were times when I wanted to shout, “What the @#$% did you mean by that comment?” but held my tongue instead. Instead of barking orders at one another, we remembered to say please and thank you. When we crashed into each other en route to quiet a crying child, we both rushed to be the first to apologize.

Bit by bit, it stopped feeling strange. It stopped being forced. It simply became second nature to treat the person I love most in the world with the highest degree of courtesy and kindness I could muster. You know how you tend to use your good china only once or twice a year? The rest of the time it just sits on a shelf gathering dust. The same was true for courtesy and good manners. Who had I been saving the best of myself for?

There are some who will find this analogy simplistic. And I agree with you wholeheartedly. It is intended to be. Every relationship is complicated and many factors come into play in the collapse of a marriage. But in my relationship, and I suspect in many others, remembering to give my kindest self, my politest self, my best self to my partner has gone a long way toward helping us overcome many of the obstacles we face in our marriage and family relationships. It’s a virtually painless (sometimes saying “I’m sorry” does hurt a bit) and deceptively simple way to put a relationship back on track. What have you got to lose?

Like this post? Then go visit The Drunch and give my friend Jodi some love!

I'm on a world tour

Okay, so I haven’t really reached Britney status (and some may argue that’s a good thing.) But starting this week, I am on tour. A blog tour, that is. I’m the featured guest blogger for some really awesome, funny, too-cool-for-school women. Does saying “too cool for school” mean I’m not?

Anyway, you can find me over at Robin’s ChicksLoripalooza, and The Drunch. Their blogs are worth a visit, because as Robin says “it really is funny, when it’s happening to someone other than you!”

In the coming weeks, these women will be gracing my blog with their presence, so stay tuned.

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