This just in! You really can be in two places at once!!
One foot in Arizona and one foot in Nevada. Hoover Dam.
Devil’s Bridge – Sedona, Arizona
We had to hike to get there. I didn’t even panic when they walked across. Ok, that is a lie. I did panic, a little. But man, it was cool.
The truth is, the best moment may very well have been afterwards, playing football with them in the hotel pool. That was cool, too.
For more on this adventure, finding the bridge and living to tell about it – Go Here!
For more Sweet Spot Travels: Go Here!
Today is my husbands birthday. Last year, I (and my kids) completely forgot his birthday. That’s right, no gift, no cruddy store bought card, no drawn picture, no recognition whatsoever – not even a gag gift. Honestly, he wasn’t even that up-in-arms about it…which, of course, made us feel even more guilty. He loves to laugh. Therefore, we decided salvation from our faux pas was through humor.
We made him a list. A very special list. A list explaining how we, in our individual ways, had very logical reasons excuses as to why his birthday had been forgotten.
Top 10 Reasons I/We Forgot Your Birthday
10. I was abducted by aliens and they mind wiped one day from my memory… so, I will remember tomorrow.
9. I have selective amnesia: also known as Spoucitus or Parentaphobia.
8. It’s not my fault; I got my brain from you!
7. What!!! I was doing you a favor by forgetting.
6. Mama needed a new pair of shoes…dress…shirt… well, you get the idea.
5. The devil made me do it.
4. My underwear was too tight.
3. Pick up shirts from the dry cleaners… (oops, wrong list).
2. I was busy documenting a Big Foot sighting (which, unfortunately, turned out to be just a really hairy guy from down the street).
And the number one reason your birthday was forgotten…
1. I would have remembered if I didn’t have diarrhea.
This year for my husbands birthday, we bought him a tie. Actually, this year for his birthday we are taking him on a trip – which will be memorable and fun. However, I have a feeling he may stand by his sentiment expressed after reading our pitiful excuses for forgetting last years birthday.
“That was the best birthday present you could have given me”.
Sometimes, it is just that simple.
The fun continues on ParentSociety.com where my latest article “Top 5 Mysteries of Parenting” went live today. It starts out like this:
Mysteries are a part of life. True mysterious occurrences are, all at once, puzzling, unexplainable, and strange. As a young person I obsessed over anomalies such as: Did it really say “Paul is dead” when a Beatles song was played backwards? And would the bad guys on Scooby Doo really have gotten away with it “if it wasn’t for those meddling kids?” As I matured, I moved on to more perplexing mysteries such as: How did they get those massive statues on Easter Island up and standing in a row? Is Jim Morrison really alive and well roaming the streets of Paris, incognito, looking like Grizzly Adams? And, Donald Trump’s hair (need I say more)?
But then, I discovered the mysteries of parenting…

“How Much Should I Tell My Kids About My Wild Youth?”My latest article on ParentSociety.com is out. Want a little sample?
I know the day is coming, soon. I know as sure as Lindsay Lohan will end up in court again, the day is coming when my fear of full disclosure will be realized. The day when I get asked personal questions by my curious teenage boys that I, on the one hand do not want to lie about, but at the same time do not want to fully disclose either. And, in the interest of proper parenting – I mean, you have start some time, right – I must know how to handle the moment and I need help!
Let me explain. Getting married and becoming a first time Mom in my 30’s meant two things…
I like The Wave. I want The Wave. I want to kick the person’s butt who denies me The Wave. Do you know of what I speak? I am not talking about that thing in the sports stadiums that makes you get off your behind, flail your arms like a Muppet on crack, and spill stuff. I am talking about that little acknowledgement you get from a fellow driver on the road. The simple hand gesture that can say “please”, “thank you” or just “I acknowledge you exist”. The Wave.
Never gave it much thought? Well, neither did I. That is, until The Wave was gone. (Feel free to hum a few bars of “Don’t know what ya got, ‘til its gone”, I did)…
Even during my 10 years in LA, where driving is sometimes like something out of a Mad Max movie (only without Tina Turner riding shotgun), you can still get The Wave – and I don’t mean the one where the middle finger is prominent (although, that one is generously given as well). I am talking about a true and significant appreciation Wave, enough, at least, to feel satisfied.
But then, I moved to New Orleans. Now (disclaimer coming), New Orleans is a great city, with many wonderful attributes and people – boy, do they know how to throw a party. However, when it comes to The Wave, they are a big, fat void. In my 5 years living there, no matter how hard I tried, begged, frantically waved, offered beads and occasionally even a boob flash (ok, not that one) I could never illicit a return or acknowledgement Wave in any way, shape or form. And, I missed The Wave, desperately.
However, our next big move was to the Mid-West. And, much to my pleasant surprise, Mid-Westians (Mid-Westers?) really know how to work The Wave. You know how the Eskimos have 100+ words to express “snow” related things? Well, that is how prolific Mid-Westians are with The Wave. I kid you not (‘cause that would be so unlike me). Here are just a few that come to mind:
The “Thank You” Wave.
The “No problem” Wave.
The “Go ahead, I’m in no hurry” Wave.
The “Sorry I did not see you there” Wave.
The “That’s Ok” Wave
The “Thanks for not honking at me even though I deserve it” Wave.
The “Sorry to make you wait while I cleaned up the juice my kid just spilled” Wave. (followed by…)
The “I can see that you are stressed and I won’t make it worse by honking at you” Wave.
The “We are just two cars passing on a country road” Wave.
The “I’m cool” Head-Wave.
The “I’m even cooler” Chin-Lift Wave.
The “I don’t want to take my hands off the wheel but want to greet you” Finger-Lift Wave.
The “You are welcome to pass my slow farm vehicle” Wave.
The “I’m sorry I was just a dork for cutting you off/getting in your way” Wave.
I possibly overuse this wave and therefore often receive back…
The “Never mind, it is ok that you are a dork” Wave.
The “Hello fellow truck owner” Wave (hubbys favorite)
The “I won’t smile at you but will still acknowledge you exist” Wave (my visiting Mom’s Fave).
And the truly unique, from my elderly pedestrian neighbor…
The “I am too involved in what I am doing to look up at you but here is my hand” Wave.
To which I always respond with…
The “I know you can’t see it but I will reciprocate anyway” Wave.
I love them all. Who knew such a small thing could speak volumes when silenced. There are many things in life I can definitely live without – coffee a 2nd cup of coffee, an ab six-pack, shoulder pads, another social network, Journey to the Center of the Earth Part 3.
But The Wave? No, I know now, I need The Wave.
In fact, I deserve The Wave.
And so do you.
So, if you are ever out Mid-West way, look for me. I’ll be the one giving you
The “Nice to see you ‘round these parts” Wave.
My first article The Real Reason I Wear Sunscreen (Hint: It’s not for my health) is up and running on ParentSociety.com! Curious? It starts like this:
A few years ago (if more than ½ dozen can still be considered a few), I turned 40.
You know those major transitions in life that breeze right by – go down like milk and honey? Right, well, this was not one of those moments. For me, turning 40 was much more like swallowing a jagged little pill…and Alanis Morissette…and her entire band…all at the same time.
As I recall, which being over 40 and a Mom pretty much gives me carte blanche to never remember anything ever again, my actual birthday was pretty good….
Go here to read the rest. Really, you don’t want to miss this one. That is, if you want to know what Peeping Toms and sunscreen have in common.
10 years ago I did something unbelievable; so amazing in fact, that my friends and family were in awe (or, shock was it?). I moved, with my husband and two boys, from the city to my husband’s hometown in rural mid-west Missouri (for how city girl met country boy go here).
Now, I know what you are thinking: California girl moving to the country – train wreck about to happen. Well, sometimes, it felt that way. In truth, there were adjustments to make.
First off, in an attempt to minimize my transition trauma, we chose a house in “town” as opposed to one smack dab in the middle of a farm – like, without neighbors…and lots of snakes. However, while it is true that in “town” I can actually see my neighbor’s house, it is also a fact that “town” is basically a one block main street with some off-shooting streets, not even enough inhabitants to fill up an AMC Movie Theatre (unless you include the animals and livestock), and to get a decent work-out, you must run/walk/bike the circumference of the “town” numerous times.
However, in addition to learning to survive a rural mid-west winter (A California Girl’s Guide here), I have acquired knowledge of immense use to making it faking it as a country girl.
1. Anywhere in town, always leave your keys in your unlocked vehicle. This is very important, because you never know when someone will need to quickly jump into your vehicle to move it out of the way of a passing farm apparatus, help an elderly person needing your parking space, or borrow it for some quick, random errand. If all goes well, your car will be in the same location when you go to retrieve it. If not, a few phones calls (in my case, usually to car-swapping brother-in-law) will quickly establish a location and alternate transportation if needed.
2. Don’t be fooled, in the country the snakes live in town too. In fact, they enjoy flaunting this fact by dropping out of trees in front of your house guests, sunning themselves outside your kitchen window, slithering through your baseball pick-up games, or hibernating in your domicile. It is best to pretend you are copacetic with co-habitation and hope they are eating rodents and not your baby birds.
3. If you run out of or forget an item at a store, seek help. “Running” to the store to get a needed item is just not an option, the store might as well be a billion miles away (Which explains why savvy country dwellers have pantries the size of Mt. Rushmore). Therefore, if you need an item such as eggs, milk, spices, butter, canned corn, etc…appeal to a neighbor. If you require items such as: Whole Wheat flour, tofu, tempe, organic beans, or turkey bacon…make spaghetti.
4. Learn how to follow road directions. I know what you are thinking…how dumb can you be if you can’t follow directions. But trust me; survival depends on a vast amount of UN-documented knowledge. Here is generally how my first direction experience went:
Me: “How do I get to xyz?”
Direction Giver Guy/Girl (DGG): “Drive straight out of town then turn left at the Smith house”
Me:“Who are the Smiths?”
DGG: “The Smiths are the people who used to live in that house next to the barn where John Chaney kept his horse named Champ”.
Me:“Oh”.
DGG: “Then, take a right onto Boat Road”
Me: “So, there will be a road sign?”
DGG: “No, that is not the actual name”
Me: “Huh?”
DGG: “It is called that because of a building that looks like a boat”
Me: “So, I will see this building that looks like a boat and know when to turn?”
DGG: “No, the building was torn down several years ago.”
Me: “Oh”.
DGG: “Then, when you see the black bull standing in the pasture..”
Me: “You mean, like with horns?”
DGG: “Yeah – turn right at the sharp corner where Duke Dudley wrecked his truck and there you are.”
Me: “Where?”
DGG: “At the chicken coup with the rooster weather vane.”
Me: “Oh”…
And as a country Mom, I have learned to curtail the shock of watching my kids driving before their feet reached the pedals, wielding all manner of power tools and weapons of mass destruction, and requesting flying squirrels as pets. But, that is a story for another day.
In closing, if there is one key thing I have learned about rural life, it is this…
The good thing about living in a small town is,
When you don’t know what you are doing, that’s ok…
Everybody else does…
A special time of year is quickly approaching. It is the time, each year, when I transform from your typical mild mannered Mom (did I hear someone snicker?) into something scary and not a little bit dangerous…the Sport-Mom.
You see, very soon, it will begin to warm up, the grass will turn green and my two boys will be heading out of doors with their bat, ball, and glove to “take the field”. And I, being the devoted Sport-Mom, will be right there with them. I will sit in the stands, with all the other Sport-Moms doing what Sport-Moms do in such circumstances: guide in all sporting skills, guard against sport pitfalls, protect from lurking evil sport entities, and provide snacks.
Now let me say, it has taken some time for me to become the full-fledged proficient Sport-Mom you see before you today. There were those novice days when I unknowing purchased football cleats for my son to wear for an entire baseball season. The time I actually calmly watched as my son took the mound for the first time – frivolously unaware of the high stakes of Little League Baseball. Oh, and the worst – the time I forgot the snacks.
But now, I come to play – bring my A game, as it were. I try to be good, I really do. But it is a struggle. Let’s face it, whoever decided it was a good idea to meld the Mama-Bear mentality with kids sports had to know trouble was on the horizon. I fear the day I could morph into that Sport-Mom who runs to the dugout to chew out her son for a mistake made on the field because she thinks the coach isn’t doing an adequate job of it. Or, the Sport-Mom who corners the coach after the game with notes on what he needs to change – which usually includes her little dickens starting in pretty much every position. Or, the Sport-Mom who wears sexy, tight and inappropriate outfits to the game in an attempt to distract the opposing team’s coaches (ok, I might do this one if I was blessed with the goods).
Therefore, as the time approaches, even though there is no denying my ability to coach from the bleachers is, well, beyond impressive, I will head into the season with a fresh approach. Strict directives- some self-imposed and some “suggested”- to keep from getting too out of hand.
For example:
I will (per request) make every effort to restrain from screaming out those annoyingly obvious instructions such as “Throw strikes” “Hit the ball!” “Make good throws” “Keep your eye on the ball” “Just play pitch and catch” “You gotta want the ball” “Bat to ball”
and my favorite “See ball…Hit ball” (I definitely won’t say that one because someone might mistake me for an idiot).
I will squelch the impulse to hurl chunks or obsessively pace every time one of my boys comes up to bat – takes the mound – squats behind the plate… ah heck, takes the field in general.
I will resist the urge to go Spider Monkey on the Sport-Mom who is convinced her kid is getting drafted into the Majors straight out of Little League…or the Umpire who doesn’t know the rule book…or the coach who takes advantage of the Ump who doesn’t know the rule book – I will send my friend Nikki to do it.
Lastly, I will not, under any circumstances whatsoever, tell my kid (or anyone else’s) “Get your head out of your butt and get in the game”, unless, of course, it is, and in that case we are probably headed for the hospital.
I will, however, cheer until I am hoarse, gives high fives & hugs when they win, give high fives & hugs when they lose, tell them they are awesome…always, eat the teams combined weight in Good n Plenty, wear my sunscreen, and quietly kvetch with empathetic fellow Sport-Moms. All the while, keeping in mind there is undeniably, only one true answer to the question:
What is the difference between a Bulldog and a Sport-Mom?
Bulldogs don’t wear lipstick.
My son was an action figure connoisseur of sorts. As a kid, he spent hours engaged in elaborate battles with his huge collection. These ‘campaigns’ would continue for days on end and until completion, I was not allowed to alter their tactical arrangement in any way. In the majority of these battles, an action figure he named Chris the Caveman (of mysterious origins) was invariably the leader and subsequent conqueror. I asked my son once, why?, and he replied that his battles required super-hero strength against extreme powers and Chris with his ripped muscles seemed like the man for the job…
From left: Lori Kickliter, Kristen Sauter, Jennifer Cihi, Michele DeCuir, Paula Benedetti (Danner), Molly Ringwald.
Today I am hanging out at one of my favorite places to guest post, DenimDebutante.com.
I love random. Today, I am writing about the musical Annie and Dittos Jeans. It may not be as random as you think (then again…). I guess you will just have to go here and find out. And yes, that is me in the picture (Annie/National II) above…a “few” years ago.
Over the years I have been encouraged to tell the serendipitous story of how my husband, Jim, and I found each other. Valentine’s Day seemed like a good time. Honestly, I tried to keep it short, but it just isn’t that kind of tale.
I was 23, touring as a performer in the National IV tour of CATS. He was 25, working at his family owned hotel in New Orleans, LA – which is where the story begins. The tour stopped in New Orleans for 2 weeks of performances and some of us ‘Kitty’s’ were thrilled to find and stay at his quaint, historic hotel. Our first meeting occurred over a broken stove. I called the front desk to have someone come repair the stove in my room (this was when cooking actually seemed fun) and he showed up at my door. Over that hot and steamy repair job (kidding!) the attraction was immediate. We spent those 2 weeks together, getting to know each other.
After those two weeks, though, on I went with the tour to the next city.
Over the next several months we stayed in contact by letters (you know the handwritten thing that goes on paper). We kept in touch while I finished the tour and went back to Los Angeles to continue my performance career and he cruised around South America starting an export business (the legal type – Alpaca sweaters) and around the US on the PRCA (Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association) circuit as a Bull and Bronc rider (all true, I swear).
Finally, an agreement was made; he would come to LA to visit me. However, not long after his arrival in LA, I informed him “I do not see this relationship going anywhere”. In truth, I do not recall saying it in just this way (as he relayed to me some time later), but my Mom ratted me out by saying it sounded “exactly like something I used to say in those days”. (There went her Christmas present that year!).
Anyway, off he went, back to New Orleans. That was the last time we spoke.
7 years went by (yep, 7 years!).
In that time he continued with his export business, riding the Pro-rodeo PRCA circuit, and attending to the hotel. I kicked around LA doing commercials & videos, singing in bands, marketing music artists, and doing what all aspiring performers do in LA –bartend, waitress and do odd jobs.
But, the pertinent part is, during that time, I had the pleasure occasion to kiss a lot of frogs. Cute some may have been, but none of which turned into a handsome prince (although, a few morphed into evil wizards with bad complexions).
Then, it happened. One day, on the heels of the crown jewels of bad relationships, I was teaching Line Dancing at the trendy Denim & Diamonds Country Music Nightclub in Santa Monica (one of those odd jobs). I happened to look up at the TV screen with the ever running assortment of ‘all things western’ and there he was; on the screen, in all his Pro-rodeo glory, riding a bucking horse (well, getting bucked off a bucking horse if you must know), in a PRCA rodeo in Texas. Thus began the obsessive thought process that would plague me for days on end: “He was a really good guy”…”What was I thinking back then (as in, what an idiot I was)”…”man, I really blew that”…”I wonder what he is doing now…married???”
I spent days thinking and thinking about it; until I could not take the cosmic hammering anymore and decided to take action.
At the time, I was performing in a trio that was preparing to open up for Carlene Carter. As the group was addressing promotional postcards with our picture on it (this is what one did before “social networking”), I addressed one to him at his hotel in New Orleans, which consequently his family still owned, with a small note (and, duh, my phone number) included. (oh, home-wrecker I’m not – one call to chatty desk clerk at hotel confirmed bachelorhood).
Since our final parting 7 years prior had been, ummm, not the best in his memory, he was prepared to possibly discard the greeting. That is until his English friend (I knew I liked that bloke), in his never beat around the bush way, pointed out that due to the “positive physical attributes” displayed in the picture, perhaps at least a return phone call was in order (praise be the wisdom of guy-logic).
He did call. Then he called again, many times. And then we arranged to get together. Gullible Forgiving guy that he is, he, again, came out to see me in LA. This time, I did not send him home with some stupid edict, but rather with the promise of a reciprocal visit to New Orleans and more.
And despite the fact that I bristled ever so slightly at the statement made by him some months later that if “anyone had ever told me I had already met the girl I was going to marry, I would never have thought of you” and he, annoyed by the fact that I had to slobber all over a bunch of frogs before finally getting it right…
We married a 1 ½ years later.
Well, 7 years and 1 ½ years later.
This year we will celebrate our 16th anniversary. I am thinking all those frogs and bucking livestock were well worth the trouble – which only goes to show that it is a good thing, life is what happens while you are busy making plans!
As author Saul Bellow so eloquently put it:
“Unexpected intrusions of Beauty. That’s what life is.”
Happy Valentines Day
I have a son. I have had him for a decade. Apparently, 10 years is a long enough time for some to acquire a significant amount of knowledge and I have, consequently, learned a vast amount from him. Not the usual wisdom one might aspire to but, I have come to believe, he is definitely onto something. What, exactly, I couldn’t really say; but valuable, to be sure. And, what good is knowledge if not shared? Therefore, in the interest of fairness, here are some of the Decade Boy’s most admired words of wisdom.
Why goof of tomorrow when you can goof off today.
Girls who chase boys are pathetic.
Smart people are often “over-rated”.
The enjoyment of any activity is always increased by the removal of all authority figures.
School (work) could actually be fun in Heelys…and, of course, no teachers (bosses).
The song “Animal Crackers in My Soup” is worth singing repeatedly after changing the word “Soup” to “Poop”.
School is completely unnecessary, just “figure it out.”
Forget motivational speeches, prizes, or perks…you want results? Show me the money!
Which brings us to:
Career goal: “To be Rich.”
Most Memorable Quote:
“All the seasons of Childhood are wasted while in School.”
And lastly:
The person who decided it was a good idea to have 5 days of school/work to only 2 days of weekend was the dumbest person on the planet.
Confucius say: He who passes gas in church sits in his own pew.
Decade Boy say: When all else fails…kick butt.
Like I said…clearly onto something.
For more Pre-teen isms – A Decade of Wisdom – Go Here!
There I was, wrestling with “The Beast” (aka: Full Kitchen Trash Bag), out-manned, out-matched and out-maneuvered as contents began to spill out onto the floor. “Help Needed!”, I yelled to no one in particular. Both of my boys came bounding into the kitchen to my aide. Together, we tamed “The Beast”. They’ve got my back. I’m not alone. It feels good.My son was an action figure connoisseur of sorts. As a kid, he spent hours engaged in elaborate battles with his huge collection. These ‘campaigns’ would continue for days on end and until completion, I was not allowed to alter their tactical arrangement in any way. In the majority of these battles, an action figure he named Chris the Caveman (of mysterious origins) was invariably the leader and subsequent conqueror. I asked my son once, why?, and he replied that his battles required super-hero strength against extreme powers and Chris with his ripped muscles seemed like the man for the job.
Now, Chris the Caveman sits on a dusty shelf in the playroom – his battles behind him. The truth is, he has not only been abandoned by a maturing boy, but he has also been replaced by an enemy I must now face. A foe I wonder if even Chris the Caveman would have had the strength to overcome.
Electronics
Before I go any further let me just say, Electronics are not inherently evil – ok, maybe they are, but in the interest of political correctness let’s just say they ‘behave badly’. And like most families these days we are equipped with the usual: computer, HDTV, phones (my smart phone may have been a stumble into enemy territory), microwave – plenty enough to distract from human interaction (those microwaves can really be addicting). But, I have tried to hold firm against an all-out invasion (i.e. big gaming units with flesh eating Zombies).
Nonetheless, I was blindsided by the enemy’s recent ploy. My weakness has been identified…my kids. When my boys presented the idea they “earn and save” the money (they took that Get a Yob thing seriously) to buy their own desired items I was all aglow with: smug relief (Ha! They will never be able to save that much), and maternal pride (look at those little darlings willing to work for something they want, aaah). However, this Custer–like underestimation of my opponent has proven to be a fatal misstep. For now, my boys are both in possession of their desired electronic, complete with bells, whistles & Zombies, and I feel like Mickey in Fantasia, helpless as Electronics march over me and into my house.
In essence, I have become Chris the Caveman – except, without the rippling muscles and you know, cool loincloth. I am single-handedly attempting to fight an enemy of extreme powers with only help from my minions (well, minion – my husband) – struggling to stop the time-sucking, interaction-obliterating, Electronic devices from completely taking over my home. And as in all of Chris the Caveman’s battles, I fear it will get worse before it gets better, be bloody, body parts scattered, and end with only one true victor. But like Chris the Caveman, there is no “if ya can’t beat em’ join em”, only a fight to the last one standing. I think I am the woman for the job but just in case…
Better save a spot on that dusty shelf for me.
Yob: I did it! I created a word. At least I thought I had. Until I discovered some slippery, sly English peops (I can say that because some of my best friends are English) had beat me to it. However, when my son won at scrabble using “Yob”– which according to Merriam-Webster is b-o-y spelled backward (really?), and meaning: a young man who is rowdy, rude, noisy, and aggressive (I live with Yobs and didn’t even know it), and rhymes with Gob (Ha! Didn’t see that one coming did ya’) – I was forced to face the disappointment or lobby M-W for inclusion.
You see, for some time, Yob has been a Homonym of sorts in my household. Allow me to illustrate.
“Get a Yob”: In this context, Yob is most effective in answer to the frequently asked question from minors in household: “Mom, can I have…(fill in blank with overpriced electronic of choice)”. Used in this form, Yob means: If you want particular time sucking device, you will have to work, earn money, save, spend it all on desired item and realize you are flat broke…again.
Positive attributes of usage being, minors are proud purchasers of mind emptying electronics and my Botox emergency fund remains intact…oh, and they like, learned some kind of valuable life lesson or something.
“Not my Yob”: The usage of the word in this context is a clear indication that a “pass the buck” scenario from one adult to another is about to take place (from myself to hubs if you must know). At this crucial moment, husband is forced to revisit the possibility he failed to examine the fine print in the marriage contract explaining his Yob description included: all things gross (puke clean up), all things that make you simultaneously sweaty & dirty (summer yard work), and all things smelly ( taking out all trash).
Sadly for him, the misplacement or loss of said document has relegated husband to taking wife’s word on the subject.
“Do your Yob”: The bellow of the word in this context is music to the ears of one occupant of the household…my dog. At moment of utterance, the word ringing in dog’s ears causes her thought process to go something like this…The Mom is cooking…dropping food on the floor…all over the floor…like always…I must away…to the kitchen…no time to waste…to clean the floor…I love my Yob,…no, I REALLY, REALLY love my Yob. (Which in this context means – That thing one does when not sleeping, eating or urinating on the tires of cars in the driveway…preferably you are a dog if you are using the word in this context).
Disclaimer: For those of you getting the ole undies in a bundle over the use of this questionably politically correct pronunciation, please keep one thing in mind. As a person from San Hose, who has endured a lifetime of “You really do know the way to San Hose, don’t you!” and “Are you from San HosA or San HosB?”– I think I have paid my dues and deserve to take a few liberties. No Yoke.
Only a few words were maimed in the writing of this blog.
