Archive for the ‘friends’ Category

Played Us Like a Fiddle

February 3, 2009 by Joe
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Yesterday was Adam’s 30th birthday. Three days ago, on Saturday, was the super secret awards-show style surprise birthday party that his wife had been planning for the previous 4 or 5 months. She rented a conference room at the local Radisson hotel, which we decorated around a red carpet awards show. I won’t delve into her devious planning, and how she was able to arrange for him to be there in a suit, with him none the wiser, but it’s a good story.

I’ve spent the last 2 months (maybe three, I can’t really remember), making a PowerPoint for the event, which became known as “The Non-Annual Quoties Awards”. Adam has the innate ability to watch a movie one time and quote almost the entire thing afterward. As a result, he somehow manages to work movie quotes into everyday conversation, well, everyday. Some are easily worked into a discussion, like “You’re killing me, Smalls”, from “The Sandlot”. Others aren’t nearly as easy, but he pulls it off. It’s a gift, for sure. The meat and potatoes of the PowerPoint went like this. A quote would appear on screen for about 4 seconds. All quotes were lines that Adam has been known to say, many times. Guests would then shout out their guesses for the movie the quote belongs to. Then the movie clip would play. It took two (or more) months, because I had to get the movie from Netflix, if I didn’t already have it, rip it to the computer with one program, compress it to a windows movie file with another, find the quote and mark its start and end frame with yet another program, and extract the segment of movie with a final program. After all the quotes and slides were loaded, I had to rearrange them all into a random order, and set the timing up for the clips. Sound effects, animations, blah blah blah.

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The general format of the Quoties slideshow

On Friday, I watched the slideshow about 10 times, and tweaked a few things. Sarah took Tyler to visit a friend that just had a baby, which allowed me to concentrate my time into making these final adjustments. The party was about two hours from us (ah, the joys of moving away from all of one’s friends), so we spent Saturday morning getting everything around and packed up. The difficulty in this was that Tyler was being an absolute nightmare; easily the worst he’s been since he was born. A peek into his mouth during these endless screams revealed the very beginnings of Tyler’s third tooth. His first two teeth were the bottom front teeth. I don’t recall which one is normally the next one to come through – and it’s not worth my time to google it again – but this one wasn’t it. Tyler appears to be copying Maddie, by bringing in his left, upper eye-tooth next (also known as the canine, or the fang tooth).

It really hurts us to see our son in pain. The bigger problem is that we had a party to get to that night. If we were just regular guests (and I’m not being demeaning in saying this), we would have called and canceled. But, the PowerPoint was a very key element to the party. No matter what, the laptop had to get up there and hooked up to the speakers and projector! Sarah’s last nerve was in danger of snapping and she needed a baby-break. So, she went to the store to look at shoes while I tended to the tester-of-sanity.

“Tyler, I don’t know what to do, buddy.”

He continued screaming as the lightbulb clicked on above my head. You know the lightbulb. It’s the one that has the word “idea” curved around the top of the bulb. Sometimes, little lines will come off the word, to show emphasis on the fact that despair has been replaced with a brilliant thought. I searched through the luggage bag that Sarah packed, for the magical tube of Baby Teethers Orajel. I squirted about a half pea sized amount onto my finger and rubbed it onto his gums. For good measure, I handed the tube to him, so he could suck what he wanted to out of it, like an on-demand morphine drip. I’m making that last part up, but it did cross my mind. On a scale of one to a hundred, with one hundred being the best, the effect of the Orajel on Tyler’s pain (as judged by the longevity and pitch of his screams) was about 0.00000001. And that was being generous.

Have you ever watched a movie where the hero was hanging off a cliff by a rope, and the individual threads of the rope started to break and unravel, spelling certain doom for our hero? That’s how I visualized my nerves and patience. Then I heard keys.

“MOMMY’S HOME!”

An angel, surrounded by bright, pure, white light appeared in the doorway, and she was holding a package of Baby Motrin. Berry flavored, no less. I couldn’t read the dosage table, indications and fine print fast enough. Tyler definitely liked the taste of it too, because he looked at me as if asking where the rest of it was.

Further complicating everything else, this was to be the first time that Tyler would be left with a babysitter. Let me clarify, because he’s previously been left in the care of his aunts while Sarah and I went out. This time he was going to be cared for by a complete stranger. We weren’t terribly worried, because this is the same person that watches Adam and Mel’s son, Ben, and they love her. But he was wearing on our patience, and we’re his parents. I had a real fear that she could just lose her temper with Tyler.

We drove up to Kalamazoo and parked at a “For Sale” house just around the corner from Adam’s and Mel’s. At 6:09p, they pulled out and turned the other way. I said “It’s go time” and quickly drove to their house, unloaded the supplies and hopped into Mel’s SUV to go to the Radisson. Before I left, I told the babysitter to please be patient with our grumpy baby and call us for anything. Sarah was sticking around for another 20 minutes to go over all the details with her.

Fast forward about 90 minutes. We were all setup and waiting for Adam and Mel to arrive from their dinner date to the surprise party. All the guests were lined up on the “red carpet” with their cameras. They were instructed to act as paparazzi for the guest of honor. Problem is, the guest of honor and his wife were running late, so every time I walked back into the room to update them (Melanie was sending Sarah text messages while Sarah spied from the halls of the hotel, looking for them) the guests all looked up, ready to yell and start taking pictures. All I saw were the looks of disappointment when they saw that it was just me. Truthfully, during one of my entrances, they expressed a collective sigh of disappointment, which was a mixture of “uhhh”, deep exhalations, and “come on”. It’s great for ones pride and ego.

Finally we got the message. “We’re in the hotel. Adam’s going to the bathroom.” Sarah and I ran into the room and told them to take their places. When they walked in, flashes were going off everywhere as I faded in AC/DC’s “Thunderstruck”.

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“What are you wearing?”, “Who did your eyebrows?”, and “Where the hell have you been?” were just a few of the comments I could hear over the music, as I was crouched right next to the speakers. The speech, the PowerPoint, and the surprise couldn’t have gone any better. After the “awards” portion, we all started to mingle and talk and drink. There was a table setup with theatre sized boxes of candy, and a popcorn machine next to the beverage table. Sarah sent me into the hall to check her voicemail since there was no reception in the room that the party was in.

“You have 1 new message, and 2 old messages”, piped the recorded, emotionless female voice.

“Hi Sarah, this is Jaime…”

My heart jumped. Could Tyler really have been so bad that she had to call us? Why didn’t I pay attention to when the message was received? How long ago was this?

“… I just wanted to let you know that Tyler…”

Seriously? Talk faster, woman! Get to the point!

“… is sound asleep. He’s been great tonight. He did start to get a little fussy, so I read him a book and put him to bed, and he went right to sleep…”

I stood there, with Sarah’s pink phone to my ear in stunned silence as she continued her message about Tyler’s angelic behavior. The boy that seemed to be possessed by the darkest demons just 12 hours ago? I could feel the walls start to close in on me as I realized that my son is a two faced liar, and he played us like a fiddle. How could I ever have sympathy for Tyler and his Crocodile tears again? Little faker.

“… press 7. To save this message, press 9.”

Snapping back to reality, I pressed 9 and folded the phone closed. Sarah’s mouth made an audible thud as it hit the floor when I relayed the message. I told her that I saved the message because I knew she wouldn’t believe me.

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Let’s do a shot!

October 1, 2008 by Joe
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A Breastshield
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Something happened a few weeks ago, and I promised myself that I would blog about it.

Tyler is a breastfed baby, 100%. How a breastfed baby can weigh 19 pounds three days before he’s 3 months old is beyond me. If Mike and Heather want some of Tyler’s baby fat for their 10 and a half month old Maddie, I’ll send it via first class mail. Also beyond my comprehension is how Sarah can still have excess milk while breastfeeding a 19 pound baby. Don’t get me wrong, Sarah has always been *ahem* blessed in the bosom. Ever since her milk came in, her hoot hoots have become ginormous. Still, I’ve no idea how she can feed the chunky monkey and still need to say, “I need to pump.”

To do the deed, she uses a Medela Pump in Style Advanced breastpump. It’s a pretty cool pump. It does it’s job, and Sarah seems pleased with it. Two thumbs up as far as I’m concerned. It basically consists of a pump, a carrying bag, a tube, and a breastshield. Check out the picture to see what a breastshield is, as it’s the subject of this post. I will also be referring to it simply as “shield” for the rest of this post. If you have ANY imagination whatsoever, you can easily see where it goes.

Well… a while back, Sarah and I, along with Tyler, went to spend a long weekend with Mel and Adam, and their son, Ben, at their lake cottage. You can read about that here. I didn’t mention this particular story then, because I really believed it deserved its own post.

On one particular morning while we were there, Sarah needed to pump. When she was done, she put the shield next to the kitchen sink. Me, Sarah, and Melanie were all sitting at the dining room table. I couldn’t tell you with absolute certainty what we were doing though. I’m sure we were either playing Yahtzee or eating food. Adam is walking around munching on chicken wings (at 9am) or something.

Adam is one of the funniest guys I know. He can find funny in just about anything, to hell with levels of appropriateness. He is a rabid Buckeye fan, and a Republican though. With those two strikes already against him, he’s really got no other choice than to be funny. In my eyes, the two worst qualities you can have are to be a Republican and a fan of a team whose mascot is a poisonous NUT, so you better damn well have a redeeming quality. The day I stop laughing at your jokes, Adam, is the day that my strictly-non-gay man-crush on you is OVER!! GO BLUE!!!

Anyway, Adam walks out of the kitchen, holding the shield. With a quizzical look on his face, he asks, “What is this thing?”

That was when he found funny. He didn’t wait for Sarah to say, “That’s the thing I put on my hoot hoot when I need to pump breast milk for my baby.” He didn’t wait for Melanie to say, “Adam, put that down, you jackass.”

Nope… Adam found funny. So, instead of waiting for a response, he continued.

“It looks like something you’d take a shot out of.”

He then acts as if he’s taking a shot of whiskey. He holds the shield over his head, cranes his neck back and opens his mouth. He didn’t bring the shield down to his mouth or anything, because that would be gross. He just held it about 8 inches above his mouth… BUT….

drip…. drip…..

Right into his mouth. It was a bullseye shot directly into his gullet.

It was at that exact moment that Sarah informed him of the purpose of the item he had in his hands. Adam’s face contorted slowly from a look of “did that just happen?” to one that was a mixture of revulsion, terror, embarrassment, and utter disgust. It is beyond me how he was able to keep from getting a second showing of his breakfast, because he looked darn close to bringing it all back up. It was kinda like that scene in Van Wilder when the frat boys find out that their doughnuts aren’t filled with custard.

“Mmmmmm…. I think I’ve had these before”

Sarah – evil girl that she is (but that’s why I love her) – waits until all this has happened before saying, “I washed it out already. It’s clean.” I’m sure that didn’t do much to alleviate Adam’s disgust though. Think about it… if it were you, would you feel better? I wouldn’t. For as long as we all live, Adam will be the guy that got some of my wife’s breastmilk residue in his mouth. She could have washed it out with bleach using an industrial sized power-washer, but he’d still be that guy.

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