Life As an Afterschool Special

Just another WordPress weblog

And you can quote me on that…

Filed under: Uncategorized — imjlrw at 9:34 am on Thursday, November 29, 2007

So my friend Dave recently showed a picture he had taken at an Arby’s somewhere in eastern Indiana/western Ohio. (Ha. Ohio. Those are my people)

ha!

There are so many ridiculously fantastic things about this picture. First, which employee must wash hands? Do they take turns? Is it a daily raffle? Fascinating.

Secondly, why is wash hands in quotation marks? Seriously? Is it a euphemism? What exactly does it mean?

While discussing this with friends, Jason brought up this web site.

I love it!

My favorites so far

Holy cow…

Filed under: Uncategorized — imjlrw at 6:45 pm on Wednesday, November 28, 2007

I look a lot like my mom…

I was looking at pictures of my grandfathers funeral, and I was amazed at how a like we look…

mom

and me

And I am kind of glad too… because my mom is beautiful.

(and I miss her)

Happy Thanksgiving Eve

Filed under: Uncategorized — imjlrw at 11:36 am on Wednesday, November 21, 2007

I am not going home for Thanksgiving…

On one hand, this makes me very very very sad… because I do miss my family. On the other hand, this makes me very very very happy… because I don’t have to eat any of my mothers attempts at cooking.

My mom will say she cooks, but she doesn’t cook. And when she does, things tend to go very very wrong. Like the time she tried to make Key Lime Pie and it didn’t congeal. And my Dad, being the brave soul that he is, ate it anyways, even though it was like bright green slime dripping through the tongs of his fork.

Or the last time I was home, when she caught the stove on fire.

I think to truly understand why my life is an afterschool special you need to spend the weekend with my family.

They are wonderful, and so much fun, but where my family goes adventure soon follows.

This weekend was no exception.

I was at my mom and dads house in Michigan. On Saturday night we had a house full of guests and my mother wanted to make something for dinner for all of them. She was cooking lasagna, spaghetti and meatballs, and garlic bread all at once while we played cards and caught up on each others lives.

She called for the girls to come and help her and as we walked into the kitchen we saw flames coming from the stove top. The oil from the noodles had spilled over onto the burner and ignited.

Oh yeah, it was on fire.

We all stood looking at it for a moment trying to decide how to put it out. We knew enough to know you couldn’t put water on it.

My little sister Staci was the first to spring into action. She grabbed a towel and started to fan the flame, which of course made it grow.

My Aunt Mindy yelled for my mom to put baking soda on the fire. My mom looked in the cupboard and yelled she didn’t have baking soda, so she reached in and pulled out a box of corn starch and threw it on the flames, which also made it grow.

My Aunt Mindy said “I said baking soda not corn starch.”

My mom yelled back “Its the same thing” and then yelled for my dad to help.

So now my mom, my Dad, my two sisters, my sisters boyfriend Ben, five of my cousins, my aunt, three of my uncles, and I are all standing in the kitchen watching the fire.

My Aunt Mindy yells for salt to throw on the fire and my mom reaches over the stove and grabs a salt grinder and starts twisting.

My aunt tells her that wont work we need baking soda and table salt.

My mom turns and yells. “I don’t have any. What do you want from me. Do you want me to go to the store and get some”

At which point my sisters and I start laughing and are of no use at all.

Finally my sisters boyfriend reaches over and grabs a lid to a pan and throws it over the flames, which causes it to die down but not extinguish, so he sets the lasagna on top of it too. Then me and my dad blow out the fire.

My mom opens the oven to get out the garlic bread and it is on fire too.

There is smoke everywhere, corn starch all over the kitchen and us, the dinner is burnt, and my sisters and I cant stop laughing.

In the end we survived. We laughed and ate burnt Italian. It was wonderful and it was family.

My mother called it the great fire.

And every time we tell the story it gets a little better.

because that’s just part of having a life as an afterschool special.

Happy Thanksgiving friends. May your turkey be moist, your potatoes fluffy, and your house fire free.

Edited to add email from my mom

And oh by the way….. And yes there was a fire this Thanksgiving also… Squash with marshmellows caught on fire and had to be carried outside.

Tis the season

xoxoxoxo

Ha! Love her!