Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Dispatches from the Holmesfront

Or, bullet point versions of posts that The Holmes has been wanting to write, but hasn’t the time for currently

  • The Business of Busyness - Somebody emailed me recently and asked if we (meaning The Ash and I) could possibly be doing any more things at once. The answer is yes, yes we could, but then we would be certifiably batshit insane. New baby on the way, toddler on the loose, condo on the market, school, work, etc. I'm actually slightly terrified of what will happen if the condo actually sells in the next month or two because then "finding new place" and "moving" will officially have to be added to the to-do list. In the midst of everything, I sometimes have to stop and remind myself what it's all for, that there's actually a reason for all this busyness, a goal behind each and every item on our list. That helps a bit. I've also been setting aside a bit of time each day to just stop doing, stop thinking, and just be. Just for a few minutes. I suppose one could call it meditation, though I'll be damned if I can do a full lotus position. It might get me through the semester.
  • Next Batch of Biscuit - I've been feeling kind of bad that I haven't blogged much about baby number two. True, I've written about him some, both here and over at Dadcentric, but it seems like when Henry was enwombenating, I was posting about him all the time. Of course then, there wasn't a real live toddler running around, and life was, I suppose, a bit slower. It's not that I don't think about the new baby, because I do every day. I guess it's just that his December arrival seems so far away because right now is so very very full. But I promise you this little guy…and this is where I switch from talking to readers to talking to my new son: you're going to get every bit as much love and attention from your folks as your big bro did and does. We can't wait to meet you. Until then, you just hang out in there and make.
  • Another Lesson in Not Making Assumptions - Perhaps it's because I'm taking more classes this semester and I spend more time among my fellow seminary students, but I'm starting to get the feeling that perhaps I'm not the only one there that doesn't quite “fit in.” Which I suppose means that I fit in just fine. True, I am one of the youngest by far, and there are quite a few more women than men in my program, but the more people I talk to, and the more theology class debates I sit through, the more I realize that I'm not the only one with some wacky ideas about God and religion that some might think would fall outside the norm of what you'd find in such a setting. It would seem that in presenting my own challenge to the assumption of what kind of person goes to seminary, I have in turn had my own assumptions about what kind of person goes to seminary challenged. What brings us all there, I suppose, is a desire to educate ourselves so we can be of service to our fellow earth dwellers, and the notion that perhaps there's a spiritual aspect to our work that functions along with everything else.
  • Get Some Beer…And Some Cleaning Products – In further evidence that there are Others Like Me at seminary…and this might be just because my theology teacher looks like he would be friends with Floyd from "True Romance", but the other day when he talked about Saint Stephen “getting stoned”, I noticed several people tittering like teenagers. What is this, freshman sociology?
  • Kid Toys, Adult Party - Last Sunday was Free Museum Day in lovely Austin, Texas, so I scooped up the kiddo and we headed for the Austin Children's Museum while The Ash and her brother painted our living room. Henry had a blast and all, but man, I think I want to rent this place out for my birthday party. We can all drink beer while we play in the Shadow Garden or develop our problem solving skills in the Tinkerer's Workshop. We can station the keg in the game center and play all manner of drinking games. We can use the Austin Kiddie Limits center for karaoke.
  • For Your Purchasing Pleasure – I’m thinking we should make ink prints of the placenta and silkscreen some tee-shirts and onesies.
  • 5 comments:

    Anonymous said...

    I didn't blog about our second child as much as our first until he reached about 9 months.

    A toddler is just such a fertile ground for blog posts I think it's unavoidable.

    CamiKaos said...

    Having thrown my daughters 2nd birthday party at Portland's children museum I can tell you it was wasted on the young, your idea is much better.

    Anonymous said...

    I discovered that I accidentally did the same thing with videotaping my daughters. When the eldest was born, I spent hours and and hours capturing all sorts of little moments with the camcorder. Not so much with our second. Once I became conscious of it though, it was easily fixed. (I had to play catch up a little bit though, just to avoid her possibly needing extensive psychotherapy over it when she becomes an adult.)

    Whit said...

    I didn't write about #2 (the kid, not the poop) until later also.

    After I saw True Romance I went and bought a honey bear just to make a bong out of it. I think I still have it, with honey in it.

    Anonymous said...

    First, do you live in the seminary housing off 27th? Maybe too personal to answer on the Internet! Anyway, if you do, my kids enjoy playing by that creek and on that playground.

    Second, don't worry about writing about the second child. It's the second child. You won't take much video of the second child either. BUT, the second child will be SO easy.

    Finally, this is a stretch, but if you rode the bus as far it goes toward your work, and took your bicycle you could bike the rest of the way. Might be way too much, but jus' sayin'

    Cheers!