Wallpaper on Furniture

I’ve had this picture in my files for a while. Thought I might do a post on blue rooms.

But today I came across the designer, Bryonie Porter’s site (and I can’t for the life of me retrieve the source…sorry!). Here are some other great pieces.





Either of the two grey ones with flowers would look great in a white room.

If you’ve ever considered wallpapering furniture – here is your starting point for inspiration!

A Few Updates and a Major World Event*

We’re leaving early tomorrow morning for a wedding in Cleveland, so I’m going to be offline until next week. In the meantime, I thought I’d sneak in a quick update.

First – I’ll definitely try to do a short fiction piece for tomorrow (for all three of you who are enjoying them). It’s been fun, so I don’t want to drop that.

Second – I DID actually write something of substance for this week – so if you have time, you can find that HERE (and leave me a comment so I know you came by).

Third – I owe you one more My Children are Gross and Annoying post. I haven’t forgotten. That should be up next week.

Fourth (maybe I should have used bullets…) – I had the opportunity to participate in a conference call with Uma Thurman yesterday. She talked about her new movie Motherhood that’s coming out next week. I was also privy to a little online marketing controversy, so I have some thoughts on that as well. More on this next week.

Finally – don’t forget to visit Vodka Mom HERE to learn about an amazing program as well as your opportunity to win some great prizes.

Now – with “housekeeping” notes out of the way, I do have one major update.

We finally got Eleanor off the junk.

We were going to wait until after our trip since there is nothing worse than being trapped in a car for six hours with a toddler jonesing for her pacifier. But as it turned out, the last two that we had went missing on the same day last weekend. We really did look for them too (believe me – we looked). But they never did turn up.

Bedtime was rough. There was a lot of screaming which made bedtime stories a bit challenging. Have you ever tried to read a Thomas the Tank Engine storybook while a 30 lb. banshee shrieks in your ear? As if the tedious story line and creepy humanoid faces on the trains weren’t bad enough…

Then when I turned off the light, she pulled out her best Linda Blair and shook the room with seizure-like thrashing and mattress kicking. Before she started foaming at the mouth though, she had one of those crying-related coughing fits that of course ended with me cleaning vomit off of her in the bathroom.

Fortunately – this all seemed to exhaust her (and I suspect it kind of grossed her out as well) so she went back to bed quietly with a refreshing sippy cup of water.

Three days later, we’re letting out a collective sigh of relief. Next up – potty training!

See you next week.

R.I.P. Paci. Gone but not forgotten….(she does still ask for it now and again)

*Okay – not exactly a “world event” but it was fairly earth shattering for us.

It’s Like They Just Know…

The other morning, I took my almost three year old twins to the Fairfax County YMCA for the first time. As younger siblings who spent two years in daycare, they’re generally pretty good about entering new environments. It’s rare that they cling to me when there is such obvious fun to be had.

And what could be more fun than a kids’ gym complete with coloring tables, obstacle courses and a bounce house? Apparently, whatever I was leaving to do. Because my people-person daughter decided to be shy and demand that I take her with me.

I had to peel her off my leg and promise that I’d only be gone for a little while. That I’d be right back and of course, that she’d have SO MUCH FUN while I was gone.

Then I just hoped for the best.

Having never worked out there before. I was surprised and pleased to see that the cardio area backed up to a balcony overlooking the kids’ gym. How convenient! I could peek over to see how my abandoned children were faring.

I made sure to stand about five feet away from the edge. Then on tiptoe, I lifted my chin high enough to just peer over.

When I located them sitting at the coloring table, it seemed Eleanor had calmed down and was starting to enjoy herself.

Within two seconds, George looked up and locked eyes with me.

Then the screaming began.

It’s like they just knew

How do they do it? Tap into this direct line to our psyches? They know exactly what we don’t want them to do without us having to say a word. They know exactly where we are no matter how quiet we try to be. The minute we decide to take a break…to have a private moment…to go to the bathroom. Their little prairie dog heads pop up out of their self absorbed play. Little ears perk up…little noses sniff the air…. What is that? That sound…that smell…that odd vibration…that change in the atmosphere…? I know – it’s mom trying to get away from us! Well, we can’t let that happen, now can we….

They just know.

But it goes beyond wanting attention. It’s a constant. An unseen umbilical cord that can’t be cut. Any move we make away from them, no matter how infinitesimal…

They just know.

After a long night of getting tiny teeth brushed, forcing unwilling limbs into pajamas, reading bedtime stories, running up and down the stairs with glasses of water and favorite stuffed animals, conducting search and rescue missions for missing blankies and pacifiers, cleaning up dinner dishes, folding laundry, putting away toys, and getting lunches ready for the next day… At the very moment that you fall into bed, your pillow offering the sanctuary and rest that you’ve been craving for hours…a child cries, “mommy!

They just know.

Waking from an restless doze on the edge of a toddler bed, you slowly lower yourself to the floor. Core muscles tighter than those of any master pilates instructor, you hold balance defying yoga poses for minutes at a time as your child shifts, rolls over, sighs and half opens their eyes. After you’ve crawled, rolled and slithered your way out of the room, you slowly close the door, wincing as hinges squeak and floorboards creak. But even the echoing click of the latch doesn’t wake the sleeper. You’ve done it. You’re steps away from your bed now – almost home free. Free…two…one… “MOMMY!

They just know.

Feeling a bit peckish, you decide to indulge in a piece of contraband Halloween candy. They’re busy playing. They won’t notice if you disappear for a minute. Employing near surgical skill, you slip that tiny Twix out of the plastic pumpkin without displacing a single Snickers. No rustles or crackles of any kind. You are the cat burglar of candy. Finally in the in the bathroom with the light off, you break the seal of the wrapper. And suddenly, a knock at the door, “mommy I want chocolate.”

They just know.

You need to look good. No – not just good. For this meeting/interview/luncheon, you have to look great. Put together. Confident. And after an hour-long wardrobe crisis, you finally pull out your favorite sweater. It’s a no brainer really. Why hadn’t you just put that on in the first place? Wishing you hadn’t wasted all of that time, you only have minutes for a quick cup of coffee and a piece of toast. The jelly slides off the bread, just missing your clothes and hitting the table instead. Breathing a sigh of relief, you pick up the baby to put him in his play yard. You think, “maybe I shouldn’t be doing this without a towel…we just burped him though…and he’s practically sitting up on his own now…he probably…he won’t….oh crap.” Of course he spits up all over your shoulder. What were you thinking?

They just know.

My mom has always said that children are so connected to their mothers that they can almost read our minds. And sometimes I believe her. From knowing what you’re thinking to picking the exact wrong moment to puke on you, they just know.

Not very convenient when you think you might sneak in some computer time while dinner is cooking and everyone seems to be happily entertaining themselves in another part of the house. Just a few minutes to catch up on e-mail, check favorite blogs, peruse the J. Crew sale….”Mommy! Where are you?

Sigh.

But then you have a terrible day. Your boss claims that you aren’t putting in enough hours when as it is, you barely get home in time to put the kids to bed. Or you realize that you lost your grandmother’s gold bracelet – the one she gave you for your high school graduation, just weeks before she passed. Or you get the dreaded call that one of your parents is sick. You just want to climb into bed and never get out. You’re exhausted by life. Disappointed by the lot you drew back when you should have known that the game is fixed… You’re inconsolable.

Then your baby smiles at you for the first time. Your special needs child astounds you with an unexpected developmental leap. Your picky eater tries something new. Your nose picker asks for a tissue… “Mommy – I love you.

Sometimes, they just know.

Monday’s Muse: "I’m going to lost weight and then I’m going to steal all of your boyfriends."

This is a very loosely quoted line from one of my absolute favorite people in the world. And it’s a sentiment that only she could pull off with such three-snaps-in-Z-formation** style.

Before she had her blog GwenniePie, Gwen guest posted for me (part I over at Amy in Ohio and then part II at The Big Piece of Cake) about her incredible weight loss and life reinvention story.

But the inspirational part isn’t about her running the Marine Corps Marathon or meeting the man of her dreams. What really makes her muse-worthy is that even when she was overweight and thinking that she needed a change, she STILL thought she was pretty fan-fucking-tastic.

That kind of self confidence is rare and exactly what makes Gwen EVERYONE’S favorite (I’m not particularly original in this). So she is my Muse* this week.


I strongly suggest that you read her wonderful guest posts (see above for links) and start reading GwenniePie which will now chronicle her year of getting back into running AND planning her wedding which I’m sure will be the party of the century.

Need more convincing? Read THIS.

Love you Gwen!

*I find that almost all of my inspiration comes from people. So you can expect all of my Monday Muses to be about people that I think everyone should know.

**If you have no idea what I meant by that Z snap thing – it’s the “Zorro snap” from Men on Books. I know – anything from In Living Color is now almost obscurely old school, but I’ve had that in my head all day and couldn’t resist.

Don’t forget to grab a button and add your Monday’s Muse link over at Cinnamon & Honey every Monday!

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More Fiction: Vivian’s Roots

What do you know? I’m actually following through on something I said I was going to do here. I’ve written another fictional piece (again in one sitting – keeping it short) and I honestly think I’m going to do this every Friday. If I didn’t fear jinxing myself, I’d name this theme something like “Fiction Friday” – but then I’d absolutely let it fall off the radar. Too formal.

Instead – I’m keeping this open. I’ll try to do something like this weekly – and we’ll see how that goes. I’m also going to try to keep all of the writing connected and see if I can get an actual story out of it. Just to create some direction. I just wrote this story (or piece of a story) and had to stop before I got to the part where it connects to Ivy. But it will. Possibly next week.

Vivian’s Roots


Do whatever you want Vivi, but for god’s sake don’t be boring.

Even as a young girl, Vivi found this common command from her mother’s to be the height of irony. Between all of the lounging and the cocktail sipping, Mama was quite possibly the most boring woman on earth.

But Ethel Clinton nee Chambers was also the most beautiful woman on earth – or close to it – so she didn’t think she owed the world too much else. At least that’s the way Vivi saw it. And Vivi got to see quite a bit of Ethel during the day, because in spite of “the child’s tedious questions” and “unnecessary theatrics,” Ethel didn’t like to be alone.

So young Vivi spent her days watching Mama wilt on couches while putting on airs that only a Southern woman who came from money could claim. Which, in fact she could not, since she was neither. At least that’s the way Vivi’s Daddy saw it, and said as much.

Ethel took great umbrage to this, since she most certainly did consider herself to be Southern woman. But in spite of her Virginian birthright, her own daddy was a Yankee – and a middle class one at that – and it was only her dark eyed glare that kept people from reminding her of that fact.

Vivi didn’t take after her Mama in any way. She was a Clinton through and through, and her blue eyes twinkled more often than they narrowed at people. She was far more observant than Mama and learned early on that you get much further in life by laughing than glaring.

And she laughed. A lot.

She laughed at Mama when she went off on one of her tirades about…anything. She laughed at her sisters when they told her she couldn’t climb trees like the boys. She laughed at everyone who lamented over her not inheriting her mother’s beauty like her sisters did.

She especially laughed at that. Because she was plenty beautiful on her own.

In fact she didn’t give two hoots about having a Yankee Granddaddy since she fully intended to be a Yankee herself one day. As soon as she was old enough, she was taking her red curls and long legs to New York. She was going to be a fashion model.

The rest of the women in her family could faint on couches all they liked. She was going to be someone. Not just someone’s beautiful wife.

Now at age 59, Vivi had to laugh again. Because she never did move to New York. She never did become a real “Yankee” as they used to call them. And she did in fact become someone’s beautiful wife. But she wouldn’t change a thing, because whatever she did or didn’t do, she made sure it was on her own terms.

Now, looking at her perennially red curls in the mirror, she thought two things. First, that it was time for a touch up. Her roots were showing. Mental note: must call Claude for an appointment. And second, that Mama did teach her something very valuable all those years ago. Vivi may have been many things in life – but she was never boring.

That’s all I have time for today. But this isn’t what I was planning to write about Vivi. It’s an intro gone wild. My verbosity always gets the best of me… I’ll have to pick it up again next week.

Make Mine a Double: Part II

*Did you get to see Nie Nie on Oprah yesterday? If you weren’t at home and weren’t able to DVR it – here is a short clip. As if her writing wasn’t inspiring enough…

Continuing my birthday tribute to George and Eleanor who turn three tomorrow, here is part two of their birth story (a re-post from last year). Last we left off my water broke while I was getting my hair did, and I had to borrow a cell phone to call my doctor. For the full version of Part I, go
HERE.

We last left off the evening of October 9, 2006, with me driving to the hospital with amniotic fluid soaking through my pants and into my car’s upholstery. How’s that for an opener? Didn’t catch the “Part I” post? Maybe you should read that first.

Back to the story. I was very lucky in that I didn’t start having painful contractions until I arrived at the hospital. It was only when I was sitting in some light traffic, that I started thinking about the fact that I might not be able to drive if my barely perceptible contractions became more intense. I was definitely rethinking that decision to let Giacome finish my blow dry before leaving for the hospital.

Ideally, Chris would have been driving me – but it was important that I go to the hospital immediately since I was definitely going to have a c-section (George, “baby A,” was breech). And Chris had to drop our 18 month old, Oliver off with friends before coming to meet me.

It was a little anti-climactic when I first arrived. I drove around for a bit looking for a good parking place, and then I stopped to give someone directions on my way into the building. Once I reached the reception area, I had to wait in line behind people who were interrogating the receptionists about whether it was possible to order vegan meals from the cafeteria. Okay – I just totally made that last part up. But I did have to wait in line behind a bunch of people that did not have blood pouring out of a gunshot wound OR amniotic fluid streaming down their legs.

Eventually I was sent up to Labor & Delivery where I finally got a little service! Actually – it was a bit disconcerting because when I provided my name, the nurse said, “oh – your doctor just called. She’s very worried about you.” I asked if I should be worried about me. She clarified that since surgery was necessary, they wanted to check me out right away. So off I went to triage.

Here is where the pregnancy crazies come into play. The young nurse who “checked me out” said, “oh yes – I can feel that head.” Now – this made me very excited because last I heard, George (who was positioned to be the first one to come out) had his little heiny jammed firmly into my birth canal. Could he possibly have turned? Could I skip the whole major abdominal surgery thing and have the twins the old fashioned way? I was really getting psyched about this.

Then my doctor arrived. She is great and I trust her implicitly, but that woman is strictly no nonsense. I told her about the miraculous head sighting (or feeling), and she gave me one of her famous looks. “Kate,” she said, “it is almost impossible for that to happen now. They have very little room to move at this point.” But I wanted my fantasy to be real, so I begged her to check – just to make sure. She agreed to go get the ultrasound equipment, and I could literally feel her eyes rolling as she walked away from me. Long story short, the nurse gave me false hope. She felt George’s butt, not his head.

Shortly after my disappointing news, Chris arrived looking like he had just parachuted onto the front lawn of the hospital. He was excited though and I needed some positive energy in my little corner of triage. Then I noticed that he only had one bag with him. I had packed two. Was it the bag with my skincare products and my toothbrush and my comfy socks? No – it was the bag with my DVD player and my books and magazines. I asked him if the other bag was in the car, and he said, “what other bag?” I said, “um, the one sitting right next to this one?” Nope – didn’t ring a bell. I expect that when I called to tell him my water had broken, he didn’t register anything more than, “water broken…blah blah blah…hospital…blah blah blah…Oliver…blah blah blah…bag.” Oh well – at least I could watch some Gilmore Girls if I got bored.

As much as I really was dreading the surgery part, I was happy to see my anesthesiologist and get the news that it was go time. The contractions were becoming more than uncomfortable. And Chris was starting to get on my nerves, all windblown and positive with only one suitcase… Men.

Since I had expected to have a c-section, I knew what to expect. I kissed Chris and told him that I’d see him in the OR. He had to scrub in. Then the anesthesiologist and I walked down the hall together. Which seemed weird. I was kind of expecting to be wheeled in on a gurney. Or to at least be pushed in via wheelchair.

The next thing that I remember finding a little unnerving is that when I lay down on the operating table (which was so thin I thought I might fall off – is it me or do you picture something more along the lines of a dining table?) I was completely stripped below my chest. I don’t know why this would surprise me since I’m familiar with the area where they make the incision. But I just didn’t picture being naked. Especially with strange men wandering around talking about sports. Everyone seemed a bit too jovial for my liking… What did they think this was, Gray’s Anatomy? Were they going to be too busy flirting across my blood and guts to notice that I was bleeding out? No – I wasn’t overly fond of the banter. I wanted them to come to MY surgery with their A game.

Anyone who has had a c-section before may have noticed that I skipped the part about having a needle poked into my lower back to administer the spinal block. It wasn’t my favorite part – but it was over quickly enough. Let’s leave it at that. But the actual effects of the spinal block made me want to jump up and run screaming out of the room (if I could actually move my lower body that is). They had positioned me so that my knees were up in the air, and then suddenly my lower body just disappeared. But I knew that my feet were on the table and my knees were bent. BUT I couldn’t feel them. This made me ca-razy! But once they moved my legs back down so that they were on the table again (couldn’t feel it – but I knew they were doing it – eeeeww!), I felt better.

I also noticed that the numbness reached up to my chest and I was finding it hard to breath. Of course that could have been due to the general sense of panic, but the numbness didn’t help. Finally I couldn’t stand the jokes and the sports and the numbness and the tiny table and that fact that I was AWAKE for all of this, and I pulled off my oxygen mask and clutched the arm of the closest nurse. I dragged her down so her face was right next to mine and said, “listen – I just need to tell someone…I’m REALLY SCARED.” She kindly patted me on the shoulder, replaced my oxygen mask, and told Chris who had just entered the room to come hold my hand.

And then it started. I of course couldn’t see what was going on since there were about ten inches of sheet screening my view. But Chris had to actually avert his eyes since he was sitting up. He was given instructions to stay facing me if he didn’t want to “see anything.” Chris and I are pretty much in agreement when it comes to the inner workings of the human body. We never want to see anything.

Most of the procedure was a blur – but suddenly, there was George with a full head of dark hair. He was pink and screaming – and he looked nothing like my first baby. So it was kind of like having my first baby – if that makes sense. I had never seen anything like him. Chris went to go look at him as they started to pull Eleanor out. She looked a little bizarre since she was up in the top of my uterus and didn’t get washed off the way George did when my water broke. She was covered in vernix – but she looked more like Oliver did when I had him (just a little light brown hair on her head). But she was a girl and that was new to me. Chris watched them clean her off and saw both babies get weighed. Born at 9:23 p.m. and 9:24 p.m. (respectively) George was 5 lbs. 11 oz. and Eleanor was 5 lbs. 12 oz. They were so tiny.

It was at this point that Chris decided to come back and talk to me. Big mistake. Or it wouldn’t have been if he turned back the way he had come: facing me. Instead he went in the other direction, and got a perfect view of the intern inspecting my uterus (outside of my body) and then shoving it back in. A nurse had to grab his arm as his legs started to buckle. He didn’t actually faint, but he almost did. Now that’s an image that will haunt your dreams. And he wasn’t too keen on what he saw during the “regular” birth of our first son. You know how the doctor says you have to wait six weeks before you can have sex? Six weeks after I had Oliver, Chris looked at me and said, “I’m not ready.”

Stop making faces Chris – that last line is crucial to the story. Well maybe not – but it’s really funny.

So that’s it! We got to hold our babies and take a picture and then all kinds of drama began the next day. But that is a story for another day. Today is a birthday. And while I’ve never been one to get sentimental the miracle of birth – I’m VERY sentimental about the birth of my own little angels.

Happy Birthday George and Eleanor. I love you so very much.

Cool Looking Staircase, but…

(click picture for source)

…it probably won’t work for people who:

1. Have children under the age of 18.

2. Have grandchildren.

3. Have friends with children.

4. May possibly have a child in their house for more than 10 seconds.

5. Sometimes have grandma come to stay.

6. Indulge in a drink every once in a while.

7. Wear socks around the house.

8. Wear heels.

9. Like to slide down the bannister (does anyone ever do that anymore?)

10. Want to sneak up on an intruder in their living room.

11. Experience extreme paranoia about weight gain.

Okay – so the list can go on…but seriously, it’s just an accident waiting to happen.

Nice to look at though.

Make Mine a Double: Part I

So there I go announcing that I’ll be a fiction writing machine, cranking out stories every Friday – only to realize that this Friday is George and Eleanor’s third birthday!

But I think I can get away with skipping the heartfelt tribute. It’s not like they can read (thank god I didn’t buy that infomercial product that teaches your kids to read by the time they are 8 months old – close call!)

No – I don’t think they’ll notice. And I doubt my readers won’t mind one less “three years ago today a little angel entered this world and my heart” post. Does that sound cynical? Sorry – I just spent an hour talking George down from the “I want to sleep in YOUR bed” ledge. We have GOT to stop that madness… No – I love my twins to pieces, but I’ll sit that hokey pokey out this year.

Instead, I’m reposting their birth story. Which was kind of epic and full of thrills (spoiler: my water broke in public). Part I today and Part II tomorrow.

Since the twins won’t be tuning in to The Big Piece of Cake on Friday, I will attempt another little story. So check back to see how that goes.

And now…Part I of “Make Mine a Double”:

Exactly two [now three] years ago (give or take a week), I looked like this:

And yes – it was just as uncomfortable as it appears. And what is even more outrageous is that I remember looking at that picture and thinking it was “flattering” – that it made my stomach look less gigantic than it actually was. So apparently, I was even bigger in real life. People who have never been pregnant before can pick themselves up off the floor now. It’s not like that happens overnight. You do have some time to get used to it.

Enough about my enormous stomach though (shut up – I mean then, not now!). I am showing embarrassing pictures of myself as an opening for the story of the birth of my twins. It’s their birthday! On October 9, 2006, at 9:23 p.m. and 9:24 p.m. (respectively) I gave birth to George and Eleanor Hood. They looked like this shortly after they departed my body:

And no – they were not nearly as angelic as they appear. Actually, they were perfectly sweet babies – it’s just that there were two of them. And having had one newborn already – I knew the difference between one screaming baby and two screaming babies. It’s simple math: 2 x 1 baby = 1 seriously deranged mother. But that’s another story.

On the morning of October 9, 2006, I had a feeling that the end was near. While my scheduled c-section (my “baby A,” George was breech) wasn’t supposed to take place for another week, I just didn’t feel right. And of course I was already four centimeters dilated and showing some “signs” that are TMI for even this blog. Also, we had just moved into a new house three weeks prior and I was still carrying my 35 lb. 18 month old up and down the stairs. This probably helped to speed things along.

The bags were packed and waiting by the door and I was finally resigned to the fact that George was not going to turn over for me, and I would have to have my first experience with surgery. Awake. One word: barbaric.

We were as ready as we were ever going to be – and I decided that I would spend the day trying to wrap things up at work, even though it was a federal holiday and the office was closed. It’s like I knew…

I won’t get into the details of the day – mainly because I barely remember them. But at about 5:00 p.m. I was ready to leave. I felt the urge to do some errands, so I called Chris and told him that I would be running late, and that he’d have to do Oliver’s bedtime routine (which he was more or less covering already in preparation for my post surgery limitations). Then I was off to the mall.

First stop – the cosmetics department at Nordstom. I was running low on concealer, and you know – this is a huge priority for someone that expects to be sequestered to their house for several months. I have to look good for the mail man and all. Then I headed over to Suissa, a hair salon where I had a history of success with random stylists (I’m notorious for being a walk in client).

When I arrived, the receptionist smiled at me and told me that I was the third expectant mother to come in that day. My first thought was that I hoped the others were as far along as I was and also sporting ill fitting maternity clothes that hinted at a penchant for inappropriate belly baring. I didn’t want to be “the big one” when they talked about the run on pregnant ladies that day. She told me that Giamcome would be able to take me immediately. (I don’t remember his name – but I once had another stylist named Giacome, and I think it suits my no name guy.)

Giacome? Not that much of a talker. But that suited me well enough, as my mind was racing in fifty different directions, and I didn’t mind NOT playing 20 questions with him as he pretended to be interested in my pregnancy. But one persistent thought running through the rest was that I was starting to worry about incontinence (don’t worry – this isn’t a story about incontinence – but it’s relevant in context). All day, I had been feeling a little…well, loose – for lack of a better word. I had never experienced incontinence before, and I was wondering if this was an early sign.

It was while my hair was being washed that I had the first pang of concern. There was definitely something going on down there – and I was feeling extremely grateful for the long black gown that covered my legs. At this point, I was thinking that I might look as if I had just had accident – or more accurately, that I looked like I HAD had an accident. But at the end of the day, I’m an optimist, and I hoped that it either wouldn’t show once I was standing up – or that maybe it would be dry by the time I had to unveil myself.

The haircut was uneventful. It was looking exactly like what I had requested and Giacome continued to play the strong silent type. But about ten minutes into the blow dry, something rather significant happened. I suddenly knew that I was not experiencing incontinence. I had my water broken for me in the hospital when I had my first son, and while this was not the same, there were definite similarities. It finally dawned on me: I wasn’t peeing my pants – I was going into labor.

I had never spontaneously gone into labor before. My 9 lb. 2 oz. first born was a week late and I had to be induced. And I was expecting a scheduled c-section for the twins. So I was completely unprepared for the slapstick situation of having my water break during my blow dry at the Tysons Corner Suissa where I was a goddamn walk in for god’s sake. Oh my god! Damn!

But I’m nothing if I’m not practical. And I never panic. So I quietly weighed my options as Giacome continued to smooth and straighten my hair. I had done this once before, and I knew that I had some time before I actually went into real labor. At this point I wasn’t even having contractions. Oh what the hell – my hair was only half done, and I figured that it wouldn’t hurt anything if I just let him finish. I deserved to have perfect hair for my first surgery. Awake. BARBARIC I tell you!

Plus – I kind of needed time to figure out what I was going to tell Giacome. I couldn’t imagine that this was something that happened every day at Suissa. So when he finally finished his last flicks and fluffs, it was time for me to break the news. I said, “so Giacome…I have to tell you something. I THINK that my water may have broken.” He looked at me blankly – and if he did say anything, I don’t remember what it was. At this point I was beginning to wonder if he was actually mute.

Then I stood up and he removed the vinyl drape. And that’s when I realized that my water hadn’t really broken yet – it was just starting to break. It was only when was vertical and gravity took over that it really BROKE. All over. With sound effects. I was truly in a sitcom from hell. And as an added bonus, that morning I decided not to wear the black pants that I had sported every day for the past two months. No – I was feeling “khaki.” And there was no camoflauging the river of amniotic fluid running down my legs.

Giamcome looked me. I looked at him. And then as if we had the same thought at the same time, we both looked at the chair where I had been sitting. Thank god it was the usual fake leather. I can’t even imagine the humiliation of leaving a soggy chair in my wake. I guess I expected more of a puddle – but maybe my pants absorbed most of it. All that was left was what you might find after a very sweaty person in shorts got up from a vinyl seat. And in silence, stoic Giacome switched on the hair drier and commenced to cleaning up my mess.

The receptionist’s desk was conveniently located directly behind me, so I grabbed her attention and explained that I’d have to settle up rather quickly. And I would have to use her phone because – of course – I left my cell at home that morning. I called Chris – told him to get the bags, make the necessary calls, take Oliver to our plan A person, and if she wasn’t home, to our plan B person. And then I was ready to go.

The receptionist was incredibly sweet and asked if there was anything she could do for me. I couldn’t really think of anything… She wasn’t a doctor, and she had already helped me with the walk in appointment… And a pedicure was definitely out of the question. So I said that I thought not. But then she offered to get my car for me – and that sounded like a great idea since I seemed to be losing gallons of amniotic fluid with every step I took. And I was pretty sure that I’d needed to keep some in there for another hour or two.

After some discussion about where I may or may not have parked (pregnant women NEVER remember where they park), I told her to “walk in that direction and just start clicking.” Eventually she’d hear the “beep-beep” noise.

While I was waiting outside for her, strategically covering my soaked pants with my purse, it occurred to me that I hadn’t called my doctor. Rookie mistake! And I didn’t have my cell… so had to again rely upon the kindness of strangers. The only person in speaking distance was a touristy looking guy who I think I remember as being Japanese (I know that there were characters on his phone screen instead of letters/numbers). Either way – he definitely didn’t speak much English, and I could only hope my appearance made up for any confusion over the translation for “broken water.” Apparently it did since he handed the phone over without any questions.

Just as I signed off with my doctor’s answering service, the receptionist peeled around the corner in my car. I handed the man back his phone and realized that I had never said goodbye to Giacome. Seems like we should have hugged or something. But it was too late, and it didn’t seem appropriate to hug the Japanese tourist. We didn’t have quite as much of a history, and you know – I was really wet.

With effusive thanks to the receptionist and the tourist, I was finally on my way to the hospital. As I drove off into the twilight, I wondered what my story’s cast of characters would make of my cameo appearance in what seemed to be just another ordinary day at the salon. Would they reminisce about me in months to come? Would they wonder what happened to me and wish me well? I didn’t know – but I didn’t have time to think about it. My real journey was only just beginning…

Cool ending huh? Like something from a really bad romance novel. Yeah – I just kinda went with it.

What’s that? Yes – I said “ending.” Have you noticed how LONG this post is? It’s definitely a “to be continued.” I’ll finish up tomorrow. And here are a couple of spoilers: I realize that when you have surgery you have to be naked, and Chris almost faints. In that order. But the two are not related. Till tomorrow then…