I know – didn’t I just post one of these? Last week was late! And I’m a little preoccupied right now (more on that later). But in the meantime, behold the pretty:
Full details HERE.
I know – didn’t I just post one of these? Last week was late! And I’m a little preoccupied right now (more on that later). But in the meantime, behold the pretty:
Full details HERE.
Feeling pink and gold today…
Inspired by this blazer/jacket I think:
And isn’t it great with that Anthro necklace? I’ve been a longtime reader (i.e. lurker) of Erin Gates’ blog, Elements of Style. And she has recently teamed up with a friend to start a line of blazers. The label is Two Penny Blue, and the styles are super cute. But really – this one is the stand out. Very unique – wish it came in other colors!
For a dash of gold, how about this cuff bracelet from Pondicherry?
Excellent price for something that looks far more expensive. I would wear it with everything!
Back to pink… I love this painting of pink cosmos:
Kelley MacDonald is one of several artists I follow who blog regularly about their work. I’ve been a fan for a while (in fact – I’ve posted about her before!)
And finally – something that I will forever kick myself for not buying at a private show last year…
A good friend saw a post I wrote about Jill Rosenwald’s ceramics and invited me to join her at a special showing that takes place every year in DC (which takes place at the home of one of Jill’s friends – who is a friend of my friend – SMALL world!) The timing was perfect – but I ultimately didn’t buy anything. Worries about money and that kind of thing… And I so regret it. Maybe next time.
This is a wish list after all…
Until next time!
This week’s Wish List comes from my good friend Christy of A Lil’ Welsh Rarebit. She showed me some things that she’s been coveting and they’re pretty fab.
So take it away Christy!
***
While I could never narrow my wish list down to FOUR items… Here are the current forerunners:
First, don’t you love this gorgeous 20″ chevron floor pillow? I’ve wanted one or two of these since I spotted them, but I keep getting overruled by the other adult who lives in my house. Sigh.
They also come in green, blue or brown.
And have you tried this summer beauty oil/perfume from Bobbi Brown? It’s called “Miami Beach.”
Since the beach is my favorite place to be – how could I NOT want to buy this? The description says it was “designed with notes of sand, jasmine, sea spray and Mandarin.” Sounds heavenly!
While Christmas isn’t exactly right around the corner…I already know that I want to find THIS gorgeous Stella & Dot necklace in my stocking!
Luckily, our friend Jill is a Stella & Dot consultant. Think I’ll just hand my husband her card at the start of holiday shopping season…
[UPDATE: If you love Stella & Dot, you now have a GREAT excuse to buy yourself some jewelry. Anna of An Inch of Gray is hosting an online jewelry party to raise money for Samaritan’s Purse, a wonderful cause championed by her beautiful son Jack. Jack passed away in a flash flood last September, but he is still an inspiration to people all over the world who knew him, know Anna or have have read Anna’s blog. For full details, visit Anna HERE.]
And finally, because a girl can never have too much jewelry (at least, not THIS girl), I can’t stop dreaming about this ring:
It may need to wait until the kids are out of college. But I’ve tried it on a couple of times at a local shop and it jlooks PERFECT on me – ha!
Thanks for sharing my list Kate!
***
Now I have four other things to add to my own running Wish List…
Do you have one to share? Let me know – this was fun!
Since I’m fairly certain said grandmothers have not heeded my advice, I’d just like to put it out there that everyone is OKAY.
With the exception of maybe me… Though my robotic ability to shut down emotions when they threaten to render me unable to cease crying for the rest of my life did kick in about five minutes into my nervous breakdown. So that’s good.
This talent of mine serves me well because at the core, I’m a very fearful person. I worry about everything. When I was little I would worry about tidal waves and twisters. I worried about nuclear war and my parents dying. I had night terrors and no matter how irrational, I couldn’t stand next to my bed after dark without imagining a hand reaching out from under to grab my ankle. The world was fraught with danger and I was keenly aware of every awful thing that could possibly happen to me. I saw shark infested waters – both literally and figuratively.
So now, I disconnect. I just don’t think about it anymore. I simply don’t have time. I have too much to juggle and it’s made me very practical. I’m a good person to have around in a crisis. I’m calm and analytical. I wait to hear all the facts before forming an opinion. And I don’t consider the worst until the truth grabs me by the neck and slams me against the wall. Even then I’ll hold it together. For me, it’s a matter of survival.
But we all have our breaking point. And I hit mine yesterday when for about five to ten minutes in the late morning, I lost Oliver. Meaning, I searched my immediate neighborhood and I couldn’t find him anywhere.
One minute I was walking in my front door to get Eleanor a cup of water and the next I was racing around our block, frantically calling his name.
When I left him, he was sitting about ten feet away from our house in (of course) a patch of dirt. He was drinking the first cup of water I brought out for Eleanor since he drained his own so quickly that I just gave him hers and ran back in to get more.
When I stepped back outside, I found George engrossed in turning on the water for the garden hose and the absence of Oliver. A yellow plastic cup lay on its side on the patch of dirt. No spills – no mud. He drank all of it.
Ignoring Eleanor’s constant chatter behind me, I asked George to turn OFF the water – he knows that he’s not allowed to play with the hose – and WHERE did Oliver go.
My younger son pointed vaguely down the block and said, “down the hill.” It was obvious that George had no idea where his brother went, but I started walking in that direction. It was as good as any other.
Oliver tends to wander off. Never far, and typically to predictable locations, but I always have that brief pang of “what if?” The one that we barely register since it borders on unnecessary drama and fully crosses the line of unlikely. And by the time it could possibly gather momentum, the child appears – blissfully ignorant of the big bad world and its predators lurking behind every theoretical corner. Then we yell or hug or get distracted by another child. But the resonance of that pang stays with us long enough for a glimpse of perspective. What truly matters in our lives. Those lost earrings become a welcome price to pay – the trade off for this moment of relief. So lucky…a charmed life I’m living, really.
But when I reached the end of our townhouse row and turned the corner, my child wasn’t there.
And when I turned the next corner, he still wasn’t there. Or the next corner. Or the next. And suddenly, I was back where I started.
I looked at the strange men doing landscaping and noticed for the first time that they all drive vans. Then I asked George again, “WHERE did Oliver go? Is he inside?” Before even hearing his answer, I crossed the street to look in the good climbing tree. Then I doubled back to try the path to the bridge where we throw rocks in the water. Our neighbor was walking his dog there and said he hadn’t seen Oliver. So I went up another set of steps that would lead me back to the area behind our house.
Then I quickly returned to the front and ran into the house, still calling for him. Eleanor said he wasn’t there but I kept calling. At the door to the basement, I heard how hoarse my voice sounded. I didn’t notice that I was still holding Eleanor’s second cup of water until I hurled it down the stairs.
Back outside. More searching.
Too much walking and running and calling “Oliver…Oliver…OLIVER…OLIVER…OLIVEROLIVEROLIVER!” The twins echoed my calls and I realized that they were now both on the front lawn, trying to aid me in my search. Within minutes they would be lost in the neighborhood too, so I pushed-dragged them to my friend’s house two doors down, and barked, “stay there I don’t know where Oliver is stay THERE!”
We had all been at this house earlier for a casual brunch, and several other mothers were still there. My friend asked if she should call the police and I think I said yes – but I may have just showed her the yellow cup in the patch of dirt. Because he was JUST there a minute ago.
But more than a minute had now passed. Many minutes. Too many. And with each one, the vapor of “unlikely” continued to gain substance. I ran back across the street and through another cul de sac, distantly aware of other voices calling my son’s name.
It was only when I was looking down a hill at the nearby creek that I heard my name. Someone (or everyone) was calling for me. And that meant they found him. It never occurred to me that it could have been anything else. Anything else would be unbearable.
As I rushed back up the street and my house came into view, I saw another neighbor helping Oliver step out of my car. MY CAR. He was in my car.
Me – the city girl who once never left her car unlocked for a single minute. Not even to run into the house for forgotten sunglasses. Because leaving a car unlocked meant that strangers could get in. Maybe steal it. At the very least, pilfer the meter change hidden away in the glove compartment. That city girl, now lulled by her quiet suburban neighborhood and distracted by multiple children let locked car doors fall off the radar. Constant vigilance was reserved for boiling pots of water on the stove and cleaning fluids locked under the sink. Not the car.
And my five year old son climbed into a black Ford Expedition with tinted windows and child safety locks in 90 degree weather.
If one of my friends hadn’t seen a flicker of movement, who knows how long it would have taken for me to find him there. And what that could have meant.
Let’s play hide and seek mommy! Where’s Oliver…
That is real fear. The vampires and sharks of my childhood look like Smurfs and Care Bears when pitted against the fear of losing my child.
I barely said thank you to the people who helped me search for Oliver as I silently led him into the house. And the minute the door closed, I burst into tears. I was SO scared. I couldn’t find you. You were LOST.
I could have yelled or spanked him. I could have sent him to his room for the rest of the day. I could have held him tight and asked if he was okay, told him everything would be alright. I’m here now. Mommy’s here.
Instead I sat and cried and said I was scared. So scared.
At first he laughed. The nervous laughter we’ve all experienced when faced by something impossible. It wasn’t just a crack in his mother’s composure. I dissolved before his eyes. I fell to pieces and I couldn’t help myself.
But I think this probably made more of an impact. If he was scared while locked in the car, he didn’t show it. He has his own walls – his own habits of disconnecting with reality. But he too has a breaking point, and apparently, it’s me. We both cried and said we were scared. And said we were sorry.
Then joined by the twins, we fell into a teary, sweaty heap in front of the TV and decided not to leave the house until it was time for Oliver’s therapy appointment.
I sat with all three of my children and basked the luxury of knowing that they were safe. Nothing bad could happen to them in that moment – I could protect them with four walls, air conditioning and the tedium of passive parenting. With my physical presence. As long as we could see each other, nothing could touch us.
Hours passed, therapy was received, and commuter traffic was endured. And when we returned to the slower speed limit of our neighborhood, the last traces of our anxiety dropped away. I opened the windows and turned up the radio. Warm air rushed in to remove the chill of fear.
In my side mirror I saw Oliver putting his hand out the window to feel the breeze. Part of me thought, “keep arms and legs in the vehicle at all times…” but I remember pushing my own palm against the wind when I was his age. No tree limbs or other cars ever came close enough to hurt me. I never worried about that. Earthquakes maybe…but not losing my hand to swerving motorcyclist.
So I decided not to worry about it now. I put my own hand out the window and felt the pressure of wind. My own flesh and bone, solid and invincible against the blast. With a little tension and concentration, I couldn’t be moved. I could even push back.
The what ifs will never go away. They linger on the edges of our every movement, decision, omission… And sometimes they catch up with us. There is always a terrible story to hear. To simultaneously feel sorrow for others and immense gratitude for our own luck, grace, karma.
I once read a brilliant line about what it means to become a parent. While the source left my memory long ago, the sentiment stayed with me – that someone’s child was born and “fate took a hostage.”
Every day I feel the truth of this. And it humbles me. I have to take responsibility for my power and accept my powerlessness and ultimately just hope that my luck will hold.
And I do that every day. I guess we all do.
It’s a charmed life I’m living. Really.
*I wrote this in June 2010. Christy posted Ava’s Rule on FaceBook and it reminded me again how important it is to LOCK YOUR CAR DOORS. Not to protect your GPS or meter change. To protect children. Any child can open a car door – but only if it’s unlocked. Forward this reminder to everyone you know. Not this link – this is just a cautionary tale that people may not get around to reading. The postcard for Ava’s Rule says it all, “Always lock your car and store your car keys out of kids’ reach. Verify your kids know to NEVER go to the car unsupervised. Actively seek out sheltered locations to park your car.“
Stay cool and stay safe this summer!
Details HERE!
As you may have seen on The Big Piece of Cake last week, things were a little hectic and not very blogging-friendly. But I found several lovely home accessories that I thought I’d feature here today.
And the best thing about them is that they are affordable! So much of what catches my eye online would require some saving (at least for me!) So the fact that a few of the bright shiny objects I encountered offered maximum effect for minimal dollar signs seemed like an obvious “Wish List” theme. These aren’t just finds, they are DEALS.
So first up – this pretty Blue Q lantern that I spotted on Sneakpeek.
At a whopping $10, this little beauty is 13 3/4″ in diameter and would be perfect for livening up a drab corner. There are many options to choose from – all very fun and whimsical. Probably just a tad to contemporary for my current decor – but I could possibly use it in a bedroom. I have a thing for lanterns – and it’s a crime that I have never actually owned any!
Note: You would have to purchase a cord kit separately, but what did you expect for $10?
Next up is a simple striped throw blanket from IKEA.
Just $19.99, this black and white stripe is timeless. My only complaint is that it doesn’t come in any other colors. But I do love stripes and you can’t really go wrong with this one.
Next – have you ever purchased paper products from Minted? I recently saw that they also sell limited edition art prints. Like this sweet little chair (more stripes!)
I couldn’t get a large enough image so I had to cobble four of the colorways together. Guess they don’t want people grabbing high res images and printing their own? Smart – but not very convenient for my blogging purposes… Now that I think of it though, an assortment framed together could be cute. (They start at $40).
Also love this beach chair print.
Last on the list today, pink pillows:
So bright and cheerful. These 16″ x 18″ pillow covers from The Pillow People are $28 for a set of two. Tons of other colors and patterns can be found in this Etsy shop – you can cover your couch!
Well – that’s it for today. Wishing you a fantastic Fourth of July celebration tomorrow! And for the non-U.S. readers…have a great Wednesday!
This may be a bit of a ramble since I’m killing time in a waiting room…so bear with me.
A couple of hours ago, I posted this picture to Twitter making a joke about how boring waiting for (well ANYTHING, but in this case) surgery can be; and how kids now have iPads, where my generation had to rely on paper entertainment like Mad Libs.
A couple of reactions I got from friends made me realize that I haven’t actually mentioned Oliver’s surgery today. Ooops! But there are two very good reasons for the omission. The first is that I’ve been kind of preoccupied with life (including this surgery thing) and haven’t had it in me to do any “real” writing. This would account for the heavier focus on my Wishing True page – if you were wondering about that. I’m sure Stephanie was confused when she rushed over to my blog from Twitter to find a post about…jewelry. Sorry Stephanie.
The second reason is that this “surgery” is nothing serious. Oliver has two teeth that need to come out for reasons that are too complicated/snore-inducing to get into here. Something about adult teeth coming in at an angle and crowding or something…honestly, I’m a little hazy on the details due to the complicated/snore-inducing situation. Anyway – since my first born insists on being a complicated boy in almost every way, he has to have this done in a hospital instead of the dentist office. I could tell you all about that part, but I’ll keep it brief: he MAY have a condition that would make certain types of anesthesia extremely dangerous (possibly lethal) – so the gas version of general anesthesia isn’t possible for him.
Enter the IV.
Which sounds like a super fun time for pretty much any kid. Right?
Knowing that he wouldn’t be into the idea of having a needle shoved into the top of his hand, the anesthesiologist and I had an elaborate plan that involved doping him up with some cherry flavored syrup first. As explained to me, this would make him kind of loopy and happy, and generally un-phased by things that would typically induce a grand mal seizure. So of course my response to this suggestion was, “can I have some too?”
Sadly – it was going to be a table for one as far as the drugs were concerned. But that’s probably for the best since I then had the herculean task of keeping him from trying to get up and walk around – or worse, trying to rip off the numbing patch that was placed on the top of his hand. Considering the fact that he shredded his hospital bracelet within minutes of having it snapped onto his wrist, I practially had to sit on him for the twenty minutes required for the numbing agent to take effect.
Here is what I discovered about Oliver. When he is doped up on cherry flavored happy syrup, he wants to wrestle! While his delays already make him seem a lot younger than his seven years, THIS version of Oliver brought me back to the toddler years when he needed to be physically restrained from whatever madness he had in mind. Now that he is a 75 lb (SEVENTY FIVE POUND!) boy, trying to keep him from his mission of getting up and removing that annoying patch was more like trying to getting a drunk friend to sit down while you call them a cab. It was a very “gimme my keys, man – I want my keys!” moment.
FINALLY the nurse arrived to insert the IV. But drugs aside, the iPad was the biggest help in distracting Oliver from his hand piercing. We got it from a really sweet twelve year old who told me her job was to help distract children who were waiting for surgery. Okay – so it was a more official title and job description than that…and she was at LEAST fourteen if she was a day…but either way, she was fab.
After that, I spent about 45 minutes making sure Oliver didn’t pick at the IV (because OF COURSE he had to do that) and wondering when exactly our 10:00 a.m. surgery would actually begin. By 11:00, I was starting to loose steam, and Oliver’s happy drugs were wearing off.
When our surgeon did appear with the expected apologies for her previous surgery running over time, I was happy to get off Oliver’s hospital bed to sign some forms. And like a dummy I decided that this would be the perfect time to take a break from my IV vigil and check e-mail/Twitter. Starting with Twitter, I noticed that a couple of people expressed concern for Oliver (see above). So I started to type a quick reply that all was well – nothing serious going on.
This would be the moment that Oliver chose to rip out his IV.
After I spent an hour of hanging off the side of his hosptial bed, watching his every movement, lest he do something to his IV, he actually removed the whole damn thing. I saw the spurt of blood and immediately felt like a little girl who just watched her ice cream scoop slide off the cone and onto the pavement.
No tears though. Just defeated, annoyance for the very nice staff who had no control over the fact that we waited SO LONG for this damn surgery because if they started even just 30 or 45 minutes late, he probably wouldn’t have had the opportunity to pull out his IV and I wouldn’t be feeling like I lost my ice cream cone to gravity…. SO frustrating. It made me want to scream. Instead I silently seethed. And visibly sulked.
I just wanted to make this as easy on Oliver as possible. And my efforts ended up being a big waste of time. I hate that. Even though this kind of describes life in general much of the time… It still makes me crazy.
So I watched them wheel IV-less Oliver and his iPad into the OR where they would just hold my terrified son down to re-insert the spike and try to pump anesthesia into him as quickly as possible. I could only hope that the twelve year old was able to distract him with puppets or something.
Seriously – I’m sure it was fine. Oliver is a trooper. But two hours later in the waiting room, I’m still a little pissed about it.
Also – the phone reception here is terrible! Thank god I was able to find a sketchy internet connection.
Still waiting, I decided to go get a coffee and find a restroom. The former being exceedingly less confusing than the latter. The restroom for this “family waiting area” is a one at a time kid of deal and the two people ahead of me both took approximately five hour-long turns. For the life of me, I can’t imagine what they were doing in there. Even the second guy who was holding a toddler, would have to change at least 5 diapers to justify the length of his stay. In the end, I had to go to another floor. This was a blessing in disguise since I discovered en route, that my texts to Chris finally went through.
I also got to stretch my legs and do some people watching. Hospitals provide great people watching opportunities, you know.
The noise in the cafeteria was overwhelming so I just strolled the hallways for a bit. I talked to a woman pushing a cart with not one, but two zithers. Now THAT is something you don’t see every day. Just to make sure, I asked her if they were in fact, zithers. She said yes and that was the longest conversation I’ve had with anyone who wasn’t in scrubs since 7:00 a.m.
*****
We are now in recovery!
Oliver is still out of it but his procedures went well. Teeth are extracted, spacers are inserted, and various small cavities (cringe) are filled. I’m just waiting for him to wake up.
In the meantime, I learned a few things.
First, it wasn’t two bottom molars they removed, but two top molars. I could have sworn she said bottom teeth…mother of the year!
Also – not eating anything in the morning before your child’s surgery out of solidarity (or fear that they’ll see you eating and demand food) and then not eating at the cafeteria because it’s crowded and smells funny will make you feel like a complete idiot when you are sitting in recovery at 3:00 p.m. thinking you might pass out from hunger.
Finally – the twelve year old who gave Oliver the iPad is a “Child Life Specialist.” And she’s not really twelve. But I already knew that. I’m just 40 and think anyone under the age of 25 looks like they should be selling girl scout cookies.
Oh – cookies… Hopefully we’ll get out of here soon. I’m starving.
More than anything I am grateful that my babies are all healthy. Seeing other children waiting for their own surgeries, hearing their cries as they come out of their anesthesia sleep… I don’t know how many of these kids are here for serious reasons or routine procedures like Oliver. But my heart goes out to the babies here who are suffering and the mothers and fathers who suffer with them. It’s a scary job, this parenting thing.
Oliver is waking up now. Much love to you and yours.

At least right now… I’m experiencing a little writer’s block. And the few post ideas that I could have banged out a week or two ago are just sitting in my brain feeling confused about how they got there and why they are holding a Barbie doll (okay that’s more like what happens to me when I find myself in the bathroom – holding a Barbie doll – with no memory of what I’m doing there).
ANYWAY! I can still peruse pretty stuff on the Internet so visit me at Wishing True today to hear more about this:
Hopefully the words will stop hiding from me soon!
When you are looking at pretty jewelry, does the thought, “I wonder how earth friendly this is,” ever cross your mind? If so – good for you! I’m generally too distracted by the BRIGHT! SHINY! OBJECT! to care, let alone remember what day it is.
And this line of jewelry from Mujus is very distracting.
First – there is the obvious showstopper piece:
Right? And for those of you who aren’t so much into multi-color, THIS is equally spectacular:
The Locura bib necklace is described as “runway deserving” and I couldn’t agree more. Would love to see it with a drapey shoulder baring evening gown. Strapless? Halter? It would work with so many styles.
So back from fantasyland now… Here are some other pieces that I could wear – you know, OFF the runway:
And of course, there are bracelets to consider…
So how is this loveliness earth friendly? It’s made of tagua seed. Tagua, also known as vegetable ivory, originates from a palm tree that grows in Amazon rainforest. When ripe, the tagua fruit falls to the ground and is gathered and dried by local communities. Since the seeds are harvested after they have fallen to the ground, there is no damage done to the rainforest during the harvesting process.
Designer, Paola Delgado left investment banking (of all things!) in 2009 to found Mujus. Having grown up in Peru, she returned to Lima to explore how she could design beautiful jewelry using high quality, organic and sustainable raw materials AND give back to her native land. She discovered tagua and a few years later… To read more about the company, check out the “About” page – so inspiring.
More incentive for me to figure out what I want to be when I grow up. I love a great “corporate to creative” success story!