happy birthday greg

Here is the card I made for my brother

He’s a professional musician 🙂 It’s funny… he is one of the few people I know who has made a career out of the thing they love and are talented at. He’s so lucky for that!

Yesterday I took Freya over to my dad’s house, where there is an upright piano that he plays and that my brother learned to play on about thirty years ago. Freya sat on the bench next to her grandpa and pounded on the keys happily while he played a tune. It was sweet.

sweets

In my top five list of desserts is vanilla bean ice cream with fresh, unadulterated blueberries or strawberries or peaches on top. Simple, perfect. Also in that list: fruit crisp (apple or cherry) with oatmeal streusel topping. Another? Mocha rum cake, no frosting or glaze. Hmm. Also: vanilla creme brulee. One more: dark chocolate mousse with fresh whipped cream and bing cherries.

I guess a running theme there is fruit. And simple flavors like vanilla and chocolate. And I don’t like frosting.

Mmmmm sweets. Supposed to be avoiding that. Guess I’ll write about it instead?

I also like oatmeal chocolate chip cookies and carrot cake and caramels with sea salt. Ok I’ll stop now.

That rain forecast is proving to have been a big fat lie. Because now it’s 1:00 and the sun is still shining in a cloudless sky. Though it’s not hot, not by any stretch of the imagination. Which reminded me today that one thing that is making me the most pissed off about our Bullshit Spring is that I bought so many cute hot-weather outfits for Freya and now I am seriously wondering if she will even get to wear them. Grr!! And here we have why people move to crapholes like Arizona and Southern California. Sometimes you trade quality of life for sunshine you can actually count on.

Freya and I went for a nice walk this morning. At the end we stopped at the soccer field near our house and I let her run around and push the stroller. The wind blew her fine baby hair all around her head. She pointed up at the setting crescent moon. Wispy white clouds blew past above us. She wanted to stay and play some more despite her cold hands, and burst into tears when I put her back in the stroller. So I asked her if she could find the moon for me, and that distracted her from her indignation for a moment. Then I pushed the stroller while running across the field and she got a big kick out of that, too. When we got home, I gave her a few pretzel sticks, as promised, and then she dumped all of her wooden puzzles out onto the floor.

suppertime

I made asparagus-leek soup for dinner. It’s a puree so hopefully Freya will like it. I also made a dozen pumpkin cranberry whole wheat muffins for a playdate tomorrow that just got canceled. Now what?

We went to the library this morning to pick out books and also attend her first toddler story time. I think it went well. She was in my lap throughout as she still doesn’t take direction and would have been just running around causing mayhem otherwise. But she was really good in my lap, seemed to listen to the story lady (when she wasn’t looking around at all the other kids) and lasted for about twenty minutes before starting to ask for “down” and then cry because I wouldn’t let her walk. So I put her back in the stroller and she was fine after that. She doesn’t really throw huge tantrums over not getting her way. I guess that could still change, but I think she knows that I will stay calm and be gentle and listen to her (while being firm when I need to be), and hopefully knows she doesn’t need to escalate into a full on screaming fit in order to gain my attention.

wednesday

It’s windy and rainy and gray outside. I am in my office listening to the baby monitor. Freya is moving around, but not waking. It makes me so anxious to listen to this. Will I have to stop what I’m doing and run in there? These days when she wakes up she says “Mommy?” so I know she’s truly awake. But sometimes she talks in her sleep.

I just did burst training. I had skipped a few days. When I did that one-mile fun run I realized that I could be running as burst training, too. Sprint a couple blocks, walk, sprint, etc. Freya would love that, too. It’s like a ride to her. So I’d like to be running, but the weather has turned to shit again. After all, what can you expect for early March? Oops, I mean late May, don’t I? Ugh.

Man I need to clean up this office. One corner is just a pile of outgrown baby clothes, and Brian’s suitcase, and Brian’s laundry. How did that happen? He has his own office. Hmm. He wants a standing work station from IKEA, which means I will get his old desk and set it up in here as a craft table. I can’t wait! Then I will move all of Freya’s remaining stuff into her bedroom across the hall, where she still does not sleep, but shall someday.

My brother’s 40th birthday is Saturday. I made him a card yesterday, and made sure to snap a photo before I mailed it. So I’ll post that later. But I think it’s a cool card. I worked on it in the living room because Freya was being EXTRA needy after her nap yesterday. Mama mama mama she said over and over as I tried to use my glue stick. I ended up stopping every couple minutes to get down on the floor and play with her or hug her. Children need you to come down to their level. Just standing there and talking to her while I tried to work was not enough. So we read a book, or played with the See and Say toy, which she likes but hasn’t figured out yet how to pull the lever herself.

I should probably go down and eat something. Good day.

olivia

So a few weeks ago I went out to tapas dinner with a few girlfriends. The food was AMAZING, as was the company. But that’s another story. My friend Jean was carrying a purse which I, as a handbag enthusiast, spotted across the room. I had to know more about it. It was a large patent leather tote in a striking shade of dark blue. The leather had this very cool watercolor effect. I asked her about it and she said that it was actually made by a friend of hers who had a handbag line, and that it retailed for like $500. Oh, I thought. Well, it sure is pretty!

So I was still thinking about this bag a few weeks later. How cool that there was a local designer making such great stuff. Why am I wasting my time with stupid Coach, who are moving their manufacturing out of China because it’s “too expensive” now to pay workers there (and still reap huge profits), and instead are setting up factories in even poorer economies. Ugh, fuck them. So I wrote to Jean to ask about this designer, thinking maybe I could see if she made a little wallet I could afford or something.

She told me the brand is Rocco e Dante, based in Seattle. I did some googling, and couldn’t find much at all in terms of online sales or anything. It seemed like a dead end. So, I tried again with a different search for “patent leather rocco dante,” and I saw a couple of eBay auctions come up. In fact, there was that same blue bag, brand new, selling for 95 dollars. It’s called the Olivia.

Of course my instinct was to ask, is it real? But who would go through the trouble to knock off a small boutique designer no one’s heard of (yet)? It was certainly authentic, and the seller had impeccable feedback. I mulled it over for a little while. It was still ninety-five bucks. But it was also $400 off the retail price. Lordy. I had to get it. I don’t have any patent leather bags, or big totes that I could use someday for work. That’s how I reason with myself sometimes. Heh.

Here are some pics…

trip photos


Sunrise over the City.


Our unremarkable hotel room.


New shoes at Nordstrom.


Eva and Freya taking a cat nap.


Freya and Ivo.


Melon at Crepes on Cole.


Freya visits Daddy at work.

viking fest

Every year, our little Scandinavian village hosts a three day Viking Festival, complete with a parade, a race (5 miles), a carnival, and tons of other events over a long weekend. All the town’s merchants get all excited for all the business they get, and Front Street gets all decorated for the event. It’s a big deal.

I’ve never really participated that much for one reason or another. Two years ago I was visiting SF during Viking Fest, and last year I thought Freya was too little to be able to handle it all. But this year we made a point of attending.

First, Brian registered us for the road races Saturday morning. There was a five-mile run, which he did, and a one-mile “fun run” for me and Freya. The weather was cool and misty, perfect for running. As soon as I got there, I wished that I had dressed more appropriately, as I was determined to run as much as I could. But I was in jeans. I did it anyway; it was only a mile. Our daily walk is usually twice that. Next time we sign up for a 5k or something, which we intend to do more of, I will definitely use the jogging stroller and wear the right clothes.

I also ran because I didn’t want to finish dead last, as we did last year in the Boy Scouts 5K we walked. That was sad. So I ran for over half, pausing to walk a few times. Freya had a blast, and so did I. After we crossed the finish line on Front Street, we found a great spot to watch the 5-mile finishers.

The runners at the front were seriously hardcore, and fast. The winner finished in 23 minutes or so, and he was absolutely flying. Same for the next few guys, they were really fast and you could tell they were trying to beat their personal time or something. Competitive runners always have this grimace on their faces when they finish. No stopping to walk a block for them.

Brian finished around the 50-minute mark — his knee had started bothering him after three miles in. But he finished pretty well, and still running. We went home to relax before the parade. I also had made a crockpot of baked beans for the barbecue at Christina’s house post-parade.

She lives a few yards from the parade route, so naturally the cops would not allow us to drive to her house to park. They were pretty dickish about it. We had to park a few blocks away and carry Freya and a couple grocery bags. Wah. Well, it wasn’t that bad. The parade started a few minutes after we arrived, and we walked down to Fjord to get a great spot.

I normally think parades are pretty boring and lame. But a small town parade is different. Somewhat quaint, but sincere. Freya really enjoyed it from her perch in the backpack carrier. We saw lots of school bands, Marines and Navy soldiers marching with their machine guns, and lots of open-top cars with pageant winners sitting in the back, waving awkwardly. It was great. Near the beginning, the town fire trucks rolled by, and I was given a sexy firefighters calendar by what looked like a male model. Okay, I asked for it, and he gave it to me. Hee.

The schools all brought their costumed mascots, which was probably Freya’s favorite part of all. She squealed with delight at the giant, furry animals. There were a few floats, mostly with a Viking ship theme. Lots of candy thrown our way, most of it crappy, but a few notable exceptions (york peppermint patties!). It was hilarious how the crowd fell suddenly silent when the Republican Party truck went by, windows rolled up. Ha. Assholes. Even better when the “Tea Party” contingent passed, a sad group of white people in their 60s-80s, trying to hand out fliers. “Absolutely not,” said Courtney’s husband. Ha Ha.

Strangest inclusion in the parade was the massive truck bearing a cement septic tank. I wondered if we were supposed to cheer for the septic tank. It was near the end, of course, followed by a line of boring cars. I was disappointed in the lack of horses in the parade. That would have seriously impressed miss baby.

Afterward, we went to Christina’s for hanging out and barbecue. Nice and laid back, though we hoped for more sunshine. At least it wasn’t raining.

The next day, yesterday, after Freya’s nap, the three of us decided to visit the downtown part of Viking Fest, meaning the craft and food pavilion in the parking lot and along the waterfront. We got a cone from our Icelandic friends at Viking Feast Ice Cream, and then I scored a GORGEOUS blue-green scarf/shawl for $15 from one of the vendors near the water. It’s already my new favorite scarf. It’s a lot like the $60 one I looked at in SF last week at BCBG, only ten times prettier and a fraction of the price. Yay.

We then got coffees and departed for Home Depot. So long, Vikings. Let’s hope for sunny weather next year.

the city

We departed Monday morning for our family vacation to our old home of San Francisco. It’s always an emotional event for me, as my feelings about this city are so mixed and so strong. It’s a true love-hate relationship.

Freya did well on the flight. We had lots of snacks for her, some new toys to play with, and she even napped a little in my arms, and Brian’s, too. While the plane was landing I talked to her all about what we could see down below, and then encouraged her to be super excited about touchdown and taxi.

Then we fetched our suitcase and headed for BART. She was quiet throughout the train ride, looking around curiously, probably lulled into a daze by the roaring white noise that BART trains make. We got off at Powell and headed up the street about four blocks to Union Square and our hotel, the Westin St. Francis, which is pretty famous and fancy. The lobby was opulent as hell, like a palace, with crystal chandeliers everywhere and gleaming marble tile and so on. I wondered if our room would be like that.

We stayed in the Tower section, which is actually behind the older part of the hotel, and features a set of external elevators with 180 views of the city below. We were on the 24th floor, so the elevator ride was a huge highlight, especially for Freya, who started saying “wheee” when we were in there, much to our delight.

Our room was not that fancy. It was just a hotel room, king bed, white sheets and towels, blah. The view we had was fantastic and the best part and perhaps how they get away with charging a fortune to stay there. As far as amenities, I have stayed at many other hotels that offered WAY more hospitality. The Westin left shampoo, conditioner, a bar of soap, and a lotion. Woopdee doo. Oh and a mini bar that offered $8 Snickers. And room service that sold a $14 fruit plate. And $15/day internet access. What a joke. BUT I’m sure that since 80% of their customers are on expense accounts, why not charge whatever the fuck they want? The last place we stayed in the City, The Orchard Garden, had a beautiful room, and provided all kinds of toiletries and cotton balls and q-tips and a sewing kit etc etc. I liked that place.

Anyhoo. So we checked in and relaxed. Freya ran around the room a little bit. We went down to the SF Shopping Center to get a bite to eat and find Freya some yogurt. I felt like my senses were being assaulted by the pure chaos of thousands of people and noises and trolleys and sirens and insanity. Which is funny because I used to work downtown and was immersed in it daily and wasn’t really affected by it. But now I live in a small town of 9000 people. Life is quiet here. I realized that I like that.

We had dinner with a group of friends at a place called Cafe Mason near our hotel. That was fun — they brought all their kids so we had one baby, two toddlers, and a preschooler. Freya was the only girl. She behaved pretty well at the table, as she usually does. Very interested in playing with the straw and plastic cup of water. This kid loves water, yay.

After that it was definitely bed time. It was nice to be in a king bed, tons of space for everyone, though little miss snugglepants still found a way to shift me closer to the edge of the bed.

Oh, did I mention the weather? Yeah so it was pretty much raining this whole time, and Tuesday morning, raining even more. Crappy. We went to have a big fat greasy American breakfast at Max’s, and I only finished maybe half of mine. Freya had no interest in the pancakes, and only wanted my eggs, which was fine. I make her whole wheat pancakes with no sugar, these ones were buttermilk and tasted pretty sweet. Good girl. Brian let her try his orange juice. She was pretty into that — she loves oranges already.

We did not have coffee at Max’s since we knew we were headed to Blue Bottle at the Ferry Building to meet Tamara and her daughter Eva. We walked all the way down there. I felt the familiarity of the streets, and noticed all the changes, too. The Ferry Building has also changed and grown. That makes me happy, as I love that place. I frequented it on many a lunch break long ago.

Tamara and Eva were waiting in the long line at Blue Bottle. I ordered a drip coffee, a half pound of beans for our neighbors, and a little shortbread cookie to share with Freya. She accepted a few little bites but didn’t seem too enthralled. Good for you, kid. We sat at one of the huge tables near Peet’s and Eva chased pigeons around hilariously.

Brian left us to go to a work teambuilding event (Circus School!), and Tamara and I took the kids to her car and drove up to the shopping center to do a couple returns. The night before I had purchased a cute pair of black Converse sneakers for Freya, only to have one of the velcro tabs totally come apart an hour later. Ugh. So back they went. I wish we’d had more time to shop and browse like we did last time, when our babies were little infants, but now they are toddlers, and pretty much dictate the schedule. We gave them some lunch downstairs, then got back into the car to head for Rena’s flat in the lower Haight.

On the way, both girls fell asleep. We tried rolling down the windows, pinching toes, calling their names, but they both passed out about five minutes before parking. So of course we just carried them in our arms into Rena’s building and laid them out on her bed. Yes, there are pictures.

So the playdate got off to a slow start, but we were entertained by Ivo, Rena’s adorable son, who is two weeks younger than Freya. They are pretty much the same height and weight. I think he is the only kid we know so close to her in age.

We let the girls sleep about a half hour, then roused them for playtime. It took a little while for Freya to wake up and acclimate, so she was a little clingy monkey for a few minutes, which is fine by me. Then she was ready to hang out and explore. My former roommate Heidi also showed up with her son Evan, who recently turned one. Four babies is pretty hectic. I wouldn’t recommend anything larger for a playdate in a small SF apartment.

Around two, Tamara and Heidi departed, leaving just Freya and Ivo to play together, and it was cute as hell and there is video which I need to get pronto. Freya loves running up and down hallways while shrieking, so she did that for a while until Ivo joined in, and it was hilarious. I wish these two could spend regular time together. Sigh.

Brian came back from his work event close to three, and we said goodbye and walked over to Cole Valley for a little snack and coffee. Then we rode the N all the way back downtown. Memories…

I wanted Indian food for dinner, but the closest place was Naan n Curry on O’Farrell. The one in the Sunset I recall being good, but this one was just filthy and gross and I regretted it, even if it was dirt cheap. Ugh. I guess the food was alright, but the ambience kinda ruined it.

Brian had a martial arts class after dinner, so after he left I hung out with Freya in our room. She had a blast being somewhere with no gates, so I had to manage her the whole time, mainly to keep her from touching the toilet or bonking her head on furniture. But overall she was awesome and was so happy to just run back and forth and play with her new matchbox cars. She also loved looking out the window at the panoramic view, and pointing out passing airplanes, gulls, and so forth.

The next day, the rainclouds were finally gone. I got up early and looked outside at the city coming alive. It was a beautiful sight. After everyone was ready, we walked down to the financial district to Noah’s, where I had an everything bagel with cream cheese on the side. Gave Freya some cream cheese and fed her a yogurt, too. Then to Peet’s for a latte, and then to Brian’s office, where he was to spend the morning working. Freya and I headed out on our own.

I used to work on California and Battery, and as I walked near my old office, where I walked every morning exactly eleven years ago, I kind of thought of how funny it was that I would pass that way again over a decade later, this time with my daughter. The building I worked in (for a short time when I was still with Gap) had been transformed. The first floor had once been a Lasik center, now it’s a Staples store. I looked up and tried to remember what floor I worked on.

We walked to Embarcadero Center. Nothing was open yet. I showed Freya the big waterfall sculpture, and the nearly tame adolescent sea gulls that were walking around. The area around the sculpture was of course crowded with homeless camps. The city was as full of homeless people as ever. I do not miss that one bit. Who would?

I wanted to go to the Ferry Building again, so I got another coffee and took Freya to the waterfront area to chase pigeons around and check out the Bay Bridge and the murky green water. She protested wildly when it was time to get back in the stroller. I am just not comfortable letting her get very far from me still, especially in SF, even with only a few people around. I’m a bit of a mama goose in that way, except that my child doesn’t follow me everywhere. That would make it easy, huh.

I headed up into the financial district again and happened to pass a kid’s clothing store. Inside I found two dirt cheap pairs of sneakers just like the Converse ones. Eight dollars each, one pink pair and one blue/green. Also, $3 sunglasses, a tank top, and jeans. I guess they were having a big sale, I don’t know.

Back to hotel room, Freya was winding down fast. I nursed her to sleep on the bed and then just chilled out for a while. Brian finished work and picked up a couple of chicken schwarmas for us. Mmm. It was important to me to find food that you can’t get in Poulsbo. After I wolfed mine down, Freya woke up and I excused myself to the BCBG store downstairs to buy aforementioned cute blue and white top. It’s more flattering on me than it is on that flat-chested model.

While I was shopping, our friend Karen arrived from Clearlake, in northerner California, along with her four month old son, Kellog. As soon as I walked into our room, she handed him to me. I was amazed at his lightness. Ahhh, little babies! And he didn’t try to squirm away, either! He is so very adorable.

We all walked down to the Westfield Center (again!) so that Karen could find a gift for a friend of hers, and so that I could buy those cute pewter leather flower sandals from my last post, which are so very comfy. On our way out, we also indulged in a favorite SF indulgence, eclairs and cream puffs from Beard Papa, to be enjoyed later.

It was our last night in the City and it was finally sunny and warm, with the usual ocean breeze blowing up and down the streets. We wanted to end our trip with some good Mexican food, but not too far from the hotel. We ended up at a place called “Herbert’s Grill”, which despite the name, was pretty awesome and cheap tacqueria style food. Brian and I each got Mexican Cokes, a TOTAL treat for a couple of people who never drink soda. They also sliced up a perfectly ripe avocado for Freya to eat, with jack cheese sprinkled on top. I had a couple of very juicy chicken soft tacos, and we were joined by Brian’s friend Rebecca, from the Bujinkan dojo in SF. It was a perfect local meal to close out our stay.

Back at the hotel, it was time for Freya to have a bath, so I got in the tub with her and we tried to approximate our baths at home, though much shorter and without the toys. She seemed to enjoy herself. I had a shower by myself after that, then we just hung out listening to the Giants beating the Dodgers on the radio (stupid fucking hotel didn’t carry the channel that broadcasts Giants games. WTF), and I ate my eclair: puff pastry with chocolate on top and vanilla bean custard inside. It was magical and sublime.

I got up in the morning before anyone else, as usual, and watched the sun rising behind the tall buildings downtown, turning the sky pink. It was totally clear, finally appropriate weather, just in time for us to go home. Brian was awesome and packed for us as I was getting Freya to bed the night before, so getting ready to go was easy. We checked out, saying farewell to the fun elevator, and started toward Market Street, where we had a coffee and food pit stop at The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf cafe. They had some fruit and cheese for us to give Freya, too.

And then we took the train back down to SFO, and flew home. Freya had a slightly harder time on the plane this time. She really wanted to nurse a lot, and the lady sitting next to me was highly unaccommodating. But Freya was a good baby as always and as always, we got a compliment from another passenger on her great behavior.

When we landed at Sea-Tac and arrived at where our car was parked, Freya shrieked with excitement. She was ready to get home, too, and smiled and kicked and sang as we drove to the ferry.

There will be pictures from the trip in my next post!

I went shopping

We went to San Francisco this week, just got home this afternoon. While in the City, I enjoyed a little bit of shopping, which was especially fun since I know this will be our last vacation out of state for who knows, a year? And next time we get to buy a ticket for Freya too, sigh. Anyway full update on our trip later. Here’s what I bought.

Top: (BCBG)

Sandals: (Nordstrom)

can’t sleep

I’m up at 3:45 am, whee. Not because my baby is awake, she is fast asleep. I’m just an insomniac tonight. Maybe because I had not one but two girly drinks at dinner. The alcohol is a depressant, but the sugar kicks in later on, and can definitely keep you awake.

We had our monthly ladies night dinner at Paella Bar in Poulsbo. I was blown away by the food. The six of us ended up ordering fourteen different small plates to share, plus three desserts, and everything, EVERYTHING, was outstanding. Dates wrapped in thick, salty bacon. Marinated mushrooms with goat cheese. Enchilada mole. Catfish fritters. Chocolate whiskey ice cream. Mango mojito. I think this place eclipsed Mor Mor, at least for now, and Mor Mor has awesome food. Who would have thought that this little Norwegian village has two world-class restaurants?

The place was slammed, too. We were lucky to get there when we did, at six. It always pleases me to see shops and restaurants on Front Street crowded. The whole street is nothing but small, local businesses and I want them all to thrive. So many have closed down in the past two years. It was depressing there for a little while. But it seems to be making a little comeback.

When I got home, I heard Freya shrieking from the living room, “Mama!!” and then saw her little face smiling at me. She did a little happy dance. God I love her.

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