Tag Archives: Granddaughter

Everyday Happy

It’s the end of another Monday and I am sitting at my desk. No, of course I’m not blogging on work time… I would never do that. But it’s Monday, and I am happy. Not exceptionally giddy or enthusiastically ecstatic.. just, you know, happy. In an everyday-happy kind of way. This is a pretty great feeling since I spent the past two Mondays feeling mournfully sad as a result of a too-happy weekend in Charlottesville and an exhausting-yet-fun weekend in Pittsburgh, respectively. Also, it rained the past two Mondays and was about 60 degrees. In May. I mean, come on weather!

But I digress.

So today I am happy. It’s for a variety of reasons… rather small reasons, actually. But I’m really enjoying how all of these everyday things have made me happy, and you know – I think it would be a disservice to everyone’s Monday if I didn’t share them and let you be happy, too.

On Friday, I got a massage with The Boyfriend.

(Unnecessary details: I haven’t gotten a massage since third year of college, and over the past 5 years (five?! How has it been that long??) I have experienced some of the happiest times of my life… accompanied by about twice as many of the most stressful times. Every day, every week, every month I make promises to abide by Aziz Ansari’s command to “treat yo’self!”… and then promptly get carried away by more stress. So Friday, I went for it. And somehow, getting myself TO the point of this treat was still stressful. I fussed about being late and planning, and argued with The Boyfriend the entire way to the spa. I was the most miserable person on the planet. And then, this magical man laid his hands on me. No, not The Boyfriend.)

…This was followed by a Shake Shack concrete with truffle cookie dough.

AMAZE.

AMAZE.

I spent Saturday babysitting my favorite almost-4-year-old twins – coloring, playing school, eating waffles, and learning new phrases like “choppy chicks” (chocolate chips, duh).

The afternoon passed while surfing my parents’ DVR with them and catching up on the few shows that I still watch.

Then I ate some fresh homemade cookies and re-found my ice cream maker, and discovered Game of Thrones (at Denise’s urging). My first thought was, “Wow, my hygiene standards wouldn’t allow me to exist in an epic fantasy realm.” And then, I was like MUST BINGE-WATCH THE OTHER 30 EPISODES IMMEDIATELY.

On Sunday, my family and I attended the senior-citizen service at Grammy’s church (oh hey, Ascension Sunday!) where the pastor incorporated the impending cicada infestation into the sermon.

this is all I can think of when people say “cicadas”

We all went to Charlottesville for Mother’s Day Brunch with Grammy.

oh, family, you are cute.

oh, family, you are cute.

Gracie and I spent some time picking fresh strawberries and antiquing. Summer, you taste so good.

three days early on the harvest.

three days early on the harvest.

And I even got to continuing my current reading pick, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry.

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Late Sunday afternoon was spent “shopping” in Grammy’s old jewelry.

grammy's response every time we asked for the story behind a piece/who gave it to her "ehhh, one of those boyfriends probably."

grammy’s response every time we asked for the story behind a piece/who gave it to her “ehhh, one of those boyfriends probably.”

And later that night, we introduced Grammy to Facetime… and of course Biko was involved.

grammy lecturing biko on turning his tail on her

grammy lecturing biko on turning his tail on her

I wrapped up the weekend with an excellent (easy!) new smoothie recipe: 1 frozen banana + 6 oz. unsweetened vanilla almond milk + 4 ice cubes + 1 tsp. cinnamon

Finally, this was the [slightly-overloaded-with-feelings] theme song of my weekend, as I reflected on my beautiful mom, Grammy, and family as a whole:

Tales of My Sassy, Fabulous, Photo-Bombing Grammy

Hello, I am Grammy and I am fab.

Hello, I am Grammy and I am fab.

Grammy is the source of all things sassy and fabulous in my family. She is simply the best. All of my friends have probably heard more than an earful of Grammyisms and praise over the past decade, but no one can deny it – she is one amazing and rockin’ lady.

She even knows how to do the skinny arm.

She even knows how to do the skinny arm.

Last weekend, Grammy turned 83, and per annual tradition we drove down to Crozet to celebrate another year with her. As we returned, my sister and I remarked how Grammy aged and grown with us so seamlessly over the years – when we were young children, she was the doting grandmother who bought us Barbies and stuffed animals and let us come for summer sleepovers at her house. As we grew older, she knew how to be silly with us and talk to us like the adults we wanted to be. Now that we are grown, she talks to us as equals, shares our sense of humor, and tells the best stories about the benefits and shortcomings of the men around us. It’s hard to put into words, but Grammy just gets it.

one of my all-time favorite family photos - please note how engaged Grammy is in the silly shots.

one of my all-time favorite family photos – please note how engaged Grammy is in the silly shots.

And as evidence, I give you a collection of Grammy’s birthday shenanigans, past and present, including this year’s newly-discovered skill of photo-bombing.

probably saying something inappropriate...

probably saying something inappropriate…

did I mention my grandmother is pretty much a unicorn as far as awesomeness goes?

did I mention my grandmother is pretty much a unicorn as far as awesomeness goes?

crowning the Birthday Queen

crowning the Birthday Queen

Grammy the Birthday Queen with her favorite Ice Queen

Grammy the Birthday Queen with her favorite Ice Queen

Practicing the Birthday Queen wave from her magical dinosaur.

Practicing the Birthday Queen wave from her magical dinosaur.

Grammy learns how to photobomb. She is an instant natural.

Grammy learns how to photobomb. She is an instant natural.

Grammy refines aforementioned photo-bombing skills.

Grammy refines aforementioned photo-bombing skills.

So you may have noticed our small purple dinosaur friend in some of these photos; in 2008 we happened upon him in a local Charlottesville park, and somehow when it was all said and done, the dinosaur remained a steadfast part of Grammy’s birthday tradition. Kind of like marking children’s growth on the wall. But more purple. And only our midsections and/or hair length and/or amount of gray hair grows.

2010

2010

2011

2011

2012

2012

2013

2013

So yes. Grammy is awesome. And the post was really just an excuse to show you adorable photos of her. But really, I look at her… and I know exactly who I am, and why. And I love that.

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Grammy at 24. SEE WE ARE THE SAME.

the skinny arm is immune to time and fad.

the skinny arm is immune to time and fad.

Granddaughter

God had a special plan in mind when he created someone so kind – a person with dignity and pride. He gave that person a generous love, a strong faith with guidance from above, then placed a great and tender heart inside. Then God, according to his plan, provided for this special man a family of his own to love and raise. So, faithfully, the man believed and, blessed by love, his own received the gift God gave through him in endless ways. And though his children now are grown and this man has gone to a heavenly home, he’s still providing for his own a  love that, like the Lord, is strong and great. He was a grandfather – God’s work of art – who nurtured many hearts with a love that took a lifetime to create.

We love you, Grandpa.

 

 

{the biggest} Flake

Dear fellow LiL’ers,

In case you hadn’t noticed recently, I have been a giant, obnoxious FLAKE about posting. After profuse apologies to my fellow [dedicated, regular, amazing] posters, I swore to reform. Although March is pretty much null and void at this point, I figured I would do a bit of a review of some labels that have come my way this month. Some of them, I’ve hated realizing (e.g. Flake)… others have surprised me, and still more have challenged me. So without further ado, A Month in the Life of a Labeler: March 2012.

1. Quitter: this past month, I was a quitter. I quit knitting, I quit mentoring, I quit shaving my legs (TMI?). In all seriousness, I HATE having to quit something. It makes me feel disappointed in myself, and I feel as though I have let others down. After wallowing in a bit of failing-at-life self-pity, I picked myself up, bought a razor, and moved on.*

2. Wannabe Vegan: inspired by Denise’s not-quitting self, I have been embracing her vegan ways selectively over the past few months. Obviously, I’m much more willing to help with Trader Joe’s and dark chocolate are involved. Although I’ll never be able to give up yogurt or cheese or froyo (God bless you and your will power, Denise), I have enjoyed trying new dishes with Denise, and learning to shop for vegan meals has made me more aware in general of reading ingredient labels on food. This also resulted in me swearing off all flavored coffee creamers halfway through the month (but really, folks, this stuff DOESN’T EVEN HAVE MILK IN IT.) So thank you, Denise, for teaching me that nutrition is far more than calories!**

3. In a funk: earlier in March, Denise and I found ourselves in a used book/mixed media store with my sister. After a glorious foray into the old Disney VHS section (hello, Pollyanna and the original Parent Trap! The Rescuers, you have returned to me! And how have I never seen Mighty Ducks??), we browsed the grown-up movie section, at which point I picked up The Hours and Sylvia within about 60 seconds.

Sister: “Hello, suicide movies.”

Denise: “Meryl Streep!”

Me: “But Pollyanna is upbeat!”

At which point I was reminded (spoiler alert!) that it ends with her falling from a tree and paralyzing herself from the waist down.

Oh, it was a funk indeed. My Redbox renting history and that trip to the bookstore are hard evidence. So are the six (six!) bags of jelly beans that made their way into my apartment recently. After one too many Sylvia-inspired quotes on my tumblr, a friend asked me when I was planning to stick my OWN head in an oven. The grandmother-sweater phase of the winter extended through the unseasonably warm (read: 80-degree) weather we had recently. It was the funkiest of funks, but thankfully I had another label up my sleeve…

4. Runner: I’ve been running/going to the gym regularly since I graduated (in retribution for years of abuse to my liver and otherwise), but with mild weather recently, my runner label has grown quite a bit stronger, and served as a pick-me-up and stress-release at the end of many days. Perhaps it’s the change of scenery with my new job – my run now circles the memorials and the Mall, and gives me a chance to “check up” on our construction site for the Museum on almost a daily basis.

SO EXCITING!

 Perhaps it was the unending funk of being trapped in my own thoughts. But running finally gave me the release that I needed from everything else that I had going on. The endorphins obviously weren’t too bad either. And that’s how I learned that the “rush” all those intense runners laud about is ACTUALLY real, and it can do wonders for a person when you need it the most.

running around Burke Lake

5. Smiley: this is my silliest and sappiest label of the month, but it was a much-needed contrast after all the dark-and-twisty funk I just threw out there. As a result of the insane endorphins, I found myself smiling more than usual as I trotted around the city. At first, I thought I just looked upbeat.

“Hey world! I’m moving around! I’m getting shit done! I have on hot pink underarmour!”

Then I noticed tourists (see #6) were staring more than usual. And I realized I was running around grinning like a freak Cheshire cat unleashed on the district.

{Apparently I am incredibly sensitive to endorphins.}

But the alternative was furrowing my brow and causing early aging on my porcelain skin, so I figured I’d just keep being a loon and see the worst that could happen. Then I tried smiling on the metro last week. As Denise has explained, the metro is a very special social experiment of shared suffering and hatred. And while the smile-theory quickly died, I found that other facial expressions of shared misery were welcomed with OPEN ARMS. Stuck on the metro after the circus finishes in Chinatown, smelling the residual stench of elephant on small children waving laser-light toys? Roll your eyes at Mr. 30-Something next to you for a guaranteed self-pity smile in return! Metro delays multiplying your commute length threefold? Give your best Courtney-face-scrunch to the woman next to you with two bags of groceries. Boom. Facial expressions… who knew?***

how 'bout that stinkeye?

6. Tourist Hater: How quickly the cherry blossoms come and go. If only, if only the tourists were the same. Although it is beyond stereotypical to hate on tourists in DC, I can’t help myself. Remember that Cheshire cat grin? Well, the only thing that could kill it was when tourists blocked the path around the tidal basin and practically shoved me into the toxic waters of the Potomac (but really, guys – remember the snakehead fish??). This is not an exaggeration. Other faults include: standing on the left on metro escalators, asking me where the closest Starbucks is (response: “Walk one block in any direction. You will find one, I promise.”), not understanding walk signs, taking artsy pictures in the cherry blossoms, traveling in packs of 20+, wearing I ♥DC/FBI/CIA/flag t-shirts, using segways, driving, parking, walking, standing, biking, breathing, and generally reminding me why America is doomed.

no. just... no.

money shot.

7. Wine-o: the best way to remedy hatred over tourists, work, and life in general is through alcohol. What better way to ease your anger, than by adding a mood-altering substance? Just ask our founding fathers. My soft spots for bourbon and wine have been exercised regularly, with the occasional Margarita Monday, but my affinity for quieter, more subdued environments like wine bars has grown exponentially over the past month. Although I consider myself nothing close to a connoisseur, I can definitely throw around words like bouquet, oaky, and quick finish. As an added bonus, my favorite wine bar has a bakery attached. Wine and chocolate chip cookies for dinner? I’m sorry, did you just say dinner of CHAMPIONS?

home away from home. yes, please.

8. Still Crafty: My crafting ways have become so well-known and extensive that I have now been recruited by multiple people to help with their own projects. I have also learned some fancy braids, made bacon cupcakes (this is more of a baking craft, yes), learned to splice together videos on my phone (more about that next week!), and been tapped by multiple sources for my knowledge of cursive handwriting, or as I like to call it: the lost art of America. However, I have still rejected the notion of getting a Pinterest.

 

testing out my skillz.

bacon cupcake. trust me, I was confused too.

9. Iron deficient: yesterday a friend asked me how often I ate meat. I responded that I got my protein through greek yogurt and eggs. I was swiftly met with an iron supplement multivitamin pill. If March was for iron deficiency, April will be my own personal Iron Age.

10. Grocery Connoisseur: while still living with my parents last year, I developed a sort of love affair with the grocery store. Creating new menus, trying different produce, the free samples (!!!), dozens of perfectly-lined rows of products (a type-A’s personal paradise)… grocery stores were my new Mecca. Since then, I have taken it upon myself to freakishly research different products at each grocery chain (and different locations of certain chains) in the area for the best quality and price. {Insert insane freak commentary here} Most of this has been contained in my ongoing mental list

  • Trader Joe’s: reduced-sodium boxed soups, chocolate-covered craisins and bags of honey crisp apples
  • Whole Foods: single apples, frozen veggies and bagged salad
  • Wegman’s: jelly beans and greek yogurt, but never buy off-brand because of artificial additives (again, props to Denise on food labels!)
  • Desserts: buy straight-up containers of frosting at Harris Teeter, but fresh cookies from the Whole Foods in Old Town and Clarendon (but never Foggy Bottom!)

not all cookies are created equal!

  • Cereal: buy at CVS with black market coupons

…. I could go on, but I feel like I’ve already convinced you of my personal insanity (even though I guarantee all you DC folks are totally going to pay attention to cookie quality by Whole Foods location now). The point is: grocery shopping is an art, and I like to think that my kitchen is the flipping Hirshhorn.

So that’s it – a month in my life, condensed to a handful of labels. It seems pretty simple in retrospect… and hopefully, I’ll remember that in the upcoming weeks as I post more regularly about what I’m up to. And with that, happy weekending! I’ll be exercising my labels of Runner, Babysitter, Wine-O (duhh), and Appreciator of Brunch.

Oh, also: best part of March? Being a granddaughter - Happy 82nd birthday to the coolest Grammy!

good gosh, I love her!

*this may have also been a result of this incident at the gym.

**I know, it is sad that it took me 24 years to learn this lesson.

*** Everyone else knew; this is just like my inability to read food packaging.

Granddaughter

Hello, loyal Life-in-Labelers! Greetings from lovely little Crozet, VA, where this newbie is currently channeling one of my most favorite labels: granddaughter.

One thing that many people learn about me pretty quickly is how close I am with my family. Shortly thereafter, they also learn just how quirky and crazy we can all tend to be. But I wouldn’t have it any other way, and Grammy (as we affectionately call my maternal grandmother) is a perfect example.

Grammy is my only living grandparent. She has also always been the grandparent that I shared the closest bond with, starting with my first solo visit at age 4. Her house is always full of magical things – from square-dancing skirts to puzzles made from photos of my sister and me (that’s right, you haven’t lived until you’ve jigsawed your own face together) to the black-and-white tv she rocked all the way to 2001. Grammy is also the only person (that I know of, and that can get away with) actively maintaining a shrine in my honor… On her refrigerator, obviously.

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The years of my life, immortalized in glossy.

Now, I realize that many grandmothers [can pretend to] rival Grammy, and based on the above, I understand that. But as I’ve grown up and spent more time with Grammy (thanks to her living 15 minutes from U.Va), I’ve learned a lot more from her than just where to get homecooked brunch in Charlottesville (hint: NOT her house).

When I was 10, Grammy taught me that koolaid was better when mixed with Sprite. In fact, she claimed everything was better with some “extra fizz”. Substitute vodka for koolaid, and I’m still living by Grammy’s words.

When my sister Gracie was 16, Grammy advised her to never date less than two men at once- life is better with options. Grammy is 81 and has supported herself for over 40 years. She doesn’t have time for men (or anyone) who isn’t up to her standards, but that doesn’t stop her from being a social butterfly (as I have learned from stories of frat parties at U.Va in the 1940′s). Just today, Grammy was telling me how her neighbor Richard insisted on fixing her car’s dead battery last week and drove OVER A MOUNTAIN to a completely different town to get car parts. Then he spent two hours breaking through her car’s antitheft programming. Grammy runs this show; geriatric men bow to her. (She is, however, still locked out of her car’s radio system.)

Finally, Grammy has taught me to know what you want in life. Case in point: Grammy hates to cook. She decided that she was, in fact, done cooking. Forever. She finagled Meals on Wheels into making an exception to their normal delivery qualifications, and now she gets hot meals at her door. Every. Day. Last summer, Grammy decided that she wanted a new knee. So she got one. Grammy has learned to navigate life and be a strong woman, from the small ins-and-outs of everyday life to the bigger physical, financial, and long-term decisions she also must face. She is truly a grand mother – an amazing female figure in my life. For me, being her granddaughter is not about baking cookies or wearing sweaters she knit – it’s about soaking up every wonderful, hilarious, crazy, loving, amazing moment with one of the best people in my life. See y’all back in D.C. next week- for now I’m off to play Ants-In-the-Pants and Rummy!

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Matching, obvs, we rock out like that.

Granddaughter

About the Author: Emily (not to be confused with Emily or Emily) got her BA in English and works as a technical writer; she’s going back to school in the fall so she can teach high school English. She grew up in Arizona, lives in Utah, and loves Wikipedia, traveling, Target, Harry Potter, and being the only sister to four younger brothers. Emily blogs at emilymcb.blogspot.com.

If I could choose myself a middle name, I would choose Marlene.

Marlene Grigg McBride was my dad’s mom. 

I don’t know much about her life before I appeared on the scene. I do know that she was born in Oregon (which may be why I sometimes feel I have the Pacific Northwest in my blood). I also know that she met my grandpa at BYU and that they got married when she was 22 (probably going on 23, since Grandpa Horton was almost 33).

I wish so bad she were here to tell these stories herself. I want to hear more about her youth during WWII and about her college years in the sock-hop 50′s. I want to hear about what she was studying and the classes she enjoyed and what she thought of Provo. I want to hear about the first time she met Horton and when she knew she was in love. 

Last year, an old woman called my dad, looking for Marlene. After she heard the sad news that she was a decade late, this old woman—Marlene’s college roommate—sent us a large yellow envelope. Inside were pictures of her and Marlene sassily pouting their bright red lips and stories of how Marlene was almost evicted after she and Horton ran up and down the house throwing water (and pieces of their hearts in hopes that they’d be caught and treasured).

I want to know what her hopes and dreams were. Did she want to see the world? Did she ever wish she could live in an apartment in the middle of a big city? I want to know if her lofty hopes and dreams were realized, or if instead, the love for her home and family replaced those hopes and dreams with something eternal and tangible and far more worth it. I want to know if she had regrets when she died, so I could learn from her and avoid those same regrets myself. I want to know more about this woman who raised her son to be the man he is today.

I wish I would have asked her more about her life, but I guess I can’t fault myself. I was just an eleven-year-old girl who rode her bike to Grandma’s to spend endless hours playing SKIP-BO and watching Rodgers & Hammerstein. I didn’t know my time with her would be cut short so soon. She died just weeks before the new millennium, just weeks before Christmas—her favorite time of the year.

Although she’s been gone for eleven years, I sometimes still miss her and the remarkable woman that she was. I long to hear her eccentric laugh on the phone as I tell her crazy dating stories or see her excitement as I show her pictures from my London adventures. I can imagine her eyes wide as I tell her about using a bathroom in the middle of Mozambique (that was basically just a tarp around four sticks) and her tears as I tell her about the frail orphans I held.

Even though she’s not here, I feel her sometimes. I felt her tangible pride as I played a piano solo at my final high school orchestra concert and as I stood in my cap and gown at the Marriot Center this past April. I feel that she would be proud of who I am today.

I love all my grandparents, but I feel a special bond with Marlene. I feel like I get a lot of my compassion and spirit and bubbling happiness from her.

If I could choose myself a middle name, I would choose Marlene.