BOM-ba DEE-da

 Geek Wannabe, General  Comments Off
Sep 282007
 

Last Friday we had a test in Cost Accounting. (I passed–phew.)

Just before the test was handed out, one of my classmates was singing a little earworm that she’d picked up in a previous class. “BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da…”

Needless to say, this got stuck in my head. It made for an entertaining week. “I’m applying overhead costs, is that a debit or BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da…”

I related this incident to my son Wednesday night when he was grumbling about one of his tests. “And now when you’re taking your Algebra test, you’ll be thinking x over y is BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da…

He thinks it’s hilarious. For the last few days if I want to start him laughing uncontrollably, I just wander past his room singing “BOM-ba DEE-da, BOM-ba DEE-da…”

In a completely unrelated note, my husband made his first solo flight Monday.

Yo

 Geek Wannabe, General  Comments Off
Sep 242007
 

Last night I was bumbling around in the kitchen, which my husband always finds entertaining.

I turned to him and said “Quit being amused at me, or I’m going to start singing ‘I Like Big Balls, Yo!‘”

“That’s a very good threat,” he remarked. “It’s both specific and credible.”

And he hadn’t even seen the video yet. Yo.

Sep 222007
 





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NSFW.

You can thank
ms_daisy_cutter
for passing along this little earworm. I’m sure my mate will be a bit puzzled when he comes home from work and finds me singing “I like big balls, yo…”

 

For the last few years, my eldest has been adjusting himself. He’ll just be strolling down the hall, pause mid-stride to re-arrange his package, and continue on.

I don’t mean he’s been doing it continuously for the last few years. Perhaps fifty percent of the time he leaves things alone. I thought perhaps he’d outgrown his underwear, and got him some men’s sizes. I think they’re stashed under his bed somewhere. We had to issue orders that he wear long pants to school.

My experience with children is limited, so I wasn’t sure if this was normal guy behavior. But apparently he’s not the only one. Cranky Professor and LawDog have observed the phenomenon in many other young men. Apparently some fellows have it much more severely than my kid, and rarely remove their hands from their pants.

I’ve gotten a lot stricter about hand-washing before dinner, I’ll tell you that.

Either the parental nagging is sinking in or he’s growing out of it. Perhaps he’s finally heeded my advice that such things be limited to the privacy of his room. This is excellent news for me, as I’d frankly rather not be made aware of my son’s package. Bad enough when the boy doing it is unrelated to me. Seriously, children—other people notice when you grab at yourself, even if they don’t say anything.

Sep 112007
 

A couple of nights ago I dreamed Phurball came back. Not like zombie-cat back from the dead, but that somehow he’d just gone missing and turned up again. I was downstairs and someone called down, “Oh, your cat is back!”

“I don’t have a cat,” I said, coming up the stairs, but there was a cat. At first I didn’t know who he was, but then he meowed and I recognized his voice. And much cuddling ensued.

Some dreams really don’t need a shrink to interpret them, ya know?

Sep 112007
 

First of all, I want this Roomba. When does it finish production testing?





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And second–OMG teh kewt!!!





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Squishy Bewb

 Geek Wannabe, General  Comments Off
Sep 092007
 

A couple of years ago, my gynecologist mentioned that I should probably have a mammogram.

Last year, my doctor suggested I go ahead and get a mammogram.

This year as soon as I logged on Campus Cruiser to check my e-mail, I saw an announcement about the Rex Mobile Mammography unit coming for a visit next month.

*sigh*

So Friday I bit the bullet and called Rex Mobile Mammography to make an appointment to have my tits squished to within an inch of their lives.

“Oh, all our appointment slots are full, and there’s a long waiting list,” said the lady on the other end of the phone. “But we’ll be at the other campus locations. Sign up early, they go fast!”

After I hung up I IM’d my husband:

Rex mamm appts all taken – no squishy bewb 4 me

He replied:

U should still get it done, squishy bewb better than cancerous bewb.

The world is determined to squish ‘em. What has everyone got against my bewbs? They never hurt nobody.

 

…you will find this hilarious…





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My friend Jade changed addresses last year. Apparently this fact has been lost in the vast bureaucracy of the school transportation system, as the school bus is still driving by my house (where it used to pick up her son/my sorta-nephew) at 8:00 a.m., while no bus is appearing at her current address.

We know from our experiences last year that getting a bus stop set up involves a lot of perseverance. Jade is calling them two or three times a week to prod them to action, because that’s apparently what it takes. Meanwhile, Romi drives the little guy in to school, and I go pick him up after I get out of class.

Today I got to the school around 4:20. All the other kids were long gone, of course; school lets out at 3:45. I parked the car and strolled in to the office to find The Kid. As I went by, one of the administrators summoned me into her office.

“Carpool is over at four o’clock,” she said sternly.

Hell, I knew that. “Yeah, I’m coming from Wake Tech and my last class on Wednesday is over at 3:50,” I replied, and breezed on over to the library media center to collect the little guy.

He was quietly reading a book, but as soon as he saw me he hopped up and the torrent of words began: “Hi Bertha I’m hungry can we go to Burger King have you ever gotten to the end of Warcraft III they have this funny movie with the outtakes and in one of them the demon lord is trying to launch a boulder from a catapult…”

Within ten minutes I was flooded, but I tried to maintain interested responses since the little fella had obviously been holding back this verbal tidal wave all day, and was just dying to get it out. We stopped by Wendy’s (couldn’t find the Burger King) and got him a hamburger, and by the time we left the chatter had subsided to a level mere mortals like me could process. I played him a recording of Fish Heads and King of Spain the rest of the way.

Then I went by the grocery store. I didn’t want to go by the grocery store, but it was either that or send the kids cocoa packets and toast for lunch the next day. When I got out of the store it was almost 6:30, and my cell phone informed me that someone had left a message for me. It was my own little guy:

“Hi, it’s me. We were just wondering where you were, because it would be nice if you got home before midnight.”

Yes, my twelve-year-old is very good at sarcasm. With us as parents, even the sixteen-year-old learned the art. I’m told many autists don’t get sarcasm at all. Maybe they just need more practice.

I’d told him I was going to be driving the nephew home for the foreseeable future, but he hadn’t realized the amount of time involved in this activity. He’s feeling a little neglected because his dad and I have both been crazy busy since school started; the boys get home an hour before I do most days. Last night I just took their word for it that they’d done their homework, too tired to follow up and make them show it to me. I can’t make a habit of that if I want them to graduate.

Today I should be home a little after 3:00, so I can spend the afternoon with the guys until my 6:00 appointment.

I’ve noticed a pattern over the years: you get things set up so that you’re getting a reasonable amount done, but you’re not overwhelmed. You say “There, that’s just about right. Not too much, not too little.”

Then Life says, “Nonsense, you’ve got plenty of room!” and heaps on a bunch of other things. The kid wants to start sports and requires a chauffeur. An appliance breaks and you have to spend a day waiting for a repairman to not show up. Someone gets the flu and must be driven to the doctor, whose office moved as far across town as it could possibly be. Someone else’s prescription ran out and you need to make an emergency run to the drugstore to refill it.

When you manage to pull all that off, Life just smirks and says “See?” and ignores you when you give it the finger.

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