Monday, March 31, 2008
Curiouser
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Friday, March 28, 2008
Back In the Saddle: Give Me Your Advice; Win Baked Goods!
Karma's a beeyotch.
A few months ago I chaperoned a 6th grade dance (don't get me started -- some of those girls have better lingerie than I do). I was chatting with the organizer of the dance, who is a very lovely person, and she suggested with great enthusiasm that we hold a fundraising bake sale for PKD at the next 6th grade dance. How do you say no to that? You can't.
The next 6th grade dance is a week from tonight.
Now, I'm not in a panic -- I have several tubs of scratch cookie dough already in the freezer, ready to bake up -- but I am in a quandary. To wit, how many cookies can/will 100 sweaty, jacked-up 6th graders eat/buy in a two-hour period? If I over-bake, the excess will somehow magically apply itself to my
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I have only myself to blame for this next one. Every spring, our delightful little hamlet holds a Charity Fun Fair, in which town center closes to motor traffic and dozens of booths, each supporting a specific charity and manned by volunteers, spring up all along the sidewalks. It's on April 20 this year. There are moon bounces and picnic areas and live music and it's generally a lot of fun. We're going to have a table selling baked goods (and homemade doggie biscuits!), and I have no concerns about quantity on this one -- as much as I'm able to bake, that's how much we'll sell. Period.
However, it was suggested to me by one of the organizers that the booths with activities attract more traffic and tend to raise more money. Now, I'm not about to set up a ring toss or anything like that. But...... what do y'all think of a raffle, with the prize being a custom special occasion cake? I'd put some parameters in place as to scope (no three-tiered wedding cakes, yo), and make a little display with color copies of some of my past cakes. Do you think people would buy raffle tickets for such an item, and is $1 a good ticket price?
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One last question for the pretty, pretty internets. I'd like to have a name associated with the baking -- not a business name, per se, but some kind of name that invokes baking and elegance and sugary goodness. Something with more polish than "Cookies for a Cure." Wanna make this one a contest? The winning name will get a dozen fresh-baked cookies hand-delivered (if you're local) or mailed (if you're not). I'll even let you pick the flavor.
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Tell me what you think on questions 1 & 2, and leave name suggestions in the comments. Thank you in advance for saving my brain from exploding.
Braggin' On My Husband, Part Deux
You can listen to the song here. Rock on!
Thursday, March 27, 2008
The Kindness of Virtual Strangers
A few weeks ago, after several days of silence, a newcomer joined the board to inform us that out of the blue he had received an email from this person, who was an old friend, and that the depressed poster had indeed made a serious attempt on his life and was currently hospitalized. There was an outpouring of support from the chat board community, lots of messages of courage and hope that our friend would now receive the treatment that he clearly needs.
Silence followed. Then, two days ago, the newcomer came back to inform us that in fact the suicide attempt had been successful -- that our virtual friend was gone. As you'd expect, there was an outpouring of sorrow, messages of grief, and fervent pleas that the newcomer express our condolences to the family.
To the shock of most, last night our depressed friend came back and posted that there had been a mistake in communication. That he's still with us, though he had made an attempt on his life. However, it quickly became clear that he had masqueraded as a newcomer and posted the misinformation himself, in a misguided attempt to "see what it would be like" if he died. He finally confessed the deception in a post full of self-loathing and -recrimination.
Many of the members of our chat community are quite upset, feeling manipulated and gulled, and perhaps understandably so. Myself, I cannot bring myself to feel anything but compassion for this poor young man, who is obviously so deeply troubled. So what if his illness and lies have lead to my having "wasted" my time and kindness responding to a sham? I can think of no better use for my compassion and kindness. I do not grudge him even one little bit of my time, thoughts, hopes, words, or worry. I cannot conceive of reacting with anger to a person who is clearly in excruciating pain. I hope it will always be thus.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
How Is This Possible?
If you need me, I'll be numbing the pain with tequila.
Black Helicopters?
Spooky.
Ohhhhhhhh, wait. They linked over from Well Read Hostess. I feel better already.
My Health Insurance, Let Me Show You It
Would it surprise you that I'm eager to share all of this crapola with the pretty internets?
Here's the dope: my employer covers my health insurance in full at company expense, and if I add any dependents, I pay their entire freight. Michael's Big Corporate Employer offers an array of plans from which to choose, with varying levels of employee premium responsibility. His company pays a portion of the premiums for dependents, so we have always enrolled the kids in his company's plan. Used to be they'd offer at least one straight-up, no-deductible HMO amongst the menu. No longer. After
So what's this all costing? I don't have a firm figure for what Michael's employer is paying for him and the kids, but given my knowledge of the benefits market, I think $600/month is a good guess. Plus, of course, his employer is paying $1,000 into our HRA. We pay an additional $120/month (pre-tax, through payroll deductions). My employer pays $212 for my PPO from Health Assurance.
TOTAL ANNUAL PREMIUM & DEDUCTIBLE COSTS:
$10,744 (employers/estimated); $2,440 (us)
So far, in our little dual-career, upper-middle-class family of professionals, we're paying 18.5% of our family's health insurance costs for the year.
But the fun's just starting....
Until we reach our $2,000 deductible for Michael and the kids, we are paying full retail out-of-pocket for everything. Doctor's visit? $133. Asthma meds for 3 months (for ONE of the four asthmatics in the house)? $500. We have already chewed up the entire $1,000 HRA and are plunging head-first into the second $1,000 of the deductible. And it's only March.
But here's the tricky part. After we reach the top of the second $1,000 of the deductible, we stop paying full retail and start paying co-pays. I figure we'll reach this point around June at the rate we're going. And the truly flummoxing issue is that, in addition to the HRA, we have a Flexible Spending Account (FSA) with Michael's Big Corporate Employer, which allows us to designate an amount of money to be withheld from Michael's check each month (tax-free, of course), to be used for reimbursement of medical, prescription, OTC medical expenses for the whole family.
If you think I lost sleep trying to decide how high to fund the FSA, you'd be right.
We finally just stuck a pin in it and funded it at $3,500 -- higher than in past years, due to the $1,000 of deductible we
So what I think I'll do is post periodic updates. You'll hear about it when we top out the deductible, and you'll hear about how much money we're paying in co-pays. So far we're out of pocket a whopping $1,500 (including the $1,000 that gets reimbursed) for the year (including dental and vision). I'll be VERY curious to analyze our year-end numbers, comparing premium + out of pocket expenses against full retail costs for all of the services we use, but I'm not sure I'll have access to enough info to do that. I suspect that I'd find that the insurance company is making money on us.
The bottom line is: if it takes a reasonably smart Ivy-League graduate who does benefits as a (part of her) profession this much time, effort and angst to really understand this brave new insurance world, what hope is there for the not-as-educated, not-as-motivated among us? I fear that the insurance companies secretly hope that we're all going to become so annoyed and frustrated by them that we're going to stop paying attention to what our benefits are -- and then they'll really have us by the short and curlies.
Do you know how much you are paying of your health insurance burden?
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
I Think It's Cute
Sunday, March 23, 2008
A Word to the Wise
Friday, March 21, 2008
Cobwebs
Must remember next time I order veggie Drunken Noodles to tell them to hold the tofu.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Aristotle Ain't Got Nothin' on Him
(They love to watch movies of themselves as young 'uns. We had quite a little film festival a few months ago while Michael was dubbing the old camcorder tapes onto DVDs.)
As an infant, Garrick was rather... solemn. Once he started locomoting his inner imp came into full flower, but as a newborn he was very contemplative. When I pointed this out last night, Garrick said (in all seriousness), "I must have been very busy thinking about my phisolophy."
As far as I can tell, his phisolophy thus far consists mainly of pasta and Bionicles......
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
By Request
Monday, March 17, 2008
Oh, the Baking
Audit Week
Pass the tequila.
Saturday, March 15, 2008
The Hell Was I Thinking?
Tomorrow, we're going to Michael's cousins' for an open house.
Tomorrow evening, we're celebrating my mother-in-law's birthday with dinner chez Schultz.
Guess who's baking for all three events?
Kill me now.
(Pix next week when I recover.)
Thursday, March 13, 2008
We Had A Time
(Oh how I wish I could bottle Domestic Goddess -- I'd be a millionaire several times over.)
It was fun to be out and about, fun to meet new bloggers and catch up with old friends, fun to drink a beer on a weeknight (I'm out of control, I tell you). I spent yesterday completely immersed in everyone's mostly-new-to-me blogs and heartily recommend you do the same. They are funny, touching, creative, heartfelt, fresh, goofy, and fun. And good writers, to boot. Doesn't get much better than that.
(Extra grrrrl power points if you can name the [old] TV show from which I cribbed the post title....)
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Celebrity Encounters, Part Two
While I was living in NYC being a
Day One of the shoot was a mob scene -- we were shooting at Tunnel Club and they had the place packed with sweaty extras. By Day Three the crowd had thinned out, as they were shooting in sequence, from peak clubbing hours into the very wee hours of the morning. On Day Four, they turned on the fog machines, to fill out the atmosphere around the few dozen of us extras still working (and by working, I of course mean acting like drunken club-goers).
Now, this was a troubled shoot. The director we were working for was eventually fired and the movie started over from scratch with a new director, so don't rent the movie and crawl through the club scenes looking for me -- I'm not there. There was tension on the set, though, and Michael J. Fox did lose his cool once that I witnessed, when a day-player who had a few lines with him missed her mark for the fourth time in a row (dumbass).
Sydney Pollack was producing the flick, and showed up on the set around Day Three, to babysit the director, I'm sure. He pretty much sat in his chair quietly and didn't interact with anyone, and after the initial flurry of recognition, we all ignored him.
So, Day Four. Fog machines. We had been working long days -- about 10 hours, mostly on our feet -- and I'd been out late
Back inside, while passing from the shooting area back to the extras area, Sydney Pollack stopped me. He was full of concern and truly sweet, asking several times whether I was sure I was okay, and offering me his director's chair (!!) so I could sit down. Of course, I didn't take his chair -- Sydney Pollack! -- I wobbled back to the extras area and sat my tushy down on a hard metal folding chair, like the rest of them/us.
But I never forgot what a complete gentleman he was. While sitting watching his project circling the drain, he still took time out to check on a $90-a-day non-union extra. That's class.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Powerless
It monsooned all day on Saturday. If you have not had the joy of shopping at the wholesale club during a monsoon, well, let's just say that it is not an example of humanity at its collective best. Grownups who should know better were not using their indoor voices and several of them deserved time outs. Believe me, I was tempted.
I escaped relatively unscathed, though wet, and collected the kids from their final Flash Animation class. Note to self: learn to park illegally better. My illegal parking place was so far from the front door that, despite my umbrella, we all were soaked by the time we made it back to the car. By now I was exuding rather squishable quality that was really not very pleasant, or attractive.
The drive home was diverting enough, as the localized flooding gave rise to a detailed discussion of hydroplaning and the physics thereof. But I must have explained it wrong, as I'm not sure I convinced the boys that the danger factor outweighs the coolness factor...
We got home, dried off, and wrangled lunch. Between a pending dinner party and upcoming fundraising bake sales, I had an ambitious To Do list. I kicked everyone out of the kitchen and spent a few hours blanching and toasting nuts, making beurre noisette, and a few other little preparatory details. I was just about ready to tackle the sinkfull of dirty dishes and give the kitchen over to Michael for dinner prep -- and go have myself a much-needed lie-down -- when the lights went out.
And stayed out.
(Between running to Target for battery-operated lamps and to the local Chinese restaurant for take-out, guess who didn't get her lie-down? But the kids and I were treated to the once-in-a-lifetime experience of driving along Michigan Avenue and encountering an enormous evergreen tree which had been uprooted by the high winds and was lying perfectly perpendicular to the street, spanning the entire width and then some. Good times.)
Theo reacted very sensibly to the situation. Lights out = time to sleep. Would that we could all have managed so brilliantly. Instead, the kids melted down due to the lateness of dinner (and the gathering darkness), I ran around like a maniac gathering batteries, and Michael hauled lots of firewood. (Did you know that an oil-based furnace needs electricity to, you know, TURN ITSELF ON?! You're welcome.) Due to an oddity in the wiring of our street, my parents and all houses to their south still had power, so Michael and I fobbed the kids off on them for overnight and huddled 'round the fireplace with Theo, Coleman lanterns and good books for several hours before bundling up in sweatshirts and going to bed.
The house thermostat read 56* when we woke up on Sunday, and yes, that is mighty chilly for indoors. Our hot water heater is electric, so we were not only without heat, we were without showers (or the ability to wash the #$%^&* sinkfull of dishes leftover from Saturday). PECO's emergency recording was estimating power restoration at 7am Monday morning, which was inconceivable! The kids had slept well and were perfectly happy at home with books and games and no computer, so I begged my mother to let me
- 10 sheets of parchment paper
- 9 granny smith apples
- 8 pounds of butter
- 7 pounds of flour
- one 6-quart Kitchen Aid
- 5 pounds of sugar
- 4 rolls of sable dough
- 3 mini-muffin tins
- 2 dozen eggs
- and a handful of vanilla beans.
At some point, Michael and the kids wandered down with the final Lord of the Rings film (our Saturday night movie night had fallen victim to the outage), so all were all warmly ensconced. At about 5:30pm I'd had reached my limit and my back was killing me -- I had really over done it. So I packed up the clean laundry, the cookie dough, and all of my baking crap, and headed home to lie down.
The first thing I noticed was that Theo seemed unusually happy to see me. The second thing I noticed was that the lights were back on. Huzzah! I called Michael, who zipped right home with the kids. We ran around organizing and tidying, unhooking extension cords (our neighbors' son had brought up a generator and we'd hooked the 'fridge up at his invitation, bless him), washing dishes, putting away baking supplies, cooking dinner, and generally trying to fit 2 days worth of weekend into 2 hours. (The careful reader will notice that, once again, my lie-down was deflected by the Energy Gods, damn them.)
I did finally get to sit down after dinner with a new-to-me Margaret Atwood ("Alias Grace") while Michael and the kids finished watching the movie. I even managed to get the laundry folded before collapsing into bed and demanding George Clooney as a reward for the level of exhaustion I'd worked myself into. Luckily, Netflix had sent "Michael Clayton" earlier in the week and my Michael wisely capitulated.
And it was very good. If one must torture oneself with a weekend without electricity and too much baking, The Clooney is an excellent antidote.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
C'mere, You Big Stud Muffin
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
The Kidney Post
In October 2005, during a routine check up, a high blood pressure reading awoke suspicions. Blood work confirmed that my kidney function had started to ebb. I immediately went on a very low protein diet and started reading everything I could get my hands on about slowing down the progress of the disease. Reducing protein intake seems to be the most widely encouraged step that kidney-impaired patients can take, as processing proteins is very hard work for the kidneys. There is more ambiguity around caffeine intake -- my nephrologist believes that caffeine can encourage the cysts to grow, though the research is mixed -- but I've been almost-caffeine-free for years now, so that was not a difficult choice for me.
I expect that I will need dialysis or a new kidney within a 3-5 year time frame. I am incredibly lucky to have a brother of my blood type who is willing to be a donor (you'd be surprised how often that is not the case), so I'm in a much better position than many kidney patients.
Leading me to this question: as I develop my fundraising
Public Service Announcement the Second
Garrick is very independent and self-directed when it comes to food. He is often to be found with his tushy sticking out of the pantry as he scrounges in its depths for some previously overlooked tidbit. He is a master snack-maker and he fixes himself breakfast virtually every morning (usually cinnamon toast or a bowl of cereal). This morning, he decided to place some cheddar cheese slices on his bread and place it under "broil" in the toaster oven.
If I had come downstairs 3 minutes later, he would have been dealing with a toaster fire on his 10-year-old ownsome.
After the smoke had cleared and the batteries had been removed from the smoke detectors, I asked him what he would have done if I hadn't been there. "I don't know." Hmmph. I reviewed the unplugging, the keeping-the-toaster-closed-to-starve-the-fire, and the difference between electrical fires and other kinds of fires. Then I cleaned out the toaster oven and dug out the little baking tray that came with it and put it within easy kid reach.
Then I started a Target list and put a new fire extinguisher at the top of it.


