All posts by blogobeth

Most Popular

As we head into the holiday weekend (here in the states) I thought I would list the most visited, stumbled upon, highest-traffic posts I’ve written. I’m sure you will be surprised, as I am, regarding which ones made the top 5. Here they are:

1.) Max’s First Kiss
I wrote this in August 2008 as part of Scribbit’s Write Away Contest. I have people read this post EVERY SINGLE DAY. It is hands down my most popular post.

2.) See Dick Fail His Class
This post was done in response to an article I had read about the Dallas ISD and their new grading policy. Once again, I have people read this post EVERY DAY and still get comments periodically. This is the one that surprises me the most.

3.) Barbie Versus Motherhood
I periodically post out on Shine.Yahoo. When this post hit that online magazine it was filled with people telling me I’m an idiot for worrying about a stupid doll. However, my personal blog readers – out here – are smart and really grasped what I was trying to say. It hit a chord because people keep coming back to it.

4.) Circle of Life
This was done in honor of Max’s birthday, but it really has more to do with my Grandfather passing away. This is also one of my personal favorites.

5.) Operation Pacifier Freedom
I think this is popular because people are always looking for ideas on how to get their kid to stop using the pacifier. I will say that Max has been “paci-free” for about 4 months now with no signs of going back. I could not be more thrilled.

Happy reading and I will meet you all back here on Tuesday. Have a great holiday weekend.

Desperate Date

While at our niece’s ninth birthday party this weekend, David and I mentioned that we’d like to see “Star Trek”. My mother-in-law quickly chimed in “Oh, well they can spend the night with me”. Oh really? David and I bolted out of that house faster than if we had written a bad check. We jumped into the car, frantically pulled out our iPhones and in a panic began looking for a theater that had a showing of “Star Trek” that was not sold out. David was pushing 90 miles an hour and screaming the “f-word” at any driver that even thought about going the speed limit. I was dialing and strategizing our movie plan with an efficiency that could have only been matched by a 5-star general plotting an invasion. Our tires squealed against the pavement as we slid into the first parking space we could find at 9:15 pm. We hopped out of the car, and without even looking at each other we began sprinting to the theater door. David ran up to the apathetic teenager working the counter plunked down his credit card and said “I’ll take two tickets for the 10:05 show”. She slowly began to make her selections on the register when I chimed in, “Are there any seats available for the 9:30”? David glared at me as if to say “Damn it woman! Don’t be greedy”. The girl took a moment, stopped chewing her gum and said “uh, yeah there are still, like, 60% of the seats left”. As we slumped into our seats David turned to me and said, “We’ve got 12 hours to see a movie, sleep in, eat breakfast together and squeeze in a meaningful conversation all before our children are returned. ” That’s a man who knows how to seize a moment.

The movie was fantastic. It was so good that I have nothing further to say about it except that J.J. Abrams is a god and that it is the closest thing to cinematic perfection I have seen in a long time. David woke up this morning and made ME breakfast and as we lingered over our hamburger bun toast we commented that when the kids grow up this is what our lives will be like. It was in that moment that we realized how much we missed being with them.

Expectations

David and I got in a fight on Mother’s Day. I feel comfortable in confessing this since both the female CEO of his company and his only female employee both know about the argument (Hi Katie and thanks for taking my side). This marital dispute can easily be summarized with one word: expectations.

You see I woke up at 7:00 AM Sunday morning (as I have done every morning since February 28th 2004 – the day Lucy was born). I turned on cartoons, made some chocolate milk for the kids, and logged on to Facebook. This is when things went downhill. You see, while I was continuing with my wifely duties (and David slept) my friends were having breakfast in bed, their homes were being cleaned, cheesecakes were being presented and Lord knows what other glories of appreciation were being showered on them. I tried to ignore the green-eyed monster of jealousy raging up inside of me, because after all David does do MANY wonderful things. He did ask me Friday night on his way home from work if there was something special I wanted for Mother’s Day and I told him a blog redesign. That is not something you can wrap in a box and present on Mother’s Day. And yet, that great sin of envy, that horrible jealous monster could not be ignored. It was developing a low growl.

I brushed the jealousy aside and began to make breakfast when David woke up. He shuffled out into the kitchen and said “good morning”. I cried. Really, things got ugly pretty quickly after that. Lots of words were said, and fingers were waved, accusations flung, angry whispers in the corners, glares across the room, but it all boiled down to expectations.

David felt he had fulfilled his duties. He had bought a card and chocolate and offered to redesign my blog. Mission complete. I, on the other hand, felt that more attention needed to be paid to ME and my enjoyment of MY day. I should have been allowed to sleep in. Breakfast should have been made by someone else besides me. Kids dressed by somebody else besides me. David felt that he never got the chance to do any of these things (if he had even planned on doing them) because I was crying before he woke up and thus I had preemptively ruined the day.

The truth is that it doesn’t matter. David loves me. He appreciates me and when he’s working 70+ hours a week I see it in his eyes. I see it every night when he comes home to a warm dinner or when he realizes I’ve washed all his clothes, or when I sit and listen, one more time, to the problems at work. David has never been great at planning big holiday surprises. It is not his thing. However, he takes care of me, cherishes me and shows me his love in a hundred other unique ways. Most of the time that expression of love does not fall on Mother’s Day. I suppose in the bigger picture I’d rather have a husband who shows me his love and appreciation in small ways, every day than one who only shows me once a year.

Black Bean Enchiladas & Cinco De Mayo

Today is Cinco de Mayo, which is an annual Mexican festival honoring the defeat of the French. Being Texan and living so close to the border, and being American and generally disliking the French, Cinco de Mayo is widely recognized in these parts. In honor of this great Mexican tradition I thought I would share one of my favorite and cheapest Mexican meals; Black Bean Enchiladas. This has quickly become my go to meal for those nights when I forgot to plan for dinner. It is a great emergency dinner because nothing has to be defrosted and outside of the tortillas, none of the ingredients have to be “fresh”.

I love recipes that use so few ingredients
I love recipes that use so few ingredients

Ingredients:
1 can of Black Beans, undrained
1 package of shredded American cheese
1 can enchilada sauce (or an enchilada sauce of your choice)
2 Tbs dried cilantro (or 4 Tbs fresh – it depends on your love of cilantro)
1 package of flour, fajita sized, tortillas (you can use corn, if you prefer)

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Pour beans into a mixing bowl with cilantro. Beat beans and cilantro with hand mixer (I use a stick mixer, which seems to work better, you can also use a food processor). Until the beans have become a dark paste (yes, it will look inedible). Using a spoon, line one tortilla with bean mixture and then sprinkle cheese on top. (Be careful not to overfill or you won’t be able to roll them up.) Roll up tortilla and place seam side down in a 9×13 (or 8×8, depending on how many you plan on making) baking dish. Repeat this process until you’ve filled your pan. Then pour the entire can (or jar) of enchilada sauce over all of the rolled/filled tortillas. Sprinkle the top with more cheese (I like a lot, but top it to your liking). Then bake for 30 minutes. Serve them topped with sour cream, chives, guacamole, jalapenos, or any of your favorite Mexican toppings.

Invite your friends, make some margaritas and toast our friends to the south who were kind enough to introduce us to the avocado and the Swine flu. Here are some other great Cinco de Mayo recipes to spice up your day:

Tamale Pie from Ezra Pound Cake
Carnitas from Homesick Texan
Mexican Cornbread from Noble Pig

Long Live The Book

In 1996 a large technology firm recruited me to work in online media. It was a new and exciting field and everyday people were making predictions about what role the Internet would play in our future lives. One of those predictions was that the dawn of the Internet signaled the death of the book. I remember thinking that it was a ridiculous prediction. With a graduate degree in literature and a book addiction that would rival any heroin junkie I knew this would never happen. “Non-book” people thought I was foolish, and ignorant. But it was they who were ignorant. It is they who know nothing about the love and passion that a book addict has towards their precious tomes of knowledge.

The most obvious reason why technology will never replace the book has to do with WHERE we read – in bed. Many people read in bed or on a couch and a laptop just isn’t as comfortable as a paperback. Indeed, when I was a sophomore in college my Shakespeare professor insisted that we buy all of Shakespeare’s plays in paperback instead of an anthology because he recognized this very factor. You can hold a paperback with one hand, lying down, doing yoga, breastfeeding, cooking dinner, changing diapers, etc.

Some people might suggest that Amazon’s Kindle is a replacement for the book because it is small, and can be taken to bed or read on a couch. However, you can’t write on a Kindle. Like so many bibliophiles, I write in my books. Nothing pleases me more than revisiting an old book and finding my notes, thoughts or reflections scrawled out in the margins, or even better the thoughts and ideas of somebody else.

True bibliophiles are not just interested in the stories and adventures discovered between the pages. Oh no, a true bibliophile yearns for the smell of the bookstore. They languish in the soft tranquility of the library. It is the soft touch of the pages and the visual beauty of the words. It is the smell, the feel, and the very act of holding the book that is part of the attraction. As I am typing this, books surround me. On my right is a stack of western literature textbooks and on my left paperbacks that I plan to read over the summer. My books are my adult security blanket. They provide me with the comfort of knowledge, wisdom and the answers to any question I might ever have.

I’m sure there will always be a market for e-books and for technology like the Kindle, but for me, well I’ll stick with my paperback.

School Days

I have one week of class left. It is amazing that I have gone almost this entire semester without writing a single blog post about it. It has been a remarkably average semester which has made it less than noteworthy. Here are my final thoughts.

Private vs. Public
People frequently ask me if I see a difference between students coming from a public school education versus private. This is a hard topic to comment on because so much of this has to do with the school district. However, I work in a well-funded, highly rated public school district, and yet, my private school students are ALWAYS at least one semester ahead of my public school students. My private school students come to college understanding the amount of work and discipline it takes to excel in college. They are prepared to do the research, put the effort in and manage their time in a way that will make them successful. On average, most of my public school kids have no idea. My public school kids complain far more than my private school kids. I don’t know if this would be true in every school district, or every college across the country but my personal experience has been that private is superior.

The Ancient Hobby Of Reading
As an English teacher this is the most disturbing trend – kids don’t read. I recently quoted an article where the CEO of Delta Airlines said that when interviewing future executives he often asks what the last three books were that the interviwee read. When I shared this quote with one of my students who wants to be a pilot he said; “you mean I have to READ too?” Sigh. Yes, reading would be nice. The part of this trend that bothers me most is that girls still read, but boys don’t. Why has our soceity and our school system suddenly cateogrized reading as a “girl’s hobby”? Something has to change there.

Teaching Is Hard
Before I became a teacher I was quick with my criticism and my skepticism. Now, I get it. Teaching is a very difficult profession. It is not diffcult like advertising was difficult. No, working in advertising is STRESSFUL – teaching is DIFFICULT. Why? Well, you are working within a bureacratical system that rivals the government. You truly are a cog in a much bigger, complicated machine that you cannot change without seven forms being completed and the signature of ten people, one of whom is no longer working for the school. You are also teaching people who don’t want to be taught. Students don’t want to be there, they don’t want to learn. No, they want the shortest distance between two points with the least amount of effort. You are trying to excel in a position with an uninterested constituency and an unsupportive system. In addition you are being paid approximately the same amount as your student who is working at Best Buy. Once again, if we want good teachers we need teachers to be paid more money.

Only The Strong Have Standards
When I started teaching I was afraid I was going to be the “easy” teacher. The teacher that everybody liked because I was a push over. I have been surprised to find out that I’m the “hard but fair” teacher. This does not come easy. In my composition class my students write and write and write and write. They also bitch and complain and whine and bitch some more. My three year old does less whining than my 19 year old composition students. And, as any parent knows it is easy to capitulate when you are exposed to that much emotional duress. I expect my students to work hard, read challenging authors (like Walt Whitman – oh horrors) and to write long papers (5-6 pages – I’m a tyrant). When I look at veteran teachers who have lowered their standards I see the signs of resignation. They have grown weary fighting the battle and have ultimately capitulated their standards due to the on-going pressure from their students. It is an exhausting battle. It is because of this battle weary feeling that teachers take long breaks.

I wish I had some wonderful words of wisdom regarding how to fix our educational system, but unfortunately it is not that easy. I’m looking forward to the end of this semester. After a brief four week break I’ll be back to fight the battle again during summer term.

Open Letter To Oprah

Dear Oprah,

I wanted to be the first to tell you that it is time for you to retire from your daily talk show. I know this may seem shocking but it is best that you do it now before it becomes awkward and embarrassing for everybody. You’ve had a long run on day-time television, but that run is over.

Somewhere between Deepak Chopra and Eckhart Tolle you lost your credibility. You have introduced us to and fully endorsed every spiritual guru since the early 90’s and I can insure you that my inner chi is centered. You’ve explored and practiced every dieting trend from low-fat to Acai berry. We’ve met all of your professional nutritionists from Rosie to Bob Greene. And you know what? We’re all still fat, just like you.

As fellow single women we clamored to listen to your relationship advice espoused from every expert you discovered, Dr. Phil to Marianne Willimason. Where most of us got married, you maintained your single status. This was okay until you proclaimed that women get married in order to insure financial security and thus your lack of desire to be married. If you think that financial security is the only reason women get married, well, you don’t understand marriage.

I cannot relate to building a school in South Africa, driving across country with my best friend, or wearing $200 high heels to work. I do not have the money to hire a personal chef, or a personal trainer. I do not have even fifteen minutes in my day to reflect on the importance of my life or what makes me happy. I definitely don’t understand the challenge of decorating multiple homes.

The final straw was your interview with Heather Armstrong (Dooce). Oprah, she is the largest mommy blogger on the internet and you mention her blog in passing – like it is a funny little hobby. As if it is somehow tangential to her book? Oh my.

Oprah, you were my friend. You were my personal expert guiding me through my life, but now, well, you’ve become a stranger. Your life and your problems no longer resemble anything in my own life. We’ve grown apart.

So, it is with a heavy heart that I say goodbye. Thank for the years Oprah, but it is now time for you to slink off into the good night.

Regards,
Your Target Audience

Feminist Generation

I remember being thirteen years old when the idea of feminism was explained to me. I knew right then that I was all for it. I was a liberated woman. I admired the suffragettes, and the ERA. They were my sisters. The soldiers who blazed the trail before me. I was going to honor their legacy and respect their sacrifices. I read Faludi. I read Steinem. I am woman, hear me roar!

I feel as passionately today about women’s rights as I did then. If anything I have more perspective, more information and a better understanding. I’ve sat in board room meetings and been patronized because of my sex (and youthful appearance). I’ve seen my sister get passed over for promotion. I am aghast as the younger girls behind me seem to willingly allow themselves to be viewed and treated as nothing more than glamorized strippers. I am saddened by the sexualization of our young girls.

None of that passion, determination, or energy left me when I quit my career to be a stay at home mom. And yet, I get the message that I must have abandoned my sisters when I made that choice. Section 1 of the Equal Rights Amendment (which has not yet been ratified and made an amendment) states; “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex”. Equality of rights – my rights – my right to choose. My right to choose a career, a house, a job, a family, a spouse, ownership, etc. I have made thousands of choices in my life. Some of them that would be shocking for a woman to make – especially if I lived in another culture, or another country. I chose what school I wanted to attend. I chose to get a driver’s license. I chose to travel extensively and alone, for work. I’ve worked for men and have had men work for me. I chose my own husband and sometimes I even tell him that he’s wrong. But most importantly, I CHOSE to stay home with my kids. And somehow, that one choice negates all the other choices I have made.

Yet, that one choice is more important than all the others. That one choice insures that the role model my daughter will have in her daily life will be me. The mother who has a graduate degree, and who can also make heart-shaped pancakes. She won’t be determining her value, or her self-image based on the mysoginistic messages she sees in TV and on the internet. She will have her independent, strong-willed mother to be her mirror. My choice is not detrimental to the feminist movement. My choice is exercising the very freedoms the feminist movement fought for me to have. My choice may be different from the choices of other women, at other times in their lives, but that is the power of choice. That is freedom.

When I put my apron back on I did not forfeit my feminist membership card. I became the worst kind of feminist, because I’m raising the next generation.