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Dear Twitter

Dear Twitter,

A little over a month ago, I wrote a not-so-kind post about the challenges I’d been having when trying to get my account restored.

I was more than a little peeved and ranted my little heart out.

I can do that, you see, because this is my own little corner of the world.

But I digress.

I’d finally caved and created another account, though I was not happy about it.

I was finally able to follow my children’s tweets, all the while trying to avoid the Olympic ones that I’d subscribed to for fear that I’d find out results before I got to watch them on TV.

Yesterday morning, my phone dinged as it does when I receive new email.

To my surprise, I had a message awaiting me…

One from Twitter’s customer support.

Apparently, someone had listened to my repeated requests, and it had been discovered that my account had been caught in a massive clean-up sweep of spam accounts.

Much to my joy, Twitter support restored my account!!

I can now be AuburnChick again!

I promised, when I wrote my heated post, that I would sing Twitter’s praises if the problem had been fixed, so that is what I’m doing now.

Thank you for not only restoring my account by restoring my faith that I am not just another “account” out of millions, not worthy to be tended to individually.

Whenever I talk about Twitter, and I do talk a lot, I will make sure to share “the rest of the story,” as Paul Harvey would say.

So, thanks again, for your assistance!!

Sincerely,

AuburnChick

A Most Rational Hodgepodge

Wednesday seems to roll around quickly in this here parts!  With the beginning of a new school year just over the horizon, I’m especially cognizant of the passage of time.  Still, I’m putting work aside for the moment to answer the questions that Joyce has posted.  Play along and make new friends.

1.  In an effort to combat obesity, the mayor of NYC has plans to ban the sale of large sugary drinks (anything over 16 oz.), initially in restaurants, movie theaters, and street carts. Corner stores would also be affected if they are defined as food service establishments. You can read more here . Your thoughts?

This is tough for me.  I am, for the most part, a very healthy eater.  I make conscious decisions to avoid sweets (except for my Starbucks frappuccino), meat, and dairy.  However, I think I’d be livid if someone DICTATED to me what I was allowed to eat.

While I think the intentions are good, I don’t think the method is kosher.  People should be making healthy choices of their OWN accord, not because they are being forced to.

2.  Art festival, music festival, food festival…which would you most like to attend?

If it was a vegan food festival, I’d be all over it; however, I know that would NEVER be the case, so I’ll go with music.

3.  What are you irrational about?

I can be very irrational where it comes to my children…namely if I’m worried about them.  I’ll move heaven and earth to make sure that they are okay, and this concern can cause me to go to extremes.  Oh, not that I solve all of their problems for them, but I do worry…a lot (even texting a coach’s wife to make sure that “someone” was “encouraged” to take meds every four hours).

Issues of the heart make me go nuts!!

4.  Do you feel confident you’ll have a comfortable retirement?

As a state employee, I don’t think that “comfortable” would be the right word.  My goal is to get my debt paid off, build up some kind of nest egg, however, small, and then live a frugal life so I’ll have enough to get me through.

5.  What’s been your favorite Olympic moment so far?

As of this writing, I’d have to say that the close volleyball match between the US and China has been my favorite moment.  If I’d seen the women’s soccer game against Canada, I’d probably name that moment, but I didn’t, so I won’t.  I have long respected Kerrie Walsh and Misty May-Treanor, so watching them dig deeply for that semifinal win was both nerve wracking and exhilerating.

6.  What would you label as the messiest room in your house?

At the moment, Rooster’s room is the messiest because he’s in the process of packing so that we can move him into his dorm on Saturday. <sniff, sniff>

7.  Do you follow your heart or your head?

Well, I usually start out following my heart, but then I finish by using my head.  I tend to react based on emotion but then settle into thinking about a situation and making decisions based on logic afterward.

8.  My Random Thought

Y’all have read my posts about the angst I have to deal with when eating out sometimes.  Because I’m a vegan, my choices are very limited.

Well, the other day, the Mr. told me that Taco Bell is now offering salads that are very healthy…no meat…black beans, rice, and corn.

So, I decided to give it a try.

Here’s what it looks like…

I’ve gotta tell you that the salad is DELICIOUS!!

It wound up being a larger salad than I expected.

The combination of ingredients was p-e-r-f-e-c-t!

I was in happy land, let me tell you!

So, if you’re looking for something healthy to eat at what is not known to be the healthiest of eating establishments, try Taco Bell’s new salad.

You guys can trust me because you know I’m picky, and I don’t review food lightly.

Home

I, like millions of people around the world, have been glued to my television each day, eagerly watching Olympic coverage for as many hours as time allows.

The song that’s been played repeatedly during the women’s gymnastics segments is Phillip Phillips’ Home, which he sang during the American Idol finale.

Every time I’ve heard it on television, I’ve grown to love it more and more.

Oh, the musical nuances are lovely, but I mostly like the words, which speak of a place where one isn’t alone and where one can trust his or her family members to always be there.

Because this is what I strive for in my classroom, I’ve decided to make this my theme song for the year.

I just happened upon the following video, and I plan on showing it to my students at some point during the first couple of days of school.

It is vital that my students feel loved and accepted…especially because they are struggling readers.  Additionally, most of my students have unstable home lives.

It is my prayer that my students grow academically but, most of all, that they see, from example, that there are some in the human race who are on their side.

Enjoy the video!

Stop the Madness!

When I got home from taking Chicky back to college, I saw this…

20120806-065314.jpg

The time is drawing near when Rooster will begin his own college experience at Auburn University.

We leave on Friday and move him in on Saturday.

Can this mama’s heart take much more?

Someone stop the madness!!

Third Time Isn’t the Charm

They say that the third time’s the charm when doing something; however, there was nothing charming about escorting Chicky back to Southeastern so she could start her third year of school (she’s actually halfway through her junior year because she took a few online classes this summer).

She’d come home for what amounted to only four full days.

I didn’t get to see her much because I had in-service meetings all week.

Although her room was a disaster while she was home, she had it all cleaned up by Thursday, departure day…

I did take half of Thursday off so we could begin driving earlier and not get down there too late.

The hotel was very, very nice.  Trust me when I say this because I have stayed in quite a few hotels over the years thanks to her travel soccer adventures.

We had fun playing with Thor, who was thrilled to be out of his cage after such a long ride.

After watching Gabby Douglas win gold in the All-Around, we headed to bed.

The drive in to school was lovely.

Seeing the school’s sign as I entered campus was soothing.

This is a place where the students are genuinely cared for…where the words of Jesus are not only preached but lived out daily.

Chicky had her physical, and we began moving her stuff in.

It only took a few trips to the car because her wonderful roommates helped out.  Every time we walked out, we got to see this…

New volleyball court!  There are even hammocks around the green space!

Chicky’s rooming with most of the same girls this year…nearly all of them soccer players.  It’s a good group of gals.

I watched as Chicky made her bed, hung her clothes, and created order out of the chaos that had only recently been created when we dumped everything in her room.

She’s a pro now after having moved so many times.

As time progressed, my heart began to grow sad, as it always does during move-in day.

I decided to leave before the team dinner because I didn’t want Chicky to worry if I was going to be able to keep my emotions in check.

The rain that poured down matched my mood…

She and I, it turned out, had a few issues to deal with.

Now, let me explain, in case you’re new to my blog and, thus, new to the mother-daughter drama that has existed in my life, Chicky and I have some history.

I brought a lot of baggage into my grown-up life…ugly stuff I had to deal with when I was a child.

Those things made me determined to be a hands-on mother to my own children, but I still deal with the after effects of a very traumatic childhood.

My hurts have led me, at times (cough, cough) to cling to my children, and they have often pushed hard against my mama bear claws.

Chicky and I, being females, have fought the longest and the hardest.

It’s a trend that we’re both working hard to reverse.

During her visit home last week, I actually saw us turn a corner.

We’d had one of those stupid arguments (most are, you know), and we’d both yelled at each other.

Then, Chicky did something quite unusual.

She came back into the room later and spent the entire evening watching the Olympics with me.

In prior years, she would have NEVER done such a thing.

She would have hibernated for days…stewing about things.

I did take note and tucked the moment into my heart.

So, on Saturday, when I was having my “moment,” we cried.

A lot.

It was so hard.

I’m tearing up at the memory, still so fresh and painful.

To see her cry was upsetting as well.

Big crocodile tears on my precious baby’s face.

It just broke my heart because I knew I was getting ready to leave and wouldn’t see her for a while.

Who wants to leave that way?

I went back and forth in my mind…could I pull myself together and eat dinner or would I go?

In the end, I left, but both of us were still very, very upset.

Man, that was just awful.

I cried the entire way to the hotel and even thought about checking out, however late it was, and driving home.

But I decided not to.

Instead, I took a long, hot shower where I cried and cried and cried.

It was awful.

Then, I crawled into bed, determined to sleep away the pain.

About an hour later, through a drowsy haze, I heard my Facebook notification go off on my phone.

After checking it out, I realized that I felt a little better, so I called Chicky to find out what she was doing.

She sounded happy, like our “moment” hadn’t happened.

I asked if I could go back and see her one more time.

She agreed and met me in one of the covered areas that her dorm has on each corner.

She looked good.  She’d changed her clothes, put on some makeup, and was gearing up for the team activities that were soon to follow.

We didn’t have much time.

I apologized for the way I’d left and told her about the epiphany I’d had during the drive between the hotel and the school.

I’d fully expected year three’s dropoff to be less painful and could not understand why it was hitting me so hard.

I’d come to realize that it was because she and I had turned that corner a few days before that I didn’t want to leave her.

Usually, we’re at each others’ throats from the second day of our visit, but not this time.

We’d had so much fun…shared so many great conversations…deep things…some political stuff…grown up stuff.

I also told her that I was PMS’ing.

Folks, let’s get real just a second.

PMS stinks.

More so when the timing is when you’re taking your baby to college.

Even more so when you suspect you’re pre-menopausal.

My emotions are all over the place for a few days during PMS.

Ugh.

Chicky and I shared a lot in the five minutes we had when I returned.

I hugged her.

I told her I loved her, a mantra I’d repeated over and over during both conversations.

My love for her (and Rooster) drives me to act crazy.

Yeah.  I’m not exactly that “mature” mama you typically see.  I go a little nuts when I haven’t seen my kids in a while, and that causes Chicky much angst at times.

I think she’s waiting for me to grow up.

Either way, we were able to clear things up, and she finally conveyed to me that she understood why I acted nutty.

HUGE breakthroughs!

So I left my girl for the second time, and things were better.

Does that mean that I didn’t cry a little when I got back to the hotel?

Of course not.

I did order take out from Olive Garden…a huge deal for me who doesn’t eat much…less so when I’m upset.

I stayed up until midnight watching the Olympics and teared up when we won medals.

I got up early the next morning, bade goodbye to the room that had only, 24 hours beforehand, held my sweet Chicky, and headed home.

I cried when I got home.

I need my hormones to get straight again!

Regardless of my sadness, I know in my heart that Chicky is where she is supposed to be, and I am HAPPY that I did not turn into the mom who didn’t allow her child to leave home (had that done to me and did not like it one bit).

I am THRILLED that Chicky is goal-driven, knows how to take care of her business (she shared an apartment next to campus with friends this summer, held down a job, and took several classes), and is a role model for others.  She has leadership skills that I, at times, envy.

While the third time taking my girl to school didn’t feel charming, I’m thankful for the lessons I learned.

I’m keeping my fingers crossed that next year, when I take her for her final semester (yes, Chicky, I am going despite what I said, but I have A PLAN!), I won’t get gushy-eyed.

And if I do, well, I guess I’ll be keeping with tradition.

I love you Chicky, and I’m praying for an injury-free season, a deepening of old and new friendships, and for continued growth in your Christian walk.

Wishing I Could Stretch Time

I’m having a moment…the kind when I see my children heading out the door, and I want, desperately, to hold onto them a little longer.

As I’ve listened to Chicky pack her stuff, and as I’ve chatted with Rooster after he’s come in late from spending time with friends, my heart grows wistful, and the tears begin to flow.

How can it be that this, my third year of being the mother of college-enrolled children, is proving to be as difficult as the first year?

I cannot explain it.

It’s not as if I don’t have other activities to keep me occupied.

I am about to begin year three of teaching.

I think that as I prepare to say goodbye to Rooster for what will be his first extended absence, I am reminded of the first time I delivered Chicky to school.

Sigh…

That was a difficult adjustment.

I really do not want to go through this again.

Maybe I can blame the late hour.

Maybe it’s PMS.

More likely, I’m just another mom who loves being around her children…cannot, in fact, get enough time with them.

It’s moments like these when I wish I could stretch time…perhaps even rewind it a bit to when my babies were actually babies.

But time doesn’t stand stand still, pressing ever forward.

Meanwhile, a mama (me) goes to bed feeling bittersweet about the passage of time and the fact that there’s not one thing I can do to slow it down, pause it, or stop it completely.

Singing the Tune of the Wednesday Hodgepodge

Last week, I was a little late posting my responses to Joyce’s Hodgepodge questions.  Although I’ve been at in-service meetings all week, I’ve managed to stay on track.  Yay for small victories!  Play along by answering on your own blog and linking back up with Joyce.

1.  Joyce is joining daughter1 in the 101 in 1001 challenge. Essentially you create a list of 101 things you hope to do or accomplish in the next 1001 days. What’s one thing you’d put on your list?

Ok, so if I’m doing the math correctly on my phone’s calculator, 1001 days equals roughly 2.75 years.  So, essentially, the question is what would I like to accomplish from now until then.

I think I’d like to have my non-essential debt paid off, meaning a couple of credit cards and two of my student loans (I have three in total).  I know I’ll get the student loans paid off.  The credit cards will take more time, but as I pay off the other stuff, I’ll put that money toward the credit card payments.

2.  How many remote controls do you have in your house? What’s one item in your home you wish could be operated by remote control?

I’m not even going to attempt to answer this question because, just in my living room, I’m counting about five or six remotes, and that includes the one to my electric fireplace.

In this techno-driven world, everything has a remote control!!

Something that I wish I had a control for is the back door.  With four dogs, I’m forever letting them out and back in, and it gets rather annoying to have to get up all the time.

Don’t tell me about doggie doors.  I don’t think they’re very energy efficient.

3.  What does having it all mean to you? Is it attainable?

Having it all means accepting Jesus’s saving work on the cross and living your life in a way that pleases Him.  As a result, you’re satisfied with the things in your life and consider yourself satisfied with those things.  Is it attainable?  I don’t know.  Satisfaction with what we currently possess is difficult given the mentality of “I want/should get more” that exists today.

4.  What’s your favorite movie soundtrack?

Part of me wanted to answer Grease; however, after talking to Chicky, I decided to answer Phantom of the Opera.  My favorite song from this soundtrack is Music of the Night.

The lyrics really speak to my heart.  They describe the power that music can have over a life.

5.  Describe the best view you’ve seen from a rooftop.

Well, I don’t regularly spend my time on rooftops, so this question is difficult to answer.  The only time I’ve ever been on a roof was when Rooster and I stayed in a hotel in Mobile, Alabama, after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans.  We were in Mobile for a soccer tournament, and the devastation was everywhere.

Standing on the rooftop one night, we were privileged to see and hear, from a distance, the Beach Boys perform a benefit concert.

Sure, that’s probably not what Joyce was probably thinking, but it’s the first thing that come to mind.  Seeing the Beach Boys, whose songs I’d sung growing up, was such a treat and touched my heart after all of the hard times that my fellow Southerners had endured.

6.  What’s your least favorite thing about summer?

My least favorite thing about summer is the humidity.  As a gal blessed with an abundance of naturally curly hair, I loathe humid days.  I feel as if I’ve completely wasted my time when I’ve straightened my hair and then walk outside to have everything curl up.  Grrr.

7.  Our weekly Hodgepodge falls on the first day of August. In ten words or less sum up your July.

Two weeks of being sick and nine days of training.

8.  My Random Thought

Yesterday, I moved all of the stuff you see on the counter from the floor near my SmartBoard.

The cleaning people refused to wax my floor until the stuff had been moved.

They’ll move the tables and chairs…just not the personal stuff.

I spent part of my lunch break during my in-service meetings moving the boxes.

Meanwhile, the open cabinets are displaying stuff from the previous teacher…a teacher who is now one of the school’s administrative assistants (and a fine one at that).  I have a plan for getting the stuff removed, but finding the time…that’s my next challenge.

The most pressing issue?

Getting everything finished in five days.

Why?

Because next week I have three more days of training before I take Rooster to Auburn.

The next week will be our last before school begins on the 20th.

I’m choosing not to panic.

Yet.