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Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary

You’re Killin’ Me, Smalls. . .

You’d think by now I’d have learned my lesson by now. You’d think that because I’m the adult, I’m making the decisions. And yet once again, here we are, and all I can do is shake my head.
Foolishly, I sometimes ask the girls what they’d like for lunch, often giving them a choice between different sandwich choices or chicken nuggets vs. hot dogs. Today, though, I just couldn’t even wrap my mind around all the choice left overs in the fridge and asked them flat out, “What do you want for lunch?”

Morgan, just as sweet as you please, asked for tuna fish and chips. Done and done. Coever asked for grilled cheese. What? Whose child is this? Certainly not mine. We don’t eat grilled cheese in this house. Let me re-phrase, I don’t eat grilled cheese, and if the numero uno, executive chef ain’t eatin’ it, it ain’t gettin’ made. But of course, Coever looked at me with those Bambi eyes and saw this. . .

[source]
I got busy making grilled cheese.
For someone who doesn’t eat it, I sure put a lot of thought and love into this thing. I toasted the Oat Nut bread, which, by the by, if you haven’t had the Oat Nut bread, do yourself a favor and get it. It’s beyond good. It’s like a hug in your mouth. But I digress.
I toasted the bread, I spread it with butter — I think I read that’s what you do when you make grilled cheese. I shaved — yes, you read correctly, I shaved off several layers of cheddar cheese from this hunk o’ cheddar we had in the fridge. I laid the thinly sliced cheese over the buttery- oat-nutty-bready goodness and threw another layer of bread on top. I wrapped that mamma jamma up in some foil, fired up the iron and commenced to press it to death.
Coever wove in between and around my legs, chanting, “Is that my grilled cheese, Mom? Is that my grilled cheese?” I half expected her to break out in song and dance like Bill Cosby’s kids when they had chocolate cake for breakfast.
I unwrapped the sandwich, placing it on her plate with some orange slices, and some chips. By now, the girls were in the living room, looking at library books, so I called them to the table. They seated themselves just as I placed their plates in front of them.
“Thanks, Mommy,” said Morgan, taking a monstrous bite of her tuna fish. Mmmm, oat nut bread.
I go back to the kitchen to fetch (yes, I’m from the Mo-tea-suh tribe) the girls’ drinks, when I hear Coever ask, “What dis, Mom?” She’s picking up her sandwich between two fingers, “Is dis my grilled cheese?”

[source]
“Yes, Coever,” I begin, seeing that she’s somehow managed to shove the orange slices and the chips down her throat. “That’s the sandwich you asked for.” In my head, I’m thinking, “Oh no. She better not even think about it.”

“I don’t like grilled cheese,” she wrinkles up her nose and lets the sandwich fall back onto the plate.
Of course. . .
Hi, my name is Hilary with one “l” and I’ve been duped by my two year old.
Again.

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IN: ON: March 9, 2010 TAGS: food, motherhood BY: Hilary
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Summer in the WinterTime

I could kick myself for not thinking of this before. . . .
Bathing suit + Bath Tub + Morgan and Coever = Best Morning Ever!

Hands down, easiest life-guard gig ever. Double bonus: no sand in hard to reach places and no need for a bath tonight. Oh, we are so doing this again tomorrow.

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IN: ON: February 28, 2010 TAGS: Odds and Ends BY: Hilary
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Martha Stewart, watch yo’ back!

I really enjoy entertaining. I wish I did it more often, but since I don’t, when I do, I like to do it well. While some enjoy centerpieces and coordinating napkins, m y focus is on the food (whoa, big surprise). I love feeding people, so at my last event, there were staple veggie trays and fruit trays. I had several cracker and cheese selections and chicken salad with toast points (thanks, Costco). I even got my mom to make a veggie dip in a sourdough bread bowl — mmmmm, bread bowl. As for the sweets, I broke out the 5 Flavor Pound Cake balls, but I also tried my hand at a new recipe.
— Look at what I made! —

And I even made the frosting from scratch!
Got all fancy with the “piping bag” I MacGyvered out of a Ziplock freezer bag.
If you are reader of this blog who has in fact had one of these Margarita Cupcakes, please, please, please comment and tell the masses how good they are!
Yes, I have successfully broken my arm patting myself on the back.
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IN: ON: February 28, 2010 TAGS: cooking BY: Hilary
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Mermaid Haiku

Make-you well mermaid
will keep the doctor away
if you rub her tail.

Lola on the green.
“I love her!” says Mo, but for
Co, well, not so much.

A homeless man naps
just out of frame. Say “cheese”, girls.
Now get in the car.

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IN: ON: February 19, 2010 TAGS: Mermaids BY: Hilary
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Loserville: Population of One

I love to read. Absolutely love, love, love it. I can inhale books in a matter of hours if its good enough. And it’s doubly good enough, I’ll read it again and again (hello, Time Traveler’s Wife!).

But. . . I’m out of books at the moment. I had a really rough patch where I wasn’t reading anything that wasn’t related to human anatomy and medical terminology. While fascinating and educational, I’m looking for something that’s going to make me shirk my wifely duties, motherly responsibilities, and personal hygiene. I want a book so good that I am using cocktail toothpicks to prop open my eyes as I read far into the night. And when I turn the last page, I want to feel swollen with satisfaction and the sharp smack of my hand as it hits my head when I realize, “I totally could have written this!”

The last book I read was “Eat, Pray, Love” and I slogged through it — sorry you Liz Gilbert fans. She had me in Italy, but when she got to India, I got very bored. Indonesia was redemptive, but by that point, I really wanted to just put the whole thing to bed and done with her. Hence the burning need for something I can really just burrow myself into.

I was tempted to pick up “The Time Traveler’s Wife” yet again, but I did read it fairly recently and it seems a little too soon. I thumbed through the books on my shelf: nothing. My wish-list at paperbackswap.com and at shelfari.com are just that — wishes. At PBS, the books I’m waiting on have an ETA on average of 17 weeks. WTH?

I thought about the library, but it’s tough to peruse the shelves at a leisurely pace with Mo and Co in tow. They haven’t quite figured out that a library is a quiet place and their volume control only goes in one direction — guess which one.

My dad reads quite a bit and I thought he might have some titles that I could borrow, but I already plowed through his collection of Mad Magazine Anthologies (very though provoking), Elmore Leonard, Stephen Carter, and others. My mom doesn’t read books, mostly magazines, but she did have a few titles near her desk. I perused those, settling on one that I had read before, but knew that I enjoyed. As soon as I cracked it open, I got giddy.

Yes. . .I’ll admit it.

I’m reading “Twilight” again*.

*well, technically, it’s Eclipse, so it’s not like I’m starting all the way at the beginning. . .

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IN: ON: February 18, 2010 TAGS: books, honesty BY: Hilary
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Covergirl

Today, the girls had a playdate with one their little friends. The friend is Morgan’s age and she, too, has a little sister, who is a year younger than Coever. Coever wants no parts of the little sister and is more than happy to insert herself in the mix with Morgan and the Big Sister friend.

For a while, Host Mom and I sat in her living room talking about this, that and other thing. Somehow, we got on the topic of playdates gone awry, always an exercise in who can pull out the most embarrassing/horrendous/outlandish/otherwise humiliating experience. I feel like “Top That” should be playing in the background.

She told me about a friend of hers whose daughter cut the hair of another child during a playdate. We laughed, trying to think of ways to explain ourselves to the other parent in a situation like that. Host Mom went on to say that one time, her own mother had hosted some children, and sent the children home completely unawares that the children had gone into her jewelry box and be-dazzled themselves with her best stuff. Thankfully, the visiting mother realized she had jewel thieves in her midst and returned it all post-haste.

The playdate went on and the girls were all playing nicely upstairs. Host Mom and I went to the kitchen, getting snacks and feeding Little Sister in the high chair. I guess we’ve learned to only prick up our ears if we hear crying, screaming, or assorted thumping and bumping noises, because Host Mom commented how we hadn’t heard from the girls in a while. That’s always a sign that something is amiss. Just as we rose to check it out, Morgan comes tromping down the stairs, Big Sister and Coever in tow.

At least, I think it was Coever.

I thought it was Cesar Romero at first.

{source}

In any event, all Host Mom and I could do was laugh. I mean, really, should we even be surprised that this is what went down when we all but guaranteed something was bound to happen just by sheer revelry in the previous conversation?

Miraculously, the bathroom, where they had pilfered the make-up from, was clean as was the room in which they applied it. Morgan and Big Sister had a much light hand when it came to application, contenting themselves with several layers of lipstick and limiting the blush to only one side of their faces from brow bone to jawline. Nice.

But here’s the weird thing — about a year ago, Morgan did this photo shoot where she was given carte blanche to have at it with some make-up. Neither one of them has seen the photo, I don’t think, but their make-up application is strangely similar. Check it out here.

Cesar Romero, right?


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IN: ON: February 15, 2010 TAGS: Odds and Ends BY: Hilary
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Q&A with Mo and Co

I took the girls to a birthday party the other day where, over the course of the event, they saw me holding another guests’ baby sister. Later on today, we were sitting on the couch having a snack and reading some books, when Morgan asked me why I had been holding the baby. I put the book down and told her that while I always love holding her and her sister, sometimes it’s nice to hold babies.

She thought that over for a minute before saying, “Oh.”

Cautiously, I asked her, “Do you think maybe you’d like to have another sister or a brother some day?” — emphasis on “maybe”, “some” and “day”.

“Um, I’d like another sister, and another sister, AND a brother”, she said. “A brown brother.”

Coever, who had been listening the whole time said, “I don’t want a brown brother. I don’t want another sister. I want that sister.”

“Which sister?” I ask.

“Just Morgan.”

Just Morgan, just Coever. That’s sounds like just enough.

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IN: ON: February 14, 2010 TAGS: my girls BY: Hilary
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Hilary With One L

© 2015 Hilary Grant Dixon.