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October, 2009:

Of Grandmas and Chocolate

I was born with a plastic spoon in my mouth. So my palate wasn’t exactly…evolved. When I was a kid I hated German chocolate cake. Actually, I didn’t like chocolate at all, but add that funky coconut or whatever it was that made a cake German chocolate and…..BLEH! My favorite cake was yellow cake with vanilla frosting.

The same thing with ice cream. My favorite flavor was vanilla. Plain old vanilla. Or maybe sometimes strawberry. But never chocolate! And leave the nuts off the sundaes, please.

Also? I didn’t like the taste of coffee as a kid. So forget coffee candy or the ick of icks: rum butterscotch. To me, that nastiness was adult candy, not meant for kids.

These preferences of mine were no secret. But you know what my grandmother served after dinner at her house on my birthday, EVERY. SINGLE. YEAR? German chocolate cake with coffee almond ice cream. What the hell, Grandma?

Here it was MY birthday, and I had to sit in front of a plate of this disgusting crap and force it down. As a child, I could never understand it, but it was just one more thing that contributed to the reason why this woman was not my favorite grandmother, if I were to choose one. And I did.

I never ever ate German chocolate cake any other time, why would I want it on my BIRTHDAY-the one day of the year it was supposed to be all about ME?

Of course, in retrospect, I suppose she may have served this brown coco nutty crap because it was also my Grandfather’s birthday and my father’s birthday and it was meant to be more of a group celebration, but to me it wasn’t fair. I was the kid and really, aren’t holidays for the children? I mean, would it have killed her to have a second option on the ice cream at least? I usually scraped off the cake frosting and accompanying that with a decent vintage vanilla would have made a world of difference. Birthdays were supposed to be special, and serving me food I hated didn’t make me feel that way.

And don’t get me started on what I got as a gift from dear old Grandma, either. I’m liable to split a seam.

I never felt very close to that woman. I carried her middle name, Isabel, but it didn’t make me favor her more. In fact, my middle name embarrassed me as a kid because it wasn’t “Ann” like EVERY OTHER GIRL I KNEW. Isabel sounded like an old ladies’ name. It’s not something I shared in public willingly.

Even though I never tested any boundaries with “Izzy”, as Grandpa called her, I always felt like she occupied her time not approving of me. She was serious and authoritative. She never “played” with me. Children were to be seen and not heard. She was full of rules and standards. You dressed up (as in, you actually wore a dress) when you went to the grocery store. You took off your shoes in the service porch before coming into the house. Her couch was usually covered in creaky plastic. The house was constantly and immaculately clean. My mother obviously rebelled the second she moved out, got married and had us kids, so Grandma’s rules seemed Draconian to me.

She spent the last few years of her life in a nursing home, suffering from dementia that would result in her refusing physical therapy for a broken hip. I was her conservator, so once when she hysterically demanded the phone from the staff, they called me and let her cry into the phone, demanding to “come home”. I told her I would come right over and I did.

I arrived hoping she had calmed down and forgotten everything by the time I got there, but she was still panicky and wanted to “go home”. Instead of telling her she was already home, or that she had to stay where she was, I asked her why. She said “the Germans” were coming to get her and they would kill her with a knife in court or something like that. A few minutes later, I picked up the paperback she was reading and realized she was reliving the last scene she had read in the book. Word for word. Weird that her memory was so good, yet served her so disastrously.

On a different visit, I asked her how she had met my grandfather. She told me this crazy story about how Grandpa was this leather jacket-wearing motorcycle-riding rebel. And how her family didn’t approve of him. And how they ran up to Reno and got married while she was still in high school. It sounded romantic, but definitely not something Grandma would do, and I wondered what book she had taken that story from.

When she died, I gave her eulogy at the funeral. I had reflected on memories and gone through her belongings to construct an appropriate funeral for a woman I had never gotten to know. As I outlined the eulogy, I began to realize how much we had in common. Either her “rules” had an influence on me, or I was genetically destined to be like her in other ways not so obvious, regardless of my resistance.

However, my impression of her as a rule-following, properly-behaved woman melted away when I found a newspaper article in her scrapbook that announced the elopement to Reno of her and my grandfather while she was still attending Sacramento High School. In 1937. I thought that was fantastic and wished I could have hung out more with THAT woman.

It was such a revelation for me and I was disappointed that I missed out on that part of Grandma. I wish I had spent more time with her, particularly before the dementia. Instead I got to know her a little better by rummaging through all her stuff as I settled her estate. Now I’m proud of and even impressed by her. She didn’t spend her time with me disapproving of everything I did, she was busy teaching me life lessons. And now I like my middle name and I love that it came from my Grandma Isabel. 

But I still don’t like German chocolate cake.

* * *


(This post was inspired by, of all things, a recipe. For German chocolate cake. Over at Jan’s Sushi Bar)

Goat Thing of the Day: Leavenworth

Mt Forest Pictures shows a picture from their trip to Leavenworth, Washington.

Ever been to Leavenworth? As in Leavenworth, Washington? Not as in Leavenworth the prison (although if you’ve been there, I’d like to hear about that, too). Anyway, this Leavenworth is one of those Dutch Villages. You know, like how Solvang is a Dutch Village.

Lacy, NGIP Mascot, Makes her Las Vegas Debut

Hello! And welcome to the scrollfest that is the rundown on my (er, Lacy’s) trip to Vegas for SITScation, a blogger’s conference last weekend. While the rest of the world was at Blog World Expo, seventy-five or so of us descended on a smaller, more intimate, less overwhelming blogging conference.

If there’s one piece of advice I can give you about going to such an event, it’s that you should bring a mascot. People love mascots, and pink-pantied Lacy was no exception. At the risk of allowing her to become more famous than I, I brought her to The Venetian in Vegas with me, and she rocked it.

Here she is delivering her keynote speech at SITScation in the Venetian conference center:

Lacy the goat delivers keynote speech

Lacy was accosted by fans all day long and it felt like being bombarded by the paparazzi (because I totally know what that feels like, me and Paris Hilton, yo.)

Anyway, people screamed and cried and begged to have their picture taken with Lacy, such as:

Bobbi, Lacy and Connie

Bobbi and Connie are sisters, in case you didn’t know. You may notice that Connie is wearing her pink and zebra print to go with the SITS theme of pink and leopard print, which is so funny because I was THIS close to wearing my pink and goat print outfit.

Also tripping over themselves to get a picture with Lacy were:

Kerri and Amy pose with Lacy

Kerri (Damn You Little Rock) and Amy (The Bee Dot)…two fabulous ladies from Arkansas. Is that tug-of-war they’re playing?

Also? The infamous Jessica Gottleib. Lacy practically broke her neck, craning to give her a kiss.

Jessica Gottlieb poses with Lacy

And no star-studded photo album would be complete without a picture of SITScation’s fearless leaders:

Heather and Tiffany pose with Lacy
Tiffany (R Family Diaries) and Heather (Mindless Junque), the co-founders of SITS. I cannot recommend enough that you find a way to get to know these friendly, generous women, if you ever have the opportunity.

A big party transpired that night, complete with red carpet and step-and-repeat backdrop photographs. You probably already saw them in People magazine or something, since I’m a week late getting this report out.

Here’s Tonya (This and That) posing for the photog on the red carpet.

Tonya poses on red carpet at SITS party

And then it was Lacy’s turn. Sadly, nobody asked her who she was wearing.

Lacy posing on red carpet at SITS party

You may or may not recognize the arm assistance of Lara (Chicken Nuggets of Wisdom).

Two people we actually got to spend some time with during this whirlwhind of an event were two bloggers from Los Angeles. This is my favorite part of any conference: The connecting to people IRL (in real life).

Dale (Stroke of Living), Lacy and me
Kim (House of Prince) and Lacy

Then there was the after-party with many celebrities in their hotel rooms. This is the closest I could get to showing you the after-party, as the bodyguards slash bouncers just inside this door confiscated our cameras upon entry to ensure no leaks to TMZ.com.

Lacy in front of hotel room after party

We also had to sign a confidentiality agreement that said we would not divulge the party attendees. So I can’t tell you who all I saw. What I can tell you, however, is that Kim Kardashian and Justin Timberlake were at the Venetian that weekend, but I cannot confirm or deny that they were in Suite 12-101. Because that would be wrong.

Lacy stayed only as long as was fashionable before she expressed a desire to hit the slots.

 

After a few speakers the next morning, Lacy lunched with fellow bloggers.

Lacy lunches with bloggers

During dessert, she Twittered about the weekend’s events. And since she has about 48 badrillion followers, pretty much everyone knew what we were doing.

Lacy twittering

After the final Blog and Nosh session, Lacy dragged me all over the Venetian for some more photo ops she’d promised some of her fans, most of whom I did not know. Like this blue guy.

 Lacy and Blue Man

On our way to another photo-op, we walked past this Venetian statue that lost its composure and screamed “OMG! Lacy! LACY! Can I get a picture with you? OMG, David will be soooo jealous!” Lacy rolled her eyes, but agreed. I mean, she does have her public to consider. And after all, she wouldn’t be where she is without her fans, blue or white as they may be.

 

But it was Lacy who groveled at this next guy’s feet when she stumbled upon him as we were on our way to some VIP goat blog event. Come on, I tried to tell her, the guy’s a troll! But she couldn’t help herself. It was embarrassing, really.

 

I don’t know what she saw in him, when clearly Humpty Dumpty could provide so much better for her. And adore her like no other. Why are girls so attracted to the bad boys?

 

Granted, Humpty can be fragile at times, but doesn’t that mean he’s the real sensitive type?

I ducked into a bathroom just to catch my breath and escape all the testosterone, but when I snuck into a stall my eyes fell upon this necklace hanging from the stall door!

candy penis necklace

And speaking of penises, have I even mentioned all the swag from SITScation?

SITScation swag

Even though it was an all-female conference, we were bedecked with male/double-entendre swag, like these little devices called “pokens“…

 

and vibrators…

 laundry balls

Oops! That not a vibrator. I think.

But this is:

 
courtesy of Edens Fantasys

Lacy and I were exhausted and she insisted on returning to our room, where she sprawled on our tiny tiny hotel room couch. In the sunken living room.

And then it was back to the craps tables. Personally, I think she has a gambling problem.

This is my favorite picture from the weekend:

Venetian Statue Guy

frilly pink panties

I don’t know if you’ve heard, whether it was on CNN, or the AP Newswire, but Nanny Goats in Panties is now available on Amazon’s Kindle. Tell your Kindle-havin’ friends. And you know what would really be cool? At least for me? If you went to the NGIP Kindle page and wrote a nice little review. You don’t have to if you don’t want to, or don’t have an Amazon profile, or whatever, but I’ve heard it doesn’t hurt to ask people for things. I think it was Renee J Ross (Cutie Booty Cakes) who said those very words when she spoke to us at SITScation.

Do I expect many Kindle subscribers? Heck no. But every little outlet helps. And now I can say I have published work available on Amazon.com - woo-hoo!


Read my blog on Kindle

Goat Thing of the Day: Taking Billy for a Ride

So Echidne of the Snakes found this picture in her family photos and posted it recently on her blog…

picture lifted from Echidne of the Snakes (via Elmlish)

I asked her for the story but she couldn’t recall if there was one. That’s OK, leaving it up to the imagination might be even better.

Interview with Uma Thurman. Yes THAT Uma Thurman

When is someone going to expose the fact that Hillary Swank and Matt Damon are the same person? Have you ever seen them in the same room togther? Have they both ever starred in the same film?

Also? They BOTH have that same upside down smile. You know what I mean. Where the corners are turned down instead of up even though their teeth are showing.

Anyway, I’m not the only one who thinks this, and as usual, that’s not why I brought you here.

No, I called this meeting today to discuss the right way and the wrong way to interview a celebrity. And those of you at home might want to call up your favorite celebrity now and follow along as I walk you through the proper steps.

First of all, be specific. I was on the phone with Uma Thurman the other day and I asked her if she had a funny story about the filming of Motherhood, an upcoming movie where she plays Eliza, a stay-at-home mother (SAHM) and mommyblogger. She said she didn’t have a specific funny story, although she did say “I think I threw my lower back out doing those endless pounding up-and-down-the-stair shots with dogs and it had been a few years since I’d had that back pack on. And I never liked those either. They make you feel like the baby is a not-very-well-secured ball of ice cream on a somewhat broken wafer cone. It’s quite nerve-wracking how spindly and top heavy you feel with that thing on.”

So while she did say something, I didn’t make it very easy for her and Uma had to work harder to come up with an answer. What I should have asked, obviously, is what she was wearing. Or how she was able to eat at the studio commissary with those big thumbs while shooting Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, although that would have been a little off-topic. But “off-topic” is my middle name.

So yeah, I was a dork and essentially asked, “Do you have anything funny to say, DERRRRRRRR???”

Luckily, some other bloggers were on the call and had the decency to ask intelligent, thoughtful questions.

Like Jennifer (Hip as I Wanna Be) who asked Uma how the audience would relate to her character, Eliza.

In response, Uma told us that “The character is someone who has chosen to be a stay-at-home-mother and yet she’s struggling with that decision. She feels fulfilled, yet compromised by being in total babyland and not stimulating other sides of herself.”

Uma Thurman in Motherhood

Lara (Chicken Nuggets of Wisdom) asked her if she felt motherhood had been overlooked by Hollywood. See what smart questions you can ask if you just think about it for a minute? Maybe I was blank because with no kids, I had nothing to draw on. In any event, Uma said she did believe that motherhood has been “put on the third shelf” in Hollywood.


Mary (Wired Moms) wanted to know if she was surprised by anything during the production. Uma said she was surprised how the children that she worked with were such good actors, having never played a realistic mom before.

Motherhood is one of the first films to tackle the subject of mommy-blogging. Uma’s character Eliza is a writer who blogs for a creative outlet. Kacey (Chronicles of a Mommy) asked Uma if she’d researched blogs for her role, and Uma admitted that she hadn’t, saying: “I feel so badly telling you that.”

Uma Thurman is Eliza in Motherhood

Motherhood opens Friday, October 23 in New York, LA, San Francisco, Boston, and Chicago. The rest of the country will have the chance to see it beginning on Friday, October 30.

Motherhood

For more information about Motherhood including a trailer, you can go to the Motherhood film website.

(All pics lifted from motherhoodthefilm.com)

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