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DECEMBER 31, 2000    "SNOWBOUND IN A YELLOW SUBMARINE"
Originally posted on the website Continuum...


FUNNY... I woke up this morning with my sanity intact! I did it! I survived! A full day snowed in with five kids, and I'm still sane! Just a little bit of drool on my chin and a passively crazed look in my eye - not too bad!

We all fared fairly well yesterday. S had a few moments there when I thought she was going to be the first one to jump ship. I guess it's tough being a 14 year old girl living with two teenage brothers and a dad. I can't say that I can relate to that exactly, having never been a girl myself. S was a great help in keeping H and M occupied much of the day, especially while I was taken hostage by my pc and forced to finally produce this site! J was fairly mild through the day. There were a few incidents when he and S tangled with each other. That brought back some memories...

I GREW UP WITH a younger sister, C, two years younger than I. I love her to death... But there were times as a teenager when... Well, I remember saying things like:

"Stop singing!", while we were in the car. And, of course, Mom always said, "She can sing if she wants to. Leave her alone. She's happy." Yes, happy to be torturing me! But, I will confess, I find myself repeating Mom's words in similar situations with my own children.

"Don't walk so close to me!", while we were walking in the mall. Walking too close to your teenage brother in the mall just isn't cool! He doesn't want anyone to mistakenly think that you are his girlfriend and not just his sister! That is one of life's injustices that most teenage brothers are forced to bear. Some day I'll make a law about that too!

ANY WAY... Besides the few squirmishes between J and S, we had some fun while being snowbound yesterday. In fact, we got by with a little help of our friends, The Beatles. M saw a commercial on television for a new Beatles CD. When I told her that I had that CD, she got so excited and said, "Can we put it on? I want that one, 'I want to hold your hand,' Daddy!"

So we danced our way through most of the 27 tunes on the CD! At one point S, H, M and one of S's friends were all holding hands and dancing - on my bed! Then "Penny Lane" was ringing out through the halls at the top of someone's lungs. "Eight Days a Week" was a little confusing for young minds. As an adult, it sure feels like most weeks have enough work for eight days! My bed was quickly transformed from a dance floor into a "Yellow Submarine." M was the captain. She and I sat on the bed, facing each other with or feet together, singing and making silly faces at each other. There's nothing as silly as a four-year-old yellow submarine captain!

I've been thinking of changing one of the tunes to "JavaScript Writer." I wonder if it would sell??

THROUGH MOST OF MY LIFE, I really haven't had much of an interest in the Beatles. But, for whatever reason, I recently had a "hankering" for their music. That's a funny word, but I don't know how else to describe it. It's a "hankering." For the past few years, I've been getting these "hankerings" for music that I never wanted to listen to when I was younger. Some of the CDs that I now own I would not have been caught dead with in my possession as a teenager! And I'm finding that I've been getting "hankerings" for the music my Mom listened to while I was growing up!! Somebody save me!! Neil Diamond... Elton John... Carly Simon... Carole King... And I've got such a "hankering" for one of the old Chicago CDs! I must resist! I must fight it! I must put some cool music on! Alice Cooper! Give me Alice! Alice will help me!

So what is the moral of the story? Is it, once you have kids of your own you end up with "hankerings," talk like your Mom and listen to her kind of music?? Maybe it's, once you have kids of your own you start to appreciate your parents more. You begin to realize how much of their own life they gave up for YOU. As you pour yourself into your children you see that a good portion of what you are pouring has come from your parents. Then you may even get a glimpse of how so many things - both good and bad - have been pouring down from parent to child for generations. Hopefully you also have the determination to correct some of the low qualities that may have been passed along and to strengthen the higher qualities. Now, before I get way too philosophical on you, I think I better put some music on!

Neil Diamond anyone??

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