Saturday, March 26, 2011

stumbleupon.com

Everyone probably knows about this but I just discovered stumbleupon.com. This little, unique search engine has provided HOURS of fascination. It has given me a new perspective on the internet.

You see, if you don't already know (which you probably do), you select all the various subjects that you are interested in from a extensive list. Then you just simply click on "stumble" and you literally stumble through the internet. But it's not stumbling at all. It's really a controlled hop through ALL the areas of knowledge that you are interested in. The website picks videos, pictures, articles and other sites that it thinks you might like. Things that you would never know existed. Subjects you never even knew you were interested in. I can feel my brain growing already.

I have always felt the internet was this archive crammed with everything you ever wanted to know. I love to wonder through it and see what I can learn. Whether it be skin diseases or information on inflammatory breast cancer, the internet has all the information you could want. Possibly too much information for a hypochondriac to absorb in a healthy way. Just wondering around the internet, though, has it's limitations. The limitations of one's own interests. You only go to places that you are interested in and rarely venture to anything else. 

Stumbleupon.com is simply an aid to your brain. The only thing that I know of that comes remotely close to this is Wikipedia's "random article" feature. While this feature gives you access to various topics that you wouldn't normally think of it doesn't hold your interest. After 5 or 6 articles about the specifics of various roads in Iowa, you get bored out of your mind and lose interest. 

The first 5 places that I "stumbled upon" made me laugh out loud, gasp in astonishment and learn something new about drinking water. All in five minutes. 


* That is some talent.

* You might know some, but probably not all.

* This is the funniest thing you will see all day. Seriously

*How useful is this?!?!?!?!

* Bring your tissues.


So, disregard the question "What did she pick to come up with those random topics that include basset hounds running?" Pick your own topics and have a blast. Expand your knowledge base and impress your friends! I am hoping it helps me with those epic battles of Trivial Pursuit. You know, random bits of useless knowledge :)

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

TUESDAY TUESDIES....

Yeah, that title doesn't really work but I wanted to do my normal Sunday Sundries post but didn't get a chance to on Sunday. Or just didn't do it. Either one, you pick :)

I feel like an animal coming out of hibernation. Only it's our business coming out of hibernation and I wasn't lucky enough to sleep through it. I am hoping the business will pick up soon because the stress is getting really old. I have been soliciting for new business but that's something I have always hated to do. "Please sir, will you give me some work? I promise I am good! Pinky swear!" UGH. It just reminds me of begging and automatically puts the solicitor in the weaker bargaining position. I haven't had to solicit in a long time so I am probably just spoiled but the recession has hit our business hard so I have to do what I have to do. I am only documenting this because I want to look back on it, years from now, and think "Remember when we were super slow? Those were the days!"

To recap the week:


  • Henry had his 15 month visit. He was upper 97% for head size, weight and height. The doctor looked at me and said "You know they are going to try to recruit him for football, right?" To which I replied, "We are super nerds, there is no athletic ability in this family. He is going to be a giant scientist." I was very nervous about this visit because the 12 month check up involved the phrases "developmental delays" and "can not rule out autism." I don't remember much after that. All I remember is that it was two weeks before Christmas and I went ballistic. A meeting with Early Intervention and a neurologist put my mind to rest, however. The neurologist actually said "Why are you even here?" This visit was just perfect. The NEW pediatrician marveled at how well such a large baby with HUGE thighs could walk and even went as far as to say "This child is not autistic."  Music to my ears. Not every mother hears that.
  • Henry has taken to following Ada everywhere. He stands at the kitchen door and barks at her. He drinks out of her water bowl (before I catch him!) like a dog would drink. When she is in her crate, he will always be in there with her. She is always so very gentle and patient with him. 








  • George is taking a lot of after school activities including Math Allstars, Coordination Games and Maymont Explorers. This week he even starts play practice for "Oh Rats! The Musical." His teacher, Ms. Glover, had to pick the most charismatic students in her class and he was one of two. Am I bragging? Yes. Duh. Mark volunteered at George's first play practice which involved pressing play on the CD player and herding cats children. 
  • We celebrated Greg Roeder's birthday this weekend! Great food, GREAT friends, lewd cards and ice cream cake. The girls even let the guys win at "Trivial Pursuit." It was a great time!
That's all I can think of at the moment but I am sure I missed something! Now it's time for some pictures!














These are some pictures from our weekly park excursion with that Emmett baby and his mommy :) Always the highlight of my week!







The cap was on!


Barking at the dog.

Have a great week everyone!


Monday, March 14, 2011

Henry and the Leprechaun Trap

I have had a bad day to go with the bad weeks I have been having. I am not complaining so much as just commenting on the state of the union. It's getting old. Really old. As usual, when things get rough I tend to look at the good things that we have going on. Since I have started this blog, I have found myself organizing blog posts in my head. I have wanted to capture a couple of things Henry has been doing lately and I got some really good videos today so I just wanted to share the goodness :)


Henry likes to bark at the dog in the back yard so I sneaked into the kitchen and I captured this. Not exactly barking but they are definitely having a serious conversation. All was lost, though, when he spotted mommy :)



The second and third videos are of Henry's unique crab crawl. Since he has started to walk I wanted to catch this crawl before he stopped doing it. It's pretty hard to describe this crawl to people so I had to catch it on video. Every time a stranger sees it, they are pretty astounded at how quickly he moves.He has never crawled normally. Not a single second in his life.

Since the 17th is St. Patrick's Day, George's school has jam-packed the entire week with St. Patrick's day activities. Most importantly, is the "Leprechaun Trap" project. Yes, parents and students are supposed to design a "trap" to catch a Leprechaun. Apparently, according to the take-home sheet, Leprechaun's are attracted to gold coins, rainbows and lucky charms. LUCKY CHARMS. So Mark and I have been discussing with George what he thinks would make a good Leprechaun Trap. We had planned on going to the Children's Museum to use all their art supplies and built a super wicked trap. That did not happen for various reasons SO my husband came home with: Lucky Charms, Bread and green icing. Because: "It's like glue baby, you know? We will put the icing on the bread and stick the lucky charms in it and then the Leprechaun with get stuck in the glue. Get it?" Yeah, I get it. Wow. I think we might take another shot at it tomorrow but it made for some good pictures. I think my husband just wanted to buy green icing because they pretty much just ate it.


Sunday, March 13, 2011

SUNDAY SUNDRIES

It's been a long and ridiculously stressful week. Here's the week round-up:


  • I believe the woman we bought Ada from is either bat @#$% insane or just really really dumb. To quote this woman word for word on her website: "Amazing as it sounds the longer coat shepherd sheds less then there short haired realitives and when they do they shed once or twice a year, the reason is because the long coats have no thick undercoat like the short coat shepherd. All that is required is monthly bathing and once a week brushing." Let's overlook the obvious grammar and spelling errors because, hey, she might not have spell check right? I vacuum and sweep on a daily basis and there is enough hair collected to build a whole new dog. It is a constant, never ending struggle that leaves me wondering if shaving the dog is even a possibility. And to bath this dog once a month? REALLY? I guess I would do that if I want my house to smell like a kennel. I asked Mark if we could use the vacuum on her but he said it "wasn't nice." He's such a softy.
  • I had jam packed my Thursday with a doctor's appointment and a business meeting on top of the work I had to do. Everything got pushed back, however, when it started to rain in the morning and the dog decided to roll around in the mud and then promptly come inside to shake all over clean clothing. This resulted in Ada being shoved placed gently in the bath tub for an hour and a half in order to get all of the mud off of her. She emerged from the bathroom refreshed and ready to play while I emerged covered in mud and ready to go back to bed. The rest of the day was just as super awesome.
  • George alerts us to EVERYTHING Henry does which is incredibly helpful. "MOM! Henry is playing in the toilet!!" "MOM! Henry is walking!!" "MOM! Henry is playing in the dog food!" He is my Henry Naughty Behavior Alert System. It's fantastic. He is such a wonderful big brother and really a all-around wonderful kid. 
  • We had parent-teacher conferences on Friday morning and when George heard this he started to cry. "I don't want to go to the parent-teacher conference, I just want to stay home with you and Daddy." After asking "why not" about fifteen times he finally came clean. "Because I have been calling out on the carpet a lot and I don't want to get in trouble." George NEVER tells us what goes on in school. NEVER EVER EVER. "How was school?" "Fine" "What did you learn" "Nothing" Sigh. 
  • We had a wonderful night at The Roeders on Saturday night. I had such a hard week that I had been looking forward to getting together and relaxing . I REALLY relaxed. Greg introduced me to rum and cokes which I had never liked before. I realize it's not a new drink and I also realize I should not have had 4 of them. We watched "Megamind" and I thought it was just hilarious. I watched again this morning and didn't find it all that funny. Weird. We have wonderful friends, though. We are very very lucky.
  • Mark's back is feeling better. He is continuing to recover and passed his mandatory drug test that they give every tech who gets hurt on the job. (That fact that he passed is no real surprise)
  • I am ready for work to pick back up and the money to become steady again. I am ready to be very very busy. I also need to be reminded that I said this when I get too busy and get stressed about that. 
  • And finally and MOST IMPORTANTLY, Henry started to walk on 3/10/2011 at 15 months and 1 day. It's the cutest thing ever. I got a video of it. That will follow later once I can figure out how to crop me out of the video since I totally do not want to post myself in Halloween pajamas on the internets. (yes I know I pluralized that, spell check, I did it on purpose)
I hope everyone has a wonderful, stress-free week!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

This is not where I thought I would end up...

NOTE: THIS ENTRY IS FOR FAMILY HISTORY PURPOSES. YOU MAY BE BORED....VERY VERY BORED.

I never, EVER thought I would end up as a title  researcher. For that matter, owning my own business never even crossed my mind as a possibility. Title research, as any of my fellow researchers will tell you, is something you just fall into on the way to your dream job.  At first you say "Oh I will just do this until I find a REAL job." Then it's "Wow,  I am actually pretty good at this." The next thing you know it's five years later and you have no memory of where the time went.

I started working for a small title research company in Annapolis, MD in 2001 after I had graduated from college with a B.S. in Criminal Justice. I had moved back in with my parents because my boyfriend had done me the HUGE favor of breaking up with me (no seriously, we were just wasting each other's time). For months, I applied to various criminal justice jobs in various places like the ATF, FBI, Treasury Department, etc etc. I had NO idea what I wanted to do. My mother, in the meantime, saw that I wasn't doing anything useful and started to ask around. She knew a woman, who knew a woman who's husband was working for this guy or something like that. 2001 was the height of the refi boom and Bob (my boss at the time) couldn't get enough good workers. People were making money like crazy. We worked hard and he rewarded us very well. 

I didn't like title research at first because it was just so mundane. Incredibly detail oriented. You are paying attention to the slightest detail like comparing the curve of someone's signature on a mortgage in 1998 to that of a mortgage in 2000 just to make sure the same person signed it and it wasn't fraudulent. So many details to keep track of and if you missed something you could be sued for extremely large amounts of money. We were stuck in a dank room with no windows, sifting through huge, dusty old books filled with barely legible ancient handwriting. The room didn't have proper ventilation so the winter months involved one sickness after another. The record room was filled with about 20 other companies all doing the exact same thing you were doing. Every one of these people had come about their job the exact same way you did so no one really had anything in common except our job. Plus, we were all competing with each other so it got ugly on a regular basis. If someone wasn't wearing deodorant you would know and it would make you miserable all day long.  I stuck with it, though. It turns out I am really very good at paying attention to very small details. I am very good a my job. Who knew?

Anyways....


I was there for a year before the owner's son said "I have a friend that needs a job" and of course our boss said yes since he couldn't find enough people. That's how I met Mark but that's a story for another time. After being together for a year when we decided that we couldn't afford to live in Maryland. 350K for a double wide trailer with no AC? No thank you. I went to college in Richmond and knew the housing market was much more affordable in certain parts of Virginia. We had no family in Richmond but my best friend was eventually going to move back when her husband finished his schooling so we thought "why not?" We always wanted to move around and not be stuck in one place so this was an adventure. Looking back on it, I am pretty proud of the fact that they we uprooted our tiny family for better opportunities. It was very hard to move to a place that was far away from family and support. We still struggle with it, even more so since having children.

Mark and I were hired at the same abstracting company and some friends of ours were kind enough to let us stay at their house until we found an apartment which took about a week. So we had a job and we were getting married in a few months. Everything was right on track. Or so we thought.

Fast forward to 8 months after our wedding. We were still working for the same company and were reassured time and again that our jobs were very secure. Feeling our jobs were secure we felt good about getting pregnant on our honeymoon. Yes, our honeymoon. Then, 8 months later Mark and I were laid off at the same time from the same company. We were devastated. We didn't know what to do. We had always talked about starting our own abstracting business but hadn't started to plan for it, let alone save any money for the business. It was now or never. We could keep going from one abstracting business to another or we could start out on our own and not have anyone to answer to. This rates at the most stressful time in our lives. In almost a week we incorporated our business, got life insurance and started to solicit business.

George Isaac Starkey was born almost exactly 9 months after our wedding on July 31st 2005. We were married on October 30th 2004. You do the math :) Why not? Every single member of my family has :)

So we had a newborn baby, a new business, no money coming in except for some savings and a crapload of stress. We also had absolutely no health insurance. I honestly don't know how the stress didn't eat us alive. It makes me ill just thinking about it.

Everyones knows what happened next. The market crashed. Many of our clients closed up shop and declared bankruptcy without paying us what they owed. Our plans to buy a house were put at the bottom of the list while we struggled to manage with the day to day. For two years we struggled to maintain steady work and steady money before Mark decided to go out and get a "real" job. With that real job, we had stability and more importantly, health insurance. The fear of not having health insurance still haunts me. I can sympathize with young parents who don't have insurance for their babies. I was constantly worried about one of us getting sick.

Another fast forward to today. Sometimes I think I am in the wrong business. I think I have missed my calling in the medical field. When I am not getting any work in from my clients, when my clients treat me like I am nothing, when I don't get paid for the work I do, when the stress seems too much I just think about all the good things this job gives me. Most importantly, this job gives me time with my children. The flexibility to pick them up whenever they are sick, to stay home with them when needed, to be there for the school plays and awards ceremonies.

This business has also given me a beautiful, loyal friend. We are both small business owners working every day to keeps clients happy while trying to maintain the proper balance of family and work. We know what each other is going through because we are going through it at the same time. She is one of those friends that that ALWAYS listens and ALWAYS cares. She is always honest and open. I can always count on her to tell me the truth, good or bad. She has the maturity to know that no marriage is perfect (and none is, those to who claim to have a perfect marriage are big fat liars) and no mother is perfect. This description doesn't do her justice but she needs an entire entry all to herself so I will stop here. She has taught me what being a good friends means. She even hugs me when she KNOWS I don't like it and I just tolerate it. Because it's her...(I heart you, Tanya :) )

So even though I never thought I would be in this business (or knew that it even existed), this is where I needed to be to become the person I am. Owning a business is hard. No one ever tells you how hard it is but I can always go and do something else. This is my choice and there is no complaining. I have no boss and only I am responsible for my success. This business has shown me the bottom of the barrel but I can take credit for every inch of success that I have earned.




Sunday, March 6, 2011


I stole this idea from another blog I read. Every Sunday I will run through the weeks events that don't warrant an entire post but are worthy enough to mention. Plus it's just me being a little lazy.


  • George missed one day of school again for a stomach bug on Tuesday. I thought it was the start of another round of stomach bugs for everyone but it did not spread thankfully. At 4:30 am George comes into our room and says: "Can I sleep with you guys?" Half awake, I say: "Sure. Ok." George: "I am going to take my shirt off because it's wet." Now I am awake and say: "why is it wet??" George: "Because I threw up 5 times in my bed and I don't want to sleep there anymore." 
                                                                  SIGH.
           
          That sounds reasonable right? Mark and I spring into action. We make a good team. One of us puts
          the subject child in the bath tub while the other cleans up the mess. We usually end up all sleeping on 
          couch so we can monitor said child for more vomiting and control it better. By 8am he was all better 
          better but still had to stay home. I designate a chair in the living as the "sick chair" and cover it in a 
          sheet so we can possibly control the spread of whatever disease has hit us that week. 
  • Also on Tuesday Mark hurt his back at work. He was under a crawl space and felt a little twinge in his back but kept working. As time went on, however, it got so bad that he couldn't move. So again he had to go to the hospital but this time around the supervisor on call was a really great guy and stayed with him the entire time and brought him home at 9:45 at night. He is slowly getting better but the emergency doctor sent him home with narcotics and said he could go back to work the next day. Really? Moron. I won't even get into the difference between men and women when they are sick/hurt.
  • George and Henry went to Oma and Grandad's so I could go to a bridal shower on Saturday. The bridal shower was a lot of fun and I won the purse game because I had a DVD, a ball up tissue, a piece of candy stuck to my purse and the bridal colors because I had a crapload of legos in my purse. It was a sweet sweet victory.
  • Ada has recovered nicely from her surgery to fix her "having babies" problem. I, apparently, don't have the same opinion of dogs as most people do because when I told someone I turned down extra pain medication because "it's a dog and it doesn't feel pain like we do" I was labeled a monster by some co-workers. Not really, but I am sure their opinion of me was lowered a little. Oh well, I stand by my statement. Ada slept when she got home and by the next day she was hopping around and playing again. Now she just smells like an outhouse because we couldn't wash her for a week. 
  • Saturday night we had a lovely date night with our friends Laurel and Greg. Laurel and I got inebriated on beer and margaritas and ate extremely hot food. The husbands dealt with our drunkenness very well and were only slightly annoyed :) We also went to see "Take Me Home Tonight" which was not that good but I didn't have high expectations AND I was drunk so I enjoyed myself. Immensely. 
  • Idea for later blog post: My father, at breakfast this morning, says during a story he is telling: "This watch has had more sea time than you have."
This week looks to be long and difficult. I have a meeting with a new client which I hope turns out well. We need to find a babysitter for Henry since it's starting to pick up. I am hoping the worst is over and the work dry spell is done with. It's been stressful. 

Have a great week to my 3 readers!!