Wednesday, December 31, 2008
A non-holiday post
It's a complicated story of how I got on the board, and now I wish I had never opened my big, fat mouth.
Back when Mike was doing his travel to Houston, I was in the mode to become a very involved Alexandria citizen. (That was about the time I volunteered for about a dozen "committees" at church, and never got called to serve on any of them. Not that I'm bitter.) I also tried to keep up with my neighbors much more back then, partly out of security - I wanted them to know that I was alone and they should watch out for me.
So, one day this notice comes around for nominations to the board of directors. I had absolutely no complaints about the current board, and no causes that I wanted to take up as a director. But the way I read the notice, it sounded to me like there was an empty seat on the board. Not like I'd be running against anyone or anything.
I asked the busybody of the neighborhood, and he confirmed that, indeed, it was an open seat.
Out of civic duty, I put my name down.
Only to find out that it is not, in fact, an open seat, but rather I had signed up to run against the current president of the board, who'd served for years and pretty much ran the whole darned thing, and that by running, I was specifically running for the presidency spot.
Oops.
I inadvertently made a few enemies. And all I was trying to do was help out!
The meeting is held where the election will be, and both the current president and myself are asked to give speeches about why we'd be good presidents.
She gives hers, which is heartfelt.
I stand up and basically say, "Look, I didn't mean to run against anyone. I thought it was an empty spot, and I'd help out. I'd be happy to still do so. But in no way did I mean to imply that I was unhappy with [current president]. Sorry for the confusion."
Needless to say, I didn't win. (Thank goodness.)
But then a year or two later, a current board member moves. Not the president. So the president approaches me and asks if I'd like to be appointed to the board to fill his spot.
At this stage, I really don't. The civic duty calling has left me, and I'd really rather not bother. But I felt guilty, so I said "yes."
I'm not particularly active. The current president, while a bit domineering, really does take care of everything. It's a volunteer job, and she's really committed to it. There have only been a few small times when I've disagreed with a suggested policy, and we work it out.
Anyhow, I've pretty much skated by on the board not doing much but attending meetings. I've printed up and distributed a few fliers when we have construction going on in the neighborhood, but that's about it.
There is a third board member who has been keeping minutes AND sending out the dues notices every month. She asked if I'd take over the dues starting in January. And truly, it's only fair. It's my turn to pitch in, and it's really not a big deal. A few hours a month, some record keeping, no problem.
Last night I began my first attempt at sending out the dues and ran into immediate problems. The first has to do with the current system being a largely hand-written system, instead of any automation on the computer, or printed anything.
Fine, I put in a few extra hours this first month to make up a few Excel spreadsheets. No big deal.
But then I run into problem number two, and the true impetus for this rambling post.
The very first house record is wrong. A new couple moved in last month, and I don't know their names. I can't exactly send the dues notice with the old owner's name.
So I call the president. She doesn't know their names.
Then I call the neighborhood busybody. He also keeps track of the neighborhood contact list that's distributed to everyone, so he should know.
He does know, and he gives me their names.
Then he asks why I want to know. I tell him I'm starting to do the dues for the HOA.
"Oh!" He says with surprise. "So then you're the treasurer of the board now? I thought you were secretary. When did that happen?"
"Well," I reply, immediately seeing I'm in a trap, "I don't know what you'd call me, except someone processing the dues!"
"What happened to [other board member]? When people ask me, I say she's the treasurer. If you're doing dues, you must be treasurer. Is she secretary now? When did this take effect?"
Crap. I don't know if I've got a title. I don't know if [other board member] has a title. I know she's been doing the work of secretary (taking minutes) and treasurer (processing dues), and I was just trying to be fair. I don't know if we need office titles, or if the bylaws state we need some official action to change titles, or.... really? Really? This is important?
I try to put him off further by responding that we're just "not that big into titles, so call us what you want, I'm doing the dues now."
He actually said at one point, "I'm not trying to be nosey, it's just, well, I want to know what to tell people."
Because so many people care who's who on the Early Street Village homeowner's association. Really.
Okay, now that I have that off my chest, I can start entering these addresses into Excel...
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Margaritas! Wine! Chocolate Martini's!
I need to give incredible props to Mike, who did cut up the tomatoes and onions and lettuce and everything else you could want on tacos. He made the meat and squeezed the limes for margaritas. It was all delicious.
Robert and Kristin were hysterical and so much fun to hang out with, as usual. It was the first Barb and Joe had met them, and as Barb said later, "it was better than going to the theater!" The bantering and joking and general making fun never quite stops around them.
The drinking, evidently, doesn't either. Margaritas all around. Some beers. A bottle or two of wine. And because I somehow forgot that it was a Sunday night and I was off to work in the morning (and because I wanted to use Melissa's Christmas present to me, cool red and green martini glasses), I decided to whip up some chocolate martini's for desert.
You know, just 'cause.
Four and a half hours later, we were all still eating and drinking and being merry around the table.
Until I finally had to kick everyone out. I was about to fall over from exhaustion.
And as far as clean-up, Mike did help clear the table. But all clean-up credit needs to go to my in-laws, who washed what seemed like every piece of stemware in my house from the evening's festivities.
Monday, December 29, 2008
Sunday, December 28, 2008
A break?
It's day four of our holiday hosting craziness. Much less pressure today - the in-laws, my brother and sister in law and our friends the Keelings. Not so much "holiday-ness" around today (especially since it's 65 degrees outside). Just a day to get together with some friends we haven't seen in a while. And in all fairness, Lauren did offer to host, but with 8 of us, plus two dogs, there's just a bit more room to spread out here.
So Mike decided that he would cook today. No one should be shocked to discover that this means tacos for dinner.
All that's great, but as I tried to explain to him last night, that still meant that I'd grocery shop, cut up all the toppings, slice the chicken, vacuum the floor (goodness, I haven't vacuumed this much in ages!), and set the table. Then I'd step out of the kitchen for 15 minutes while he put meat in a pan and added a bag of seasoning. It'd splatter all over the place, he'd get kudos for "making" dinner, and then I'd (most definitely with the help of his parents, I'm sure) clean up.
He was appalled at what he characterized as my unfair description. So he insisted that we stop at the grocery store together on the way home from church, and that I go out for a pedicure this afternoon. That HE'D do EVERYTHING for dinner - the prep and the cooking (He did draw the line at cleaning up, though. Oh, and I still vacuumed and set the table, which involved laundry because a girl only has so many linens!).
This all makes me extremely nervous. I have to admit, I just don't trust it. I feel like he's going to use every dish in the house. And he'll forget things - like not chop up onions or tomatoes because he doesn't use them on his tacos. And that the meal won't run as smoothly as I'd like it to.
I know, I know! I have control issues! And I have issues with letting go of being the hostess, even if it's close friends that don't give a hoot if we serve salsa from the jar instead of in a nice dish.
He's being very thoughtful in making dinner.
But I'm still nervous. I wonder when he'll start the margaritas.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
And I thought yesterday was nonstop
Today is day three of entertaining large amounts of people, cooking and eating copious amounts of food.
And by copious amounts of food, today I mean mainly a lasagna that I cooked. My first ever!
Today two of my siblings and their families visited. They didn't arrive until almost 4 p.m., so I had the entire morning to make lots of appetizers (you know, the healthy ones, like sausage balls and sweet and sour meatballs and spinach and artichoke dip).
Patricia and Samantha arrived first. Here's Samantha and me, with Samantha in her Snow Princess prize:
So now it's about 9:45 p.m., and I'm about ready to pass out (Patricia and Samantha already went up to bed). The dishwasher just stopped, but it may need to wait until the morning to unload (my in-laws have been incredible helping with the cleaning up and everything - thank you!).
The day after Christmas
Maybe errors is too strong of a word. The day was just nonstop. Nonstop people, nonstop visiting, nonstop cleaning, nonstop eating, nonstop everything.
It started early with an immediate full house. Our housekeeper comes on Fridays, so she showed up around 7 a.m. I took the dog out for a walk, after visiting with her about Christmas for a bit. As I come back from the walk, the Direct TV guy is standing on the doorstep. The housekeeper wouldn't let him in, and Mike hadn't gotten up with his alarm. So the poor guy was just standing there, confused.
We needed the Direct TV guy to come because none of the DVRs worked after the first install. We come to learn this is because we have too many lines running into the house, because we have SIX televisions, and THREE DVRs. He informs us we need a SECOND satelite dish to accommodate. (Or, we can get rid of a TV or two, but come on, seriously?)
Because we're home from work, we tell him to go ahead. So the Direct TV guy and the housekeeper, and me, and Mike and Mike's parents are all trying to stay out of each other's way. And don't forget Goldie, who has no interest in staying out the way, but would rather be directly underfoot.
(And for the record, here's why I didn't ask the housekeeper not to come - there was a week a month or so ago when we accidentally locked her out by locking the storm door, and even though the following week we tried to pay her for the missed week, she wouldn't take it. So I wanted her to come, and I knew I'd just ask her to stop where ever she was at 11 a.m.)
Mike's parents do me a huge favor and go to the grocery store and so that at least gives a little more room. Still, the remaining four (five with Goldie) are all stumbling all over each other.
My father in law (Joe)'s brother, wife and three kids were planning on coming down from York for the day. So we were serving sandwiches for lunch when they arrived, then the plan was for the whole group to go to a museum.
The Direct TV guy finished at about 11:45 a.m., thank goodness, I drove the housekeeper to the Metro, and we whipped out some sandwich makings for 11. I decided to let everyone else go to the museum, and I'd clean up, and prep for dinner that night and the next night (my family is coming today, Saturday).
The American History Museum was so crowded, they said, that everyone ended up coming back about an hour earlier than I expected.
Snacks out, drinks served, grill fired up. Dinner and desert for 11 again, more visiting, and they left around 8:30 p.m.
Joe and I did some kitchen dancing while he made sticky buns and I tried to get a few things prepped for today. I completely crashed around 11 p.m.
No pictures at all of yesterday! But it's a little after 1 p.m. on Saturday, and I'm taking this quick break before my siblings and their families arrive. I've already snapped a few pictures of the lasagna in a making, so tomorrow I'll post up how today went!
Friday, December 26, 2008
Bacon Extravaganza (i.e. Christmas)
The holiday kicked off at David and Lauren’s, with a delicious turkey and all the trimmings.
An early morning Thursday with a quick jog to start the day. Good thing I got that exercise in, because the brunch was not exactly figure-friendly. Let's start with 3 pounds of bacon (yes, I did just say 3 pounds of bacon, for a brunch with 6 people), scrambled eggs, potato pancakes made with some of the left-over trimmings from the night before, bacon and cheese scones courtesy of Lauren, ham (again courtesy of Lauren), and some fruit thrown in for good measure. Washed down with mimosas and SoCo and cranberry juice.
A quick clean up before we could FINALLY open some presents! It was, like, NOON before we opened presents! On CHRISTMAS!!!
The dogs were hysterical during the present opening. They didn't know which way was up, they were so excited. Sadie loves to tear apart paper, so she kept shredding everything to pieces.
This is Joe trying to get the dogs to open their own presents. Sadie got the trick quick, but poor Goldie was just confused.
After presents, some more snacks (including pastry-wrapped Brie that I made, which was, OMG, so good), a round of Taboo, and then time to prep dinner.
Also used the bacon grease (do you know how much grease 3 pounds of bacon produces?) to saute the asparagus in (teeheehee). No photos of those two items, or of the set table - I must have been getting tired, or drunk, or both.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Coooooooookkkkiiiieeeesss
I'm already in a sugar coma.
Here's another view of the cookies, all stacked up, with some other gift baskets from work:
Monday, December 22, 2008
What a difference a few months makes

Sunday, December 21, 2008
Playing catch-up
Trust me, they taste better than they look. :-)
And about the yellow icing. Oops. I though it was red. But evidently I'm out of red. So we have green and yellow and white icing cookies. It's kind of like I made them for my high school booster club or something!
Today was about presents. Because these three can't actually read yet, I'm going to take a leap here and post up pictures of what I just bought for Aidan, Katheryn and Samantha. (They are visiting in six days! I can't wait to see them!)
I needed prizes for them to open (in addition to the savings bonds we get the kids - loved by their parents, not so exciting to open!). And these presents crack me up:
A remote control tarantula for Aidan:
A talking purse for Katheryn:
A Snow Princess tiara, wand and sash for Samantha (just don't tell Elizabeth!):
And new baking dish for me:
Oh, please, don't act surprised that I got a present when shopping for everyone else!
Saturday, December 20, 2008
In adoration
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
A weekend memories are made of
The weekend flew by too fast, but I have a lot of great memories to keep.
I had some great quality girl time with Melissa going to see Twilight. The movie itself was a bit of a disappointment, as I suppose all movies fashioned after books can be. I’ve got a better Edward in my mind than any actor could play.
Off to holiday and birthday parties, lots of catching up with old friends.

Did I mention it was cold? Very, very cold waiting for the race to start! We kept trying to move into the center of big groups of people for their warmth!
The game was a blast, not too cold (or that could have been the beers), and much to our surprise, the Steelers actually pulled out a win!
A warm and sleepy drive back to DC capped off the night.
But can I count Monday as part of the weekend, too? Two more colleagues flew into town and after a long day working and brainstorming, we celebrated the season with a holiday party at BLT Steak. I was lucky enough to be the one to plan the party, and I hope everyone had fun! Most of us are pretty close with all the traveling we do together, but there was a new face or two in the crowd, too.
I set up some games for us to play instead of it just being a dinner where you visited with the people sitting closest to you. The first one was close to a White Elephant game. I purchased 12 prizes, ranging in quality from an iPod shuffle and an espresso machine to hangers and kitchen towels. The prizes were unwrapped but marked with a letter, so everyone could see what they all were.
Then I wrapped up boxes. The only thing inside the boxes was a letter that matched one of the prizes on the table. After everyone randomly picked a number, we followed that order to pick a box, open it, and see what matching prize you got.
Complicated, but a lot of fun! It was great to see what prizes were left, instead of wrapping up items and people not knowing if the Harry Connick, Jr. CD they got was a good prize or a bad prize, because they didn’t know what else was left.
I, of course, went last. I’d just take whatever was left, and I was hoping it was one of the kids toys I bought from a $1 bin at Target.
But life can’t work out that well. And if you can believe it, I ended up with the iPod shuffle! I was mortified. The party planner is NOT supposed to get the best prize!
It looks rigged that way, and there is just no possible way I could have rigged this! It’s another reason why I put the presents out for display and wrapped up boxes with the letters inside – so all the boxes would look alike, and there would be no way for me to track what letters were in what boxes.
The second game I took myself out of the race completely. It was a trivia game, and I had e-mailed everyone to provide a question about their job. Then we’d see how well we all paid attention to each other! Everyone was a great sport and actually sent me questions. And we learned that we needed to start listening to each other in staff meetings just a bit more! Out of 13 questions, our highest score was a 6!
Lots of food and general merriment, generous prizes from the company, and more memories.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Is it the weekend yet?
I have plenty to do today, don't get me wrong. Good, important stuff. New, fun things.

But not weekend things.
Going to Twilight with Melissa tomorrow!! (I know, what kind of true fan can I be if the movie has been open for three weeks and I have yet to see it?)
We'll meet back up with Danny and Mike (they're going to a Georgetown basketball game. Relax, Joe, Danny went there and it's his birthday. Don't lecture on going to a GW game instead.), gather some more friends, and head to holiday parties galore!
Sunday morning I'm attempting my second 10k. (I'm actually debating deleting that sentence, because if my success in November was just a fluke, I don't want to have to tell you all that I didn't finish!)

With my head held high or hung very low, I'll join Mike, David and two of my colleagues are going to the Steelers/ Ravens game in Baltimore.
The fun doesn't stop there! Four out of town colleagues will be in the office Monday and Tuesday, with our holiday party (planned by moi) Monday night. Wednesday I fly to Dallas until Friday night.
Then the holidays are just a hop, skip and a jump away!
Okay, forget work, I need to be planning my holiday menus!
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Watchdog
We had our carpets cleaned this afternoon, and Goldie could have cared less that there was a strange man in the house, moving furniture, making a lot of noise, running machines all over the floor...
Goldie and I sat in the kitchen for the afternoon, and I had the doggie gate up to keep her in there with me. It was completely not needed. She didn't even sit at the gate and watch the man. She just slept on the rug, occasionally getting up to stretch and walk over to me to have her head petted.
Very mean and scary, this dog.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Time=Money
Saturday (after a great lunch with Melis up in Baltimore!), I "swung by" Target to do some shopping for my office holiday party prizes (more on this later, I promise). I had a reasonable idea of the purchases I needed to make, but was also going to need to browse a few items.
For example, I knew I needed an ipod shuffle, and the Harry Connick Christmas CD. But then I wanted to find a household/ kitchen item that was gender neutral and around $40. (Don't ask too many questions now, it's a very complicated prize system I've made up here.) (Oh - and I love what I settled on - single cup espresso machine, anyone?)
I spent two hours in Target getting my 13 prizes and wrapping paper. A small fraction of this was my fault in not being able to decide on items. But the rest was trying to get up and down aisles through hundreds of other shoppers, and being so fortunate that two of my items were in locked cases - in. separate. departments - and I had to wait twice for an employee to come and unlock the case. Oh, and they had to be wrung up separately. Lovely.
So Sunday I decided to online shop. Mike gave me a budget for everyone, and away I went. Mike's gifts? Check. Joe and Barb? Check. David and Lauren? Check. The office girls. Check. Jenelle? Check. Patricia? Check. Aunt Rita? Check. Terry and Sara? Like a mini-check.
And some more thrown in there.
It still took me hours. I probably spent from about 12:30-4:00 p.m. on the computer. And I still had my moments of indecision. And I almost called and cursed out one company whose Web site kept freezing on me during the check out process.
But, with tea in hand, cinnamon simmering on the stove, and Christmas music playing, I think it was worth the shipping costs.
Just don't tell Mike I took the liberty of only counting the base price towards everyone's budgets. I mean, it's not fair to give $5 less of a present just because it was ordered online!
Monday, December 8, 2008
Not guilty!
And there is so much to write about jury duty! It was an indecent exposure case. How many times do you think you can hear the word (insert male body part) in one day?
Add 100 to that number, and that's probably how many times I heard it.
Unfortunately, it was essentially a he-said, she-said case. Both sides had some inconsistencies, and some lines that just didn't add up. And I hate to say we found the guy "not guilty." It's not that we thought he was innocent. We just didn't think you could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that it was him that did it.
That was hard to disappoint the woman who brought the charges, because I do believe the experience happened to her. I also hated the judging part. I learned on Friday that I do NOT like to be a part of a jury. Contrary to what some girls I went to high school might say about me, I don't like to make judgements on others. At least, not when it really counts!
We ended up deliberating for about 10 minutes on this decision. And it would have been faster if two of the other jurors had let us take a straw poll from the start on how we found the defendant. But they wanted to talk out why they thought the prosecution didn't convince them, and all the things the prosecutor could have done to convince them.
So once we let them get that out of their system, we all agreed there was just no way to prove it was this guy.
All in all, the people at the Alexandria Court House love their job. The jury coordinator was a hoot, the bailiff was really friendly, and all the security guards were pleasant. So I can't really complain much about the day. Oh, and my fellow jurors, both before we were picked and after, were very chatty people.
And, I'm being a bit too chatty now. I've got a magazine I need to get to!
Friday, December 5, 2008
I can't tell you about it yet because it's still going on. I'm on lunch break now. We've actually heard all the testimony and even closing arguments. Then they dismissed us for an hour for lunch, we'll go back and deliberate.
Can I just say... I don't really like this whole "judging other people" thing. Contrary to what some girls in high school may say, I'm not into that. At least, not when it counts!
Thursday, December 4, 2008
I jinxed myself
Catch up and push forward!



Monday, December 1, 2008
It works! (for now!)
Just, please, keep your fingers crossed that it still works tomorrow...
Christmas decorations!
We arrived back in Alexandria of Friday afternoon and I immediately set in to Christmas decorating. Almost all of Saturday was dealing with the tree - a new one purchased at an after-the-holidays sale in January. I decided to go hog-wild with the lights this year, wrapping strands around each branch level as I put it up, instead of waiting to wrap the lights around the entire tree when it was finished. This proved to be a gorgeous idea. Just one that I'm a little worried about getting OFF the tree when it's time to take it down...
I'll take some snap shots this week to post up, because of course I'm going to assume you're all VERY interested in how the house looks.
Wow, that pretty much wraps up my weekend! Truly! Just lots of Christmas music, burning cinnamon on the stove, and trying out a new (and delicious) beef bolognese recipe!
Now, to online shopping...