Thursday, December 13, 2012

Home Alone :(

          Tonight Trish was at a ladies church function and took Felicity with her.  I was therefore home alone working on stuff.  I'm sure I've been home alone since Felicity was born but I can't think of any occasions.  I will log this away as the tentative first.

          I didn't realize I would be lonely.  Pretty much my daily routine consists of feeding my daughter (about 10 minutes usually?), giving her a nap (anywhere from 29-31 minutes, depending on when I check my watch--I don't think I even know adults who are this consistent let alone kids), and then playing, reading books, exercising and changing diapers for 2 hours.  Repeat until 5:30pm.  At no point in there do we discuss politics, the weather or anything regarding me.  At least not as a dialogue.

          The only linguistic interaction we have would be on the phonetic level, not even the phonological level, let alone the lexical level.  I recall making farting sounds back and forth with my daughter all day this week.  I think we did the "b" sound and some vowels for a while during the last couple months.  That about sums up our conversations.

          Don't get me wrong.  Hearing my daughter make farting sounds with her lips is enjoyable and makes me truly proud as a father.  And we have a great time just making faces and blowing raspberries on her armpits.  Yep, my lips go in her armpits and she laughs up a storm; go ahead and think it's gross but if you saw my 5-month-old laughing that hard, you'd do it too.  Shamelessly.

          But this is just the problem.  I actually do enjoy spending time with my daughter.  Even if she's ignoring me for her tupperware and I'm sitting on the couch doing something else, we both know the other is there and we're comforted by that fact.  And we've been doing this for over 3 months so it's becoming our way of life rather than a temporary arrangement.

          So not having my daughter upstairs flopping around in bed, or my wife reading in the family room, or anyone around was kind of lonely.  And that's just for 2 hours.  It's certainly nice to realize that my family is part of my life and inseparable from my self now, though, as opposed to a chore and something I have to deal with.

Here's your reward for reading my post:

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Staying at home



          The last few months have been exciting.  I get to celebrate the simplest things now: first smiles, first time grabbing things, even pushups now have a pleasant aura about them—when I’m doing the watching, of course.

          However, I’ve found some negative aspects to it that make it a challenge for me.  For instance, as much as I feel I’m the more emotional one in our family, I just don’t feel quite as “mommy” as I could if I were . . . a mommy.  Yes, I feed my daughter; I change her diaper, wash her diapers, play with her, read to her, take her for walks and so on.  But let’s take the playing as an example of how I’m not very mommy. 

          For me, there’s a certain amount of playing that needs to be done.  We have certain developmental tasks that we need to be working on—quad blasting, balance, consonantal articulation—periods of time with the various toys, regular changes of location.  I call this scheduled fun.  And the “fun” doesn’t stop there.  I even collect data on when she sleeps and eats, and how much of each.  I’ve been hesitant to record when she poops.  I’ll let you guess what I ended up deciding on that one.

          Basically, like any good guy, there's a job to be done.  So we get in and git er done.  Even making sure to not just hurry through things is a checklist item in the ol’ planner.

          Physiology is the next major challenge.  Not only am I not mentally a woman, I’m not physically one.  Yep, bottles can be taken anywhere.  Nobody’s going to accuse you of indecency if you wave a bottle around in public.  Uncovered.  Or spray milk all over.  I admit that’s pretty handy.  But just because she can eat anywhere doesn’t mean she does it.  Like with breastfeeding, she has her certain places and positions that she has grown accustomed to when it’s time to eat.  And that’s what she demands or she goes on strike.  And when we’re out too long, guess what.  I don’t have the built-in components to magic up some more milk for her.  Better pack a thermos or stay close to home.

          As if the mind and the body were not enough, society is the last challenge I’ll drag into this.  I’ll admit, on most days I forget that I participated in a war, taught college and did some other cool stuff that would give most people a lot of confidence.  But I still manage to feel somewhat valuable even when all questions regarding how we raise our daughter are directed to my wife.  “So, what kind of diapers do you use?”  “Does she have a sleep schedule?”  “Is it hard having daycare?”  Woah, what?  Since when am I “daycare”?

          Ya, those hit a solid nerve and a half.  But the two things that get me most are these.  Nobody, and I mean nobody invites me to play groups.  Granted, splitting between one other mom and myself would feel more like a play date for us than for my daughter who isn’t going on dates until she’s married.  But I’m pretty sure play groups come in different sizes.  What—don’t think I can talk about cooking?  Afraid I’m anti-feminism?  That doesn’t even make sense—look at my family!

          Now, here’s the killer.  ALL of my daughter’s clothing, from the boy hand-me-down clothes to the brand new girly clothes ALL say “Mommy loves me” or “I love Mommy!”  I love her too, don’t get me wrong.  But I just deleted the first words that came to my keyboard.  Doesn’t anyone realize that our society is falling apart because onesies don’t encourage complete families?  It all starts right there on that little piece of cloth that absorbs everything the diaper misses.  Curse you, multi-billion-dollar baby fashion industry.  My wife hunted around for some clothing to make me feel better.  By Father’s Day she came up with ONE.  Seriously.  On Father’s Day.  What do they think dad’s want, ties?  Socks?  Come to think of it, I am running a little low on socks right now.

          I’ll end the complaining now.  I know my wife’s a bit jealous that I get to see more of Felicity’s developments.  When she gets home from work it’s almost time to put Felicity to bed.  Then in the morning she’s getting ready for work about the time Felicity is waking up.  I’m lucky that I get to see smiles and laughter so often, and I love that.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

The Woeful Tale of Eric the Unafraid, but possibly Unnerved

This might take a while to read.  It took a while to run it so it makes sense.
 

     So I’m training for a couple ultra-marathons coming up very soon—far sooner than I let myself realize.  Tonight’s training was supposed to be 3ish hours, hoping for 4 hours.  I didn’t get to the trail until about 5:30pm (in mid-October when the sun goes down earlier than I'm used to).  Normally I train in the morning or midday, depending on not very many important factors.  Basically, I haven’t trained for any nighttime running, and probably won’t need much for how short these ultras will be.
 

     Despite the hoped length of the run, I decide to take my headlamp and warm shirt with me just in case.  I planned to be back at the car after 2 hours so I could get more water if I needed, and to send a text message home to say that I haven’t been eaten by any bears.  Heh.
 

     The light is good at 6pm.  Fellow trail users are friendly and courteous.  The leaves are turning lovely shades of yellow, orange and red.  It is cool enough to want extra clothing, but warm enough that I will not need them for quite some time.  It is a good evening to be running.
 

     Somewhere around 45 minutes into my run I see a pickup truck below me on a road.  It is a park service truck and it is stopping where it’s at.  It might be stopping so that the rangers can tell me to go home because the park closes at dusk.  I will not be stopping my run at dusk.  I am a runner.  I was also a US Marine.  I am not afraid of the dark, and I am quite familiar with these trails.  I run on, but not far.  I actually think I just heard growling, or a squirrel, or sticks banging1. I actually wonder if the truck was trying to locate a bear.  A few seconds of wondering, with a little light left and plenty of grit and determination, and I’m running again.
 
     It’s been about an hour and there is significantly less light.  I really do know these trails but I stop and pull out my headlamp because I’ve got nothing to prove by trying to run in the dark.  Or at least I haven’t seen anyone for a few miles to prove it to.  I’ve selected a place to turn around that’s about another ½ hour on; this should get me a solid 3 hour run, after which I can run a couple out-and backs closer to the car if I really need to and feel like it.
 

     About ten minutes later it is quite dark and I decide to turn around.  This is not because I’m scared of the dark.  This is not because I am afraid I’ll hurt myself.  No, no.  It is simply smarter to run closer to the car when it is this dark.  I decide that it will be just as well if I take up the rest of my run in the morning.  And so I set off along the dark and dreary path.
 

     I still have my watch running and I am still checking it from time to time, but despite this I’m not very aware of the passage of time anymore.  I am, however, very aware of the rocks on the ground.  The squirrels have gotten louder and I am lonely.  I am not bothered by the dark, but I am bothered by how lonely it is.  Not scared, just unnerved.  I am fortunate that a group of cyclists have converged with my trail.  As long as I can see them, I feel comforted.  So I run faster despite the growing dark, despite the distortion from my headlamp.  Even for how slow they are riding in the evening, they are still riding faster than me and they eventually disappear.  And I am left alone again.
 

     At this point the monologues in my head have started.  Bravery.  Bravery versus stupidity.  It is not courageous or brave, I am telling my future sons, to break into these creepy, abandoned houses on the side of the trail here simply to show that you can overcome fear or prove to your buddies that you are not a coward.  Bravery is when you do something dangerous that you didn’t want to do, but you did it in order to help someone else.  You still feel scared when you are brave, you just ignore the fear.
 

I am running in the dark.  I am not brave.  I am not being modest about it.  I am simply stupid.
 

     There is no more light at all at whatever pm it is now.  There are no more fellow trail users.  The leaves have turned to eerie shades of dark, darker and abysmally black.  My breath is now steaming out of my mouth as though some foul creature were in front of me.  I do not want my warm shirt; I want a cup of hot cocoa.  It is an awful night to be running.  I am not so much unnerved at being alone.  I am scared of the dark.  I want to be home.
 

     The trees are no longer standing straight up, but are leaning inward above me, their branches reaching out at me just beyond the edge of the trail.  The deer’s teeth are growing into fangs and I am less sure of the path.  Twice I have to stop to make sure if I am still on the trail.  Another cyclist passes and life is good.  I am confident for another five minutes.  Just long enough to last until I emerge from the forest to run along the edge of a couple farms.  The air is sweet outside the forest.  The trail is clear and the light is a little better.  I love running at night.  I revel in the solitude.
 

     All too soon the trail leads back into the forest for the last 10 minutes.  The last mile of my run.  It is dark again but I know this section of the trail better than any other.  I have been scanning the trees overhead and the bushes alongside me to see if there are eyes looking back at me, reflected in my dim lamp-light.  Only once have I seen a deer since it got dark and it did not stay in sight for more than a flitting moment.  My attention to the trees has cost me a bloody toenail and a few splashes in the puddles but that’s autumn running.  I can laugh this off.
 

     Suddenly the trail winds a strange direction.  I’m not heading toward the road anymore.  Do I hear the cyclists loading their bikes onto their cars?  I’m not sure.  The trail is definitely petering out into a track, as opposed to the wide, rocky path that I’m used to.  I have chosen a different fork in the trail than the one I normally take.  The usual one has a larger stream crossing and I don’t feel like slipping on the rocks or trudging through the stream.  And isn’t water where animals congregate?  Maybe that’s just on the nature programs but I chose the other fork anyway.  Why.  Why now.  There haven’t been any other little trails that I could have gotten off on but I’m definitely heading out to another part of the park where I don’t want to be.  Or was there another trail back there a ways . . . ?

     I’m not worried about that anymore because I can see a pair of eyes reflected back at me a little ways off the trail.  They’re not blinking.  They’re staring.  Silly, it’s probably just one of the trail signs reflecting back at me.  In the shape of two small eyes.  But there aren’t any trail signs on this part of the trail.  And they just blinked.  “Hey, is that somebody over there?”  Please answer.  Well, I’ll just pick up one of these rocks to throw at it.  That should scare off this thing--it's probably a deer.  Wait, how can there be no rocks on a trail that has been covered in rocks for over 2 hours of my run?  Here’s a stick I can throw.  More like balsa wood.  Who puts stick-shaped pieces of balsa wood on the trail?  It doesn’t fly very far.  And the eyes don’t move.
 

     I try sliding up and down the trail a couple feet to see if I can catch a glimpse of the animal.  But with my dim lamplight I just can't see anything.  But it’s off the trail anyways so I’m just going to go ahead, slowly.  As I start walking, the animal seems to have disappeared.  I can’t tell if it’s hiding now or if it has moved, but the trail has suddenly turned right back to where the eyes were.  Now what.  After several moments of thoughtlessly considering what I should do, I notice that the eyes are now further away.  So I bravely creep forward a little further.  Or is that stupidly?  I’m barely aware that the trail has opened up again and is a bit more familiar.  This is little comfort as the eyes stay still while I clap my hands and then throw another stick that floats like a paper airplane.  Can this really be happening this close to the car?
 

     Another eternally long minute or so passes and the eyes disappear again.  The trail is definitely—how many times have I used this word tonight only to find out how utterly devoid of meaning it is for me??—heading where I think it should, and away from the eyes.  From the deer, I’m sure.  Quite sure.  But do deer hunt like velociraptors?  While I’m watching this one, are there others closing in alongside me ready to disembowel me with their predator-developed 2-inch long . . . deer hoof?  This thought isn’t even funny at this point.  I’m running for it.  Full speed, up the hill, I’m not that tired, it won’t follow me quickly enough because I’ll catch it off guard.  And I won’t look back because if I don’t then it can’t follow me.  Whatever.  Just run.
 

     The adrenaline courses through my body as I race up the hill.  2 hours of running tonight and I’m not the least bit tired as I expel large puffs of mist from my mouth.  Well, actually it kind of hurts and I’m not so sure that was adrenaline.  Fear, definitely.  But probably not adrenaline.  Then I hear it.  I stop and turn, and see the eyes again as it comes to an abrupt stop bounding through the forest towards me.  This is a mountain lion.  In a forest in the middle of an urban environment.  A mountain lion that is bounding through the forest?  I have no idea what it is.  I still can’t see anything but the eyes.  Raptors are smart enough to know to stay at the edge of your light.  They know that Petzel headlamps that were manufactured 3 years ago have a luminous range of about 40 feet.  It knows to stand exactly 41 feet away.  Maybe it’s an error with the conversion from the metric system.  Strange thoughts creep into your mind when you’re scared.
 

     The Marine in me comes alive.  I shout with all the authority that I ever had, loud enough that anyone close by can hear me.  Loud enough that the eyes disappear and bound away.  Or skulk.  Ya.  I’ll say it skulked away when I retell this story.  Skulked away quickly.  The Marine is gone now and I find myself racing down the trail again.  This is the home stretch and I can see my own car and the cars passing by on the country road.  All the trails have converged now and I would normally walk this last, very short stretch to cool down.  But I do not stop running until I get to my car.  I unlock the car, turn off my light and start stretching as another car passes by me.  The leaves following in its wake look and sound like animals running towards me.  I stop stretching and jump into my car.  I lock all the doors—can deer evolve enough to open car door handles?  Clever girl.  It’s still not funny.
 

I hate running at night.  And I am scared of the dark.

Footnotes:
1 Don't worry, this is only supposed to make sense to a few people.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Druid Hill Park dirt trails


     I’m sad to see that no one has mapped, mentioned or marked the little dirt trails branching off the Jones Falls Bike Trail in Druid Hill Park.  Thus far in my year in Baltimore I’ve avoided the whole park out of fear of the local residents and because I’ve found so many miles of quiet trails to explore at Gwynns Falls/Leakin Park and Patapsco Valley State Park.  But since I often wake up too late to drive very far and I try to avoid just running from my front door down the sidewalks, I’ve been pushed to explore the rather close Druid Hill Park.

     Again, about a year after my arrival and first glimpse of “the scary park” I’ve discovered a different sort of park than I envisioned.  First, the people.  There are plenty of Baltimore crazies out there.  But honestly, the ones who take the time to go out to the park tend to be the low-key, nicer type.  They learn to recognize you, say hi to you and treat you pretty well.   However, most of the people there are there for the same reason you probably are: to run, bike, or just walk around.   They also tend to recognize you, say hi to you and treat you pretty well.  It’s not such a scary park.  True, I might not run through the more forested part at night, especially if I were a young, female.  That doesn’t really apply to the daytime.

     Secondly, it turns out that the park is pretty big.  You can still see the big, green dot the park occupies even if you’re zoomed out of the Baltimore beltway pretty far.  Consider: it houses a reservoir, a zoo and a Frisbee golf course, a botanical garden, plus quite a bit of other usable green space.

     I guess the point is both that I’m sad for not having spent more time there but excited that I’ve gotten around to exploring it now.  I started with the reservoir loop and discovered some public exercise equipment.  I know most people are in the techno-gyms lifting 50-lb circuit boards and achieving better results than Rocky Balboa in his home gym (cue the juxtaposition of Rocky vs the Russian in Rocky IV . . .), but when you’re poor it’s not so bad to use a purple, 30-lb shoulder press bar in the middle of a park.

     Beyond the loop, the Jones Falls Bike Trail runs through the park.  If Google.Maps is to be trusted, it runs about 1.7 miles from the reservoir back to the edge of the park.  The fun part about it is that it manages to get away from people for at least one relaxing chunk of the trail.  Sadly, while it takes you past the zoo, it doesn’t allow you a view of any of the exhibits—by design, I realize, but I can still lament.

     But the entire reason I wanted to fling this line of text out into cyber space is in the hopes of catching anyone who is trying to find a bit of dirt within the city.  Yes, I know there are other options and I also realize that anyone looking to train for a trail race will need something more substantial like GunPowder, Patapsco or the not really a trail NCR.  But there are actually some dirt tracks that run you around Druid Hill Park.

     Thus far, I’ve only just discovered them and have little more than an intention to chase them down.  But up where the Bike Path meets the north end of the park, there are two dirt trails that branch off the road on either side and take you a fair distance away from the bike path.  Along the way they branch off into other little trails.  Time didn’t permit me to do more than about a mile total but that’s a start, there was plenty of trail ahead of me yet to run, and it's considerably better than running along North Avenue.  There is another up by the zoo hospital, but I'm not yet sure if this is part of the Frisbee golf trail chain.

     As soon as I got home I started snooping around the internet (I actually ate) and found nothing about how many little trails there are, where they start out or meet or anything.  Which led me to writing this: little more than an infatuated ode to a park that I just got a crush on.  I’m glad there turns out to be a very substantial amount of green space in what isn't as dingy of a city as I first took it to be.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Oh Baltimore – Part 1: the Driving Anals. I mean Annals


     I’ve been putting off writing this post for some time.  In my mind I was waiting until I had enough material.  That would have been about a week or two after moving here.  I think it was more to make sure I wasn’t angry or cynical as I wrote.  Here I am anyway.

     Today’s favorite was the guy who pulled up behind me with about 3 feet between his bumper and mine and honked at me for only speeding by 3 miles per hour.  The numerical coincidence took me away to my blissful paradise in another state while the guy promptly turned off the road anyways.

     Speeding is a major issue here in Baltimore.  That is, if you’re not doing it then you risk getting your license revoked, or your trunk smashed.  We always know we’re getting close to home when the relative speed moves from only a couple mph over the limit to between 10-12.  Better yet is the expressway in the middle of town; I get passed like I’m stopped when I’m only doing 10 over—in any lane.  They put up signs along the side of the expressway that read “3 seconds distance” and “Obey speed limit”, like we were in kindergarten but with a license to kill drive.  They don’t even bother putting cops on patrol there.  None of them are brave enough to pull anyone over.

     Driving isn’t the only thing we complain about or are terrorized by here.  It does, however, occupy a vast majority of our time and topics of conversation.  I have forgotten that there is a debt crisis in the world largely because we no longer have time to talk about it.  It’s far more fascinating to gripe about the fact that we just got flipped off for thinking of going through a green light when a pedestrian wants to cross.  When they’re really mad they don’t flip you off, they put up the stop hand and slide the head from side to side: “Uh-uh!  No you di’ in’t!”  This is most effective in the middle of the crosswalk on your green light.

     We actually wondered how pedestrians can get away with this so “safely.”   Let me elaborate.  It’s 10pm and you’re out driving somewhere in Baltimore (that was dumb).  The street lights are broken.  Suddenly, you see a dark shape in front of you.  It’s some dude dressed in total black crossing a 45 mph road.  There was a traffic light about a 2-minute walk down the road, but this was safer . . . somehow.  It’s funner when it’s raining outside in Baltimore.  I’ve come to realize that the little people stickers on the back of the SUV’s aren’t family members but confirmed hits, which explains why there appear to be so many atypical 10-car families in Baltimore.  As I was saying, we wondered how people survive here.  Some good friends doing rotations in the local ERs have laid our naïveté to rest.  The hospitals stay in good business here in Baltimore, thanks to the pedestrians.  Sadly.

     It doesn’t work in reverse.  Traffic rules are twisted here and if you try to jaywalk without enough attitude, you will hear about it.  I made the mistake of trying to cross at an intersection with the little walk light.  There are signs posted in “Don’t hit me” yellow that say to yield to pedestrians in crosswalks.  However, those first few seconds (meaning: until the light turns red again) are for right/left turners to get through the intersection—pedestrians wait.  I’ll admit that this clears out the cars more easily.  I’ll also admit that I carried a spare set of shorts with me for the first couple months until I learned to stop following the pedestrian rules and just jaywalk like every other decent Baltimore citizen.

Oh Baltimore

     Perhaps my favorite part of Baltimore is the guy who drives around on his motorcycle with a spiked helmet.  We’re talking spiked—like a few dozen of these things.  Fluorescent engine lights.  Funk.  He’s got his radio pumping funk into the night everywhere he goes.  This is actually a good thing.  It’s not death metal.  It’s not kill-your-ex-buddy anger rap.  It’s funk.  And he’s bouncing up and down, dancing on his motorcycle both at the stoplights and as he’s driving.  It actually makes me happy to run into (not literally) this guy.

     Another classic was the lady heading into the public library in front of me.  It’s actually quite an attractive library.  I highly recommend checking it out if you’re in town.  I’d have opened the door for her, but I couldn’t get around her one-wheeled suitcase to help her.  Yep.  She was half-dragging a one-wheeled suitcase down any number of blocks, into the library and down the halls.  I’m pretty sure people upstairs heard her.  We’re not talking about your little trendy, wheeled-backpacks that you can just as easily carry but are too lazy to.  We’re talking about paying United Airlines $25 to check this thing all the way to Denver because there’s no way you're getting it through the cabin door.  She was dressed nicer that I am, which I realize isn’t ever saying much, but still nicely enough to afford a suit case.  Or at least a wheel.

Oh Baltimore

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Mitt for President or Mormonism?


It’s funny how the strapping a candidate and his religion to the presidency wasn’t so much of an issue in the past.  As long as it was a protestant no one really cared if he was Lutheran, Methodist or any other.  Catholicism got a bigger reaction, I’m told—I wasn’t there!  Possible ties to Islam even took a back seat to the fact that Obama is black.  However, a Mormon for President is a whole other issue.

There has actually been a lot of good press regarding Mormonism lately.  Some people are defending the Christianity of it (in fact, terming it overly Christian—a hyper-Christian church perhaps?), others are defending the fact that Mormons tend to be people of atypically good morals.  Think what you will, Mormons people are human beings that come in a variety of good and bad.  What makes me laugh, though, are people who honestly believe the myths that Mormons have horns.  While most people take it for granted that this is now a cultural joke, there are still those…

The issue of Mormonism came to mind this morning because I have to buy stamps.  Now you get to see how my mind [doesn’t] works.  Strap in.  You see, Mormon missionaries will give you a Book of Mormon for free then call you a few times to see if you’ve read it.  On the other hand the USPS sells stamps for $0.45 each now, or $9 for a full, canonized book.  AND you have to mark every one of your written communiqués with that stamp.  By way of comparison Mormons tend to only quote scripture in their speech, not writing.  Sort of like licking your envelope.
“Club dues” have remained a steady 10% throughout the years of Mormonism.  I can’t say that about my 2011 taxes.  We were somewhere around a fifth, which is twice as much as ten percent, as opposed to a twentieth which sounds bigger because the twenty is twice as big as the ten but is in reality only five percent (meaning per hundred).  Did you follow that?  The irony lies in the fact that the Mormon church can track you down in any continent to make sure you’re doing alright and to offer you help, all with their 10%, done by volunteers.  The Federal government, on the other hand, pays their employees but can’t even keep track of who’s inside its borders.  Maybe the Feds should hire the Mormons out to convert all the illegal immigrants and keep them on church records.  I bet they’d get SSNs a whole lot faster.

However, I don't think religion should influence my vote.  Or politics.  Therefore, I'm still voting for myself.

I also bet I’m going to get an earful about what I wrote today.  And I bet I’m going over budget by about $9 this month.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

What goes up . . . actually keeps going up – The gravity of food prices


     Our income isn’t getting any bigger but our food bill is, and it will especially continue to follow this economic trend after kid #1 is born.  Speaking of whom, since we don’t know our kid’s gender and we’re at 6 months and counting, we’ve come up with our own nicknames for him/her/it.  Trisha calls it “Baby Young.  I have opted for “the kid,” but I am starting to like the ring of “Kid #1” more now that I’ve written it down.

     Back to food.  Since it’s expensive I’ve been doing more and more of our cooking.  That and because home-cooked food is way better than stuff that can sit on a shelf for a year or years at a time (except for home-canned food—WAAAY different situation).  Imagine comparing a cadaver preserved in formaldehyde with a living, human being.  It’s an intentionally gross analogy to help show what I think of Banquet TV Dinners and the like.

     In the past it’s been stove-top meals and baked desserts.  The twist has been learning yet more recipes or versions of recipes to accommodate Trisha’s veganness as well as our push to eat healthier (not the same thing).  Now that I’m pretty well caught up and can cook proficiently on both sides of the grazing fence I’ve decided to knock the snack part of our grocery budget down to size.  I have been working through a few different granola recipes and ended up with a few shining success.


Now I’m working on roasted chickpeas (garbanzo beans).  I just pulled two batches out of the oven: #1 is honey cinnamon and #2 is curried.


      We’ve also just started baking potato chips.  I don’t know if we have a real recipe, but it’s pretty simple to just plane some potatoes into chip thickness, lather them with olive oil and sometimes toss some rosemary onto them.  One time we actually baked some buns, fried some veggie burgers with steak seasoning, added my home-canned garlic pickles with some Dijon, and the result was a pretty good home barbeque.  Trisha will be so thrilled that I added the photo below from burger night.


     Admittedly, the savings aren’t as substantial as if we were using more processed, cheaper ingredients—for instance, I’m cooking granola with real, dark amber maple syrup instead of imitation syrup or with mapleine—but even a marginal savings, coupled with amazing flavor has been worth it.

The next project is to get some herbs and tomatoes to grow.  I haven’t had a garden in a couple years.

Here’s the list of most recent cooking attempts:
  • Vegan Sausages with buns, relish, Dijon and sweet potato fries
  • Vegan Mashed Potatoes and Gravy (the gravy is seasoned perfectly; better with leftover sausages)
  • Granola (the best had more maple syrup)
  • Chocolate cake (got the recipe in France some time ago—it used vinegar instead of eggs)
  • Cinnamon & Honey Roasted Chickpeas
  • Curried, Roasted Chickpeas
  • Pizza (it’s amazing how good fresh rosemary tastes on this—just lay down some olive oil, “sun-dried” tomatoes, garlic, spinach and you’re set—I had a bag of mozzarella that I topped mine with)
  • No-Mayo Egg Salad with fresh bread (still not vegan, I just don’t like store-bought Mayo; also, I wish I had fresh dill)
I might add links to the recipes we've gotten from the internet if enough people care.

Next up is home-made mayonnaise, as soon as I get some fresh eggs.